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AMITSolanki12

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#genius $GENIUS This paper introduces Genius’ native PropAMM. GeniusFi, the first-of-its-kind propAMM built specifically for BNB chain to be the central liquidity hub to process ~$727B/year in onchain flow that is currently routed through legacy, vanilla AMM dexes on the network. The TAM is the total market of flow for the short tail of assets that constitute ~90% of current flow on BNB chain, as well as, eventually, the longtail of assets to complete Genius’ dominance in the BNB ecosystem. Lessons from Solana Solana’s Prop AMMs are winning capital efficiency The last 18–24 months on Solana have made it impossible to deny that for highly liquid & short-tail markets, active, market maker operated Prop AMM designs are outcompeting passive pools on execution. Prop AMMs like HumidiFi are able to quote tight spreads, competitive prices with high liquidity, and low fees to, even beating out mainstream CEXs like @Binance_Margin #GeniusOficial
#genius $GENIUS This paper introduces Genius’ native PropAMM. GeniusFi, the first-of-its-kind propAMM built specifically for BNB chain to be the central liquidity hub to process ~$727B/year in onchain flow that is currently routed through legacy, vanilla AMM dexes on the network. The TAM is the total market of flow for the short tail of assets that constitute ~90% of current flow on BNB chain, as well as, eventually, the longtail of assets to complete Genius’ dominance in the BNB ecosystem.
Lessons from Solana
Solana’s Prop AMMs are winning capital efficiency
The last 18–24 months on Solana have made it impossible to deny that for highly liquid & short-tail markets, active, market maker operated Prop AMM designs are outcompeting passive pools on execution. Prop AMMs like HumidiFi are able to quote tight spreads, competitive prices with high liquidity, and low fees to, even beating out mainstream CEXs like @Binance Margin #GeniusOficial
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Why OpenLedger Changed The Way I Look At AI Infrastructure I was testing artificial intelligence plaWhy OpenLedger Changed The Way I Look At AI Infrastructure I was testing artificial intelligence platforms that people were talking about on Crypto Twitter a few nights ago. Most of them were confusing to me. One platform needed me to set it up in a way. Another platform required me to have knowledge of coding. Some platforms looked good at first. Then they became complicated after a few minutes. This experience made me realize something: artificial intelligence still feels hard to understand because it is complicated.. That is probably why OpenLedger caught my attention. It was not because they were saying things the loudest. Because they were focused on building the base of artificial intelligence instead of just talking about how great it is. The more I looked into the OpenLedger project the more I noticed something. Most people only use the artificial intelligence product. They see an intelligence assistant, an artificial intelligence tool or an artificial intelligence agent.. Almost nobody talks about the systems that are working behind those products. That hidden part is where OpenLedger started feeling different to me. When I first read about their Proof of Attribution system the idea made sense to me away. Artificial intelligence models learn from a lot of information that people create.. Once those models become valuable the people who created that information are often forgotten. That does not feel fair when you think about it. OpenLedger is trying to build a system where people who contribute can be tracked and rewarded of forgott#

Why OpenLedger Changed The Way I Look At AI Infrastructure I was testing artificial intelligence pla

Why OpenLedger Changed The Way I Look At AI Infrastructure
I was testing artificial intelligence platforms that people were talking about on Crypto Twitter a few nights ago. Most of them were confusing to me. One platform needed me to set it up in a way. Another platform required me to have knowledge of coding. Some platforms looked good at first. Then they became complicated after a few minutes.
This experience made me realize something: artificial intelligence still feels hard to understand because it is complicated.. That is probably why OpenLedger caught my attention. It was not because they were saying things the loudest. Because they were focused on building the base of artificial intelligence instead of just talking about how great it is.
The more I looked into the OpenLedger project the more I noticed something. Most people only use the artificial intelligence product. They see an intelligence assistant, an artificial intelligence tool or an artificial intelligence agent.. Almost nobody talks about the systems that are working behind those products. That hidden part is where OpenLedger started feeling different to me.
When I first read about their Proof of Attribution system the idea made sense to me away. Artificial intelligence models learn from a lot of information that people create.. Once those models become valuable the people who created that information are often forgotten. That does not feel fair when you think about it. OpenLedger is trying to build a system where people who contribute can be tracked and rewarded of forgott#
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#openledger $OPEN $BTC #Why OpenLedger Changed The Way I Look At AI Infrastructure I was testing artificial intelligence platforms that people were talking about on Crypto Twitter a few nights ago. Most of them were confusing to me. One platform needed me to set it up in a way. Another platform required me to have knowledge of coding. Some platforms looked good at first. Then they became complicated after a few minutes. This experience made me realize something: artificial intelligence still feels hard to understand because it is complicated.. That is probably why OpenLedger caught my attention. It was not because they were saying things the loudest. Because they were focused on building the base of artificial intelligence instead of just talking about how great it is. The more I looked into the OpenLedger project the more I noticed something. Most people only use the artificial intelligence product. They see an intelligence assistant, an artificial intelligence tool or an artificial intelligence agent.. Almost nobody talks about the systems that are working behind those products. That hidden part is where OpenLedger started feeling different to me. When I first read about their Proof of Attribution system the idea made sense to me away. Artificial intelligence models learn from a lot of information that people create.. Once those models become valuable the people who created that information are often forgotten. That does not feel fair when you think about it. OpenLedger is trying to build a system where people who contribute can be tracked and rewarded of forgotten
#openledger $OPEN $BTC #Why OpenLedger Changed The Way I Look At AI Infrastructure
I was testing artificial intelligence platforms that people were talking about on Crypto Twitter a few nights ago. Most of them were confusing to me. One platform needed me to set it up in a way. Another platform required me to have knowledge of coding. Some platforms looked good at first. Then they became complicated after a few minutes.
This experience made me realize something: artificial intelligence still feels hard to understand because it is complicated.. That is probably why OpenLedger caught my attention. It was not because they were saying things the loudest. Because they were focused on building the base of artificial intelligence instead of just talking about how great it is.
The more I looked into the OpenLedger project the more I noticed something. Most people only use the artificial intelligence product. They see an intelligence assistant, an artificial intelligence tool or an artificial intelligence agent.. Almost nobody talks about the systems that are working behind those products. That hidden part is where OpenLedger started feeling different to me.
When I first read about their Proof of Attribution system the idea made sense to me away. Artificial intelligence models learn from a lot of information that people create.. Once those models become valuable the people who created that information are often forgotten. That does not feel fair when you think about it. OpenLedger is trying to build a system where people who contribute can be tracked and rewarded of forgotten
#USCourtDeniesKalshiPolymarketPause Problema Legale per i Mercati di Previsione ⚖️ La Corte Rifiuta la Sospensione: Kalshi e Polymarket Devono Affrontare Cause Statali Una corte d'appello federale degli Stati Uniti ha ufficialmente negato una richiesta di Kalshi e Polymarket per fermare le cause legali in corso in Nevada e Washington. La sentenza significa che queste piattaforme devono continuare a difendersi contro le rivendicazioni a livello statale mentre il loro appello federale più ampio prosegue. La Decisione: la corte ha stabilito che le aziende non sono riuscite a dimostrare che procedere nei tribunali statali avrebbe causato "danni irreparabili". Le Scommesse: Questo mantiene alta la pressione su un settore in rapida crescita dei contratti sugli eventi, poiché gli stati sostengono che queste piattaforme assomigliano a un gioco d'azzardo illegale. La regolamentazione a livello statale sta diventando il più grande ostacolo per i mercati di previsione Web3? 🏛️$
#USCourtDeniesKalshiPolymarketPause Problema Legale per i Mercati di Previsione ⚖️
La Corte Rifiuta la Sospensione: Kalshi e Polymarket Devono Affrontare Cause Statali
Una corte d'appello federale degli Stati Uniti ha ufficialmente negato una richiesta di Kalshi e Polymarket per fermare le cause legali in corso in Nevada e Washington. La sentenza significa che queste piattaforme devono continuare a difendersi contro le rivendicazioni a livello statale mentre il loro appello federale più ampio prosegue.
La Decisione: la corte ha stabilito che le aziende non sono riuscite a dimostrare che procedere nei tribunali statali avrebbe causato "danni irreparabili".
Le Scommesse: Questo mantiene alta la pressione su un settore in rapida crescita dei contratti sugli eventi, poiché gli stati sostengono che queste piattaforme assomigliano a un gioco d'azzardo illegale.
La regolamentazione a livello statale sta diventando il più grande ostacolo per i mercati di previsione Web3? 🏛️$
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OpenLedger and the Strange Feeling That AI Might Finally Be Hitting the Same Wall. I've been aroundOpenLedger and the Strange Feeling That AI Might Finally Be Hitting the Same Wall. I've been around crypto long enough to stop reacting every time a project claims it is “redefining” something. Most of the time, those words are just recycled packaging around the same old incentives. New token, new branding, same underlying reality: a few insiders capture the value, the crowd provides liquidity, and eventually the narrative moves somewhere else. That’s probably why I’ve become slower to get excited about anything tied to AI lately. The space already feels overcrowded with oversized promises. Every week there’s another protocol claiming it will decentralize intelligence, tokenize agents, reinvent compute, or replace the internet itself. After a while it all blends together into the same background noise. But every now and then something catches my attention, not because I suddenly believe in it, but because it seems focused on a problem that actually exists. OpenLedger is one of those projects for me. I’m not saying it works. I’m not saying it wins. I’m not even saying the model is sustainable. I honestly don’t know yet. But I keep noticing that the underlying question it is asking feels more real than most of the AI narratives floating around crypto right now. The question is simple: if AI models are becoming some of the most valuable systems in the world, why does almost nobody know where the value actually comes from anymore? That sounds obvious at first, but the deeper you think about it, the stranger the entire AI economy starts to look. Most AI systems today are built on oceans of data gathered from people who usually never see compensation, ownership, or even acknowledgment. Writers, artists, researchers, forum users, developers, niche communities, random internet archives — all of it gets absorbed into models that eventually become products worth billions. And somehow everyone just accepted that this is normal. Maybe because the systems became too large to question. Maybe because the companies building them moved faster than regulation. Maybe because nobody could realistically track attribution once models reached a certain scale. That last part matters. For years, one of the biggest problems in AI has been attribution itself. Once a model trains on enough data, tracing influence becomes blurry. The entire thing turns into a black box. A useful black box sometimes, but still a black box. That’s the part OpenLedger keeps circling around with this idea of Proof of Attribution. The concept sounds almost too ambitious when you first read it. The protocol tries to connect model outputs back to the data that influenced them, then reward contributors proportionally through the network. I’ve seen crypto attempt similar things before in different forms. Music royalties. Creator economies. Storage incentives. Attention markets. Data marketplaces. Most of them eventually ran into the same wall: measuring contribution in a meaningful way is brutally hard.#OpenAIToConfidentiallyFileForIPO $OPEN {spot}(OPENUSDT) #

OpenLedger and the Strange Feeling That AI Might Finally Be Hitting the Same Wall. I've been around

OpenLedger and the Strange Feeling That AI Might Finally Be Hitting the Same Wall.
I've been around crypto long enough to stop reacting every time a project claims it is “redefining” something.
Most of the time, those words are just recycled packaging around the same old incentives. New token, new branding, same underlying reality: a few insiders capture the value, the crowd provides liquidity, and eventually the narrative moves somewhere else.
That’s probably why I’ve become slower to get excited about anything tied to AI lately. The space already feels overcrowded with oversized promises. Every week there’s another protocol claiming it will decentralize intelligence, tokenize agents, reinvent compute, or replace the internet itself. After a while it all blends together into the same background noise.
But every now and then something catches my attention, not because I suddenly believe in it, but because it seems focused on a problem that actually exists.
OpenLedger is one of those projects for me.
I’m not saying it works. I’m not saying it wins. I’m not even saying the model is sustainable. I honestly don’t know yet.
But I keep noticing that the underlying question it is asking feels more real than most of the AI narratives floating around crypto right now.
The question is simple: if AI models are becoming some of the most valuable systems in the world, why does almost nobody know where the value actually comes from anymore?
That sounds obvious at first, but the deeper you think about it, the stranger the entire AI economy starts to look.
Most AI systems today are built on oceans of data gathered from people who usually never see compensation, ownership, or even acknowledgment. Writers, artists, researchers, forum users, developers, niche communities, random internet archives — all of it gets absorbed into models that eventually become products worth billions.
And somehow everyone just accepted that this is normal.
Maybe because the systems became too large to question. Maybe because the companies building them moved faster than regulation. Maybe because nobody could realistically track attribution once models reached a certain scale.
That last part matters.
For years, one of the biggest problems in AI has been attribution itself. Once a model trains on enough data, tracing influence becomes blurry. The entire thing turns into a black box. A useful black box sometimes, but still a black box.
That’s the part OpenLedger keeps circling around with this idea of Proof of Attribution.
The concept sounds almost too ambitious when you first read it. The protocol tries to connect model outputs back to the data that influenced them, then reward contributors proportionally through the network.
I’ve seen crypto attempt similar things before in different forms. Music royalties. Creator economies. Storage incentives. Attention markets. Data marketplaces.
Most of them eventually ran into the same wall: measuring contribution in a meaningful way is brutally hard.#OpenAIToConfidentiallyFileForIPO $OPEN
#
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OpenLedger and the Strange Feeling That AI Might Finally Be Hitting the Same Wall. I've been aroundOpenLedger and the Strange Feeling That AI Might Finally Be Hitting the Same Wall. I've been around crypto long enough to stop reacting every time a project claims it is “redefining” something. Most of the time, those words are just recycled packaging around the same old incentives. New token, new branding, same underlying reality: a few insiders capture the value, the crowd provides liquidity, and eventually the narrative moves somewhere else. That’s probably why I’ve become slower to get excited about anything tied to AI lately. The space already feels overcrowded with oversized promises. Every week there’s another protocol claiming it will decentralize intelligence, tokenize agents, reinvent compute, or replace the internet itself. After a while it all blends together into the same background noise. But every now and then something catches my attention, not because I suddenly believe in it, but because it seems focused on a problem that actually exists. OpenLedger is one of those projects for me. I’m not saying it works. I’m not saying it wins. I’m not even saying the model is sustainable. I honestly don’t know yet. But I keep noticing that the underlying question it is asking feels more real than most of the AI narratives floating around crypto right now. The question is simple: if AI models are becoming some of the most valuable systems in the world, why does almost nobody know where the value actually comes from anymore? That sounds obvious at first, but the deeper you think about it, the stranger the entire AI economy starts to look. Most AI systems today are built on oceans of data gathered from people who usually never see compensation, ownership, or even acknowledgment. Writers, artists, researchers, forum users, developers, niche communities, random internet archives — all of it gets absorbed into models that eventually become products worth billions. And somehow everyone just accepted that this is normal. Maybe because the systems became too large to question. Maybe because the companies building them moved faster than regulation. Maybe because nobody could realistically track attribution once models reached a certain scale. That last part matters. For years, one of the biggest problems in AI has been attribution itself. Once a model trains on enough data, tracing influence becomes blurry. The entire thing turns into a black box. A useful black box sometimes, but still a black box. That’s the part OpenLedger keeps circling around with this idea of Proof of Attribution. The concept sounds almost too ambitious when you first read it. The protocol tries to connect model outputs back to the data that influenced them, then reward contributors proportionally through the network. I’ve seen crypto attempt similar things before in different forms. Music royalties. Creator economies. Storage incentives. Attention markets. Data marketplaces. Most of them eventually ran into the same wall: measuring contribution in a meaningful way is brutally hard.$OPEN {spot}(OPENUSDT) #OpenAIToConfidentiallyFileForIPO

OpenLedger and the Strange Feeling That AI Might Finally Be Hitting the Same Wall. I've been around

OpenLedger and the Strange Feeling That AI Might Finally Be Hitting the Same Wall.
I've been around crypto long enough to stop reacting every time a project claims it is “redefining” something.
Most of the time, those words are just recycled packaging around the same old incentives. New token, new branding, same underlying reality: a few insiders capture the value, the crowd provides liquidity, and eventually the narrative moves somewhere else.
That’s probably why I’ve become slower to get excited about anything tied to AI lately. The space already feels overcrowded with oversized promises. Every week there’s another protocol claiming it will decentralize intelligence, tokenize agents, reinvent compute, or replace the internet itself. After a while it all blends together into the same background noise.
But every now and then something catches my attention, not because I suddenly believe in it, but because it seems focused on a problem that actually exists.
OpenLedger is one of those projects for me.
I’m not saying it works. I’m not saying it wins. I’m not even saying the model is sustainable. I honestly don’t know yet.
But I keep noticing that the underlying question it is asking feels more real than most of the AI narratives floating around crypto right now.
The question is simple: if AI models are becoming some of the most valuable systems in the world, why does almost nobody know where the value actually comes from anymore?
That sounds obvious at first, but the deeper you think about it, the stranger the entire AI economy starts to look.
Most AI systems today are built on oceans of data gathered from people who usually never see compensation, ownership, or even acknowledgment. Writers, artists, researchers, forum users, developers, niche communities, random internet archives — all of it gets absorbed into models that eventually become products worth billions.
And somehow everyone just accepted that this is normal.
Maybe because the systems became too large to question. Maybe because the companies building them moved faster than regulation. Maybe because nobody could realistically track attribution once models reached a certain scale.
That last part matters.
For years, one of the biggest problems in AI has been attribution itself. Once a model trains on enough data, tracing influence becomes blurry. The entire thing turns into a black box. A useful black box sometimes, but still a black box.
That’s the part OpenLedger keeps circling around with this idea of Proof of Attribution.
The concept sounds almost too ambitious when you first read it. The protocol tries to connect model outputs back to the data that influenced them, then reward contributors proportionally through the network.
I’ve seen crypto attempt similar things before in different forms. Music royalties. Creator economies. Storage incentives. Attention markets. Data marketplaces.
Most of them eventually ran into the same wall: measuring contribution in a meaningful way is brutally hard.$OPEN
#OpenAIToConfidentiallyFileForIPO
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#openledger $OPEN {future}(OPENUSDT) OpenLedger and the Strange Feeling That AI Might Finally Be Hitting the Same Wall. I've been around crypto long enough to stop reacting every time a project claims it is “redefining” something. Most of the time, those words are just recycled packaging around the same old incentives. New token, new branding, same underlying reality: a few insiders capture the value, the crowd provides liquidity, and eventually the narrative moves somewhere else. That’s probably why I’ve become slower to get excited about anything tied to AI lately. The space already feels overcrowded with oversized promises. Every week there’s another protocol claiming it will decentralize intelligence, tokenize agents, reinvent compute, or replace the internet itself. After a while it all blends together into the same background noise. But every now and then something catches my attention, not because I suddenly believe in it, but because it seems focused on a problem that actually exists. OpenLedger is one of those projects for me. I’m not saying it works. I’m not saying it wins. I’m not even saying the model is sustainable. I honestly don’t know yet. But I keep noticing that the underlying question it is asking feels more real than most of the AI narratives floating around crypto right now. The question is simple: if AI models are becoming some of the most valuable systems in the world, why does almost nobody know where the value actually comes from anymore? That sounds obvious at first, but the deeper you think about it, the stranger the entire AI economy starts to look. Most AI systems today are built on oceans of data gathered from people who usually never see compensation, ownership, or even acknowledgment. Writers, artists, researchers, forum users, developers, niche communities, random internet archives — all of it gets absorbed into models that eventually become products worth billions. And somehow everyone just accepted that this is normal. Maybe because the systems became too large to question. Maybe because the companies.!
#openledger $OPEN
OpenLedger and the Strange Feeling That AI Might Finally Be Hitting the Same Wall.
I've been around crypto long enough to stop reacting every time a project claims it is “redefining” something.
Most of the time, those words are just recycled packaging around the same old incentives. New token, new branding, same underlying reality: a few insiders capture the value, the crowd provides liquidity, and eventually the narrative moves somewhere else.
That’s probably why I’ve become slower to get excited about anything tied to AI lately. The space already feels overcrowded with oversized promises. Every week there’s another protocol claiming it will decentralize intelligence, tokenize agents, reinvent compute, or replace the internet itself. After a while it all blends together into the same background noise.
But every now and then something catches my attention, not because I suddenly believe in it, but because it seems focused on a problem that actually exists.
OpenLedger is one of those projects for me.
I’m not saying it works. I’m not saying it wins. I’m not even saying the model is sustainable. I honestly don’t know yet.
But I keep noticing that the underlying question it is asking feels more real than most of the AI narratives floating around crypto right now.
The question is simple: if AI models are becoming some of the most valuable systems in the world, why does almost nobody know where the value actually comes from anymore?
That sounds obvious at first, but the deeper you think about it, the stranger the entire AI economy starts to look.
Most AI systems today are built on oceans of data gathered from people who usually never see compensation, ownership, or even acknowledgment. Writers, artists, researchers, forum users, developers, niche communities, random internet archives — all of it gets absorbed into models that eventually become products worth billions.
And somehow everyone just accepted that this is normal.
Maybe because the systems became too large to question. Maybe because the companies.!
Visualizza traduzione
$OPEN {spot}(OPENUSDT) #OpenAIToConfidentiallyFileForIPO OpenLedger and the Strange Feeling That AI Might Finally Be Hitting the Same Wall. I've been around crypto long enough to stop reacting every time a project claims it is “redefining” something. Most of the time, those words are just recycled packaging around the same old incentives. New token, new branding, same underlying reality: a few insiders capture the value, the crowd provides liquidity, and eventually the narrative moves somewhere else. That’s probably why I’ve become slower to get excited about anything tied to AI lately. The space already feels overcrowded with oversized promises. Every week there’s another protocol claiming it will decentralize intelligence, tokenize agents, reinvent compute, or replace the internet itself. After a while it all blends together into the same background noise. But every now and then something catches my attention, not because I suddenly believe in it, but because it seems focused on a problem that actually exists. OpenLedger is one of those projects for me. I’m not saying it works. I’m not saying it wins. I’m not even saying the model is sustainable. I honestly don’t know yet. But I keep noticing that the underlying question it is asking feels more real than most of the AI narratives floating around crypto right now. The question is simple: if AI models are becoming some of the most valuable systems in the world, why does almost nobody know where the value actually comes from anymore? That sounds obvious at first, but the deeper you think about it, the stranger the entire AI economy starts to look. Most AI systems today are built on oceans of data gathered from people who usually never see compensation, ownership, or even acknowledgment. Writers, artists, researchers, forum users, developers, niche communities, random internet archives — all of it gets absorbed into models that eventually become products worth billions. And somehow everyone just accepted that this is normal. Maybe because the systems became too large to question. Maybe because
$OPEN
#OpenAIToConfidentiallyFileForIPO OpenLedger and the Strange Feeling That AI Might Finally Be Hitting the Same Wall.
I've been around crypto long enough to stop reacting every time a project claims it is “redefining” something.
Most of the time, those words are just recycled packaging around the same old incentives. New token, new branding, same underlying reality: a few insiders capture the value, the crowd provides liquidity, and eventually the narrative moves somewhere else.
That’s probably why I’ve become slower to get excited about anything tied to AI lately. The space already feels overcrowded with oversized promises. Every week there’s another protocol claiming it will decentralize intelligence, tokenize agents, reinvent compute, or replace the internet itself. After a while it all blends together into the same background noise.
But every now and then something catches my attention, not because I suddenly believe in it, but because it seems focused on a problem that actually exists.
OpenLedger is one of those projects for me.
I’m not saying it works. I’m not saying it wins. I’m not even saying the model is sustainable. I honestly don’t know yet.
But I keep noticing that the underlying question it is asking feels more real than most of the AI narratives floating around crypto right now.
The question is simple: if AI models are becoming some of the most valuable systems in the world, why does almost nobody know where the value actually comes from anymore?
That sounds obvious at first, but the deeper you think about it, the stranger the entire AI economy starts to look.
Most AI systems today are built on oceans of data gathered from people who usually never see compensation, ownership, or even acknowledgment. Writers, artists, researchers, forum users, developers, niche communities, random internet archives — all of it gets absorbed into models that eventually become products worth billions.
And somehow everyone just accepted that this is normal.
Maybe because the systems became too large to question. Maybe because
ciao 👋
ciao 👋
AMITSolanki12
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Il 75% delle istituzioni finanziarie prevede di aumentare l'uso dell'IA per la rilevazione dei crimini.
I sistemi di rilevamento basati su IA di Binance hanno aiutato a proteggere i nostri utenti da potenziali perdite di 10,53 miliardi di dollari USA dal 2025 al primo trimestre del 2026.......
$LUNC sta ritracciando... e onestamente, è qui che si fanno i veri credenti. 👀🔥 Mentre gli altri entrano in panico ad ogni candela rossa, io vedo questo ritracciamento come un'opportunità. Ho appena aggiunto altro $LUNC perché il quadro generale non è ancora cambiato. La gente rideva quando parlavamo di obiettivi impossibili prima... Ora stanno osservando da vicino. 👀 Il sogno è ancora vivo: $0.5 per $LUNc Pazzesco? Forse. Impossibile? Nel crypto, niente è impossibile. 🚀 Un forte movimento di balena, un'enorme onda di burn, un ciclo di hype... e questo mercato può esplodere più velocemente di quanto la gente si aspetti. 💥 Dopo questa correzione, non sarei sorpreso di vedere LUNç spingersi verso la zona di $0.0003. Potrebbe scendere prima? Certo. Potrebbe pompare più forte di quanto chiunque si aspetti? Anche sì 😂 Questa è la bellezza del crypto — nessuno sa veramente cosa verrà dopo. La paura si trasforma in FOMO in pochi secondi. Le mani deboli escono durante le correzioni. Le mani forti costruiscono durante il silenzio. 💎 Sono ancora qui. Ancora holding. Ancora credendo. Chi sta ancora cavalcando con l'esercito $LUNC? 🔥🚀#LUNC #Binance #TrendingTopic #cryptouniverseofficial $BTC {future}(BTCUSDT) {spot}(LUNCUSDT)
$LUNC sta ritracciando... e onestamente, è qui che si fanno i veri credenti. 👀🔥
Mentre gli altri entrano in panico ad ogni candela rossa, io vedo questo ritracciamento come un'opportunità.
Ho appena aggiunto altro $LUNC perché il quadro generale non è ancora cambiato.
La gente rideva quando parlavamo di obiettivi impossibili prima...
Ora stanno osservando da vicino. 👀
Il sogno è ancora vivo:
$0.5 per $LUNc
Pazzesco? Forse.
Impossibile? Nel crypto, niente è impossibile. 🚀
Un forte movimento di balena, un'enorme onda di burn, un ciclo di hype... e questo mercato può esplodere più velocemente di quanto la gente si aspetti. 💥
Dopo questa correzione, non sarei sorpreso di vedere LUNç spingersi verso la zona di $0.0003.
Potrebbe scendere prima? Certo.
Potrebbe pompare più forte di quanto chiunque si aspetti? Anche sì 😂
Questa è la bellezza del crypto — nessuno sa veramente cosa verrà dopo.
La paura si trasforma in FOMO in pochi secondi.
Le mani deboli escono durante le correzioni.
Le mani forti costruiscono durante il silenzio. 💎
Sono ancora qui.
Ancora holding.
Ancora credendo.
Chi sta ancora cavalcando con l'esercito $LUNC? 🔥🚀#LUNC #Binance #TrendingTopic #cryptouniverseofficial $BTC
🇮🇷🇺🇸 L'IRAN RISPONDE ALLA PROPOSTA DI PACE DEGLI USA. OGGI Un memo di una pagina. 14 punti. L'Iran ferma l'arricchimento dell'uranio per oltre 12 anni. Gli USA sollevano le sanzioni. Hormuz riapre. La guerra finisce... in teoria. Il petrolio è sceso del 15% ieri. Poi ha recuperato metà. I mercati non sanno a cosa credere. Neanche gli altri.
🇮🇷🇺🇸 L'IRAN RISPONDE ALLA PROPOSTA DI PACE DEGLI USA. OGGI
Un memo di una pagina. 14 punti. L'Iran ferma l'arricchimento dell'uranio per oltre 12 anni. Gli USA sollevano le sanzioni. Hormuz riapre. La guerra finisce... in teoria.
Il petrolio è sceso del 15% ieri. Poi ha recuperato metà. I mercati non sanno a cosa credere. Neanche gli altri.
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Rialzista
#soolan # Avviso di cautela su #sol ⚠️ La blockchain di Solana è di nuovo a rischio. Sono avvenuti diversi attacchi informatici sulla rete #solana, e milioni sono stati rubati. Anche adesso, Solana non è completamente al sicuro. È stata pompata pesantemente, e sembra un pump fasullo. Prova a prendere una posizione short su #sol o evita di fare trading su #sol completamente fino a giugno, perché non è più affidabile. Vedrai #Sol dumpare così forte che la gente rimarrà scioccata nel vedere che ha la possibilità di tornare a $50.#SOL空投 {spot}(SOLUSDT)
#soolan # Avviso di cautela su #sol ⚠️
La blockchain di Solana è di nuovo a rischio. Sono avvenuti diversi attacchi informatici sulla rete #solana, e milioni sono stati rubati. Anche adesso, Solana non è completamente al sicuro. È stata pompata pesantemente, e sembra un pump fasullo. Prova a prendere una posizione short su #sol o evita di fare trading su #sol completamente fino a giugno, perché non è più affidabile. Vedrai #Sol dumpare così forte che la gente rimarrà scioccata nel vedere che ha la possibilità di tornare a $50.#SOL空投
Il 75% delle istituzioni finanziarie prevede di aumentare l'uso dell'IA per la rilevazione dei crimini. I sistemi di rilevamento basati su IA di Binance hanno aiutato a proteggere i nostri utenti da potenziali perdite di 10,53 miliardi di dollari USA dal 2025 al primo trimestre del 2026.......
Il 75% delle istituzioni finanziarie prevede di aumentare l'uso dell'IA per la rilevazione dei crimini.
I sistemi di rilevamento basati su IA di Binance hanno aiutato a proteggere i nostri utenti da potenziali perdite di 10,53 miliardi di dollari USA dal 2025 al primo trimestre del 2026.......
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Rialzista
#BullishIPO 🚨 NOTIZIE DELL'ULTIMA ORA | 16-08-2025 🚨 Il mondo della finanza sta nuovamente cambiando mentre entriamo in una nuova era di **IPO Ottimistiche**. Negli ultimi anni, i mercati tradizionali e le criptovalute hanno iniziato a fondersi, con aziende legate alla tecnologia blockchain che si preparano a diventare pubbliche su importanti borse. Un'IPO Ottimistica non rappresenta solo nuove quotazioni, ma rappresenta **una massiccia fiducia istituzionale** che affluisce nell'economia digitale. Quando un'azienda decide di lanciare un'IPO in questo clima, dimostra una forte fiducia nella crescita a lungo termine, nell'innovazione e nell'adozione di modelli di business basati su blockchain. Gli investitori stanno osservando attentamente, perché un'IPO Ottimistica può innescare nuovi **flussi di capitale**, creare nuove opportunità e aumentare la fiducia sia nei mercati delle criptovalute che in quelli azionari. Questo è più di una semplice quotazione: è un segnale che **il futuro della finanza è decentralizzato, digitale
#BullishIPO 🚨 NOTIZIE DELL'ULTIMA ORA | 16-08-2025 🚨
Il mondo della finanza sta nuovamente cambiando mentre entriamo in una nuova era di **IPO Ottimistiche**. Negli ultimi anni, i mercati tradizionali e le criptovalute hanno iniziato a fondersi, con aziende legate alla tecnologia blockchain che si preparano a diventare pubbliche su importanti borse. Un'IPO Ottimistica non rappresenta solo nuove quotazioni, ma rappresenta **una massiccia fiducia istituzionale** che affluisce nell'economia digitale. Quando un'azienda decide di lanciare un'IPO in questo clima, dimostra una forte fiducia nella crescita a lungo termine, nell'innovazione e nell'adozione di modelli di business basati su blockchain.
Gli investitori stanno osservando attentamente, perché un'IPO Ottimistica può innescare nuovi **flussi di capitale**, creare nuove opportunità e aumentare la fiducia sia nei mercati delle criptovalute che in quelli azionari. Questo è più di una semplice quotazione: è un segnale che **il futuro della finanza è decentralizzato, digitale
#CreatorPad 🚀 CreatorPad — una nuova era per i creatori su Binance Square Binance ha lanciato CreatorPad — una piattaforma che consente agli autori nel mondo delle criptovalute non solo di condividere contenuti, ma anche di guadagnare denaro per la loro creatività. 🔥 Cos'è? CreatorPad è un luogo dove i creatori completano compiti nell'ambito di campagne di progetti crypto e ricevono ricompense in token. Il sistema traccia automaticamente hashtag, menzioni e attività, e le valutazioni sono formate dalla qualità del contenuto, non dalla quantità. ⚡ Come funziona: 1. Scegli una campagna nel Creator Center → CreatorPad 2. Completa i compiti:
#CreatorPad 🚀 CreatorPad — una nuova era per i creatori su Binance Square
Binance ha lanciato CreatorPad — una piattaforma che consente agli autori nel mondo delle criptovalute non solo di condividere contenuti, ma anche di guadagnare denaro per la loro creatività.
🔥 Cos'è?
CreatorPad è un luogo dove i creatori completano compiti nell'ambito di campagne di progetti crypto e ricevono ricompense in token.
Il sistema traccia automaticamente hashtag, menzioni e attività, e le valutazioni sono formate dalla qualità del contenuto, non dalla quantità.
⚡ Come funziona:
1. Scegli una campagna nel Creator Center → CreatorPad
2. Completa i compiti:
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