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245 posts tagged with "Infrastructure"

Blockchain infrastructure and node services

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Aptos and Jump Crypto Launch Shelby: The Verifiable Hot Storage Network That Could Reshape AI Data Infrastructure

· 9 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

Every AI model is only as trustworthy as the data it was trained on — yet today, there is no reliable way to prove where that data came from, who owns it, or whether it arrived intact. Aptos Labs and Jump Crypto believe they have built the missing layer. Their new protocol, Shelby, is the world's first verifiable global object storage network designed specifically for AI read workloads, and its early-access testnet is now live.

Cryptio's $45M Series B Signals That Crypto's Boring Back Office Is Now Its Most Critical Layer

· 7 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

Every crypto bull cycle mints new billionaires and launches thousands of tokens. But behind the on-chain fireworks, a quieter revolution is unfolding in spreadsheets, general ledgers, and audit trails. Cryptio, a Paris-founded enterprise accounting platform for digital assets, just raised $45 million in Series B funding — and the investors backing it are betting that the unsexy work of reconciling blockchain transactions will become the most indispensable layer in institutional crypto.

The round was led by BlackFin Capital Partners and Sentinel Global, with participation from existing backers 1kx, BlueYard Capital, and Ledger Cathay Capital. Cryptio has quietly grown to 450 clients across 30 countries, processing over $3 trillion in cumulative transaction volume. Among those clients: Circle, the issuer of USDC, and SG-FORGE, Société Générale's blockchain subsidiary.

When the world's largest stablecoin issuer and one of Europe's oldest banks both rely on the same accounting middleware, the market is telling you something.

DTC's Three-Year Blockchain Pilot: How Wall Street's $3.8 Quadrillion Settlement Engine Is Moving On-Chain

· 8 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

The entity that processes virtually every U.S. stock trade just received permission to put those trades on a blockchain. On December 11, 2025, the SEC's Division of Trading and Markets issued a no-action letter allowing the Depository Trust Company — the backbone of American capital markets — to run a three-year pilot tokenizing the securities it already holds in custody. When the system launches in the second half of 2026, it will mark the first time that blockchain-based settlement infrastructure has been embedded directly into the plumbing that handles $3.8 quadrillion in annual transactions.

This isn't a crypto startup pitching a vision. This is the institution that clears and settles nearly all U.S. equity, ETF, and Treasury trades telling the market that blockchain belongs in its operational stack.

Hedera's Ticketing Breakthrough: How MINGO Is Replacing Legacy Event Infrastructure Across 54 Countries

· 9 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

Somewhere right now, a fan is paying $400 for a concert ticket that cost $65 at face value — and there is a 12% chance that ticket is completely fake. The $100-billion-plus global ticketing industry has been broken for decades: scalper bots snatch up 60% of inventory within seconds, fraud losses climb into the billions annually, and legacy platforms extract 15–20% service fees while doing little to protect buyers. In January 2026, a relatively unknown company called MINGO quietly launched a blockchain-powered ticketing platform across 54 countries — and the underlying technology may finally be the fix the industry has been waiting for.

The Mission 70 Gambit: How a 70% Inflation Slash and a Pakistan Sovereign Cloud Deal Could Redefine ICP

· 8 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

What happens when a blockchain project that once promised to replace AWS decides to gut its own token supply while simultaneously signing sovereign cloud deals with nation-states? In March 2026, the Internet Computer is finding out — and the market is paying attention.

ICP surged over 35% in a matter of days. Upbit added KRW, BTC, and USDT trading pairs, injecting $110 million in market cap within an hour. Behind the price action lies something more structural: a tokenomics overhaul called Mission 70, a sovereign AI cloud partnership with Pakistan's 230-million-person digital authority, and a Swiss national subnet already live with 13 independent node providers.

This is the story of how DFINITY is betting that slashing supply while manufacturing real demand from governments and AI workloads can transform ICP from a meme-worthy punchline into critical sovereign infrastructure.

Nasdaq and Seturion's Pan-European Tokenized Settlement: How a 90% Cost Cut Could Rewire Capital Markets

· 11 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

European post-trade settlement is one of the most expensive financial plumbing systems on the planet. Market participants pay settlement fees that are 65% higher than in North America, lose roughly €850 million annually to failed-trade penalties alone, and navigate a fragmented patchwork of central securities depositories that makes cross-border settlement painfully slow. Now Nasdaq — the operator behind 130 markets across 26 countries — is betting that blockchain can compress this entire process from two business days to minutes, slashing costs by up to 90%.

In March 2026, Nasdaq announced a strategic partnership with Seturion — the blockchain-based settlement platform spun out of Börse Stuttgart Group — to build pan-European infrastructure for trading and settling tokenized securities. Days later, Nasdaq revealed a parallel deal with Kraken to distribute tokenized stocks globally. Together, these moves position Nasdaq at the center of what may become a shadow financial infrastructure rivaling traditional clearing houses.

PayFi Hits $2.27B Market Cap: How Stablecoin Payment Rails Are Replacing the Financial Plumbing You Never Knew Was Broken

· 9 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

The global cross-border payments market moves $195 trillion per year. A wire transfer from Lagos to London still takes three to five business days, passes through four intermediary banks, and sheds 6–7% in fees along the way. For decades, this friction was accepted as the cost of doing business internationally. In 2026, a new category of blockchain protocols is proving that it does not have to be.

Payment Finance — or PayFi — has quietly assembled a $2.27 billion market capitalization and $148 million in daily transaction volume. Unlike the speculative DeFi protocols that dominated previous cycles, PayFi projects are building the programmable settlement rails that stablecoins need to function as actual money — not just digital tokens sitting in wallets, but instruments that move, settle, and reconcile in real time across borders.

Tether's StableChain Gambit: Why Building a Blockchain Around USDT Changes Everything

· 7 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

What happens when the issuer of the world's most-used stablecoin decides that no existing blockchain is good enough for its token? You get StableChain — a purpose-built Layer 1 where USDT isn't just another asset, it is the economy. Launched in December 2025 by Bitfinex-backed Stable, this "stablechain" strips away the complexity of general-purpose blockchains and replaces it with a single obsession: making digital dollars move as effortlessly as a text message.

With the stablecoin market now exceeding $320 billion and USDT commanding over 60% dominance at $187 billion in market cap, the stakes couldn't be higher. StableChain isn't just another Layer 1 — it's Tether's vertical integration play, and it has kicked off a three-way race with Circle's Arc and Stripe's Tempo that could redefine how digital dollars are built, moved, and settled.

UTime's $80M Feixiaohao Bid Signals Crypto's Bloomberg Moment

· 9 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

In traditional finance, the battle for data supremacy was settled decades ago. Bloomberg commands a third of all market data spending. The London Stock Exchange Group paid $27 billion for Refinitiv in 2019. The lesson was clear: whoever owns the data layer owns the market's nervous system. Now, crypto is learning that same lesson — the hard way.

On March 13, 2026, UTime Limited (Nasdaq: WTO), a mobile hardware manufacturer with no prior blockchain presence, signed a non-binding letter of intent to acquire Feixiaohao Technology Inc. for up to $80 million. The target: China's largest crypto data aggregator, often called the "Chinese CoinGecko," which tracks over 20,000 cryptocurrencies for millions of users. The deal structure — $64 million in UTime shares and $16 million in cash — reads like a modest corporate transaction. But placed against the backdrop of 2026's crypto data consolidation wave, it signals something far bigger: the crypto industry's data infrastructure is entering its Bloomberg moment.