What you need to know today in crypto and beyond May 11, 2021 Sponsored By: If you were forwarded this newsletter and would like to receive it, sign up here. Send feedback to [email protected] – we'd love to hear from you! Today's must-reads Top Shelf BITCOIN BACKED: Block.one has launched a $10 billion subsidiary, Bullish Global, that will build out a cryptocurrency exchange to launch this year. Project investors include Mike Novogratz and Peter Thiel, with an initial stake from Block.One of $100 million in cash, around $9 billion in bitcoin and just under $200 million in EOS. ‘OPEN FOR BUSINESS’: Palantir Technologies plans to accept bitcoin payments, CFO Dave Glazer said on Tuesday’s earnings call. The publicly traded surveillance company also has $151 million in adjusted free cash flow that could go toward bitcoin “and other investments,” Glazer said. EMERGING INTEREST: The Brooker Group, a publicly listed financial consultancy based in Thailand, will invest nearly $50 million in DeFi, dapps and at least 15 high-growth companies including Binance, Uniswap and Filecoin. A division lead said the choice was invest in emerging technologies “or risk being left behind as the sector matures.” Separately, DARMA is leading a $3 million seed round in NiiFi, a DEX building on an Ethereum layer 2. And Balancer announced version 2. ETF, CONSIDERED: Wise Origin, a fund affiliated with investment giant Fidelity’s bitcoin ETF application, has taken a step forward through the regulatory red tape. Cboe BZX Exchange has filed a corresponding application with the SEC for the investment product, opening the doors to being officially considered. Cboe is working with three other known BTC ETF applicants. COPYCATS? Traders are pumping the “DOGE killer” SHIB token. Apart from being modeled on the familiar Shiba Inu meme, not much is known about the token – which was listed on Binance, Huobi and OKEx – including its dev team or current total circulating token supply (which has a ceiling of 1 quadrillion). Separately, Elon Musk queried Crypto Twitter whether Tesla should accept dogecoin. Despite being a punchline, compliance firm TRM Labs is taking DOGE seriously, announcing fraud and financial crime analytics for the Dogecoin blockchain. – Daniel Kuhn A message from Nexo Your digital assets deserve a savings account in their BEST INTEREST. 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Off-Chain Signals Dfinity's ICP token sees violent first day of trade on major exchanges (Cointelegraph); its competitive position covered in Financial Times “[T]housands of years of history give it solid support, but it is possible that the rush to bitcoin could disrupt it,” WSJ’s James Mackintosh in his latest column, "If Inflation Is Coming, Here Is What to Do About It" A quick guide to building a modern crypto mining computer (Thomas Smith) NFT, abbreviation or noun. Merriam-Webster defined the term and is launching an NFT of its definition Mark Zuckerberg named his goats “Max” and “Bitcoin” –D.K. A message from Lisk Lisk.js 2021 is a free online event organized by Lisk, an open-source blockchain application platform. The two-day virtual event, open to all developers, blockchain enthusiasts and community members globally, will set the stage for the major reveal of Lisk's Interoperability solution. Developers can expect to learn how to develop a blockchain application with Lisk SDK in JavaScript, attend in-depth talks on blockchain interoperability, and get inspired by community members who have already built blockchain applications on Lisk. A message from CoinDesk Introducing Unlocked 101 at Consensus by CoinDesk 2021 New to crypto? Here's a crash course. Unlocked 101 is a free educational series of sessions designed to give you the tools to navigate crypto. Sessions will be hosted May 4–20 to prepare you for Consensus by CoinDesk 2021, our virtual big-tent event. Register for Unlocked 101 this May. Sponsored Content CME Group: An Exploration of the CME Group's New Micro Bitcoin Futures At 1/10 the size of one bitcoin, Micro Bitcoin futures allow investors to fine-tune their bitcoin exposure and to enhance their trading strategies. Here's how to trade them. Putting the news in perspective The Takeaway Million-Dollar Idea? There are plenty of million-dollar ideas in crypto, a movement that is trying to rebuild and reimagine everything digital. This development process is ad hoc, with individuals, companies and loosely affiliated teams identifying and executing on areas where crypto assets may, one day, offer greater access to, and ownership in, the digital economy. But this ambitious, mostly leaderless, multi-year process, touching everything from basic financial services to the internet architecture itself, sometimes runs in circles. In March, conceptual artist and graphic designer Ryder Ripps, 34, announced his latest crypto-based effort, Million Token Website, built with his 16-year-old brother, Ezra. The concept is simple: An open-access, million-pixel canvas that allows nearly anyone or anything with a MetaMask wallet, at least .001 ETH and an idea to draw a picture on a plot of digital land. “Think of it as a new and improved version of the 2005 website, Million Dollar Homepage,” the brothers wrote on the project’s webpage. The “homepage” they reference was built by a British business student, Alex Tew, as a way to raise funds for college. The young entrepreneur had the idea to sell pixels – $1 per dot in 10-by-10 blocks. It became a phenomenon, spreading first by word of mouth and then by media coverage. People crowded in. The grid filled out into a technicolor mosaic of advertisements, personal messages and digital graffiti. It was another signal that online real-estate was actually worth something. “To buy a block of pixels was, in theory, to leave one’s mark on a collective accomplishment reflective of the internet’s enormous power to connect people and generate value,” UC-Santa Barbara Professor John Bowers wrote of the project in the Harvard Business Review in 2017. All said and done, Tew raised $1,037,100 (the last 1,000 pixels were auctioned on eBay for $38,100) and secured a position in the pantheon of early Web 2.0 experiments. The mosaic and webpage have remained online, more or less untouched, though a number of the images suffer from link rot. Over the years, Million Dollar Homepage inspired a number of copycats. The Ripps brothers present just the latest in that lineage – though this time bringing the experiment into the world of crypto. It uses Ethereum-based NFTs and its own LAND token to extend actual ownership over these digital plots. Instead of a static webpage that will exist as long as Tew is willing to pay domain hosting fees, the Ripps brothers hope their effort will continue to evolve and remain relevant over time. While the Ripps brothers own the domain name, which isn’t mirrored on Web 3.0 tools like IPFS or ENS, the actual grid units are owned by participants. (They also maintain control the NFT minting process, and have the ability rewrite obscene or illegal material.) People can sell or trade their tokens and overwrite their images whenever they please. The Ripps call it a model for the future of the ownership web. “We’re trying to do something that is much more community-driven and collaborative,” Ezra said in an interview. “NFTs are about ownership. We’re creating a visualization of [that process].” “The times are changing towards decentralized platforms and towards cryptocurrency,” Ryder added. About 25% complete at time of writing, the brothers may raise a total of 1,000 ETH for their efforts. That would bring in over $4 million worth of crypto, if current ether prices hold. Not bad for a sequel. Like the original homepage from which their project draws inspiration, the Ripps brothers view Million Token Webpage as a potentially historic statement. They admit the vision is limited (a canvas won’t change the world in itself) but it represents a shifting tide: a vision of the web that is even more commercialized, though with profits accruing to individuals rather than “FAANG” corporations. Many of the early adopters see this, too. “It's significance is evident through the involvement of such important artists and collectors in the NFT space in this space,” a representative for Art on Internet, an NFT collective, said over Telegram. Decentralized exchange SushiSwap, crypto-focused venture firm Future Fund and Adidas are among the early users. Much of Ryder’s body of work has blurred the line between commerce and high art. He’s contemporaries with people like Beeple and Jeff Koons, whose greater statement is less about what a painting or sculpture says, than the price someone is willing to pay for it. “Art is supposed to change your perception of what is possible in reality, whether that's someone who can paint in a way that is unbelievable, [or] in a way that you've never thought about it before,” the elder Ripps said. One take here is that companies like Adidas or the artistic director of Louis Vuitton's menswear collection, Virgil Abloh, are willing to bet on “bleeding edge” tech. Another is that the Million Token Website shows the limits of digital culture. Hauntology is the idea the present cannot escape the shadow of the past, that the reason there are more blockbuster movie sequels than original scripts; that fashion routinely digs up trends from the 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, 1990s; that computer images rely on skeuomorphic design is because we’ve lost the ability to imagine anything new. “It's kind of naive to think that there is truly original design,” Ryder said. “You can't ‘invent’ something anymore, it feels like it's all been done,” 9272, a pseudonymous investor, said. Crypto may present a way out. But it’s worth asking, is Million Token Website a homage or hustle? –D.K. The Chaser... ATTENTION: Scammers have been sending fraudulent emails with links to sites disguised to look like coindesk.com. If you are in doubt about a link, type https://www.coindesk.com directly into your browser; do not copy and paste. Remember, if something seems too good to be true, it probably is. 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