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Qubic community, Monero's 51% attacker, votes to target Dogecoin next

The community for Qubic, an AI-focused blockchain project, voted to target the Dogecoin network over Zcash and Kaspa by a wide margin. The community for Qubic, the AI-focused blockchain project that executed a 51% attack on Monero this week and gained majority control of the network’s computing power, has voted to target Dogecoin (DOGE) next. Sergey Ivancheglo, the founder of the Qubic network, asked the Qubic community which application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC)-enabled, proof-of-work blockchain the group should target with its next 51% attack, including DOGE, Kaspa (KAS), and Zcash (ZEC). “The Qubic community has chosen Dogecoin,” Ivancheglo, who goes by the online handle Come-from-Beyond, wrote in a Sunday X post announcing the results of the vote. Dogecoin, which has a market cap of over $35 billion, received over 300 votes, more than all the other networks combined.  Source: Come-from-Beyond Qubic’s successful 51% attack on Monero, a privacy blockchain, took the crypto community by surprise, and the AI-focused network targeting another proof-of-work cryptocurrency could signal troubling implications for digital asset blockchains reliant on mining. Related: Monero ‘economic attack’ receives strong community response Qubic successfully gains hashrate dominance over the Monero network The Qubic team announced that it gained majority control over the computing power used to secure the Monero network on Monday.  Qubic’s mining pool successfully reorganized six blocks following a month-long war with other Monero miners for control of the network’s hashrate. The Qubic mining pool commands a hashrate of about 2.32 gigahashes per second (GH/s) at the time of this writing, according to MiningPoolStats. The Qubic mining pool controls the most hashrate on the Monero network. Source: MiningPoolStats “The Monero network’s core functionality remains intact. Its privacy, speed, and usability have not been compromised,” the Qubic team wrote on Tuesday following the takeover. “However, the end goal is for the Monero protocol’s security to be provided by Qubic’s miners,” the team continued. Following the attack, crypto exchange Kraken temporarily suspended Monero (XMR) deposits on the platform, citing the “potential risk to network integrity” from the 51% takeover of Monero by a single miner. Despite the temporary pause on Monero deposits, the exchange is keeping XMR withdrawals and trading open and told users that XMR deposits will return once the exchange deems it “safe,” according to an announcement from the company. Magazine: AI may already use more power than Bitcoin — and it threatens Bitcoin mining Read More

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Michael Saylor signals Strategy will buy the Bitcoin dip

Saylor signaled an impending Bitcoin purchase by Strategy, as BTC’s price hovers around the $117,000 level, down from the all-time high. Strategy co-founder Michael Saylor signaled an impending Bitcoin (BTC) purchase by the company, as the price of Bitcoin hovered below the all-time high of over $124,000 reached on Thursday. The company’s most recent Bitcoin acquisition occurred on Monday, when Strategy purchased 155 BTC for $18 million, bringing its total holdings to 628,946 BTC, valued at over $74.2 billion. Data from SaylorTracker shows the company is up over 60% on its BTC investment, representing over $28 billion in unrealized gains. Strategy’s history of Bitcoin purchases. Source: SaylorTracker Strategy continues to be a Bitcoin proxy investment for institutional funds that cannot legally hold BTC due to mandates and retail investors who do not want to custody crypto. The company pioneered the Bitcoin corporate treasury model, spawning a torrent of copycats, including altcoin treasury firms. Related: Michael Saylor joins chorus for clarity as US works to legally define crypto Saylor is unconcerned with the rise of altcoin treasury companies Saylor recently said that he is not worried about the growing trend of altcoin treasury companies competing for market share and investor attention. “I still think the vast majority of the capital flowing into the space is flowing into Bitcoin,” Saylor told Bloomberg in August. “We’ve gone from about 60 companies capitalizing on Bitcoin to 160 companies just in the past six months; so, I’m laser-like focused on Bitcoin,” he continued. Strategy has more than doubled its Bitcoin holdings since US President Donald Trump’s election in November 2024, acquiring 376,726 BTC in only nine months. For comparison, it took Strategy over four years to accumulate 252,220 BTC before the accelerated pace of purchases sparked by the 2024 US presidential election. The company began buying Bitcoin in 2020, causing its share price to appreciate by nearly 2,600% over five years, drawing interest from institutional investors, crypto traders, and retail equity buyers. Strategy is the largest corporate holder of Bitcoin, according to BitcoinTreasuries, and its stash of 628,946 BTC means the company has accumulated more Bitcoin than the top 10 Bitcoin treasury companies combined, giving the firm a large moat over competitors. Magazine: Scottie Pippen says Michael Saylor warned him about Satoshi chatter Read More

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Bitcoin risks new 2025 correction as BTC price uptrend starts 7th week

Key points: Bitcoin has enjoyed six weeks of its latest “price discovery uptrend” — but a correction is now due. Analysis shows that in previous halving cycles, BTC price tends to halt its second uptrend after five to seven weeks. A new dip now would still allow fresh all-time highs in Q4. Bitcoin (BTC) may start the last week of its latest “price discovery uptrend” on Monday with the price stuck below $120,000. New findings released Sunday by popular trader and analyst Rekt Capital show that BTC price is running out of time to make new highs. Bitcoin hits classic “price discovery correction” zone Bitcoin risks keeping its recent $124,500 all-time high in place — if it follows historical patterns. Updating X followers on bull market progress, Rekt Capital noted that Bitcoin is about to start the seventh week of its second “price discovery uptrend” since its 2024 halving. After each halving event, the subsequent bull market contains a succession of such uptrends, each accompanied by a correction. The timing of each phase throughout Bitcoin’s lifespan has been roughly similar. “Historically, Bitcoin Price Discovery Uptrend 1 tends to end between Week 6 & 8 of its uptrend. Whereas in Price Discovery Uptrend 2, Bitcoin tends to end its uptrend between Week 5 & 7,” Rekt Capital summarized. “Week 7 of Price Discovery Uptrend 2 begins tomorrow.” BTC/USD one-week chart. Source: Rekt Capital/X A linked chart from earlier in the year shows a potential upside target for the second uptrend at just below $160,000. “But if we think critically about previous Price Discovery Corrections across the cycles… Then only one of them started in Week 8 (2017), one of them started in Week 6 (2021) and and two of them started in Week 7 (2013 and 2025),” a newsletter on the topic observed in July.  In 2025, Bitcoin’s first corrective phase took the price from near $110,000 to under $75,000 — a roughly 30% drawdown not uncommon in previous halving cycles. New BTC price all-time high in Q4? Continuing, fellow trader Daan Crypto Trades noted that BTC/USD has not yet delivered a “green” August and September back-to-back. Related: Ether unstaking queue hits $3.8B: What does it mean for ETH price? However, a dip could form the pretext for a larger cycle top to come toward the end of the year. “We tend to see a quick flush followed by an explosive Q4 in most of the bull market years,” part of an X post stated Sunday.  “Any larger flushes in the next 1-2 months would be welcomed and could very well be the last larger dip for the Q4 end of the year rally which we see so often. If not, that’s fine too but I think it would pull forward a bigger high timeframe top as well.” BTC/USD monthly returns (screenshot). Source: CoinGlass Data from monitoring resource CoinGlass shows BTC/USD up 2.1% in August, already slightly above the 1.8% average. September, by contrast, has on average delivered a 3.8% price drawdown. This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision. Read More

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BlackRock CEO Larry Fink appointed as WEF interim co-chair

BlackRock CEO Larry Fink appointed as WEF interim co-chair Christina Comben · 36 seconds ago · 2 min read BlackRock CEO Larry Fink has been appointed interim co-chair of the World Economic Forum, alongside Roche’s André Hoffmann. 2 min read Updated: Aug. 17, 2025 at 1:03 pm UTC Cover art/illustration via CryptoSlate. Image includes combined content which may include AI-generated content. The World Economic Forum (WEF), the influential global convening force for policymakers and industry leaders, has appointed BlackRock CEO Larry Fink as interim co-chair. The move comes hot on the heels of a high-profile internal review that cleared WEF founder Klaus Schwab of wrongdoing and set the stage for a temporary leadership overhaul as the organization recalibrates its governance model. With trillions in assets under management, BlackRock commands outsized influence across financial markets, ESG policy, and the investment strategies of governments and corporations. Fink’s interim appointment is a strategic move that could accelerate the institutional adoption of digital assets like Bitcoin within global policy forums and mainstream financial infrastructure. Larry Fink and a new era of financial influence Fink’s appointment comes at a time when questions around institutional trust, sustainability, and cross-border cooperation are more acute than ever. Under Fink’s guidance, BlackRock has been a pioneer of environmental, social, and governance (ESG) investing, pushing for a more climate-resilient global economy; a priority that has increasingly permeated WEF dialogues in Davos and beyond. BlackRock has also been a major institutional force in crypto markets, and its landmark Bitcoin spot ETF approval in early 2024 dramatically accelerated adoption and legitimized Bitcoin as an asset class for pensions, endowments, and retail investors globally. With Fink at the helm of the WEF, the lines between traditional finance and the digital asset economy blur even further. The Forum regularly shapes global regulatory, economic, and technology discussions, and Fink now holds considerable influence over both Wall Street and Davos. Fink’s appointment could usher in a more progressive stance on crypto within elite policy circles, potentially opening doors for greater integration of Bitcoin and blockchain solutions in global finance and among world decision-makers. Klaus Schwab cleared, eyes on WEF transformation The internal review that prompted these shifts centered on longstanding questions about Klaus Schwab’s role and the organizational structure of the Forum. Schwab, who founded the WEF in 1971, has long been a focal point for criticism and, lately, scrutiny regarding governance. After clearing Schwab of wrongdoing, the WEF announced its intention to install interim co-chairs in a bid to increase transparency and bring new perspectives to the leadership table. Fink’s appointment thereby serves a dual purpose: to reassure stakeholders by placing a respected industry leader in stewardship, and to reinforce the Forum’s commitment to institutional accountability and renewal. Fink will serve alongside other interim co-chair, André Hoffmann, vice chairman of Roche Holding AG, forming a joint leadership that reflects the WEF’s renewed mandate for broad-based, multi-sector collaboration. With geopolitical tensions, economic uncertainties, and the accelerating pace of climate change occupying center stage, the incoming interims face a tall order: restore confidence, drive progress across key global issues, and prepare the Forum for its next chapter. Mentioned in this article Press Releases Read More

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100 days over $100k and nobody cares: Why Bitcoin’s bull run feels lonely

100 days over $100k and nobody cares: Why Bitcoin’s bull run feels lonely Christina Comben · 18 seconds ago · 2 min read Despite Bitcoin’s record run, 100 days above $100k and battering all-time highs, retail remains strikingly absent from this Bitcoin bull run. 2 min read Updated: Aug. 17, 2025 at 12:59 pm UTC Cover art/illustration via CryptoSlate. Image includes combined content which may include AI-generated content. The latest Bitcoin bull run feels different. Scratch that. Every bitcoin bull run feels different, as each cycle brings with it fresh narratives and new blood. But there’s one element that’s always been consistent throughout Bitcoin’s history, and that’s retail interest in buying into freedom tech and f**k you money. Well, Bitcoin to the moon rallies, at least. Retail is sitting this Bitcoin bull run out Remember retail? Because all I hear is crickets… Literally zero taxi drivers, no friends’ cousins twice-removed, or kindergarten teachers asking if it’s too late to buy. Despite some analysts’ conviction about Alt Season revving up, I haven’t even been asked about Fartcoin, Dogecoin, or Ripple, and I have a pretty good templated answer to the latter, if you’d like to borrow. Anyway, the point here is this: retail is sitting this Bitcoin bull run out, and it can’t be because of a lack of awareness. This time it’s different. Somewhere between the Bitcoin ETFs, presidential pumps, and Larry Fink taking over at the WEF, retail decided this game was no longer for them. Dare I say it? Bitcoin’s just no fun anymore, or maybe retail got so badly burned last time around they finally learned not to play with fire. No one’s even casually searching for news: Google Trends for Bitcoin isn’t even grazing a mild peak next to Japanese walking and Labubu dolls. That no one uses Google to search for anything anymore could arguably be a factor in this, but still, the silence from distant relatives and service workers is palpable. 100 days over $100K You would hardly even notice that the number-one crypto has spent 100 consecutive days above $100k; a psychological feat, a generational inflection point. Each time Bitcoin has leapfrogged a major round number ($100, $1,000, $10,000), it has ushered in a new era of adoption, investment, and hockey-stick price action. Yet, this time around, nobody cares. Not only is Bitcoin sustaining celestial highs and carving out new all-time tops, but its technical backbone is strengthening. Bitcoin’s 200-day moving average crossed above $100,000, a powerful signal for traders and long-term holders alike. In every Bitcoin bull run, breaking and holding above historic resistance on both price and moving averages has preceded periods of continued momentum. But retail is nowhere to be found. This cycle has even flushed out some of the longest-standing Bitcoin whales, making way for the same corrosive institutions that Bitcoin was meant to abhor. Crypto in your 401k 2025 has also seen a quantum shift in retirement planning with Bitcoin and other cryptos being legally allowed in mainstream retirement accounts, opening direct access for tens of millions of Americans to accumulate hard money for their futures. But retail couldn’t care less. They’ve packed their bags all the way to the virtual Bahamas and said “Let’s sit this one out.” And while Bitcoin has arguably morphed from a speculative trade to a staple of retirement portfolios and institutional diversification, retail’s absence feels incredibly sad. Bitcoin Market Data At the time of press 12:59 pm UTC on Aug. 17, 2025, Bitcoin is ranked #1 by market cap and the price is up 0.79% over the past 24 hours. Bitcoin has a market capitalization of $2.36 trillion with a 24-hour trading volume of $44.9 billion. Learn more about Bitcoin › Crypto Market Summary At the time of press 12:59 pm UTC on Aug. 17, 2025, the total crypto market is valued at at $4.02 trillion with a 24-hour volume of $119.12 billion. Bitcoin dominance is currently at 58.55%. Learn more about the crypto market › Latest Bitcoin Stories Press Releases Read More

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‘People deserve to know this threat is coming’: superintelligence and the countdown to save humanity

‘People deserve to know this threat is coming’: superintelligence and the countdown to save humanity Christina Comben · 2 hours ago · 9 min read Superintelligence and AI pose an unprecedented risk to our survival, yet few people realize how close we are to potential catastrophe and that the time to act is now. 9 min read Updated: Aug. 17, 2025 at 1:05 pm UTC Cover art/illustration via CryptoSlate. Image includes combined content which may include AI-generated content. Welcome to Slate Sundays, CryptoSlate’s new weekly feature showcasing in-depth interviews, expert analysis, and thought-provoking op-eds that go beyond the headlines to explore the ideas and voices shaping the future of crypto. Would you take a drug that had a 25% chance of killing you? Like a one-in-four possibility that rather than curing your ills or preventing diseases, you drop stone-cold dead on the floor instead? That’s poorer odds than Russian Roulette. Even if you are trigger-happy with your own life, would you risk taking the entire human race down with you? The children, the babies, the future footprints of humanity for generations to come? Thankfully, you wouldn’t be able to anyway, since such a reckless drug would never be allowed on the market in the first place. Yet, this is not a hypothetical situation. It’s exactly what the Elon Musks and Sam Altmans of the world are doing right now. “AI will probably lead to the end of the world… but in the meantime, there’ll be great companies,” Altman, 2015. No pills. No experimental medicine. Just an arms race at warp speed to the end of the world as we know it. P(doom) circa 2030? How long do we have left? That depends. Last year, 42% of CEOs surveyed at the Yale CEO Summit responded that AI had the potential to destroy humanity within five to 10 years. Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei estimates a 10-25% chance of extinction (or “P(doom)” as it’s known in AI circles). Unfortunately, his concerns are echoed industrywide, especially by a growing cohort of ex-Google and OpenAI employees, who elected to leave their fat paychecks behind to sound the alarm on the Frankenstein they helped create. A 10-25% chance of extinction is an exorbitantly high level of risk for which there is no precedent. For context, there is no permitted percentage for the risk of death from, say, vaccines or medicines. P(doom) must be vanishingly small; vaccine-associated fatalities are typically less than one in millions of doses (far lower than 0.0001%). For historical context, during the development of the atomic bomb, scientists (including Edward Teller) uncovered a one in three million chance of starting a nuclear chain reaction that would destroy the earth. Time and resources were channeled toward further investigation. Let me say that again. One in three million. Not one in 3,000. Not one in 300. And certainly not one in four. How desensitized have we become that predictions like this don’t jolt humanity out of our slumber? If ignorance is bliss, knowledge is an inconvenient guest AI safety advocate at ControlAI, Max Winga, believes the problem isn’t one of apathy; it’s ignorance (and in this case, ignorance isn’t bliss). Most people simply don’t know that the helpful chatbot that writes their work emails has a one in four chance of killing them as well. He says: “AI companies have blindsided the world with how quickly they’re building these systems. Most people aren’t aware of what the endgame is, what the potential threat is, and the fact that we have options.” That’s why Max abandoned his plans to work on technical solutions fresh out of college to focus on AI safety research, public education, and outreach. “We need someone to step in and slow things down, buy ourselves some time, and stop the mad race to build superintelligence. We have the fate of potentially every human being on earth in the balance right now. These companies are threatening to build something that they themselves believe has a 10 to 25% chance of causing a catastrophic event on the scale of human civilization. This is very clearly a threat that needs to be addressed.” A global priority like pandemics and nuclear war Max has a background in physics and learned about neural networks while processing images of corn rootworm beetles in the Midwest. He’s enthusiastic about the upside potential of AI systems, but emphatically stresses the need for humans to retain control. He explains: “There are many fantastic uses of AI. I want to see breakthroughs in medicine. I want to see boosts in productivity. I want to see a flourishing world. The issue comes from building AI systems that are smarter than us, that we cannot control, and that we cannot align to our interests.” Max is not a lone voice in the choir; a rising groundswell of AI professionals is joining in the chorus. In 2023, hundreds of leaders from the tech world, including OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and pioneering AI scientist Geoffrey Hinton, broadly recognized as the ‘Godfather of AI’, signed a statement pushing for global regulation and oversight of AI. It affirmed: “Mitigating the risk of extinction from AI should be a global priority alongside other societal-scale risks such as pandemics and nuclear war.” In other words, this technology could potentially kill us all, and making sure it doesn’t should be top of our agendas. Is that happening? Unequivocally not, Max explains: “No. If you look at the governments talking about AI and making plans about AI, Trump’s AI action plan, for example, or the UK AI policy, it’s full speed ahead, building as fast as possible to win the race. This is very clearly not the direction we should be going in. We’re in a dangerous state right now where governments are aware of AGI and superintelligence enough that they want to race toward it, but they’re not aware of it enough to realize why that is a really bad idea.” Shut me down, and I’ll tell your wife One of

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Miners, not ETFs, are building the financial backbone of Bitcoin

Miners, not ETFs, are building the financial backbone of Bitcoin Armando Aguilar · 5 hours ago · 3 min read Since the April 2024 halving, Bitcoin miners have evolved into systemic stabilizers, positioning themselves as critical players in BTC-native finance through strategic balance-sheet management and liquidity strategies. 3 min read Updated: Aug. 17, 2025 at 12:49 am UTC Cover art/illustration via CryptoSlate. Image includes combined content which may include AI-generated content. The following is a guest post and opinion from Armando Aguilar, Head of Capital Formation and Growth at TeraHash. ETFs may dominate the headlines, but the real architects of Bitcoin’s liquidity are the miners quietly building balance sheets. Since the April 2024 halving, the role of miners as a whole has shifted from pure producers to systemic stabilizers. While institutions celebrate inflows, miners are doing the hard work of anchoring Bitcoin-native finance (BTCFi). In this article, I explore the way miners are emerging as financial actors, how they’re deploying balance-sheet strategies, and what BTCFi infrastructure still lacks in order for this evolution to succeed. From Hashrate to Balance Sheets: The Post-Halving Pivot The 2024 halving slashed block rewards, tightening margins across the industry. As a result, many miners had to restructure their operations not just to survive, but to manage capital with greater precision. No longer content with selling block rewards at market, miners began behaving more like corporate treasuries: timing BTC sales, collateralizing reserves, and building financial buffers. As of mid-2025, statistics show that Bitcoin miners collectively hold over 104,500 BTC (roughly $12.7 billion), while corporate treasuries added 159,107 BTC in Q2 alone. What appears to be passive “HODLing” is, in fact, a deliberate liquidity strategy—one that reduces exposure to short-term volatility while preserving long-term upside. This shift coincides with aggressive growth in network scale: by mid-2025 Bitcoin’s hashrate surged past 970 million TH/s, achieving almost 60 % YoY growth. As miners scale up operations, they’re also expanding financial exposure, treating balance-sheet management as strategically as hashrate optimization. We’re witnessing a full-cycle pivot. Rather than merely producing Bitcoin, miners are actively shaping its capital markets. Treasury-Driven Mining: Three Pillars of Strategy Collateralization: Rather than diluting equity, miners are borrowing against BTC holdings to fund operations. This approach allows for tactical spending without giving up long-term exposure. Timing: Some firms now treat BTC sales like macro trades, holding through downturns or locking in gains during rallies. These are not knee-jerk moves, but properly thought-out, structured exit strategies based on clear goals and market signals. Liquidity Buffers: Miners are no longer operating paycheck-to-paycheck. Many are building BTC reserves as cushions for market stress, giving them breathing room when network fees or hash competition spike. Public miners that maintain transparent BTC holdings and avoid forced sales are often viewed as more stable, strategic, and better aligned with institutional expectations. Naturally, the 2024 halving didn’t create this mindset, but it certainly accelerated it. Post-2024, these financial strategies became necessary for survival rather than merely optional. Signaling Power: When Miners Move Markets Miners have begun sending deliberate signals to the broader ecosystem. Holding BTC is about more than just a belief in the protocol now. It’s a message: “This asset matters, and we’re managing it accordingly.” When large public miners delay sales, markets take notice. Their actions now influence sentiment and pricing, much like central banks adjusting interest rates. This dynamic used to be the domain of exchanges—not anymore. Some countries are now exploring BTC for strategic reserves. Chainalysis even published a report on the subject earlier this year, pointing out the U.S., the Czech Republic, Switzerland, and others among the prominent supporters of the idea. Meanwhile, major names like Saylor’s MicroStrategy and Marathon Digital are accumulating and disclosing BTC positions with the same transparency you would expect from institutional asset managers. Put simply, when miners act like treasuries, mining itself turns into institutional capital management, setting the tone for Bitcoin’s financial maturity as a global asset. Whether the headlines reflect this or not, that’s exactly what we’re seeing now. The BTCFi Gap: Infrastructure Still Playing Catch-Up Yet, while miners mature, BTCFi remains fragile. The infrastructure meant to support this financial layer is still underdeveloped. Settlements remain slow, with confirmation delays limiting composability. Liquidity is siloed across fragmented protocols with minimal coordination. Instruments are often trust-based, lacking the neutrality BTC-native systems demand. Projects are continuously experimenting—custody-free lending protocols, BTC-backed stablecoins, hash-rate forwards—but most of these tools are still in the early stages, far from broader adoption. This gap between maturing miner behavior and underdeveloped protocol infrastructure is dangerous. Left unresolved, it could turn a stabilizing force into a point of failure. If BTCFi stalls, miners could stand to lose credibility just as their role becomes essential. That’s why real infrastructure is necessary here: Cross-protocol interoperability so miners can allocate capital efficiently across platforms. Robust oracles that reflect true market prices and mining inputs without manipulation risk. Incentive models that reward transparency and penalize extractive behavior. Without these, reserves meant to stabilize the system could become systemic liabilities… Conclusion: Recognize the Role or Prepare to Fail Miners didn’t ask for this role, but they’ve stepped into it. In a system without a central bank, someone must set the floor. Today, it’s miners who are holding reserves, managing risk, and acting with systemic foresight. If BTCFi fails to mature, it won’t be because miners fell short. It will be because the ecosystem refused to acknowledge the financial infrastructure they were already building and support the actors holding it all together. Pull-quote: “Bitcoin turns institutional when miners act like treasuries. And that’s exactly what’s happening—whether the headlines catch up or not.” Mentioned in this article Press Releases Read More

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Choose your freedom money wisely, Litecoin warns

Choose your freedom money wisely, Litecoin warns Christina Comben · 5 hours ago · 2 min read Litecoin urges caution in choosing your freedom money amid rising attacks on smaller PoW coins and increasing centralized PoS chains. 2 min read Updated: Aug. 17, 2025 at 1:04 pm UTC Cover art/illustration via CryptoSlate. Image includes combined content which may include AI-generated content. Litecoin delivered a clear warning for anyone navigating the crypto world: the era of truly decentralized, fairly launched, proof-of-work (PoW) coins without borders, premines, or venture capitalists is behind us. Amid increasing centralization and rising threat of attack, it pays to “choose your freedom money wisely.” “It is basically impossible to duplicate the launch of a fully decentralized, fairly launched, no pre-mine, borderless, void of VC’s, hard capped PoW cryptocurrency like that of bitcoin or litecoin and not have it co-opted or attacked at this point. That ship has sailed, people..” Why security and decentralization matter: the Monero attack Recent events with Monero (XMR) help to illustrate Litecoin’s message. On August 12, 2025, Monero suffered a 51% attack after the Qubic mining pool gained majority control of its hash rate, reorganizing six blocks and orphaning approximately 60 others. This temporarily threatened network security, forced Kraken exchange to suspend Monero deposits, and sent the price tumbling over 13% in a week. The attack highlighted a key vulnerability of PoW chains that lack critical mass (especially those that are privacy-focused with fewer miners), showing that even pioneering projects with solid privacy technology, like Monero, are not immune if their degree of decentralization is insufficient. Proof of stake and the perils of co-option While PoW chains like Bitcoin and Litecoin have stayed loyal to their launch principles, many newer chains have adopted the proof-of-stake (PoS) consensus in a quest for reduced energy consumption and greater transaction speed. PoS allows users to stake coins to help secure the network and earn rewards. However, the centralizing tendencies of PoS are well-documented. According to the academic study, Centralization in Proof-of-Stake Blockchains: A Game-Theoretic Analysis, by July 2025, more than 60% of staked Ethereum belonged to just five entities, including Lido and major exchanges. This concentration led to governance votes where a small number of stakeholders wielded disproportionate power, influencing upgrades and protocol changes. Solana’s validator and staking ecosystem is similarly dominated by a handful of well-capitalized entities. This exposes the network to outsized influence and increased risks of censorship or manipulation if those actors coordinate, are pressured, or compromised; “co-opted,” as Litecoin wrote. While PoS is efficient and scalable, the system’s fate can hinge on large holders, making it vulnerable to regulatory capture, exchange outages, or orchestrated attacks. The same study revealed that the more centralized staking becomes, the greater the chance of network co-option, as opposed to the more resilient distributed mining models of classic PoW blockchains. The value of “freedom money” While there is arguably no second best, Bitcoin and Litecoin, both launched without VC money or pre-mines and with fixed supply caps, remain touchstones for true “freedom money.” Their reliance on open PoW mining, global distribution, and established security has shielded them from many co-option risks. Widespread distribution of mining power, fixed supplies (21 million for Bitcoin, 84 million for Litecoin), and permissionless participation make them rare examples in an increasingly centralized crypto landscape. With the rise of attacks on vulnerable PoW networks and increasing centralization of PoS chains, Litecoin’s advice couldn’t be more timely. Freedom money isn’t just about price; it’s about resilience, distribution, and the ability to resist capture from within or without, not only defining your portfolio, but your financial sovereignty. Litecoin Market Data At the time of press 1:04 pm UTC on Aug. 17, 2025, Litecoin is ranked #19 by market cap and the price is up 4.34% over the past 24 hours. Litecoin has a market capitalization of $9.33 billion with a 24-hour trading volume of $561.49 million. Learn more about Litecoin › Crypto Market Summary At the time of press 1:04 pm UTC on Aug. 17, 2025, the total crypto market is valued at at $4.02 trillion with a 24-hour volume of $118.62 billion. Bitcoin dominance is currently at 58.57%. Learn more about the crypto market › Latest Litecoin Stories Press Releases Read More

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Mace Consult-Arup JV Picked for Program Management on $28.7B Hong Kong Megaproject

Northern Metropolis Coordination Office The appointment marks the HKSAR government’s first use of the program management office model on a construction project. Mace Consult and Arup have been chosen in a joint venture to lead the Hong Kong government’s first implementation of its project management office model to build what it says is the transformative $28.7-billion Northern Metropolis urban development along the northern Shenzhen River border with China. Hong Kong’s Civil Engineering and Development Dept. announced Aug. 8 that the UK-based firms will establish the office to provide multi-disciplinary services for construction of the Kwu Tung North/Fanling North New Development Area and San Tin Technopole Project, key components of the 74-acre megaproject that will connect the northern part of Hong Kong to the southern part of Shenzhen in China. The Hong Kong Special Administrative Region government’s first use of the PM office model aims to streamline workflows, allow earlier stakeholder collaboration and enable digital integration to collect and analyze data for continuous improvement, said the department, adding that the project is expected to create around 650,000 jobs. “The scale of the Northern Metropolis is unprecedented,” said department director Michael Fong Hok-shing. “It is a massive and complex program and the [program management office model] will provide support and oversight to help us navigate the challenges ahead.”  He added, “It’s not just about managing scale; it’s about working smarter.” Hong Kong Special Administrative Region government CEO Carrie Lam announced the Northern Metropolis development in 2021, presenting an ambitious plan to foster economic and tech growth while addressing the region’s housing shortages, Bloomberg reported. AECOM, in a joint venture with AtkinsRéalis, announced in April 2025 that the region’s Highways Dept. sought its technical services to build the Northern Metropolis Highway, another key component of the larger development. Arup, ranked No. 16 on ENR’s 2025 Top International Design Firms list, noted its support to the Civil Engineering and Development Dept. in “shaping this transformative area,” said East Asia managing principal Theresa Yeung. Mace has been previously ranked on ENR’s Top International Contractors list. Emell Derra Adolphus has more than a decade of writing and journalism experience. He is senior editor of ENR’s Top Lists and Survey Rankings at ENR magazine and frequently contributes stories on technology, climate resiliency, diversity, equity and inclusion. Read More

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