Election 2024 coverage presented by
A lot of people are saying, people inside CoinDesk, that nobody’s going to read anything on Wednesday that isn’t elections-related. Well maybe they don’t know about all the INCREDIBLE CONTENT we have assembled in this week’s The Protocol newsletter? There’s even an ongoing election to keep you entertained.
FEATURING:
U.S. ELECTION COVERAGE HIGHLIGHTS:
POLLS STILL OPEN: In another vote taking place, not due to close for several more hours, community members of the DeFi project MakerDAO are expressing their opinions on what to do with the Sky brand. As reported in The Protocol last month, the project formerly known as Maker rebranded to Sky in August, but the move received a lukewarm reception, and now holders of the MKR tokens are being asked to weigh in on whether a de-rebranding should be considered. As reported by CoinDesk’s Sam Reynolds, the poll is not binding. Early participation was quite limited.
MEA CULPA, TABULA RASA: Ethereum Foundation researchers Dankrad Feist and Justin Drake have resigned from their advisory roles at EigenLayer, months after a controversy erupted over potential conflicts of interest within the Ethereum community. In the spring, Drake and Feist publicly confirmed that they had each accepted advisory roles with EigenLayer. Each researcher was allotted a significant sum of EIGEN tokens in exchange for helping guide the upcoming project and its roadmap. “While I believe that the role was negotiated in good faith and with the aim of making sure that EigenLayer is well aligned with Ethereum,” Feist said in an X post, “I understand that the perception of this relationship has been different and that for many the conflict of interest this creates is difficult to reconcile with my role as an Ethereum researcher.”
TRUE CONCESSION: It turns out that making money in crypto isn’t quite as easy as it might seem: Crypto buyers, burned so many times over the years, are quite leery of newcomers — and skeptical when it comes to examining new token offerings. That appears to be the case for World Liberty Financial, the crypto project backed by former President and now President-Elect Donald Trump and his sons, Don Jr. and Eric. As detailed in The Protocol last month, project officials initially talked up their big plans, with a fundraising goal of $300 million, and released a “Gold Paper” with lots of fine print, including the revelation that the initial $30 million of “net protocol revenues” would be set aside to cover expenses, indemnities and obligations. The rest would go to a company called “DT Marks DEFI LLC,” whose owners and principals include Donald Trump. But sales of the tokens never passed $15 million. As scooped last week by CoinDesk’s Danny Nelson, the project now has made a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission saying that the sales will be terminated as soon as the $30 million target is reached. The concession to market realities could put an end to the bizarre effort, which left many analysts scratching their heads at how Trump had time to promote a crypto project while in the throes of an intense campaign for president.
ALSO:
Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong’s claim in a post on X that listings on the U.S. crypto exchange are “free” drew protests from project leaders including Sonic Labs’ Andre Cronje and Tron’s Justin Sun. Bitget, a rival crypto exchange, took advantage of the topic’s salience to open a new listing application portal on its platform, stating that it’s “transparent about its listing procedures and thrives to provide token projects with the ease of exposure at best possible initial investments for its community,” along with the following testament: “Importantly, Bitget strongly emphasizes that it does not charge any fees related to the listing application process, such as commission fees, brokerage fees, application fees or assessment fees. Tokens provided by project teams will be fully allocated to Bitget users based on the agreed-upon marketing and promotional plan.”
SPICY SPOTS: Crypto commercials have come a long way since Crypto.com’s notoriously cringe-y “Fortune Favors the Brave” ad starring Matt Damon. A couple videos circulating this week actually approached the not-inconsiderable triple-achievement of “surprisingly clever” and “refreshingly dark” while remaining “uncannily crypto-native.”
Optimism Foundation Chief Growth Officer Ryan Wyatt (Optimism Foundation)
One of the biggest trends of 2023 among the leading layer-2 projects on Ethereum was the emergence of “blockchain in a box,” where the teams encouraged developers to clone their code to spin up new layer 2s.
Now, one project in particular appears to be pulling away as the clear leader. And as is often the case in blockchain development, a crucial factor is the money changing hands behind the scenes.
Optimism, one of the major layer-2 networks, has managed to get a slew of clients and firms to deploy their own blockchains using Optimism’s technology, with the OP Stack, under open-source software licenses.
It’s a crucial development in the evolution of the broader blockchain universe, since layer-2 networks stand at the heart of developers’ efforts to make transactions faster and cheaper in the Ethereum ecosystem.
Part of the Optimism Foundation’s strategy to get new networks to use their technology is to give out large sums of OP tokens in the form of grants.
Ultimately, the goal is to reach critical mass — perhaps not unlike the ascendance in the 1980s of VHS over Betamax as the dominant videotape technology.
Click here for the full article by Margaux Nijkerk
Fundraisings
Hubert Rachwalski von Rejchwald, founder and CEO of vlayer Labs (vlayer Labs)
Deals and grants
Bea O’Carroll (Kadena)
Data and Tokens
We were forwarded a copy of Binance Research’s just-out report, “Understanding the Rise of Memecoins” and found it curiously intellectual — tracing the rise of the asset class through an economic prism, noting that “financial nihilism might be growing particularly among younger generations.”
The report suggests that memecoins’ combined share of the altcoin market has doubled from 2023 levels to about 11% currently. (See chart above.)
There was also this high-minded takeaway, flicking at an increasingly common refrain heard, a backlash against the idea of venture capital-backed projects using retail investors as exit liquidity:
“Projects have turned towards private VC funding rounds in order to raise capital. This practice has grown significantly in recent years, leading to an industry wide ‘Low Float, High FDV,’” the report reads. “A symptom of this problem is that many of the new altcoins with the most exciting narratives and visions now face significant supply unlocks in the coming years, effectively turning retail traders into potential exit liquidity for VCs that got into early stage private rounds. This tokenomics problem created by the prominence of private token sale rounds is likely one of the factors at the forefront of the market’s shift towards the fair launch, transparent memecoins.”
Top 16 providers of native staking, as ranked on assets-under-management by the website Staking Rewards (Staking Rewards)
Earlier this week I had a fascinating conversation with Pablo Larguia, co-founder and CEO of Buenos Aires-based SenseiNode, a provider of institutional grade staking-as-a-service — essentially operating blockchain nodes on behalf of big investors.
The fast-growing business involves taking non-custodial token allocations and then managing the mostly data-center-oriented business of running nodes and staking on behalf of third parties.
This activity appears to fall somewhere between the proof-of-stake equivalent of bitcoin mining and the 21st century version of a bond manager.
Larguia showed us how to find the industry-standard rankings for this cottage industry within the blockchain space. It involves first going to the tracking website Staking Rewards and then filtering for “native staking.” P2P.org is tops with $6.12 billion of assets under management, followed by Kiln at No. 2 with $4.91 billion, then Allnodes with $3.89 billion and stakefish with $2.6 billion. SenseiNode is No. 14 at $859.6 million, for what it’s worth.
Top picks of the past week from our Protocol Village column, highlighting key blockchain tech upgrades and news.
Screengrab from Pundi AI Data demo video. This is an example of “bounding box annotation” where the user takes a “scenic image containing wild animals” and draws a box around them (Pundi AI)
Disclosure
Please note that our privacy policy, terms of use, cookies, and do not sell my personal information have been updated.CoinDesk is an award-winning media outlet that covers the cryptocurrency industry. Its journalists abide by a strict set of editorial policies. CoinDesk has adopted a set of principles aimed at ensuring the integrity, editorial independence and freedom from bias of its publications. CoinDesk is part of the Bullish group, which owns and invests in digital asset businesses and digital assets. CoinDesk employees, including journalists, may receive Bullish group equity-based compensation. Bullish was incubated by technology investor Block.one.
Bradley Keoun is the managing editor of CoinDesk’s Tech & Protocols team. He owns less than $1,000 each of several cryptocurrencies.