The
tech
news
cycle
this
past
week
was
dominated
by
the
straight-out-of-HBO
boardroom
drama
at
OpenAI,
but
the
crypto
world
–
not
to
be
outdone
by
its
AI
brethren
–
has
brought
its
own
bombshells.
The
big
story
this
week
was
around
Binance,
whose
high-profile
CEO,
Changpeng
“CZ”
Zhao,
will
be
stepping
down
from
his
post
at
the
company
as
part
of
a
sweeping
plea
agreement
with
U.S.
prosecutors.
The
world’s
largest
crypto
exchange,
Binance
will
pay
over
$7
billion
in
fines
to
the
U.S.
Treasury
and
Commodity
Futures
Trading
Commission
in
“one
of
the
largest
penalties”
the
U.S.
has
ever
obtained
from
a
corporate
defendant
–
money
that
could
help
the
industry
avoid
yet
another
blockbuster
criminal
trial.
Zhao
has
long
been
a
controversial
figure
in
the
crypto
space
–
owing
largely
to
the
opaque
nature
of
his
exchange
giant,
whose
centralized
command
structure
and
shadowy
inner
workings
fly
in
the
face
of
core
blockchain
tech
principles
around
transparency
and
decentralization.
But
as
Zhao’s
tenure
at
Binance
was
eulogized
across
X
(formerly
Twitter)
this
week,
fans
(and
even
some
critics)
credited
him
for
spearheading
a
period
of
tremendous
growth
for
the
broader
industry
–
even
as
it’s
now
clear
that
Binance’s
own
rise
came
at
the
cost
of
U.S.
sanction-incompliance
and
in
brazen
defiance
of
money-transmitting
laws.
This
article
is
featured
in
the
latest
issue
of
The
Protocol,
our
weekly
newsletter
exploring
the
tech
behind
crypto,
one
block
at
a
time.
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Network
news
ORACLES’
NEED
FOR
SPEED:
A
single
millisecond
can
make
or
break
a
trade
in
the
world
of
traditional
finance,
but
decentralized
finance
apps
tend
to
operate
on
a
much
slower
timescale
–
with
certain
market
data
taking
minutes
or
even
hours
to
populate
on-chain.
The
year
2023
has
marked
a
breakout
in
the
race
to
provide
lower-latency
pricing
data
to
blockchains,
with
oracle
firms
like
Chainlink
and
Pyth
Network
duking
it
out
in
a
battle
to
make
on-chain
trading
more
hospitable
to
speed-obsessed
Wall
Street
speculators
and
high-frequency
traders.
Developers
use
oracles
to
shepherd
off-chain
data,
like
token
prices,
onto
(or
between)
blockchains.
The
main
issue
until
recently
has
been
the
inherent
latency
in
decentralized
networks,
where
geographically
distributed
nodes
take
time
to
reach
consensus,
leading
to
delays
that
can
slow
down
data
from
oracles.
Chainlink,
a
frontrunner
in
the
oracle
space,
recently
introduced
Data
Streams
to
reduce
latency
and
operational
costs,
offering
a
pull-based
oracle
system
that
enhances
efficiency.
Pyth
Network,
an
oracle
firm
that
was
in
the
news
this
week
for
its
token
airdrop,
has
also
been
an
early
mover
in
the
latency
race
–
it’s
been
particularly
active
on
the
Solana
blockchain,
where
it
offers
low-latency
pricing
data
sourced
directly
from
first-party
financial
firms.
Other
players
in
the
oracle
race
include
Band
Protocol,
Witnet,
Tellor,
XYO
Network,
Razor
Network
and
WINkLink.
A
key
focus
for
the
sector
moving
forward
will
be
reconciling
tradeoffs
between
speed,
reliability,
and
decentralization
–
a
balancing
act
for
virtually
all
crypto
protocols,
but
one
that’s
particularly
prescient
in
the
context
of
critical
oracle
infrastructure.
-
Sam
Altman
will
be
reinstated
as
CEO
of
OpenAI
less
than
a
week
after
his
surprise-ouster
by
the
artificial
intelligence
startup’s
board.
Last
week’s
firing
of
Altman,
OpenAI’s
founder
and
Silicon
Valley’s
chief
AI
visionary,
upended
the
tech
world
and
drove
OpenAI
employees
into
open
revolt. -
HTX,
the
crypto
exchange
previously
known
as
Huobi,
and
Heco
Chain,
a
related
blockchain
protocol,
were
hacked
for
a
cumulative
$97
million
early
on
Wednesday.
It’s
the
second
major
hack
this
month
to
hit
the
crypto
empire
of
Justin
Sun,
the
TRON
blockchain
founder
who
serves
as
an
“advisor”
to
Huobi. -
Bittrex
Global,
the
crypto
exchange
that
shuttered
its
U.S.
arm
last
May
after
incurring
a
$24
million
fine
from
the
U.S.
Securities
and
Exchange
Commission,
is
winding
down
the
whole
of
its
operations. -
Tether,
the
largest
stablecoin
issuer,
has
frozen
$225
million
worth
of
its
USDT
stablecoin
following
an
investigation
by
the
U.S.
Department
of
Justice
(DOJ)
into
an
international
human
trafficking
syndicate
in
Southeast
Asia. -
Santander
Private
Banking
International,
part
of
Spanish
financial
services
giant
Banco
Santander,
is
offering
high-net-worth
clients
with
Swiss
accounts
trading
and
investing
in
the
major
cryptocurrencies
bitcoin
(BTC)
and
ether
(ETH),
according
to
an
internal
announcement
seen
by
CoinDesk.
Protocol
Village
Highlighting
blockchain
tech
upgrades
and
developments.
1.
Fhenix,
which
announced
a
$7M
fundraising
in
September
to
build
a
“confidential
blockchain”
powered
by
fully
homomorphic
encryption
or
(FHE),
disclosed
Thursday
that
it
is
“introducing
FHE
Rollups
to
boost
privacy
on
Ethereum
and
similar
networks.”
According
to
a
message
from
the
team:
“These
rollups
enable
secure
on-chain
transactions
and
private
applications,
letting
developers
craft
confidential
layer-2
networks
while
staying
compatible
with
Ethereum.”
Fhenix
founder
Guy
Zyskind
told
CoinDesk
in
an
interview
that
“We’re
going
to
have
our
canonical
Fhenix
L2
mainnet,”
but
also
“We’re
trying
to
be
the
encrypted
rollup
stack”
that
builders
can
use
to
create
their
own
networks.
2.
DLN,
which
stands
for
deSwap
Liquidity
Network,
a
cross-chain
trading
infrastructure
build
on
deBridge,
has
entered
into
a
strategic
partnership
with
bloXroute,
a
DeFi
performance
provider,
“to
provide
MEV
searchers,
institutional
DeFi
traders
and
projects
with
lightning-fast
intents-based
cross-chain
value
exchange,”
according
to
the
team.
(EDITOR’S
NOTE:
Please
go
here
for
my
piece
last
week
on
what
“intents”
are
and
why
they’re
becoming
an
important
design
concept
in
blockchain
technology.)
3.
Frax
Finance’s
community
has
approved
a
plan
to
use
Axelar,
a
protocol
for
secure
cross-chain
communication,
for
expansion
to
additional
chains.
4.
Strike,
a
bitcoin
payments
firm,
has
expanded
its
services
to
allow
users
from
36
countries
(soon
to
be
65+)
beyond
the
U.S.
to
buy
bitcoin
through
its
app.
5.
ZkLink,
a
developer
of
zero-knowledge-proof-powered
blockchain
solutions,
announced
the
launch
of
Nexus,
a
production-ready
and
highly
customizable
layer-3
or
“L3”
designed
to
bridge
the
gap
among
different
ZK
Rollup
layer-2
or
“L2”
ecosystems,
to
reduce
liquidity
fragmentation,
according
to
the
team.
Money
Center
Funraisings
-
Colony
Lab,
an
Avalanche
ecosystem
developer
and
accelerator,
said
it
will
invest
$10
million
to
support
the
long-term
growth
of
the
network. -
Taproot
Wizards,
a
Bitcoin-focused
Ordinals
project,
raised
$7.5
million
in
seed
funding
to
try
and
“make
bitcoin
magical
again.” -
Privy,
a
crypto
startup
focused
on
consumer
tools,
has
raised
$18
million
in
a
Series
A
round
led
by
Paradigm,
with
participation
from
earlier
investors
including
Sequoia
Capital,
BlueYard
Capital
and
Archetype,
according
to
a
blog
post. -
Union
Labs,
which
aims
to
create
an
efficient
zero-knowledge
interoperability
layer,
has
successfully
raised
$4
million
in
seed
funding
to
build
the
“first
fully
trustless
bridge
that
connects
appchains,
layer-1,
and
layer-2
networks,”
according
to
the
team.
Deals
and
grants
-
As
the
designated
blockchain
sponsor
in
Alibaba
Cloud’s
Innovation
Accelerator
program,
the
Aptos
Foundation
will
provide
builder
resources
and
ecosystem
fund
support
to
promising
Aptos-built
projects,
according
to
the
team. -
After
many
months
on
the
auction
block,
CoinDesk
gets
acquired
by
Bullish
from
Digital
Currency
Group.
Data
and
tokens
-
Ordinals
Protocol
tokens,
a
growing
class
of
digital
assets
based
on
the
Bitcoin
blockchain,
have
gained
hype
amid
mounting
speculation
that
a
Bitcoin
exchange-traded
fund
might
soon
earn
approval.
The
sector’s
market
cap
increased
by
21%
in
a
24-hour
period
late
last
week,
with
tokens
TRAC,
MEME
and
NALS
leading
the
gains. -
Polygon,
the
Ethereum
side-chain,
saw
gas
fees
spike
1000x
due
to
a
flurry
of
activity
around
its
own
Ordinals-inspired
“POLS”
tokens,
according
to
Cointelegraph. -
Bitcoin
gained
nearly
3%
on
the
news
that
Javier
Milei,
a
far-right
“anarcho-captalist”
and
self-avowed
blockchain
supporter,
had
won
a
closely-watched
runoff
election
to
become
Argentina’s
next
president.
Regulatory,
Policy,
and
Legal
-
Changpeng
Zhao
(CZ),
Binance’s
high-profile
CEO,
has
pleaded
guilty
to
violating
U.S.
criminal
anti-money-laundering
charges
and
has
stepped
down
from
his
role
at
the
company. -
Kraken,
another
leading
crypto
exchange,
has
been
accused
by
the
U.S.
Securities
and
Exchange
Commission
of
operating
an
unregistered
platform
and
improperly
mixing
customer
funds.