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245 posts tagged with "Infrastructure"

Blockchain infrastructure and node services

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MARA Sells $1.1B in Bitcoin and Cuts 15% of Staff: Inside the Great Mining-to-AI Pivot

· 9 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

America's largest public Bitcoin miner just dumped 15,133 BTC, fired roughly 40 employees, and signed a deal with a hotel real-estate giant to build AI data centers. MARA Holdings calls it a growth strategy. The market is calling it something else entirely: the beginning of the end for Bitcoin mining as we know it.

The Mined in America Act Wants to Build a Domestic Bitcoin Mining Supply Chain — Can It Work?

· 9 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

The United States controls 38% of the world's Bitcoin hash rate — yet 97% of the specialized hardware powering those operations is manufactured in China. Senators Bill Cassidy and Cynthia Lummis want to fix that contradiction, and they have introduced a bill that could reshape the economics of crypto mining from the ground up.

The Mined in America Act, introduced on March 30, 2026, is the most ambitious piece of Bitcoin mining legislation ever proposed in the United States. It combines a voluntary certification program, domestic hardware manufacturing incentives, and a formal codification of the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve into a single legislative package. Arriving in the middle of an escalating tariff war that is already squeezing mining margins, the bill attempts to reframe Bitcoin mining as critical national infrastructure rather than a speculative curiosity.

MoonPay's Open Wallet Standard: Building the SWIFT of Machine Payments

· 8 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

Every thirty seconds, an AI agent somewhere on the internet tries to pay for something — a compute job, a data feed, a cross-chain swap — and fails. Not because it lacks funds, but because it lacks a wallet that speaks the right language for the right chain. MoonPay thinks it has fixed that problem, and PayPal, Circle, the Ethereum Foundation, and fifteen other organizations agree.

On March 23, 2026, MoonPay open-sourced the Open Wallet Standard (OWS), a specification that gives autonomous AI agents a single, secure interface for holding value, signing transactions, and making payments across every major blockchain — without ever exposing a private key. The release, available on GitHub, npm, and PyPI, arrives at a moment when over 250,000 AI agents are already executing on-chain transactions daily and the autonomous agent economy is projected to reach $30 trillion by 2030.

Perpification: Why Perpetual Futures May Eat Real-World Asset Tokenization Before Tokenization Eats Finance

· 9 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

What if the fastest path to putting the world's assets on-chain isn't tokenization at all — but derivatives?

That question sits at the heart of one of the most provocative theses in crypto this year. Coined as "perpification" by a16z in its 2026 Big Ideas report, the argument is straightforward: perpetual futures contracts on real-world assets will scale faster, deeper, and wider than direct tokenization — and they're already doing it.

Solana Just Moved $650 Billion in Stablecoins in a Single Month — Here Is Why It Matters

· 7 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

In February 2026, Solana quietly rewrote the record books. The network processed $650 billion in stablecoin transactions over just 28 days — more than triple its previous high of roughly $300 billion set in October 2025, and nearly nine times the $208 billion traded across CME Group gold futures in the same period. For the first time in crypto history, a single general-purpose blockchain surpassed every competitor — including Ethereum and Tron — as the world's busiest stablecoin settlement layer.

The milestone is not just a vanity metric. It signals a structural shift in where, how, and why digital dollars move on-chain — and it raises urgent questions about whether Solana's dominance can last as purpose-built "stablechains" race to capture the same opportunity.

Solana's $55M-to-$1.8M Revenue Crash Forced Its Biggest Pivot — Here's the Enterprise Bet That Could Pay Off

· 8 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

Solana's weekly network revenue fell 97% — from $55.2 million in January to $1.8 million in March. DEX volumes collapsed 62% in three weeks. Pump.fun, the memecoin launchpad that once accounted for nearly half the chain's economic activity, saw daily volume drop 70%. And yet, in the middle of this carnage, the Solana Foundation made its most consequential announcement in years: the Solana Developer Platform (SDP), a unified API gateway designed to bring Mastercard, Western Union, and Worldpay onto Solana.

The message was unmistakable: Solana is done being the memecoin casino. The next chapter is enterprise infrastructure.

Uniblock Raises $5.2M to Become the Twilio of Blockchain — Why Web3 API Aggregation Is the Next Critical Infrastructure Layer

· 8 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

Every blockchain developer knows the pain. You start building a DApp on Ethereum, add Solana support for speed, integrate Polygon for cost efficiency — and suddenly you are managing three different RPC providers, each with its own SDK, rate limits, pricing model, and failure modes. Multiply that across the 300-plus chains active in 2026, and you have a developer experience crisis that threatens to strangle Web3 adoption before it scales.

Uniblock, a Toronto-based startup, just raised $5.2 million to make that problem disappear. The round, which brings total funding to $7.5 million, was backed by SBI, AllianceDAO, CoinSwitch, Blockchain Founders Fund, Hustle Fund, NGC Ventures, and strategic partners Alchemy and MoonPay, with angel participation from executives at Kraken, Uber, and CoinList.

Their pitch is deceptively simple: one API key, 300-plus blockchains, 55 data partners, and 3,000-plus APIs — all routed through a patented intelligent orchestration engine that picks the optimal provider for every single call.

x402 Joins the Linux Foundation: How a Dormant HTTP Status Code Became Crypto's First Enterprise Payment Standard

· 9 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

The internet has always had a hole where payments should be. In 1991, the architects of HTTP reserved status code 402 — "Payment Required" — for a native payment layer that never arrived. For thirty-five years, that code sat dormant while the web built a patchwork of credit card forms, subscription walls, and API key gates to monetize digital resources.

On April 2, 2026, at the MCP Dev Summit in New York, the Linux Foundation announced that the hole is finally being filled. The x402 Foundation — governing a protocol that turns that forgotten status code into a machine-readable payment handshake — launched with backing from Google, Stripe, AWS, American Express, Visa, Microsoft, Mastercard, Shopify, Circle, and Coinbase, the protocol's original creator. It is the most significant alignment of traditional finance, Big Tech, and crypto around a single open standard in the industry's history.

Canada's Post-Quantum Cryptography Deadline Is Here — What It Means for Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana

· 9 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

Canada just fired the starting gun on post-quantum cryptography. As of this month — April 2026 — every federal department must submit a migration plan to replace the encryption algorithms that protect government systems, banking infrastructure, and by extension, the blockchain networks that serve Canadian institutions. It is the first concrete sovereign deadline in any G7 nation, and it forces a question the crypto industry has been deferring: what happens to $308 billion in stablecoins, 6.5 million exposed BTC, and entire Layer-1 architectures built on cryptography that a future quantum computer could shatter?

The answer is no longer theoretical.