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Web3, Blockchain, and Crypto Weekly Update: Major News, Market Trends, and Key Insights

Chain Feed Staff

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Web3, Blockchain, and Crypto Weekly Update: Major News, Market Trends, and Key Insights

Welcome to your go-to source for all things Web3, Blockchain and Crypto! Our Weekly report dives into the freshest updates and game-changing developments in the fast-paced world. We curate the best data from trusted sources to keep you ahead of the curve. Ready to stay informed and inspired? Let’s explore the latest trends and insights together! 

1. Web3, Blockchain & Crypto Breaking News This Week

Here are the major breaking news reports, related to the Web3, Blockchain and crypto world, reported this week. 

  • Consumer Price Index Rises to 3.4% in April; Bitcoin Price Surges to $64k

The Consumer Price Index increased by 3.4% over the past year, exceeding expectations of a 2.9% rise. Parallely, Bitcoin’s price jumped to $64,000.

  • Senate Passes Bill Overturning SEC’s Crypto Guidelines

The Senate passed H.J. res, 109 to overturn SEC’s guidelines on cryptocurrency accounting, potentially allowing banks to hold Bitcoin and other digital assets. President Biden may veto the bill, adding uncertainty to the regulatory landscape.

  • El Salvador Mines Bitcoin Using Volcanic Geothermal Energy

El Salvador has mined 474 Bitcoins, worth $29 million, using geothermal energy from the Tecapa volcano. The country’s total Bitcoin holdings are now 5,750, valued at $354 million, showcasing a green approach to accumulating cryptocurrency.

  • Binance Executive Denied Bail in Nigerian Court Case

Justice Emeka Nwite denied bail to Tigran Gambaryan, a Binance executive accused of money laundering and tax violations in Nigeria. The legal proceedings highlight the regulatory challenges facing major cryptocurrency companies.

  • Bill Proposed to Abolish Federal Reserve Amid Inflation

Representative Thomas Massie introduced a bill to abolish the Federal Reserve, blaming its policies for high inflation. He argues that the Fed’s actions during the COVID-19 pandemic devalued the dollar, pushing people towards cryptocurrencies as alternative stores of value.  

2. Blockchain Weekly Analysis

The blockchain weekly analysis primarily covers the blockchain dominance analysis and the blockchain 7-day change analysis. In order to bring more clarity, the Layer 1 chains and Layer 2 chains are analysed separately. 

2.1. Blockchain Dominance Analysis

Ethereum, TRON, BNB Smart chain, Solana, and Arbitrum One are the top five blockchains as per dominance and TVL.  

Blockchains Dominance TVL
Ethereum 60.71% $52,713,518,411
TRON 9.92% $8,610,792,735
BNB Smart Chain 6.98% $6,059,524,171
Solana 5.22% $4,528,351,343
Arbitrum One 3.04% $2,641,783,459

Among the top five chains, Ethereum dominates with 60.71%. TRON and BNB Smart Chain follow with 9.92% and 6.98%. Solana has a dominance of 5.22% and Arbitrum One 3.04%. 

2.1.1. Top Five Layer 1 Chains By Dominance

Ethereum, BNB Smart Chain, Solana, Bitcoin and Avalanche are the top five Later 1 Blockchains. 

Layer 1 Blockchains Dominance TVL
Ethereum 77.31% $52,646,879,307
BNB Smart Chain 8.89% $6,051,863,873
Solana 6.64% $4,522,626,716
Bitcoin 1.64% $1,115,232,049
Avalanche 1.38% $942,995,040

Among the top five Layer 1 chains, Ethereum dominates with a dominance of 77.31%. BNB Smart Chain and Solana follow with 8.89% and 6.64%, respectively. Bitcoin marks 1.64% dominance, and Avalanche registers 1.38% dominance. 

2.1.2. Top Five Layer 2 Chains By Dominance

Arbitrum One, Base, Blast, Polygon POS, and Optimism are the top five Layer 2 Blockchains. 

Layer 2 Blockchains Dominance TVL
Arbitrum One 29.85% $2,635,176,183
Base 17.29% $1,526,465,299
Blast 17.08% $1,508,006,967
Polygon POS 10.19% $899,505,619
Optimism 8.83% $779,597,461

Among the top five Layer 2 chains, Arbitrum One dominates with a dominance of 29.85%. Base and Blast closely follow with 17.29% and 17.08%, respectively. Polygon POS marks a dominance of 10.19%, and Optimism records a dominance of 8.83%. 

2.2. Blockchain 7-Day Change Analysis

Let’s analyse the top five Layer 1 chains using the 7-day change index. 

Layer 1 Blockchains 7-Day Change
Ethereum -1.8%
BNB Smart Chain -3.4%
Solana +9.5%
Bitcoin -7.0%
Avalanche +1.6%

Among the top five chains, only Solana and Avalanche show positive changes. Solana registers the highest positive change of +9.5%, while Avalanche records an moderate positive change of +1.6%. Bitcoin showcases the highest negative change of -7.0%. BNB smart Chain and Ethereum mark moderate negative changes of -3.4% and -1.8%, respectively. 

Let’s analyse the top five Layer 2 chains using the 7-day change index. 

Layer 2 Blockchains 7-Day Change
Arbitrum One +0.9%
Base -2.3%
Blast -0.1%
Polygon POS -0.4%
Optimism -8.3%

Among the top five Layer 2 chains, only Arbitrum One displays a positive change; it records a very moderate positive change of +0.9%. The highest negative change is shown by Optimism, with -8.3% change. Base shows a moderate change of -2.3%. Polygon POS and Blast showcase very moderate changes of -0.4% and -0.1%. 

3. Cryptocurrency Weekly Analysis

The Cryptocurrency Weekly analysis covers a wide range of analyses, from the general cryptocurrency market cap analysis and the top gainers and losers analysis to the Stabelcoin, Memecoin, AI Coins and Metaverse Coins analyses.  

3.1. Top Cryptocurrency Categories By Market Cap

Layer 1 (LI), Smart Contract Platform, Andreessen Horowitz (a16z) Portfolio, Alameda Research Portfolio, and Alleged SEC Securities are the top five cryptocurrency categories by Market Cap. The Layer 1 (L1) category, with $1,975,884,413,592 market cap, is the one with the highest market cap. The Smart Contract Platform category follows with $678,209,531,506.     

Crypto Categories Market Cap 7-Day Change
Layer 1 (L1) $1,975,884,413,592 +3.6%
Smart Contract Platform $678,209,531,506 +1.1%
Andreessen Horowitz (a16z) Portfolio $529,706,320,259 +1.5%
Alameda Research Portfolio $476,950,967,546 +1.4%
Alleged SEC Securities $254,824,240,832 +2.7%

Among the top five crypto categories, Layer 1 (L1) marks the highest 7-day change of +3.6%. Alleged SEC Securities closely follows with +2.7%. Andreessen Horowitz (a16z) Portfolio, Alameda Research Portfolio, and Smart Contract Platform record +1.5%, +1.4% and +1.1% change, respectively.  

Wall Street Bets Themed Coins, Parody Meme Coins, PolitiFi, Base Meme Coins, Cat-Themed Coins, and DePIN are the most trending categories this week.    

Trending Categories Market Cap
Wall Street Bets Themed Coins $59.4M
Parody Meme Coins $496M
PolitiFi $819M
Base Meme Coins $942M
Cat-Themed Coins $1.74B
DePIN $29.3B

Among the trending categories, DePIN stands out as it has an impressive market cap of $29.3B, which is the highest among the six. Cat-themed coins follow with a market cap of $1.74B. Base Meme Coins and PolitiFi record $942M and $819M market cap, respectively. Parody Meme Coins and Wall Street Bets Themed Coins register $496M and $59.4M market cap, respectively.   

3.2. Top Cryptocurrencies By Market Cap

Bitcoin, Ethereum, Tether, BNB, and Solana are the top five cryptocurrencies by market cap. Bitcoin has the highest market cap of $1,308,281,130,156. Ethereum follows with a market cap of $364,014,920,398. 

Cryptocurrencies Market Cap 7-Day Change
Bitcoin $1,308,281,130,156 +5.2%
Ethereum $364,014,920,398 -0.7%
Tether $111,655,892,722 +0.3%
BNB $89,098,450,093 -2.8%
Solana $75,786,549,695 +9.0%

Among the top five cryptos, Solana, Bitcoin and Tether show positive changes this week. Solana marks the highest 7-day change of +9.0%. Bitcoin follows with a change of +5.2%. Tether shows a moderate change of +0.3%. BNB and Etheruem display negative changes. BNB records a negative change of -2.8%, and Ethereum a very moderate negative change of -0.7%. 

Apu Apustaja, Drift Protocol, Brett, Ondo, and Toncoin are the most trending cryptocurrencies at the time of preparing this analysis.  

Trending Cryptocurrencies Market Cap
Apu Apustaja $286,023,118
Drift Protocol $54,742,896
Brett $360,132,340
Ondo $1,353,833,209
Toncoin $23,478,151,394

Among the trending cryptos, Toncoin has the highest market cap of $23,478,151,394. Ondo follows with $1,353,833,209. Brett and Apu Apustaja show $360,132,340 and $286,023,118, respectively. Drift Protocol displays the lowest market cap of $54,742,896. 

3.2.2. Top Gainers & Losers This Week

GME, MAGA VP, SIPHER, ConstitutionDAO, and Spectral are the top gainers of the week as per the 7-day gain index.  

Top Gainers 7-Day Gain
GME +1222.2%
MAGA VP +185.2%
SIPHER +161.5%
ConstitutionDAO +81.0%
Spectral +68.1%

GME records the highest gain of +1222.2%. MAGA VP and SIPHER follow with +185.2% and +161.5%, respectively. ConstitutionDAO and Spectral record +81.0% and +68.1% gain, respectively.  

Shark Cat, ALEX Lab, PunkCity, NORMIE, and Entangle are the top losers of the week as per the 7-day loss index.   

Top Losers 7-Day Loss
Shark Cat -46.5%
ALEX Lab -40.5%
PunkCity -37.8%
NORMIE -35.7%
Entangle -35.7%

Shark Cat displays the highest loss of -46.5%. ALEX Lab and PunkCity closely follow with -40.5% and -37.8%, respectively. Both NORMIE and Entangle mark -a 35.7% loss.   

3.3. Top Stablecoins Analysis

Tether, USDC, Dai, First Digital USD, and Ethena USDe are the top five stablecoins as per market cap.  

Stablecoins Market Cap
Tether $111,404,518,043
USDC $33,344,450,829
Dai $5,454,605,060
First Digital USD $3,611,060,209
Ethena USDe $2,349,531,273

Tether has the highest market cap of $111,404,518,043. USDC and Dai follow with $33,344,450,829, and $5,454,605,060 market cap, respectively. First Digital USD registers a market cap of $3,611,060,209, and Ethena USDe records a market cap of $2,349,531,273.  

3.4. Top Memecoins 7-Day Change Analysis

Dogecoin, Shiba Inu, Pepe, dogwifhat, FLOKI are the top five Memecoins as per market cap. Dogecoin has the highest market cap of $22,198,117,707. Shiba Inu and Pepe follow with $14,672,691,432 and $4,284,171,989 market cap, respectively. 

Memecoins Market Cap 7-Day Change
Dogecoin $22,198,117,707 +0.7%
Shiba Inu $14,672,691,432 +5.6%
Pepe $4,284,171,989 +17.5%
dogwifhat $2,876,263,223 -9.8%
FLOKI $2,070,321,488 +18.0%

Among the top five Memecoins, only dogwifhat shows a negative 7-day change. FLOKI displays the highest positive change of +18.2%. Pepe closely follows with +17.5%. Shiba Inu marks a change of +5.6%. Dogecoin showcases a moderate positive change of +0.7%. Conversely, dogewifhat records a negative change of -9.8%. 

3.5. Top AI Coins 7-Day Change Analysis

Internet Computer, Fetch-ai, Render, The Graph, and Bittensor are the top five AI Coins as per market cap. Internet Computer has the highest market cap of $6,042,458,734. Fetch-ai and Render closely follow with $5,781,641,812 and $3,959,699,597 market cap, respectively.  

AI Coins Market Cap 7-Day Change
Internet Computer $6,042,458,734 +4.9%
Fetch-ai $5,781,641,812 -1.0%
Render $3,959,699,597 -10.1%
The Graph $2,950,787,914 +1.9%
Bittensor $2,614,077,112 -2.1%

Among the top five AI coins, only two display positive changes this week. Internet Computer marks a positive 7-day change of +4.9%. The Graph shows a moderate positive change of +1.9%. Render records the highest negative change of -10.1%. Bittensor and Fetch-ai follow with -2.1% and -1.0%. 

3.6. Top Metaverse Coins 7-Day Change Analysis

Render, FLOKI, Axie Infinity, The Sandbox, and Decentraland are the top five Metaverse Coins on the basis of market cap. Render has the highest market cap of $3,961,011,301. FLOKI, Axie Infinity, and The Sandbox closely follow with $2,057,557,670, $1,064,252,244, and $1,009,956,073 market cap, respectively. 

Metaverse Coins Market Cap 7-Day Change
Render $3,961,011,301 -10.5%
FLOKI $2,057,557,670 +18.0%
Axie Infinity $1,064,252,244 -5.0%
The Sandbox $1,009,956,073 -0.9%
Decentraland $814,803,203 -1.0%

Among the top five metaverse coins, only FLOKI shows a positive 7-day change; it records a change of +18.0%. Render, showing -10.5% change, registers the highest negative change. Axie Infinity showcases a change of -5.0%. Decentraland (-1.0% change) and The Sandbox (-0.9% change) only display moderate negative changes.  

4. Crypto ETF Weekly Analysis

The crypto ETF weekly analysis covers Bitcoin Spot ETFs, Bitcoin Futures ETFs, and Ethereum Futures ETFs. 

4.1. Bitcoin Spot ETF Price Change Analysis

GBTC, IBIT, FBTC, ARKB and BITB are the top five Bitcoin Spot ETFs based on Asset Under Management. GBTC marks the highest AUM of $24.33 billion. IBIT closely follows with an AUM of $17.24 billion. 

Bitcoin Spot ETFs Price Change AUM
Grayscale (GBTC) $58.02 -1.36% $24.33B
BlackRock (IBIT) $37.15 -1.38% $17.24B
Fidelity (FBTC) $57.02 -1.43% $9.90B
Ark/21 Shares (ARKB) $65.22 -1.27% $2.85B
Bitwise (BITB) $35.53 -1.47% $2.16B

Among the top five Bitcoin Spot ETFs, none display positive changes. BITB shows the highest negative change of -1.47%. FBTC closely follows with -1.43%. IBIT and GBTC mark -1.38% and -1.36% change, respectively. 

4.2. Bitcoin Futures ETF Price Change Analysis

BITO, XBTF, BTF, BITS, and ARKA are the top five Bitcoin Futures ETFs as per Asset Under Management.

Bitcoin Futures ETFs Price Change AUM
ProShares (BITO) $26.49 -1.30% $598.78M
VanEck (XBTF) $39.22 +0.33% $42.41M
Valkyrie (BTF) $18.25 -1.93% $38.20M
Global X (BITS) $64.10 -0.94% $26.10M
Ark/21 Shares (ARKA) $62.17 -1.52% $8.10M

Among the top five Bitcoin Futures ETFs, only XBTF displays a positive change of +0.33%. The highest negative change is shown by BTF. ARKA and BITO closely follow with -1.52% and -1.30% change, respectively. BITS marks a moderate negative change of -0.94%.  

4.3. Ethereum Futures ETF Price Change Analysis

BITW, BTF, EFUT, EETH, and AETH are the top five Ethereum Futures ETFs based on Asset Under Management. 

Ethereum Futures ETFs Price Change AUM
Bitwise (BITW) $31.55 -1.31% $478.00M
Valkyrie (BTF) $18.25 -1.93% $25.93M
VanEck (EFUT) $24.16 -1.88% $7.84M
ProShares (EETH) $63.87 -2.86% $6.43M
Bitwise (AETH) $38.69 -2.73% $585.75K

Among the top five Ethereum Futures ETFs, none record positive changes. The highest negative change is displayed by EETH (-2.86%). AETH closely follows with -2.73%. BTF and EFUT record -1.93% and -1.88% change, respectively. BITW registers a change of -1.31%. 

5. DeFi Protocols Weekly Analysis

Lido, EigenLayer, AAVE, Maker and JustLend are the top five DeFi protocols as per Total Value Locked. 

DeFi Protocols TVL 7-Day Change
Lido $28.549B +0.12%
EigenLayer $14.919B -0.67%
AAVE $10.936B +2.77%
Maker $8.25B +0.61%
JustLend $6.431B +4.07%

Among the top five DeFi Protocols, all of them show positive 7-day changes except Eigen Layer, which records a negative change of -0.67%. The highest positive change is shown by JustLend, which registers a change of +4.07%. AAVE follows with a change of +2.77%. Maker and Lido display moderate positive changes of +0.61% and +0.12%. 

6. Crypto Exchange Weekly Analysis

6.1. Top Crypto Centralised Exchanges

Based on monthly visits, Binance, Coinbase Exchange, Bybit, OKK, and WhiteBIT are the top five crypto centralised exchanges. 

Crypto Centralised Exchanges Monthly Visits Trust Score
Binance 101M 9/10
Coinbase Exchange 65.7M 10/10
Bybit 39.1M 10/10
OKK 30.5M 10/10
WhiteBIT 22.9M 8/10

Binance records the highest monthly visit of 101M. Coinbase Exchange follows with 65.7M. Bybit and OKK record 39.1M and 30.5M monthly visits. WhiteBIT registers 22.9M monthly visits. 

Among the top crypto centralised exchanges, at least three, Coinbase Exchange, Bybit and OKK have the impressive trust score of 10/10. Binace has a trust score of 9/10, and WhiteBIT has a score of 8/10. 

6.2. Top Crypto Decentralised Exchanges

Uniswap V3 (Ethereum), Uniswap V3 (Arbitrum One), Uniswap V2 (Ethereum), Uniswap V3 (Polygon), and Uniswap V3 (Optimism) are the top five crypto decentralised exchanges on the basis of Market Share by Volume.   

Crypto Decentralised Exchanges % Market Share by Volume 24-Hour Volume
Uniswap V3 (Ethereum) 15.6% $875,859,638
Uniswap V3 (Arbitrum One) 4.9% $275,170,379
Uniswap V2 (Ethereum) 2.0% $113,110,402
Uniswap V3 (Polygon) 1.7% $92,957,905
Uniswap V3 (Optimism) 1.0% $56,123,372

Uniswap V3 (Ethereum) has the highest market share by volume of 15.6%. Uniswap V3 (Arbitrum One) and Uniswap V2 (Ethereum) follow with 4.9% and 2.0%, respectively. Uniswap V3 (Polygon) marks 1.7% market share by volume, and Uniswap V3 (Optimism) records the market share by volume of 1.0%.  

6.3. Top Crypto Derivative Exchanges

Binance (Futures), Bybit(Futures), BYDFi (Futures), Bitget Futures and Deepcoin (Derivatives) are the top five crypto derivative exchanges by 24-hour open interest. 

Crypto Derivative Exchanges 24-Hour Open Interest 24-Hour Volume
Binance (Futures) $17,732,368,644 $56,137,133,472
Bybit (Futures) $11,931,914,631 $17,252,999,974
BYDFi (Futures) $9,735,334,808 $21,186,587,860
Bitget Futures $9,455,430,822 $16,609,950,961
Deepcoin (Derivatives) $9,330,882,218 $7,809,727,287

Binance (Futures) displays the highest 24-hour Open Interest of $17,732,368,644. Bybit (Futures) and BYDFi (Futures) follow with $11,931,914,631 and $9,735,334,808, respectively. Bitget Futures and Deepcoin (Derivatives) register $9,455,430,822 and $9,330,882,218 open interest, respectively.   

Among the top five crypto derivatives exchanges, Binance (Futures) shows the highest 24-hour Volume of $56,137,133,472. BYDFi (Futures) follows with $21,186,587,860 volume. Bybit (Futures) and Bitget Futures register $17,252,999,974 and $16,609,950,961 in volume, respectively.   

7. NFT Marketplace Weekly Analysis

Blur, Blur Aggregator, Cryptopunks, X2Y2, and Gem are the top five NFT Marketplaces by Market Share. Blur has the highest market share of 64.32%. Blur Aggregator and Cryptopunks follow with 24.87% and 3.25% market share respectively. 

NFT Marketplaces Market Share Volume Change (Change of last 7-D Volume over the Previous 7-D Volume)
Blur 64.32% -1.41%
Blur Aggregator 27.87% -5.86%
Cryptopunks 3.25% -1.20%
X2Y2 2.58% -12.94%
Gem 0.73% -34.97%

Among the top five NFT Marketplaces, none shows positive volume changes. The highest negative volume change is shown by Gem, which records a change of -34.97%. X2Y2 follows with -12.94%. Blur Aggregator displays a change of -5.86%. Blur and Cryptopunks mark changes of -1.41% and -1.20%, respectively. 

7.1. Top NFT Collectibles This Week

CryptoPunks #741, $ORDI BRC-20 NFTs #88159, CryptoPunks #3619, Lasogette NFT #802, and Bored Ape Yacht Club #7616 are the top NFT collectibles based on Price. 

NFT Collectibles Price
CryptoPunks #741 $792,046.13
$ORDI BRC-20 NFTs #88159 $681,497.38
CryptoPunks #3619 $627,990.88
Lasogette NFT #802 $273,036.16
Bored Ape Yacht Club #7616 $248,797.03

CryptoPunks #741 is priced at $792,046.13. $ORDI BRC-20 NFTs #88159 costs $681,497.38. CryptoPunks #3619, Lasogette NFT #802, and Bored Ape Yacht Club #7616 are priced at $627,990.88, $273,036.16, and $248,797.03, respectively.    

8. Web3, Blockchain & Crypto Funding Analysis

8.1. Crypto Fundraising Trend

Week Funds Raised Number of Fundraising Rounds
May 13-19, 2024 $155.40M 25
May 6-12, 2024 $149.60M 37

This week, nearly $155.40M has been raised so far. It has already crossed the previous week’s $149.60M. 

8.2. Most Active Investors This Week

Animoca Brands, P2 Ventures (Polygon Ventures), Unicorn Factory Ventures, Double Peak and NXGen are the most active investors this week, based on Deals.   

Investors (or Fund’s Name) Deals (12 May – 17 May, 2024) Investments Lead Investments
Animoca Brands 4 2 2
P2 Ventures (Polygon Ventures) 3 3 0
Unicorn Factory Ventures 2 2 0
Double Peak 2 2 0
NXGen 2 1 1

Animoca Brands records the highest number of deals of 4; out of these deals, 2 are normal investments and 2 are lead investments. P2 Ventures (Polygon Ventures) follows with three deals – all of them are normal investments. Unicorn Factory Ventures and Double Peak register 2 deals each – none of them are lead investments. Notably, NXGen marks one normal investment and one lead investment – a total of two deals. 

8.3. Crypto Fundraising By Category

Blockchain Infrastructure, Blockchain Services, CeFi, Chain, DeFi, GameFi, and Social are the categories raised funds this week. 

Category Number of Fundraising Rounds (May 13-19, 24) Funds Raised
Blockchain Infrastructure 4 $40.05M
Blockchain Services 3 $6.20M
CeFi 1 $2.70M
Chain 1 $15.00M
DeFi 9 $69.55M
GameFi 5 $15.10M
Social 2 $6.80M

DeFi raised the highest amount of $69.55M. Blockchain Infrastructure, GameFi and Chain follow with $40.05M, $15.10M, and $15.00M. 

8.4. Top Crypto Investment Locations

Apart from Undisclosed, the United States, Singapore and France are the top crypto investment locations, on the basis of funds raised.  

Investment Location Funds Raised (May 12 – 17, 2024) Funds Raised % Number of Rounds
Undisclosed $87.10M 56% 16
United States $56.20M 36% 5
Singapore $9.50M 6% 2
France $2.60M 2% 1

When the category of undisclosed raised over $87.10M, the US amassed an amount of $56.20M. Singapore and France collected $9.50M and $2.60M, respectively.   

8.5. Most Active Crypto VC Jurisdictions

The US, the UK, the UAE, Singapore and China are the most active crypto venture capital jurisdictions.  

Crypto VC Jurisdiction Number of Projects (May 12 – 17, 2024)
United States 53
United Kingdom 11
United Arab Emirates 11
Singapore 6
China 6

The US registers the highest number of projects 53. The United Kingdom and the United Arab Emirates follow with 11 each. Singapore and China recorded 6 each. 

9. Web 3, Blockchain & Crypto Hack Updates

The total value of hacked is $8.75 billion. The total value hacked in DeFi is $5.92B and Total Value Hacked in Bridges is $2.83 billion. 

Total Value Hacked $8.75B

Total Value Hacked in DeFi$5.92BTotal Value Hacked in Bridges $2.83B

Project Name Amount Lost Date
Sonne Finance $20M 15 May, 2024

A hack was reported in Sonne Finance on 15th May, 2024 – the first reported this month. A huge amount of $20 million was lost due to the hack. 

Endnote

This report provides a comprehensive analysis of the current performance of various blockchains and cryptocurrencies, including Bitcoin, Altcoins, Stablecoins, AI Coins, Memecoins and Metaverse. It highlights trending coins, top gainers and losers, and delves into Crypto ETFs such as Bitcoin Spot ETFS, Bitcoin Futures ETFs, and Ethereum Futures ETFs. Additionally, it examines centralised, decentralised, and derivatives crypto exchanges, DeFi protocols, and NFT marketplaces. The report also covers crypto fundraising activities, prominent investors, key investment locations, and notable crypto hacks reported lately.  

Fuente

We are the editorial team of Chain Feed Staff, where seriousness meets clarity in cryptocurrency analysis. With a robust team of finance and blockchain technology experts, we are dedicated to meticulously exploring complex crypto markets with detailed assessments and an unbiased approach. Our mission is to democratize access to knowledge of emerging financial technologies, ensuring they are understandable and accessible to all. In every article on Chain Feed Staff, we strive to provide content that not only educates, but also empowers our readers, facilitating their integration into the financial digital age.

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News

An enhanced consensus algorithm for blockchain

Chain Feed Staff

Published

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An enhanced consensus algorithm for blockchain

The introduction of the link and reputation evaluation concepts aims to improve the stability and security of the consensus mechanism, decrease the likelihood of malicious nodes joining the consensus, and increase the reliability of the selected consensus nodes.

The link model structure based on joint action

Through the LINK between nodes, all the LINK nodes engage in consistent activities during the operation of the consensus mechanism. The reputation evaluation mechanism evaluates the trustworthiness of nodes based on their historical activity status throughout the entire blockchain. The essence of LINK is to drive inactive nodes to participate in system activities through active nodes. During the stage of selecting leader nodes, nodes are selected through self-recommendation, and the reputation evaluation of candidate nodes and their LINK nodes must be qualified. The top 5 nodes of the total nodes are elected as leader nodes through voting, and the nodes in their LINK status are candidate nodes. In the event that the leader node goes down, the responsibility of the leader node is transferred to the nodes in its LINK through the view-change. The LINK connection algorithm used in this study is shown in Table 2, where LINKm is the linked group and LINKP is the percentage of linked nodes.

Table 2 LINK connection algorithm.

Node type

This paper presents a classification of nodes in a blockchain system based on their functionalities. The nodes are divided into three categories: leader nodes (LNs), follower nodes (FNs), and general nodes (Ns). The leader nodes (LNs) are responsible for producing blocks and are elected through voting by general nodes. The follower nodes (FNs) are nodes that are linked to leader nodes (LNs) through the LINK mechanism and are responsible for validating blocks. General nodes (N) have the ability to broadcast and disseminate information, participate in elections, and vote. The primary purpose of the LINK mechanism is to act in combination. When nodes are in the LINK, there is a distinction between the master and slave nodes, and there is a limit to the number of nodes in the LINK group (NP = {n1, nf1, nf2 ……,nfn}). As the largest proportion of nodes in the system, general nodes (N) have the right to vote and be elected. In contrast, leader nodes (LNs) and follower nodes (FNs) do not possess this right. This rule reduces the likelihood of a single node dominating the block. When the system needs to change its fundamental settings due to an increase in the number of nodes or transaction volume, a specific number of current leader nodes and candidate nodes need to vote for a reset. Subsequently, general nodes need to vote to confirm this. When both confirmations are successful, the new basic settings are used in the next cycle of the system process. This dual confirmation setting ensures the fairness of the blockchain to a considerable extent. It also ensures that the majority holds the ultimate decision-making power, thereby avoiding the phenomenon of a small number of nodes completely controlling the system.

After the completion of a governance cycle, the blockchain network will conduct a fresh election for the leader and follower nodes. As only general nodes possess the privilege to participate in the election process, the previous consortium of leader and follower nodes will lose their authorization. In the current cycle, they will solely retain broadcasting and receiving permissions for block information, while their corresponding incentives will also decrease. A diagram illustrating the node status can be found in Fig. 1.

Figure 1

Election method

The election method adopts the node self-nomination mode. If a node wants to participate in an election, it must form a node group with one master and three slaves. One master node group and three slave node groups are inferred based on experience in this paper; these groups can balance efficiency and security and are suitable for other project collaborations. The successfully elected node joins the leader node set, and its slave nodes enter the follower node set. Considering the network situation, the maximum threshold for producing a block is set to 1 s. If the block fails to be successfully generated within the specified time, it is regarded as a disconnected state, and its reputation score is deducted. The node is skipped, and in severe cases, a view transformation is performed, switching from the master node to the slave node and inheriting its leader’s rights in the next round of block generation. Although the nodes that become leaders are high-reputation nodes, they still have the possibility of misconduct. If a node engages in misconduct, its activity will be immediately stopped, its comprehensive reputation score will be lowered, it will be disqualified from participating in the next election, and its equity will be reduced by 30%. The election process is shown in Fig. 2.

Figure 2figure 2

Incentives and penalties

To balance the rewards between leader nodes and ordinary nodes and prevent a large income gap, two incentive/penalty methods will be employed. First, as the number of network nodes and transaction volume increase, more active nodes with significant stakes emerge. After a prolonged period of running the blockchain, there will inevitably be significant class distinctions, and ordinary nodes will not be able to win in the election without special circumstances. To address this issue, this paper proposes that rewards be reduced for nodes with stakes exceeding a certain threshold, with the reduction rate increasing linearly until it reaches zero. Second, in the event that a leader or follower node violates the consensus process, such as by producing a block out of order or being unresponsive for an extended period, penalties will be imposed. The violation handling process is illustrated in Fig. 3.

Figure 3figure 3

Violation handling process.

Comprehensive reputation evaluation and election mechanism based on historical transactions

This paper reveals that the core of the DPoS consensus mechanism is the election process. If a blockchain is to run stably for a long time, it is essential to consider a reasonable election method. This paper proposes a comprehensive reputation evaluation election mechanism based on historical records. The mechanism considers the performance indicators of nodes in three dimensions: production rate, tokens, and validity. Additionally, their historical records are considered, particularly whether or not the nodes have engaged in malicious behavior. For example, nodes that have ever been malicious will receive low scores during the election process unless their overall quality is exceptionally high and they have considerable support from other nodes. Only in this case can such a node be eligible for election or become a leader node. The comprehensive reputation score is the node’s self-evaluation score, and the committee size does not affect the computational complexity.

Moreover, the comprehensive reputation evaluation proposed in this paper not only is a threshold required for node election but also converts the evaluation into corresponding votes based on the number of voters. Therefore, the election is related not only to the benefits obtained by the node but also to its comprehensive evaluation and the number of voters. If two nodes receive the same vote, the node with a higher comprehensive reputation is given priority in the ranking. For example, in an election where node A and node B each receive 1000 votes, node A’s number of stake votes is 800, its comprehensive reputation score is 50, and only four nodes vote for it. Node B’s number of stake votes is 600, its comprehensive reputation score is 80, and it receives votes from five nodes. In this situation, if only one leader node position remains, B will be selected as the leader node. Displayed in descending order of priority as comprehensive credit rating, number of voters, and stake votes, this approach aims to solve the problem of node misconduct at its root by democratizing the process and subjecting leader nodes to constraints, thereby safeguarding the fundamental interests of the vast majority of nodes.

Comprehensive reputation evaluation

This paper argues that the election process of the DPoS consensus mechanism is too simplistic, as it considers only the number of election votes that a node receives. This approach fails to comprehensively reflect the node’s actual capabilities and does not consider the voters’ election preferences. As a result, nodes with a significant stake often win and become leader nodes. To address this issue, the comprehensive reputation evaluation score is normalized considering various attributes of the nodes. The scoring results are shown in Table 3.

Table 3 Comprehensive reputation evaluation.

Since some of the evaluation indicators in Table 3 are continuous while others are discrete, different normalization methods need to be employed to obtain corresponding scores for different indicators. The continuous indicators include the number of transactions/people, wealth balance, network latency, network jitter, and network bandwidth, while the discrete indicators include the number of violations, the number of successful elections, and the number of votes. The value range of the indicator “number of transactions/people” is (0,1), and the value range of the other indicators is (0, + ∞). The equation for calculating the “number of transactions/people” is set as shown in Eq. (1).

$$A_{1} = \left\{ {\begin{array}{*{20}l} {0,} \hfill & {{\text{G}} = 0} \hfill \\ {\frac{{\text{N}}}{{\text{G}}}*10,} \hfill & {{\text{G}} > 0} \hfill \\ \end{array} } \right.$$

(1)

where N represents the number of transactional nodes and G represents the number of transactions. It reflects the degree of connection between the node and other nodes. Generally, nodes that transact with many others are safer than those with a large number of transactions with only a few nodes. The limit value of each item, denoted by x, is determined based on the situation and falls within the specified range, as shown in Eq. (2). The wealth balance and network bandwidth indicators use the same function to set their respective values.

$${A}_{i}=20*\left(\frac{1}{1+{e}^{-{a}_{i}x}}-0.5\right)$$

(2)

where x indicates the value of this item and expresses the limit value.

In Eq. (3), x represents the limited value of this indicator. The lower the network latency and network jitter are, the higher the score will be.

The last indicators, which are the number of violations, the number of elections, and the number of votes, are discrete values and are assigned different scores according to their respective ranges. The scores corresponding to each count are shown in Table 4.

$$A_{3} = \left\{ {\begin{array}{*{20}l} {10*\cos \frac{\pi }{200}x,} \hfill & {0 \le x \le 100} \hfill \\ {0,} \hfill & {x > 100} \hfill \\ \end{array} } \right.$$

(3)

Table 4 Score conversion.

The reputation evaluation mechanism proposed in this paper comprehensively considers three aspects of nodes, wealth level, node performance, and stability, to calculate their scores. Moreover, the scores obtain the present data based on historical records. Each node is set as an M × N dimensional matrix, where M represents M times the reputation evaluation score and N represents N dimensions of reputation evaluation (M < = N), as shown in Eq. (4).

$${\text{N}} = \left( {\begin{array}{*{20}c} {a_{11} } & \cdots & {a_{1n} } \\ \vdots & \ddots & \vdots \\ {a_{m1} } & \cdots & {a_{mn} } \\ \end{array} } \right)$$

(4)

The comprehensive reputation rating is a combined concept related to three dimensions. The rating is set after rating each aspect of the node. The weight w and the matrix l are not fixed. They are also transformed into matrix states as the position of the node in the system changes. The result of the rating is set as the output using Eq. (5).

$$\text{T}=\text{lN}{w}^{T}=\left({l}_{1}\dots {\text{l}}_{\text{m}}\right)\left(\begin{array}{ccc}{a}_{11}& \cdots & {a}_{1n}\\ \vdots & \ddots & \vdots \\ {a}_{m1}& \cdots & {a}_{mn}\end{array}\right){\left({w}_{1}\dots {w}_{n}\right)}^{T}$$

(5)

Here, T represents the comprehensive reputation score, and l and w represent the correlation coefficient. Because l is a matrix of order 1*M, M is the number of times in historical records, and M <  = N is set, the number of dimensions of l is uncertain. Set the term l above to add up to 1, which is l1 + l2 + …… + ln = 1; w is also a one-dimensional matrix whose dimension is N*1, and its purpose is to act as a weight; within a certain period of time, w is a fixed matrix, and w will not change until the system changes the basic settings.

Assume that a node conducts its first comprehensive reputation rating, with no previous transaction volume, violations, elections or vote. The initial wealth of the node is 10, the latency is 50 ms, the jitter is 100 ms, and the network bandwidth is 100 M. According to the equation, the node’s comprehensive reputation rating is 41.55. This score is relatively good at the beginning and gradually increases as the patient participates in system activities continuously.

Voting calculation method

To ensure the security and stability of the blockchain system, this paper combines the comprehensive reputation score with voting and randomly sorts the blocks, as shown in Eqs. (36).

$$Z=\sum_{i=1}^{n}{X}_{i}+nT$$

(6)

where Z represents the final election score, Xi represents the voting rights earned by the node, n is the number of nodes that vote for this node, and T is the comprehensive reputation score.

The voting process is divided into stake votes and reputation votes. The more reputation scores and voters there are, the more total votes that are obtained. In the early stages of blockchain operation, nodes have relatively few stakes, so the impact of reputation votes is greater than that of equity votes. This is aimed at selecting the most suitable node as the leader node in the early stage. As an operation progresses, the role of equity votes becomes increasingly important, and corresponding mechanisms need to be established to regulate it. The election vote algorithm used in this paper is shown in Table 5.

Table 5 Election vote counting algorithm.

This paper argues that the election process utilized by the original DPoS consensus mechanism is overly simplistic, as it relies solely on the vote count to select the node that will oversee the entire blockchain. This approach cannot ensure the security and stability of the voting process, and if a malicious node behaves improperly during an election, it can pose a significant threat to the stability and security of the system as well as the safety of other nodes’ assets. Therefore, this paper proposes a different approach to the election process of the DPoS consensus mechanism by increasing the complexity of the process. We set up a threshold and optimized the vote-counting process to enhance the security and stability of the election. The specific performance of the proposed method was verified through experiments.

The election cycle in this paper can be customized, but it requires the agreement of the blockchain committee and general nodes. The election cycle includes four steps: node self-recommendation, calculating the comprehensive reputation score, voting, and replacing the new leader. Election is conducted only among general nodes without affecting the production or verification processes of leader nodes or follower nodes. Nodes start voting for preferred nodes. If they have no preference, they can use the LINK mechanism to collaborate with other nodes and gain additional rewards.

View changes

During the consensus process, conducting a large number of updates is not in line with the system’s interests, as the leader node (LN) and follower node (FN) on each node have already been established. Therefore, it is crucial to handle problematic nodes accurately when issues arise with either the LN or FN. For instance, when a node fails to perform its duties for an extended period or frequently fails to produce or verify blocks within the specified time range due to latency, the system will precisely handle them. For leader nodes, if they engage in malicious behavior such as producing blocks out of order, the behavior is recorded, and their identity as a leader node is downgraded to a follower node. The follower node inherits the leader node’s position, and the nature of their work is transformed as they swap their responsibilities of producing and verifying blocks with their original work. This type of behavior will not significantly affect the operation of the blockchain system. Instead of waiting until the end of the current committee round to punish malicious nodes, dynamic punishment is imposed on the nodes that affect the operation of the blockchain system to maintain system security. The view change operation is illustrated in Fig. 4.

Figure 4figure 4

In traditional PBFT, view changes are performed according to the view change protocol by changing the view number V to the next view number V + 1. During this process, nodes only receive view change messages and no other messages from other nodes. In this paper, the leader node group (LN) and follower node group (FN) are selected through an election of the LINK group. The node with LINKi[0] is added to the LN leader node group, while the other three LINK groups’ follower nodes join the FN follower node group since it is a configuration pattern of one master and three slaves. The view change in this paper requires only rearranging the node order within the LINK group to easily remove malicious nodes. Afterward, the change is broadcast to other committee nodes, and during the view transition, the LINK group does not receive block production or verification commands from the committee for stability reasons until the transition is completed.

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The Hype Around Blockchain Mortgage Has Died Down, But This CEO Still Believes

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The Hype Around Blockchain Mortgage Has Died Down, But This CEO Still Believes

LiquidFi Founder Ian Ferreira Sees Huge Potential in Blockchain Despite Hype around technology is dead.

“Blockchain technology has been a buzzword for a long time, and it shouldn’t be,” Ferriera said. “It should be a technology that lives in the background, but it makes everything much more efficient, much more transparent, and ultimately it saves costs for everyone. That’s the goal.”

Before founding his firm, Ferriera was a portfolio manager at a hedge fund, a job that ended up revealing “interesting intricacies” related to the mortgage industry.

Being a mortgage trader opened Ferriera’s eyes to a lot of the operational and infrastructure problems that needed to be solved in the mortgage-backed securities industry, he said. That later led to the birth of LiquidFi.

“The point of what we do is to get raw data attached to a resource [a loan] on a blockchain so that it’s provable. You reduce that trust problem because you have the data, you have the document associated with that data,” said the LiquidFi CEO.

Ferriera spoke with National Mortgage News about the value of blockchain technology, why blockchain hype has fizzled out, and why it shouldn’t.



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New bill pushes Department of Veterans Affairs to examine how blockchain can improve its work

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New bill pushes Department of Veterans Affairs to examine how blockchain can improve its work

The Department of Veterans Affairs would have to evaluate how blockchain technology could be used to improve benefits and services offered to veterans, according to a legislative proposal introduced Tuesday.

The bill, sponsored by Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C., would direct the VA to “conduct a comprehensive study of the feasibility, potential benefits, and risks associated with using distributed ledger technology in various programs and services.”

Distributed ledger technology, including blockchain, is used to protect and track information by storing data across multiple computers and keeping a record of its use.

According to the text of the legislation, which Mace’s office shared exclusively with Nextgov/FCW ahead of its publication, blockchain “could significantly improve benefits allocation, insurance program management, and recordkeeping within the Department of Veterans Affairs.”

“We need to bring the federal government into the 21st century,” Mace said in a statement. “This bill will open the door to research on improving outdated systems that fail our veterans because we owe it to them to use every tool at our disposal to improve their lives.”

Within one year of the law taking effect, the Department of Veterans Affairs will be required to submit a report to the House and Senate Veterans Affairs committees detailing its findings, as well as the benefits and risks identified in using the technology.

The mandatory review is expected to include information on how the department’s use of blockchain could improve the way benefits decisions are administered, improve the management and security of veterans’ personal data, streamline the insurance claims process, and “increase transparency and accountability in service delivery.”

The Department of Veterans Affairs has been studying the potential benefits of using distributed ledger technology, with the department emission a request for information in November 2021 seeking input from contractors on how blockchain could be leveraged, in part, to streamline its supply chains and “secure data sharing between institutions.”

The VA’s National Institute of Artificial Intelligence has also valued the use of blockchain, with three of the use cases tested during the 2021 AI tech sprint focused on examining its capabilities.

Mace previously introduced a May bill that would direct Customs and Border Protection to create a public blockchain platform to store and share data collected at U.S. borders.

Lawmakers also proposed additional measures that would push the Department of Veterans Affairs to consider adopting other modernized technologies to improve veteran services.

Rep. David Valadao, R-Calif., introduced legislation in June that would have directed the department to report to lawmakers on how it plans to expand the use of “certain automation tools” to process veterans’ claims. The House of Representatives Subcommittee on Disability Assistance and Memorial Affairs gave a favorable hearing on the congressman’s bill during a Markup of July 23.



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California DMV Uses Blockchain to Fight Auto Title Fraud

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California DMV Uses Blockchain to Fight Auto Title Fraud

TDR’s Three Takeaways: California DMV Uses Blockchain to Fight Fraud

  1. California DMV uses blockchain technology to manage 42 million auto titles.
  2. The initiative aims to improve safety and reduce car title fraud.
  3. The immutable nature of blockchain ensures accurate and tamper-proof records.

The California Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) is implementing blockchain technology to manage and secure 42 million auto titles. This innovative move aims to address and reduce the persistent problem of auto title fraud, a problem that costs consumers and the industry millions of dollars each year. By moving to a blockchain-based system, the DMV is taking advantage of the technology’s key feature: immutability.

Blockchain, a decentralized ledger technology, ensures that once a car title is registered, it cannot be altered or tampered with. This creates a highly secure and transparent system, significantly reducing the risk of fraudulent activity. Every transaction and update made to a car title is permanently recorded on the blockchain, providing a complete and immutable history of the vehicle’s ownership and status.

As first reported by Reuters, the DMV’s adoption of blockchain isn’t just about preventing fraud. It’s also aimed at streamlining the auto title process, making it more efficient and intuitive. Traditional auto title processing involves a lot of paperwork and manual verification, which can be time-consuming and prone to human error. Blockchain technology automates and digitizes this process, reducing the need for physical documents and minimizing the chances of errors.

Additionally, blockchain enables faster verification and transfer of car titles. For example, when a car is sold, the transfer of ownership can be done almost instantly on the blockchain, compared to days or even weeks in the conventional system. This speed and efficiency can benefit both the DMV and the vehicle owners.

The California DMV’s move is part of a broader trend of government agencies exploring blockchain technology to improve their services. By adopting this technology, the DMV is setting a precedent for other states and industries to follow, showcasing blockchain’s potential to improve safety and efficiency in public services.

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