Crypto Currency Markets $1.8M of Traders' Funds Gone as Crypto Exchange XtraderFX (Cryptopoint) Becomes Insolvent |
- $1.8M of Traders' Funds Gone as Crypto Exchange XtraderFX (Cryptopoint) Becomes Insolvent
- What is the most valuable tool for crypto traders?
- HYP goes live on SouthX!
- Crypto Mostly a Speculative Investment: U.K. FCA Survey
- Interview with Bluzelle CEO Pavel Bains on the importance of decentralized databases, DeFi & More
- Top and Worst coins according to trend and momentum indicators, June 30th
- Why do you believe Algorand will be more effective and efficient than other cryptos in the long run?
- Ergo-Emurgo partnership yields new model for oracles
- Finxflo Product Launch and Beta Testing
- Ergo-Emurgo partnership yields new model for oracles
- Ergo-Emurgo partnership yields new model for oracles
- Ergo-Emurgo partnership yields new model for oracles
- Infamous Husband & Wife Crypto Pyramid Scammers Targeted, Police Respond To Armed Masked Men At Mansion...
- Public & private blockchain hybrid systems - How do you benefit from both solutions?
- BITCOIN VS GOLD - $2.8 BILLION FAKE GOLD SCAM & Peter Schiff Silent
- Kyber Protocol Upgrade
- Bitcoin Boasts Stellar Quarterly Performance As Q2 Comes To A Close
- Stashware is coming
- Bancor are live on YT with Chainlink for an AMA ahead of Bancor v2
- "We are about to witness a heated tug-of-war between centralised digital currencies like the inevitable Libra and central bank issued ‘Fedcoin’, and many others to come."
- Bitcoin Bull Market and the Stock Market correlation
- Balancer vows to reimburse victims of the $450,000 attack and rewards the bug hunter
- New Video About Vechain and How it Can Help Small Businesses
$1.8M of Traders' Funds Gone as Crypto Exchange XtraderFX (Cryptopoint) Becomes Insolvent Posted: 30 Jun 2020 10:05 AM PDT
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What is the most valuable tool for crypto traders? Posted: 30 Jun 2020 07:41 AM PDT I'm part of a team that has built an advanced AI/ML platform. There has been a ton of work under the hood to get advanced AI/ML algos to handle large datasets on any laptop. The net result of that for the user is that requires absolutely zero coding (because there's no complex set up process) and it runs entirely locally (high security & no one can front-run your trades!). We built this originally for traditional financial firms (which is the background of most of our team), but we've been increasingly looking at the cryptocurrency world as a lot of the tooling and methods that exist on Wall Street don't seem to be available in the world of crypto. There are a number of ways we could make our platform useful to crypto traders, but we're trying to identify the biggest problem for most people. Which of the following options would you most value? [link] [comments] | ||
Posted: 30 Jun 2020 09:12 PM PDT
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Crypto Mostly a Speculative Investment: U.K. FCA Survey Posted: 30 Jun 2020 08:39 PM PDT | ||
Interview with Bluzelle CEO Pavel Bains on the importance of decentralized databases, DeFi & More Posted: 30 Jun 2020 08:38 PM PDT
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Top and Worst coins according to trend and momentum indicators, June 30th Posted: 30 Jun 2020 03:55 PM PDT
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Why do you believe Algorand will be more effective and efficient than other cryptos in the long run? Posted: 30 Jun 2020 06:36 AM PDT | ||
Ergo-Emurgo partnership yields new model for oracles Posted: 30 Jun 2020 06:28 PM PDT The joint research on oracle pools will be implemented in the Ergo stablecoin project. Oracles are one of the critical elements of DeFi, providing a link between the siloed and self-contained world of the blockchain, and real-world data. It is imperative that dApps have access to reliable price data, among other information, in order to execute effectively and securely. New research from the Ergo-Emurgo partnership offers a new way to approach the problem of achieving consensus and posting data to the blockchain: Oracle Pools. Despite the importance of oracles in providing data feeds to dApps, the research notes that 'oracles schemes today lack transparency, accountability, and operational robustness'. This makes them a potential single point of failure, threatening the security of any software that relies on them. In the case of a stablecoin, it can mean the risk of losing its peg, and opening it to attack and exploits. Oracle pools The concept of oracles pools was designed for Ergo's extended UTXO smart contract model, though the high-level overview can be adapted for use in Account-based systems (like Ethereum).
Oracle pools involve several oracles operating together, with different shares in the pool, and receiving payouts based on the reliability of the data they provide. (To determine the 'true' value of the data, outliers are removed and the data points averaged.) To participate, an oracle needs to post collateral, and can be 'fined' for failure to provide high-quality data on time. Thus – as in the PoW consensus approach itself – honest oracles are rewarded, while fraudulent or unreliable ones waste their resources. Stablecoin When the new model is implemented, it will become a key part of the technology that will underpin the Ergo stablecoin. (This will take an algorithmic or collateralised approach, rather than being a fiat-backed coin like USDT or USDC.) Further details about the new stablecoin will be published in due course, with the new project expected to launch later in 2020 [link] [comments] | ||
Finxflo Product Launch and Beta Testing Posted: 30 Jun 2020 02:37 PM PDT
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Ergo-Emurgo partnership yields new model for oracles Posted: 30 Jun 2020 06:18 PM PDT The joint research on oracle pools will be implemented in the Ergo stablecoin project. Oracles are one of the critical elements of DeFi, providing a link between the siloed and self-contained world of the blockchain, and real-world data. It is imperative that dApps have access to reliable price data, among other information, in order to execute effectively and securely. New research from the Ergo-Emurgo partnership offers a new way to approach the problem of achieving consensus and posting data to the blockchain: Oracle Pools. Despite the importance of oracles in providing data feeds to dApps, the research notes that 'oracles schemes today lack transparency, accountability, and operational robustness'. This makes them a potential single point of failure, threatening the security of any software that relies on them. In the case of a stablecoin, it can mean the risk of losing its peg, and opening it to attack and exploits. Oracle pools The concept of oracles pools was designed for Ergo's extended UTXO smart contract model, though the high-level overview can be adapted for use in Account-based systems (like Ethereum).
Oracle pools involve several oracles operating together, with different shares in the pool, and receiving payouts based on the reliability of the data they provide. (To determine the 'true' value of the data, outliers are removed and the data points averaged.) To participate, an oracle needs to post collateral, and can be 'fined' for failure to provide high-quality data on time. Thus – as in the PoW consensus approach itself – honest oracles are rewarded, while fraudulent or unreliable ones waste their resources. Stablecoin When the new model is implemented, it will become a key part of the technology that will underpin the Ergo stablecoin. (This will take an algorithmic or collateralised approach, rather than being a fiat-backed coin like USDT or USDC.) Further details about the new stablecoin will be published in due course, with the new project expected to launch later in 2020 [link] [comments] | ||
Ergo-Emurgo partnership yields new model for oracles Posted: 30 Jun 2020 06:15 PM PDT The joint research on oracle pools will be implemented in the Ergo stablecoin project. Oracles are one of the critical elements of DeFi, providing a link between the siloed and self-contained world of the blockchain, and real-world data. It is imperative that dApps have access to reliable price data, among other information, in order to execute effectively and securely. New research from the Ergo-Emurgo partnership offers a new way to approach the problem of achieving consensus and posting data to the blockchain: Oracle Pools. Despite the importance of oracles in providing data feeds to dApps, the research notes that 'oracles schemes today lack transparency, accountability, and operational robustness'. This makes them a potential single point of failure, threatening the security of any software that relies on them. In the case of a stablecoin, it can mean the risk of losing its peg, and opening it to attack and exploits. Oracle pools The concept of oracles pools was designed for Ergo's extended UTXO smart contract model, though the high-level overview can be adapted for use in Account-based systems (like Ethereum).
Oracle pools involve several oracles operating together, with different shares in the pool, and receiving payouts based on the reliability of the data they provide. (To determine the 'true' value of the data, outliers are removed and the data points averaged.) To participate, an oracle needs to post collateral, and can be 'fined' for failure to provide high-quality data on time. Thus – as in the PoW consensus approach itself – honest oracles are rewarded, while fraudulent or unreliable ones waste their resources. Stablecoin When the new model is implemented, it will become a key part of the technology that will underpin the Ergo stablecoin. (This will take an algorithmic or collateralised approach, rather than being a fiat-backed coin like USDT or USDC.) Further details about the new stablecoin will be published in due course, with the new project expected to launch later in 2020 [link] [comments] | ||
Ergo-Emurgo partnership yields new model for oracles Posted: 30 Jun 2020 06:10 PM PDT The joint research on oracle pools will be implemented in the Ergo stablecoin project. Oracles are one of the critical elements of DeFi, providing a link between the siloed and self-contained world of the blockchain, and real-world data. It is imperative that dApps have access to reliable price data, among other information, in order to execute effectively and securely. New research from the Ergo-Emurgo partnership offers a new way to approach the problem of achieving consensus and posting data to the blockchain: Oracle Pools. Despite the importance of oracles in providing data feeds to dApps, the research notes that 'oracles schemes today lack transparency, accountability, and operational robustness'. This makes them a potential single point of failure, threatening the security of any software that relies on them. In the case of a stablecoin, it can mean the risk of losing its peg, and opening it to attack and exploits. Oracle pools The concept of oracles pools was designed for Ergo's extended UTXO smart contract model, though the high-level overview can be adapted for use in Account-based systems (like Ethereum).
Oracle pools involve several oracles operating together, with different shares in the pool, and receiving payouts based on the reliability of the data they provide. (To determine the 'true' value of the data, outliers are removed and the data points averaged.) To participate, an oracle needs to post collateral, and can be 'fined' for failure to provide high-quality data on time. Thus – as in the PoW consensus approach itself – honest oracles are rewarded, while fraudulent or unreliable ones waste their resources. Stablecoin When the new model is implemented, it will become a key part of the technology that will underpin the Ergo stablecoin. (This will take an algorithmic or collateralised approach, rather than being a fiat-backed coin like USDT or USDC.) Further details about the new stablecoin will be published in due course, with the new project expected to launch later in 2020 [link] [comments] | ||
Posted: 30 Jun 2020 09:50 AM PDT
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Public & private blockchain hybrid systems - How do you benefit from both solutions? Posted: 30 Jun 2020 04:49 PM PDT
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BITCOIN VS GOLD - $2.8 BILLION FAKE GOLD SCAM & Peter Schiff Silent Posted: 30 Jun 2020 04:06 PM PDT
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Posted: 30 Jun 2020 08:06 AM PDT Kyber is a fully on-chain liquidity protocol. It can be implemented on any blockchain that is enabled by smart contracts. Kyber protocol allows to aggregate liquidity from diverse sources. In this way, it helps to make decentralized exchanges more secure. In July 2020 Kyber is planning to upgrade. The new version is called Katalyst. This upgrade is meant to change several things:
The idea is to provide an ecosystem suitable for the majority of developers and liquidity providers. This upgrade is concentrated mainly around building a stronger and more secure community which will be attractive for developers in the future. [link] [comments] | ||
Bitcoin Boasts Stellar Quarterly Performance As Q2 Comes To A Close Posted: 30 Jun 2020 11:08 AM PDT
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Posted: 30 Jun 2020 08:39 AM PDT | ||
Bancor are live on YT with Chainlink for an AMA ahead of Bancor v2 Posted: 30 Jun 2020 07:40 AM PDT
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Posted: 30 Jun 2020 02:41 AM PDT
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Bitcoin Bull Market and the Stock Market correlation Posted: 30 Jun 2020 09:36 AM PDT Forgive me if my question seems stupid but I've been wondering something. More and more, people are correlating the stock market with the movement of Bitcoin and it got me thinking. How is Bitcoin expected to reach all these crazy high price predictions when it is dependent on the stock market? If Bitcoin started its historic bull run, wouldn't that mean it's movement would still be limited to what the s&p 500 does? [link] [comments] | ||
Balancer vows to reimburse victims of the $450,000 attack and rewards the bug hunter Posted: 30 Jun 2020 09:25 AM PDT
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New Video About Vechain and How it Can Help Small Businesses Posted: 30 Jun 2020 09:23 AM PDT So my brother and I entered this competition at the last second and scrambled to piece this together: https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=1&v=wNUXViRlGF0&feature=emb_title&fbclid=IwAR0d648ozVRtOGBv_L9viAU2ebsCONV6VCGWJM1M_4fZwyL3be5ZROyiNVU I guess the goal for us was to figure out a way to explain blockchain and Vechain so that the average person and business owner could understand it, which is why we limited our technical lingo and used a pizza place as an example. However, not sure if it's clear enough or if it's painting the right vision. What do you guys think? [link] [comments] |
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