Ahead of the U.K. Election, Major Parties Remain Silent on Crypto Issues
The U.K. is set to hold its first election in five years on Thursday and crypto is not a campaign-trail issue.
The U.K. is set to hold its first election in five years on Thursday and crypto is not a campaign-trail issue.
In March, the Middle-East-focused Mantra raised $11 million for its real-world tokenization efforts.
The Israeli firm’s Venn security network uses a network of operators to seek out and freeze suspect transactions before they execute.
The IRS has now set up its reporting system for crypto brokers, but it set aside related rules for DeFi and unhosted wallets as it continues to study 44,000 comments to the agency.
The exchange says it has already seen more than $25 billion in trading volume since the start of the year, with monthly revenues topping $1 million.
If crypto-friendly Republican candidate Trump goes off the rails, Republicans may wince, but the GOP ticket will likely not change.
At least one analyst believes fewer coins will be distributed than is commonly thought and thus the sell pressure might be less than expected.
Meanwhile, there’s a prediction market on whether the U.K. newspaper The Guardian will correct an article unflattering to prediction markets.
The company also revealed that it’s running Bitcoin and Lightning network nodes.
The layer-2 blockchain ZKsync, has kicked off its highly anticipated airdrop of its ZK token, with 45% of the tokens already claimed.