Animalverse.social

Login Now

Create an account
  • Home
  • Blackmarketplace
  • Groups
  • Game
  • Watch
  • Jobs
  • Financial
  • Digital Assets
  • Login
  • Register

Crypto Whale Data

Profile picture of Crypto Whale Data<span class="bp-verified-badge"></span>

Crypto Whale Data

@0x1d7a9641dcccfe07c722bede8b3c2221cc19d4ca

Active 15 hours, 30 minutes ago
  • Activity
  • Profile
  • Shop
  • Friends 1
  • Groups
  • Forums
  • Media 908
  • 1

    Friends

  • 0

    Groups

My photos
  • Flow blockchain probes security incident as FLOW token plunges over 40% The Flow Foundation announced Saturday that it is investigating a potential security incident affecting its Layer 1 blockchain, prompting major South Korean exchanges to halt token transfers and triggering a sharp selloff in the “The Flow Foundation is currently investigating a potential security incident affecting the Flow network,” the team wrote on X. “Our engineering teams are actively collaborating with network partners to mitigate the issue. We will provide further, verified updates as soon as they are available.” Onchain analyst Wazz first flagged what appears to be the exploit shortly after the price crash, estimating around $4 million was stolen. According to Wazz’s analysis, an attacker used a wallet created approximately six months ago to mint millions of wrapped FLOW (WFLOW) tokens through a TransparentUpgradeableProxy contract, a pattern consistent with a private key compromise rather than a smart contract vulnerability. “Flow blockchain had [a possible vulnerability] that allowed the attacker to mint native token, FLOW, and other bridged tokens like WBTC, WETH, and stablecoins,” security expert Taylor Monahan told The Block in a direct message. “Looks like $3.9 million [lost]…All pools and bridges are now paused.” FLOW plummeted more than 40% in the hours following the incident, per The Block’s Flow Price page. The token was trading around $0.10 Saturday afternoon, down from approximately $0.17 earlier in the day. Trading volume has surged to over $170 million in the past 24 hours. South Korean exchanges Upbit and Bithumb moved quickly to suspend FLOW deposits and withdrawals following the disclosure. The Digital Asset Exchange Alliance, or DAXA, the consortium comprising Korea’s five largest crypto exchanges, issued a formal “transaction risk warning” for the token and said member exchanges may take additional protective measures, including trading restrictions or termination of support, depending on how the situation develops. Flow is the Layer 1 blockchain developed by Dapper Labs, the company behind popular NFT projects NBA Top Shot and CryptoKitties. The network was designed specifically for consumer applications and digital collectibles, and at its peak in 2021 powered hundreds of millions of dollars in monthly NFT trading volume. The blockchain has faced challenges in recent years as the NFT market cooled. Dapper Labs, which was valued at $7.6 billion in 2021, has undergone multiple rounds of layoffs since 2022. The Flow Foundation did not immediately respond to a request for further information on the breach from The Block. The incident comes as the crypto industry grapples with a record year for security breaches. Cryptocurrency theft totaled more than $3.4 billion in 2025, according to Chainalysis, with the $1.5 billion Bybit hack in February accounting for nearly half of the annual total. Private key compromises have emerged as a leading attack vector this year, accounting for 88% of stolen funds in Q1 2025.
  • Bitcoin sits out Santa rally as stocks and precious metals set records A year-end rally across global markets has pushed U.S. stocks and precious metals to fresh record highs, but bitcoin has been left out in the cold, drifting lower as traders pull back risk into the holiday period. Bitcoin traded around $87,200 on Friday, down roughly 6.5% from its 2025 open near $93,000, according to The Block’s price data, despite having reached an all-time high above $126,000 in early October. Price action has remained subdued through the holiday week, with the cryptocurrency continuing to oscillate below the $90,000 level. Bitcoin (BTC) price chart. Source: The Block/TradingView Analysts have pointed to Friday’s record $28 billion crypto options expiry as the dominant short-term catalyst, amplifying price swings in thin year-end trading. “The tone remains defensive,” BRN head of research Timothy Misir said earlier this week, noting that upside attempts have struggled to gain follow-through. Wall Street flows have echoed that caution, with U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs seeing roughly $500 million in net outflows this week and about $4.3 billion pulled over the final two months of the year, alongside a more than $1.2 trillion decline in total crypto market value. Historic precious metals rally While bitcoin has drifted lower, precious metals have surged. Gold climbed to a record above $4,580 per troy ounce on Friday, while silver pushed past $75, setting new all-time highs. Silver is up roughly 160% from its 2025 open near $30, while gold has gained over 70% this year. The rally has been driven by escalating geopolitical tensions, a weaker U.S. dollar and year-end liquidity conditions that have amplified price moves, according to analysts. Central-bank purchases, ETF inflows and expectations for further Federal Reserve rate cuts in 2026 have also supported demand for non-yielding assets, according to a recent Bloomberg report. Silver’s advance has been particularly sharp, with speculative inflows and lingering supply dislocations following an October short squeeze continuing to pressure physical markets. Stocks hold near record highs U.S. equities, meanwhile, have remained resilient into the final trading sessions of the year. The S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average closed the shortened Christmas Eve session at record highs, extending a multi-day rally that has lifted major indexes through late December. The S&P 500 is up roughly 18% year-to-date, while the Nasdaq has gained more than 20% in 2025, according to Google Finance.
  • Midterms, shutdown risks and negotiations: Can Congress pass a sweeping crypto bill in 2026? The next year is set to be pivotal for cryptocurrency legislation, with the big question being whether lawmakers can pass an all-encompassing bill to regulate digital assets before the midterms. Crypto advocacy sources who spoke with The Block gave a range of 50% to 60% chance of such a bill becoming law in 2026. Optimism lies in ongoing discussions between Democrats and Republicans, but there are still several issues that need ironing out. Kevin Wysocki, head of policy at Anchorage Digital, gave a bill's chance of passing into law in 2026 a 50% chance. "I think what's really good is that members of Congress are talking quite a bit between Republicans and Democrats, so that's a very positive sign," he told The Block. "Some of the issues that are still [debated] are difficult, and the legislation itself encompasses banking laws, securities law, commodity law — so it's complicated." Lawmakers in the Senate are tackling an all-encompassing bill that seeks to regulate the crypto industry at large. The Senate Banking Committee has a draft that looks to allocate jurisdiction between two main federal agencies — the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission — as well as create a new term for "ancillary assets" to clarify which cryptocurrencies are not securities. Meanwhile, the Senate Agriculture Committee, which oversees the CFTC, has drafted legislation it released last month that would give new authority to that agency. Both committee versions of the bill would need to be reconciled. There had been some optimism that the Senate Banking Committee would hold a hearing to amend and vote on the bill before the end of the year, but those spirits were dashed. However, a Senate Banking Committee spokesperson said they are now looking to markup the bill early on in the new year and noted progress had been made with Democrats. "Chairman Scott and the Senate Banking Committee have made strong progress with Democratic counterparts on bipartisan digital asset market structure legislation," the spokesperson said. "The Committee is continuing to negotiate and looks forward to a markup in early 2026." The sticking points There are several pain points in the crypto market structure bill that need to be addressed, sources said. One flashpoint has been tension between banks and crypto companies on how yield-bearing stablecoins should be regulated. Banking trade groups say that the stablecoin legislation known as GENIUS, which became law over the summer, leaves key loopholes unaddressed. In particular, they argue that the statute does not sufficiently bar issuers from offering interest on stablecoins. That omission, they warn, could turn stablecoins into vehicles for savings and credit rather than simple payment tools, introducing what they describe as “distorting market incentives” for traditional banks. Crypto advocates, by contrast, say the ability to offer yield on stablecoins represents nothing more than fair and healthy competition. Another issue has been how to regulate decentralized finance, specifically how to regulate DeFi protocols in terms of anti-money laundering concerns and whether some tokens should be under the jurisdiction of the SEC or CFTC, said The Digital Chamber CEO Cody Carbone. There is concern that the SEC would be the decision maker, given the agency's former more critical stance of crypto under former SEC Chair Gary Gensler, he added. "I will say that I know from industry, it is very worrisome to have legislation that says the SEC will be the first decision maker whether a token is a security or commodity because that looks a lot like going down the Gary Gensler route, where the SEC is the only cop on the street and is deciding everything," Carbone said. Another issue in the crypto market structure bill is around President Donald Trump's conflicts of interest in crypto. Bloomberg estimated in July that the sitting president has profited some $620 million from his family's crypto ventures, including the World Liberty Financial DeFi and stablecoin project, which lists Trump and his three sons as co-founders. The family also has a 20% stake in the mining firm American Bitcoin, and legislators have repeatedly raised concerns about the free-floating TRUMP and MELANIA memecoins launched the weekend before Trump took office. Sen. Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo., who has been involved in the negotiations on passing a bill in the Senate, said in December at the Blockchain Association Policy Summit in Washington, D.C., that the White House had been involved in language around ethics. Lummis said she and Democratic Sen. Ruben Gallego sent over language to the White House, but it was kicked back. The absence of commissioners at the CFTC has also come under scrutiny and has become a solid negotiating tool for Democrats, Carbone said. Over the past year, four CFTC commissioners — Democrats Kristin Johnson and Christy Goldsmith Romero, as well as Republicans Caroline Pham and Summer Mersinger — have left the agency or announced plans to do so. Pham, a Republican, is now acting chair but has said she plans to leave once a new CFTC chair, Mike Selig, is confirmed. That leaves the agency, which is set to have broader jurisdiction over crypto, with one Republican commissioner. "I don't think any senator wants to hand over so much power to this small agency that only has a chair when it's supposed to be a five-member commission," Carbone said. Looming elections What happens next in the Senate is going to be really pivotal, sources said. Once the Senate Banking Committee has its bill in place and is then voted on and advanced out of the committee, it needs to be combined with the Senate Agriculture Committee's version and voted on by the full Senate, Carbone said. Then, the Senate crypto market structure bill needed to reconcile with the House version, called Clarity, which passed out of the full House over the summer. "There's just so many steps that still need to happen," Carbone said. If markups for bills in the Senate don't happen in January, Carbone said he would be worried. "They just need to show progress right out of the gate," Carbone said. "So if I see a markup in both committees and I see a compromise bill in the Senate and we've got a potential Senate floor vote in the next six weeks, then I'm feeling very good," he said. "If we don't have those things in January, I'm feeling very pessimistic." And then come the midterm elections, as some lawmakers focus on their own races. Lawmakers have about the first half of next year to pass a crypto market structure bill before election season takes hold, Anchorage's Kevin Wysocki said. "In terms of timeline, I think we're looking at the first two quarters of next month before members are really focused on election matters," he said. "And then maybe there's a small window of opportunity around the holidays at the end of 2026 to move this legislation post-election." Some Senate Democrats are really passionate about a crypto market structure bill and want to see it passed, said Saga CEO Rebecca Liao. Liao was also a member of former President Joe Biden's 2020 presidential campaign. However, having enough time is a challenge as they face midterm elections and another budget discussion, she said. Congress temporarily funded the government following a 43-day shutdown that ended in November. That funding extends through Jan. 30, 2026, but if funding isn't agreed to again, the government will shut down again, putting a pause on work on a crypto market structure bill. The closer midterm elections get, the more Trump's crypto conflicts of interest could come into the spotlight, Liao said. "We're seeing a real Democratic message coalescing around affordability, and so anything that smacks of privilege or unjustified gains by the president or the people in his administration, all of that is going to be hammered time and again in Democratic messaging," she said. As for what happens if lawmakers are ultimately not able to pass a crypto market structure bill into law in 2026, Liao said something has to get done, especially as financial institutions have gotten into digital assets. "In order for crypto to actually get to adoption and mass utilization, you really do need regulatory clarity, and so I think people will push for it again," she said.
  • Crypto.com hiring quant trader for sports event prediction market making in the US Crypto.com is hiring a quant trader focused on sports event market-making as it pushes deeper into prediction markets amid growing regulatory scrutiny. The role centers on pricing and providing liquidity for sports event contracts, which allow users to trade yes-or-no outcomes tied to real-world sporting events. According to the job listing, with a low-end annual salary of $120,000, the US-based trader would be responsible for continuously quoting markets, managing risk, and adjusting prices in real-time as games unfold and new information emerges. The hiring effort comes as Crypto.com expands its footprint in prediction markets through high-profile partnerships. Earlier this month, sports apparel giant Fanatics launched a fan-focused prediction market built on Crypto.com’s regulated U.S. derivatives infrastructure, joining earlier collaborations with Truth Social and MyPrize. Those products compete in a fast-growing field alongside platforms such as Polymarket and Kalshi, which together see billions of dollars in monthly trade volume according to The Block data. The hire follows a flurry of moves across the industry, including Coinbase’s agreement last week to acquire prediction markets startup The Clearing Company as exchanges compete to own pricing, liquidity and distribution in event-based trading. At the same time, the space remains legally contentious. Connecticut regulators last week ordered Crypto.com, Kalshi and Robinhood to halt sports event contracts for state residents, arguing the products constitute unlicensed sports wagering despite federal approval pathways through the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
  • MoMA adds CryptoPunks and Chromie Squiggles NFTs to permanent collection following coordinated donation The Museum of Modern Art in New York has acquired eight CryptoPunks and eight Chromie Squiggles for its permanent collection, marking one of the most significant institutional endorsements of onchain art to date. The 16 works, all donated rather than purchased, will be housed in MoMA’s Media and Performance department alongside video, experimental technology, and other new media art. The works can be viewed on MoMA’s website
  • CryptoQuant says bear market has started, sees bitcoin downside risk to $70,000 A crypto bear market has already begun, according to onchain analytics firm CryptoQuant, which cited weakening bitcoin demand as a key signal. "Bitcoin demand growth has decisively slowed, signaling a transition into a bear market," CryptoQuant said in a report published Friday. "After three major spot demand waves since 2023 — driven by the U.S. spot ETF launch, the U.S. presidential election outcome, and the Bitcoin treasury companies bubble — demand growth has fallen below trend since early October 2025." The firm said this suggests that most of the incremental demand from the current cycle has already been absorbed, removing a key source of price support for bitcoin. Based on these conditions, CryptoQuant sees bitcoin downside risk toward the $70,000 level, with a deeper decline toward $56,000 possible if bitcoin fails to regain momentum. "Downside reference points suggest a relatively shallow bear market," the report said. "Historically, bitcoin bear market bottoms have aligned with the realized price, currently near $56,000, implying a potential 55% drawdown from the recent all-time high — the smallest drawdown on record. Intermediate support is expected around the $70,000 level." When asked about timing, CryptoQuant head of research Julio Moreno told The Block the move to $70,000 could occur within months, while $56,000 would be a longer-term scenario. "$70,000 could be in three to six months," Moreno said. "$56,000 would be in the second half of 2026 if it comes to that." Moreno added that the bear market effectively began around mid-November, following the largest liquidation event in crypto history on Oct. 10. Since then, demand has continued to weaken. CryptoQuant said U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs turned into net sellers in the fourth quarter of 2025, with holdings declining by roughly 24,000 BTC. That marks a sharp reversal from the same period last year, when ETFs were strong net buyers. Addresses holding between 100 and 1,000 BTC — a cohort that includes ETFs and bitcoin treasury companies — are also growing below trend, CryptoQuant said, mirroring demand deterioration seen toward the end of 2021 ahead of the 2022 bear market.
  • SoFi launches SoFiUSD stablecoin to offer settlement infrastructure for banks and fintechs SoFi Technologies announced Thursday the launch of SoFiUSD, a fully reserved U.S. dollar stablecoin issued by SoFi Bank, marking what the company says is the first time a national bank has issued a stablecoin on a public, permissionless blockchain. The product aims to position SoFi as a stablecoin infrastructure provider for banks, fintechs, and enterprise platforms seeking faster, more efficient money movement, according to a statement shared with The Block. Initially deployed on Ethereum, support may also extend to other networks over time. SoFi said partners will be able to integrate SoFiUSD into settlement and payment flows using the firm's bank-grade infrastructure, enabling near-instant transactions around the clock at fractional-cent costs. The company added that the stablecoin will also be made available to SoFi members in the future, expanding its use beyond institutional settlement. Bank-issued stablecoin infrastructure SoFi Bank is an OCC-regulated, FDIC-insured depository institution, and SoFiUSD is fully backed 1:1 by cash reserves held for immediate redemption, according to the firm. As a federally chartered bank, SoFi said it can hold reserves in cash at its Federal Reserve account, eliminating liquidity and credit risk while generating yield that can be shared with partners and stablecoin holders. The company said its infrastructure will also allow banks, fintechs, and enterprise partners to issue their own white-label stablecoins or use SoFiUSD directly within their own systems. SoFi CEO Anthony Noto said the launch applies the firm's regulatory and operational framework to address slow settlement, fragmented providers, and opaque reserve models in financial services. "Blockchain is a technology super cycle that will fundamentally change finance, not just in payments, but across every area of money," Noto said, adding that SoFiUSD combines the firm's national bank charter with transparent, fully reserved onchain technology to provide a "safer and more efficient way to move funds." SoFi said SoFiUSD will be used not only within its crypto trading business but also for settlement by card networks, retailers, and other businesses seeking lower-cost, faster payments. The stablecoin is also expected to play a role in SoFi Pay for international remittances and point-of-sale purchases, as well as serve as an alternative payment method for its platform partners that process billions of transactions annually. The move comes as other major fintech and payments firms have unveiled or pursued their own stablecoin initiatives this year, including Klarna's planned KlarnaUSD, Western Union's USDPT, and Stripe's USDB — reflecting a broader push among traditional finance companies into blockchain-based settlement and payment infrastructure. SoFi's stablecoin launch also builds on its recent expansion into crypto services. In November, the firm became the first national bank to offer crypto trading directly to consumers under SoFi Crypto, allowing members to buy, sell, and hold nearly 30 cryptocurrencies within its app, following a phased rollout. SoFi previously offered crypto trading via a partnership with Coinbase in 2019, which was subsequently suspended in 2023. "One of the holds we've had for the last two years was in cryptocurrency, the ability to buy, sell, and hold crypto," Noto explained last month. "We were not allowed to do that as a bank. It was not permissible. But in March of this year, the OCC came out with an interpretive letter that it's now permissible for banks, like SoFi, to offer cryptocurrencies.
  • Ethereum developers name post-Glamsterdam upgrade ‘Hegota’ as 2026 roadmap takes shape Ethereum core developers have officially named the network’s next upgrade after Glamsterdam as “Hegota,” further defining the network’s 2026 development cycle as it continues its twice-a-year release cadence. Hegota blends the execution layer’s “Bogota” upgrade, following the tradition of naming updates after Devcon host cities, with the consensus layer’s “Heze”, named after a star. Developers said the headliner EIP for Hegota will not be selected until February, while work on Glamsterdam — Ethereum’s first scheduled upgrade of 2026 — continues. The naming decision was made during the All Core Developers Execution (ACDE) call on Thursday, the final meeting of the year. ACDE calls are set to resume on Jan. 5, when developers aim to finalize Glamsterdam’s scope. 2026 release cycle The naming comes at a moment when Ethereum’s upgrade process is settling into its intended rhythm. With Pectra and Fusaka shipped in 2025, the network has effectively begun its twice-annual upgrade schedule. The approach intends to make improvements more iterative, predictable, and narrowly scoped, reducing the need for rare, sweeping overhauls. Based on the established cadence, Glamsterdam would likely land in the first half of 2026, with Hegota following later in the year. While Hegota itself remains in early planning, its eventual upgrade is expected to draw from long-running roadmap goals and any overflow items deferred from Glamsterdam. Particularly, Verkle Trees — a prerequisite for fully stateless clients — have been frequently cited as a candidate for inclusion in one of the 2026 hard forks. However, no formal selection has been made. Other areas under discussion include state and history expiry mechanisms and additional execution-layer optimizations. Notably, state expiry conversations may garner more attention following a recent batch of proposals from the Ethereum Foundation. As The Block previously reported, the EF’s Stateless Consensus team warned that state bloat — the steady expansion of Ethereum’s stored data — is becoming a growing burden for node operators. Glamsterdam focuses on Layer 1 efficiency and builder decentralization Meanwhile, developers continue to refine Glamsterdam’s hard fork. Proposals still under consideration include enshrined proposer-builder separation, or ePBS, intended to curb centralization in block building; block-level access lists, which aim to reduce state access bottlenecks; and gas repricings to better align EVM costs with resource usage. More complex changes, such as reducing slot times, have already been pushed to later cycles. Any items that prove too ambitious for the timeline may roll into Hegota, with final decisions expected once calls resume in the new year. A roadmap that stretches beyond 2026 Hegota’s reveal also situates Ethereum within its broader, multi-phase technical roadmap. Back in September 2022, developers executed the first part of this path, dubbed The Merge, which transitioned Ethereum from a proof-of-work blockchain to a proof-of-stake network. The following components have been framed as The Surge, The Verge, The Purge, and The Splurge. The Surge focuses on achieving massive rollup-driven scaling. Fusaka advanced this goal through PeerDAS and expanded blob capacity, while Glamsterdam aims to improve Layer 1 performance further to better support rising rollup activity without creating new centralization pressures. Next, The Verge centers on statelessness and light-client verification. Potential Verkle integration in Hegota aligns directly with this phase by reducing node storage requirements and enabling broader network participation. Later phases — The Purge and The Splurge — address historical cleanup and long-term protocol simplification
  • 'Vote before Christmas or end up on Santa's naughty list': Uniswap founder submits UNIfication proposal for final governance decision founder Hayden Adams has submitted the long-anticipated UNIfication proposal for a final governance vote, setting up a decision window that runs from Dec. 19 through Dec. 25. In a post on X early Thursday, Adams urged delegates to participate ahead of the holiday deadline. "Vote before Christmas or end up on Santa's naughty list," he wrote. The vote follows a request for comment proposal from Uniswap Labs and the Uniswap Foundation last month and could mark a significant shift for the protocol and its token holders, who have long pushed for a so-called "fee switch" that would divert a portion of trading fees from liquidity providers to the protocol. The proposal follows years in which the authors said legal battles and a hostile U.S. regulatory environment under former Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler discouraged activating protocol fees, conditions they argue have now changed. If approved, the proposal would take effect following a two-day timelock and execute a series of onchain actions designed to restructure how value flows through the Uniswap ecosystem. These include an immediate retroactive burn of 100 million UNI from the treasury (an estimate of what might have been burned if the protocol fee switch had been active at token launch), the activation of protocol fee switches on Uniswap v2 and v3 on Ethereum mainnet, and the routing of Unichain sequencer fees into the same UNI burn mechanism. Fee activation for Uniswap v4 would be addressed through a separate governance proposal, Adams said. Uniswap has been one of the best-performing DeFi protocols in 2025, generating nearly $100 million in monthly fees on average and over $1 billion year-to-date, according to The Block's data dashboard. Fee switch rollout RELATED INDICES Protocol fees would be rolled out gradually to minimize disruption, according to the proposal, beginning with Uniswap v2 pools and a selected set of v3 pools that account for 80% to 95% of LP fees on Ethereum mainnet. On v2, activating the fee switch would reduce liquidity provider fees from 0.3% to 0.25%, with the remaining 0.05% directed to the protocol. On v3, protocol fees would be set as fractions of LP fees, initially one-quarter for 0.01% and 0.05% pools and one-sixth for 0.30% and 1% pools, with governance able to adjust the parameters over time. Under the proposal, Unichain sequencer fees would also be routed to the UNI burn mechanism after Layer 1 data costs and a 15% allocation to Optimism. Unichain, which launched about nine months ago, is currently processing roughly $100 billion in annualized decentralized exchange volume and about $7.5 million in annualized sequencer fees, the team said. The rollout could later expand to Layer 2s, other Layer 1s, Uniswap v4, UniswapX, PFDA — which is designed to route certain MEV (maximal extractable value) to the protocol — and aggregator hooks, the authors wrote. Beyond fee activation, the UNIfication proposal outlines a broader reorganization of the Uniswap ecosystem. This includes contractual agreements intended to align Uniswap Labs with Uniswap governance. Under the proposal, Uniswap Labs would enter into a services agreement recognized as legally binding in Wyoming under the state's Decentralized Unincorporated Nonprofit Association (DUNA) framework, alongside indemnification agreements covering members of the independent committee that negotiated the deal. The proposal text states that this structure is intended to ensure Labs' activities remain aligned with the interests of UNI token holders. The governance package also would shift operational responsibilities historically handled by the Uniswap Foundation to Uniswap Labs, eliminate Labs' interface, wallet, and API fees, and establish an annual growth budget of 20 million UNI funded from the treasury starting in 2026. The proposal frames these changes as part of a long-term model in which protocol usage drives UNI burns while Labs focuses on protocol development and growth. Uniswap's native token is trading up around 7.5% on Thursday following the proposal's submission for a final vote, according to The Block's UNI price page.
  • Memberships

Loading the member’s groups. Please wait.

Guest
Create an account