Blockchain and Crypto News

Don’t miss real-time updates

Decentral Block Post

Access real-time blockchain and cryptocurrency news updates from around the globe.

China Telco’s crypto SIM, Korean exchanges in turmoil… and more

Our weekly roundup of news from East Asia curates the industry’s most important developments.

China blockchain SIM card

Conflux Network says it is working with the second-largest telecommunications provider in China to develop a blockchain SIM card that will serve as a secure place to store digital private keys and nonfungible tokens.

Conflux announced its partnership with China Telecom on Feb. 15, saying the BSIM has moved past the research and development phase. The card will have up to “10-20 times storage space” compared to regular SIM cards, thereby ensuring optimized access to decentralized applications and digital communities. 

The new China Telecom blockchain SIM phone proof-of-concept. Source: Conflux

The first pilot program for the BSIM card is expected to launch in Hong Kong later this year. Conflux is a layer-1 blockchain operating on a hybrid proof-of-work and proof-of-stake consensus and claims it’s the “only regulatory-compliant public blockchain in China.” Its parent entity, the Shanghai Tree-Graph Blockchain Research Institute, has received approval from the Shanghai Municipal People’s Government to operate as a blockchain entity

Korean crypto scandals

Korean crypto exchanges and blockchain entities endured a tough week after a series of misconduct allegations shook the industry. On Feb. 13, investigations carried out by local news outlet IT Chosun alleged that Gopax, a top five crypto exchange in South Korea, charged anywhere between tens of thousands to hundreds of millions in Korean Won (KRW) for token listing fees.

The new China Telecom blockchain SIM phone proof of concept.

China Telco’s crypto SIM, Korean exchanges in turmoil… and more

Our weekly roundup of news from East Asia curates the industry’s most important developments.

China blockchain SIM card

Conflux Network says it is working with the second-largest telecommunications provider in China to develop a blockchain SIM card that will serve as a secure place to store digital private keys and nonfungible tokens.

Conflux announced its partnership with China Telecom on Feb. 15, saying the BSIM has moved past the research and development phase. The card will have up to “10-20 times storage space” compared to regular SIM cards, thereby ensuring optimized access to decentralized applications and digital communities. 

The new China Telecom blockchain SIM phone proof-of-concept. Source: Conflux

The first pilot program for the BSIM card is expected to launch in Hong Kong later this year. Conflux is a layer-1 blockchain operating on a hybrid proof-of-work and proof-of-stake consensus and claims it’s the “only regulatory-compliant public blockchain in China.” Its parent entity, the Shanghai Tree-Graph Blockchain Research Institute, has received approval from the Shanghai Municipal People’s Government to operate as a blockchain entity

Korean crypto scandals

Korean crypto exchanges and blockchain entities endured a tough week after a series of misconduct allegations shook the industry. On Feb. 13, investigations carried out by local news outlet IT Chosun alleged that Gopax, a top five crypto exchange in South Korea, charged anywhere between tens of thousands to hundreds of millions in Korean Won (KRW) for token listing fees.

The new China Telecom blockchain SIM phone proof of concept.

China Telco’s crypto SIM, Korean exchanges in turmoil… and more

Our weekly roundup of news from East Asia curates the industry’s most important developments. China blockchain SIM card Conflux Network says it is working with the second-largest telecommunications provider in China to develop a blockchain SIM card that will serve as a secure place to store digital private keys and nonfungible tokens. Conflux announced its […]

China Telco’s crypto SIM, Korean exchanges in turmoil… and more

Our weekly roundup of news from East Asia curates the industry’s most important developments. China blockchain SIM card Conflux Network says it is working with the second-largest telecommunications provider in China to develop a blockchain SIM card that will serve as a secure place to store digital private keys and nonfungible tokens. Conflux announced its […]

China Telco’s crypto SIM, Korean exchanges in turmoil… and more

Our weekly roundup of news from East Asia curates the industry’s most important developments.

China blockchain SIM card

Conflux Network says it is working with the second-largest telecommunications provider in China to develop a blockchain SIM card that will serve as a secure place to store digital private keys and nonfungible tokens.

Conflux announced its partnership with China Telecom on Feb. 15, saying the BSIM has moved past the research and development phase. The card will have up to “10-20 times storage space” compared to regular SIM cards, thereby ensuring optimized access to decentralized applications and digital communities. 

The new China Telecom blockchain SIM phone proof-of-concept. Source: Conflux

The first pilot program for the BSIM card is expected to launch in Hong Kong later this year. Conflux is a layer-1 blockchain operating on a hybrid proof-of-work and proof-of-stake consensus and claims it’s the “only regulatory-compliant public blockchain in China.” Its parent entity, the Shanghai Tree-Graph Blockchain Research Institute, has received approval from the Shanghai Municipal People’s Government to operate as a blockchain entity

Korean crypto scandals

Korean crypto exchanges and blockchain entities endured a tough week after a series of misconduct allegations shook the industry. On Feb. 13, investigations carried out by local news outlet IT Chosun alleged that Gopax, a top five crypto exchange in South Korea, charged anywhere between tens of thousands to hundreds of millions in Korean Won (KRW) for token listing fees.

The new China Telecom blockchain SIM phone proof of concept.

Crypto scammers feel the chill: Revenue drops 46% in 2022 — Chainalysis

Falling crypto prices caused crypto scam revenue to plummet in 2022, though two scam types managed to persist.

Bitcoin price derivatives look a bit overheated, but data suggests bears are outnumbered

Bullish BTC traders are using excessive leverage, but bears’ reluctance to fight back could extend the current Bitcoin price rally.

Bitcoin price derivatives look a bit overheated, but data suggests bears are outnumbered

Bitcoin (BTC) price rallied over 12% on Feb. 15, marking the highest daily close in more than six months. Curiously, the movement happened while gold reached a 40-day low at $1,826, indicating some potential shift in investors' risk assessment for cryptocurrencies.

A stronger than expected U.S. inflation report on Feb. 14 presented 5.6% growth year-over-year, followed by data showing resilient consumer demand caused traders to rethink Bitcoin's scarcity value. U.S. retail sales increased by 3% in January versus the previous month — the highest gain in almost two years.

On-chain data indicates that the recent gains can be traced back to a mysterious institutional investor that started buying on Feb. 10. According to Lookonchain's data, nearly $1.6 billion in funds have flowed into the crypto market between Feb. 10 and Feb. 15. The analysis showed that three notable USD Coin (USD) wallets sent out funds to various exchanges around the same time.

More importantly, news emerged that the Binance exchange is preparing to face penalties and settle eventual outstanding regulatory and law-enforcement investigations in the U.S., according to a Feb. 15 Wall Street Journal report. The exchange's chief strategy officer, Patrick Hillmann, added that Binance was "highly confident and feeling really good about where those discussions are going."

Let's look at derivatives metrics to understand better how professional traders are positioned in the current market conditions.

image

DeFi platforms can comply with regulations without compromising privacy — Web3 exec

Zero knowledge proofs, DIDs, and more could help DeFi protocols maintain regulatory compliance without exposing their users.

Breaking: SEC sues Do Kwon and Terraform Labs for fraud

"We allege that Terraform and Do Kwon failed to provide the public with full, fair, and truthful disclosure as required for a host of crypto asset securities," said SEC chair Gary Gensler.

Federal judge hints at denying Sam Bankman-Fried any internet access as condition of bail: Report

The judge reportedly did not expand SBF’s bail conditions to include restrictions on the internet or VPNs, but asked his lawyers to pay for a consultant to explore the matter.

GBBC Digital Finance joins international securities organization as an affiliate member

GBBC Digital Finance is now one of over 200 affiliated members of the International Organization of Securities Commissions, which also includes 35 national regulators.

'Bit-tendo' prototype offers Bitcoin retro games for bars, conferences

The prototype software allows players to earn Bitcoin by playing retro games

eBay NFT platform KnownOrigin launches creator smart contract

The creator contract beta release has been tested by users, with 84 contracts deployed and 250 NFTs minted so far.

Hong Kong issues HK$800m in tokenized green bonds

The bonds were underwritten by four banks and priced at a yield of 4.05%.

Bitcoin bulls aim to hold this week’s BTC gains leading into Friday’s $675M options expiry

$675 million in BTC options are set to expire on Feb. 17, but bears could aim to take control by pushing Bitcoin price below $22,000.

Bitcoin bulls aim to hold this week’s BTC gains leading into Friday’s $675M options expiry

While the U.S. Federal Reserve (FED) continues to monitor the overheated economy, the most likely scenario is further interest rate hikes to curb inflation. The unintended consequence is the heightened government debt cost, creating a bullish environment for scarce assets such as commodities, stock market and cryptocurrencies.

Bitcoin’s price gain practically extinguished bears expectation for a sub-$21,500 options expiry on Feb. 17, so their bets are unlikely to pay off as the deadline approaches.

Bitcoin investors' primary concern is the possibility of further impacts from regulators following the staking rewards program by the Kraken exchange being halted by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Feb. 9 and the crackdown on Binance USD (BUSD) stablecoin issuing on Feb. 13.

Even if the newsflow remains negative, bulls still can profit in Friday's Feb. 17 options expiry by keeping the BTC price above $22,500, but the situation can easily flip and favor bears.

Bears were not expecting the $22,000 level to hold

The open interest for the Feb. 17 options expiry is $675 million, but the actual figure will be lower since bears were expecting sub-$22,000 price levels. These traders became overconfident after Bitcoin traded below $21,500 on Feb. 13.

Norwegian police recover $5.9M stolen from Axie Infinity Ronin hack

The seized funds will be used to reimburse affected users, and prevent it from funding North Korea's nuclear weapons program.

$24K Bitcoin — Is it time to buy BTC and altcoins? Watch Market Talks live

Join us as we discuss whether it’s time to consider stacking some sats and buying into some attractive altcoins.

$24K Bitcoin — Is it time to buy BTC and altcoins? Watch Market Talks live

In this week’s episode of Market Talks, Cointelegraph welcomes Michaël van de Poppe, a full-time day/swing trader in cryptocurrencies based at the Amsterdam Stock Exchange who’s interested in everything related to blockchain in combination with the current financial system. He is also the CEO and founder of Eight Global, a cryptocurrency education and consultancy platform.

We kick things off by getting van de Poppe’s take on the current market and how he’s feeling about things at the moment. 

Generally, everyone’s views on external macro factors that impact crypto prices are mostly United States-centric. Since van de Poppe is based in Amsterdam, we find out what other macro and geopolitical factors he regularly considers when assessing the markets.

After the news about the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission cracking down on stablecoins and exchanges and also the not-so-hot Consumer Price Index (CPI) report, Bitcoin (BTC) made a move that was opposite to what many market participants were expecting. Van de Poppe shares hi thoughts and reasoning for this. 

We get into the nitty-gritty about van de Poppe’s approach to investing in altcoins and how the two large-cap cryptocurrencies, Bitcoin and Ether (ETH), impact his decisions, if at all. 

Image