If you’ve heard people call Aptos a “next-gen Layer-1” and wondered what makes it different, here’s the story in plain English. Aptos is a high-performance blockchain built by alumni of Meta’s Diem project. It uses the Move programming language and a parallel execution engine called Block-STM to push throughput and safety, while its APTtoken powers fees, staking, and governance. Below, we walk through where it came from, what shipped at launch, why its tech choices matter, how the token was allocated, who backed it, and how to keep tabs on the APT price today.
Curious why Hedera pops up whenever people talk about “enterprise-grade crypto”? The short version: Hedera is a public network that doesn’t use a traditional blockchain at all. It runs on hashgraph, a fast, fair, energy-efficient consensus invented by Dr. Leemon Baird, and it’s governed by a rotating council of global companies. Below, we trace where Hedera (and the HBAR token) came from, how the tech works, who runs it, and what to watch next.
China has escalated a new front in the crypto policy wars, alleging the United States effectively stole 127,000 bitcoins that were originally hacked in 2020. The claim came from China’s National Computer Virus Emergency Response Center (CVERC), which framed the episode as a “state-level” cyber operation linked to the LuBian mining pool hack. U.S. outlets covering the charge say Washington counters that the coins were seized through legal processes tied to criminal probes.
Coinbase Business Brings USDC Payments to Startups and SMEs
Coinbase has rolled out Coinbase Business in Singapore—its first international market outside the U.S.—aimed squarely at startups and small-to-medium businesses that want faster, lower-cost stablecoin payments and on-chain finance tools. The company framed the launch as a natural next step after introducing the product suite earlier this year.
When Ethereum wobbled this week, deep-pocketed buyers didn’t flinch—they bought the dip. Multiple on-chain dashboards and media reports point to roughly $360 million in ETH accumulation by large holders over the past several days, with at least one wallet snapping up two blocks of 10,000 ETH as prices fell. Another whale routed a 24,007 ETH (~$84M) purchase through an over-the-counter desk. The activity adds fresh fuel to the debate over whether whale accumulation precedes recoveries—or simply absorbs short-term panic selling.
Singapore just made its clearest case yet that the era of unregulated stablecoins is ending. Speaking at the Singapore FinTech Festival, Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) managing director Chia Der Jiun said coins with a “patchy record of keeping their peg” won’t cut it as safe settlement assets, foreshadowing a shakeout as the city-state puts long-planned rules into law.