What you need to know today in crypto and beyond April 15, 2021 If you were forwarded this newsletter and would like to receive it, sign up here.
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Today's must-reads Top Shelf COINBASE TRADES: Coinbase's first day of public trading saw shares hit a high of $429.54 before dropping to close at $328 (below the $348 price where the shares last changed hands in private markets). The company is worth around $86 billion, though there will likely be some volatility. Cathie Wood's ARK Investment Management emerged as a major buyer, scooping up some $246 million worth of COIN across three funds. Hailed as a watershed moment for the crypto industry, global exchanges are predicting the increased public exposure could bring fresh regulatory attention.
ETHEREUM UPGRADE: Ethereum's Berlin hard fork went live at block 12,244,000 Thursday, the latest stop in the multi-year blockchain redesign attempt called Ethereum 2.0. Some time after forking, nodes using the Open Ethereum client ran into consensus issues impacting some services including Coinbase and Ledger. Ethereum's largest client Go Ethereum doesn't appear affected. Today's upgrade changes gas fee structure, introduces new types of transactions and makes the network more backwards-compatible. The next upgrade, London, will activate the controversial EIP 1559 proposal to reduce circulating ETH and change how miners are subsidized. BLOCKCHAIN COPS: The New York Police Department has been using Chainalysis software to conduct blockchain investigations since 2019. Use of the analytics tool is limited to "legitimate law enforcement purposes," according to a new policy document. Chainalysis received an eight-month, $35,410 software licensing contract and later signed a $67,890 full-year deal. In other news, Barry Silbert, co-founder and CEO of Digital Currency Group (CoinDesk's parent company), said privacy will be a bigger "investment theme" going forward. GLOBAL APPEAL: The non-fungible token (NFT) craze is helping some Nigerian artists go global. Despite a nationwide ban on converting the local currency naira to digital assets, users are switching to peer-to-peer platforms to avoid the banking system. COINS MOVE: Over $623 million worth of bitcoin stolen from Bitfinex in 2016 was moved on Wednesday, according to Twitter account Whale Alert. That's about 10% of the total 119,756 BTC stolen.
– Daniel Kuhn
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Overheard on CoinDesk TV Sound Bite "People are innovating at the fringes, there's a lot of good ideas and kernels of truth underneath it, but there's a lot of 'hopium' as well."
– Tezos co-Founder Kathleen Breitman, on CoinDesk TV's "First Mover."
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A message from CoinDesk CoinDesk's Quarterly Review Webinar Series The suits are here to stay, but retail isn't going away. While Q1 saw the emergence of retail investors as a market driver, crypto caught explosive interest through non-fungible tokens from investors, celebrities and the general public.
Every Monday at 11:30 a.m. ET, crypto analysts Noelle Acheson and Christine Kim will discuss the performance and milestones of bitcoin and ether compared to macro and other crypto assets, along with important developments in the emerging DeFi and NFT sectors.
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What others are writing... Off-Chain Signals
– D.K.
Investor Momentum to NFT Boom: CoinDesk Research's Quarterly Review Introducing CoinDesk Research's quarterly review, covering the main developments over the first three months of 2021 in Bitcoin, Ethereum, DeFi, stablecoins and – of course – NFTs.
The report presents over 100 insights on how retail investors are picking up market momentum, how Ethereum activity is not being driven by NFTs as much as one might think, how stablecoins have responded to increased activity, how DeFi is for now the realm of decentralized exchanges and more.
Putting the news in perspective The Takeaway
Crypto is still the frontier for journalism
The internet was supposed to revolutionize the way we share, consume and produce information – a democratization of content and creation. A revolution it was. But the slippery borders of the internet have made it hard for anything to matter. There's a lot to process.
Someone once told me, "Writing on the internet is like breathing water." I think that's a pretty accurate description of the joys and horrors of the internet.
Not to mention the corporate entities that own the web, which have ad- and data-driven business models that corrupt the original vision of the internet. It's difficult to say anything specific here – as no one really knows how these systems work. (A sit-down my colleague Ben Powers did with Shoshana Zuboff is a good place to start.)
For years, people have looked to cryptocurrency as a solution for the media crisis. Cryptocurrency adds friction to the web to make it more life-like. There are costs associated with even small acts. It disincentivizes noise. It makes the electronic indelible. If you have something to say, it better be worth it – it's there forever (also preventing the sort of influence powerful people can exert, as with Peter Thiel and Gawker.)
Needless to say, many crypto-media projects have failed. Civil, a three year experiment in tokenomics and media organization, folded after a series of internal disputes and the collapse of its token. But a new class of media projects and platforms seems to be emerging.
Substack, Ghost and Mirror are all promising platforms that are finding real use. These projects apply many of the core ideas of crypto – empowering individual voices, uncensorability and crowdfunding – if not the technology directly. Brick House, a writer-owned media collective involving several ex-Civil people, is partially informed by that project.
Untitled Frontiers is the latest to join the crowd. A new project by one of the fathers of the ERC-20 token standard, Simon de la Rouviere, looks to combine the buzzy world of NFTs with the fuzzier world of DAOs and other "Web 3.0" technologies to explore the edges of content creation.
The project is not yet launched – maybe not even coded – but CoinDesk reached out to de la Rouviere to talk about crypto's role in the media. An artist and author at heart, it's the ideas that matter most. His responses sent over email have been lightly edited for brevity.
It's best captured by a quote from internet pioneer Stewart Brand: "On the one hand information wants to be expensive, because it's so valuable. The right information in the right place just changes your life. On the other hand, information wants to be free, because the cost of getting it out is getting lower and lower all the time. So you have these two fighting against each other."
As we've seen with NFTs, we can have the best of both. Information that is free (as in free to share and consume), but also 'expensive,' meaning, accruing value. Untitled Frontier believes this will be most valuable at the intersection of fiction, because the most valuable collectibles have a story attached to them.
There's an abundant catalogue of amazing media that can only be funded and enjoyed through:
In most of these cases, the content has to be restricted in some form to be enjoyed. With non-fungible tokens (NFT) specifically, it allows superfans to collect meaningful souvenirs related to the media, allowing the content to be more permissive, and secondly allows stronger connections between fans, the content and the creators. It's both a new funding model but also a new way for new media to flourish.
What do you think of open, but not decentralized, platforms like Substack? It seems to be having an outsized effect on the media ecosystem.
Substack is a step in the right direction. Some writers have been burned by platforms like Medium that changed user expectations over time. At least with Substack, the writer will always control and own their audience. If Substack fails or screws up, they can take their mailing list to a new platform.
How are you incorporating lessons from projects like Civil?
Many early media projects in the industry were just early. I learned that lesson with pioneering in the music industry with Ujo Music. We launched one of the first music NFTs back in 2017. The key takeaway isn't always that those projects were the wrong product. It was just at the wrong time.
We have to invent less technical innovations these days and can focus more on the product, users and the market. There's established infrastructure and an established market that will make our lives a lot easier.
You've discussed using NFTs as a funding mechanism to help support UF. How does this work?
This is an open-ended question and one that will be resolved by talking to specific writers. Initially, it will be pitched as a 50/50 split, after which it might change if writers decide a different split is sufficient.
Untitled Frontier at this stage acts more like a mixture between Disney + publisher, guiding a shared narrative. If successful, we hope to see more projects spinning up similar models for their own communities.
The most permissive content travels the furthest (with a good distribution channel). However, doing so means that the creator won't necessarily make commensurate return on the value of the work due to the restrictions of current business models. NFTs change this paradigm by rewarding NFTs that are the most well known (the 'Mona Lisa' cryptomedia thesis). Thus, permissive stories that travel the furthest drives more value to NFT sales.
How long until The New York Times converts to a DAO model?
Would love to see this, but I bet if we see journalism DAOs, it won't start with the NYT.
– D.K.
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