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November 24, 2020 The top stories in bitcoin, crypto and more – all in one place, delivered daily By Daniel Kuhn If you were forwarded this newsletter and would like to receive it, sign up here.
Top shelf More than 500,000 ETH have been locked and loaded into Ethereum 2.0's deposit contract, kick-starting the network's major, multi-year development phase. JPMorgan analysts say institutions are piling into bitcoin. And the IRS has again sent out (possibly erroneous) letters to crypto traders indicating they owe taxes on unrealized gains.
Taxman knocketh
Institutional analysis Gold bug to BTC 'cockroach' Crypto… currency? E-money license Introducing Valid Points, a CoinDesk Newsletter CoinDesk is staking 32 ETH in Ethereum's historic upgrade, and research analyst Christine Kim and tech reporter Will Foxley are breaking down Ethereum 2.0 and its sweeping impacts on crypto markets, weekly. Using data direct from CoinDesk’s own Eth 2 validator node, Valid Points features original insights about what the future of Ethereum looks like for industry stakeholders and investors.
The Valid Points newsletter launches with Eth 2.0's launch. Learn why CoinDesk staked 32 ETH in the new blockchain protocol and follow our journey and insights by subscribing to Valid Points here.
Quick bites BRING BACK BITCOIN SIGN GUY: President-elect Joe Biden tapped former Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen as the next U.S. Treasury Department head, with oversight of FinCEN, IRS and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC). CRYPTO IPO: Australia-based West Coast Aquaculture (WCA) has completed an A$5 million (US$3.65 million) initial public offering, becoming the first firm in the nation to use cryptocurrency for its capital raise. ACJR SPEAKS: A professional association for crypto journalists has weighed in on the lawsuit brought by Binance against Forbes, affirming that the standard for defamation is “actual malice.” NOT DEMURE: WTF Happened in 2020? | Meltem Demirors (Bankless – YouTube video) BIG IDEA: Cypherpunk, Crypto Anarchy and How Bitcoin Lost the Narrative – Brady Dale’s crypto-philosophical essay makes for an engaging Thanksgiving read.
Market intel Powder keg Airdrops and inflows
Webinar: How to Value Ethereum The penultimate episode of How to Value Ethereum explores the metric of gas costs. How is gas calculated? What is its unit of account? And why is it an important metric to valuing Ethereum?
Find out the answers to these questions by registering for How to Value Ethereum, episode 3, on Nov. 24.
At stake Deposit set Yesterday morning (in the U.S. at least), Ethereum pundit Anthony Sassano tweeted that 307,392 ETH ($181 million) had been allocated to a smart contract that would kick off the first phase of Ethereum 2.0, in what’s shaping up to be the largest blockchain overhaul to date.
That was nearly 220,000 ETH shy of the total amount needed to get things rolling on schedule. Exactly 524,288 ETH (worth over $325 million) needed to be locked up in the so-called deposit contract to begin the next phase of development by Dec. 1.
Yesterday evening, that amount was matched, a significant feat of community commitment. Now begins the hard part. Ethereum will undergo a transition in consensus model, from the proof-of-work system implemented in Bitcoin to the proof-of-stake mechanism thought to improve blockchain scalability. Eth 2.0 will also see the implementation of sharding, another cryptographic technique meant to improve transaction throughput.
While the launch of the actual Eth 2.0 network is a ways off, on Dec. 1 a parallel proof-of-stake blockchain dubbed “the Beacon chain” will go live. In this initial phase of development, the PoW Ethereum and Beacon chain will exist side-by-side.
Those that pledged funds to the deposit contract will be validators on this experimental network, and earn rewards for processing transactions and creating new blocks. CoinDesk is just one of many network validators. One potential reason funding for the deposit contract came down to the wire is that the staked ether is irretrievable in the short term, at least until Ethereum 2.0 development progresses to a significant degree.
Viktor Bunin, a protocol specialist at blockchain infrastructure service provider Bison Trails, said that while some users may be put off by the one-way nature of staking ETH in the contract, “by and large the community is extremely excited to launch Eth 2.0.”
The beacon chain activation is the first of four phases of the Ethereum 2.0 migration, which begins with the onboarding of validators and eventually leads to the full transition of all users and dapps to the new network.
“There’s not a chance that Eth 2.0 doesn’t launch,” Bunin told CoinDesk. “Eth 2.0 is a vision. It is a drive to improve Ethereum to scale support for the entire planet. Even if this launch is not successful for some reason, you can be sure that the community will learn from it and try, and try, again.”
Who won #CryptoTwitter?
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