Source: Greenfield Compiled by: Zhou, ChainCatcher The digital asset ecosystem is evolving in unexpected ways: new fundamental elements, new behavioral patterns, and new coordination tools are constantly emerging. What was considered experimental a year ago may now be a basic element. As investors, our responsibility is to closely monitor these changes, understand which emerging ideas can develop into lasting infrastructure, and truly gain market acceptance. Last year, we shared our predictions for trends in the coming year. This year, we're taking a different approach. Instead of claiming to predict the future, we want to share our vision: a wish list of ten ideas, questions, and products that we hope founders will begin addressing in 2026. Through these reflections, we can gain a deeper understanding of the next wave of significant opportunities that may emerge in the infrastructure, decentralized finance (DeFi), and consumer sectors, and how the evolving regulatory environment will shape the foundation of these opportunities. 1. Infrastructure - BuilderNet for Solvers question: Over 50% of “non-toxic” (i.e., low-risk) retail order flows through the EVM via an intent aggregator that utilizes a solver model. However, the solver often faces latency when integrating new routes because a significant amount of work is required to fully understand its logic, prevent rollbacks, and maintain low simulation latency. This presents a chicken-and-egg problem for many new Automated Market Makers (AMMs) such as Uniswap v4 hooks: solvers need existing order flows to integrate new liquidity sources, but they themselves are responsible for routing the majority of those flows. This hinders innovation in AMMs, as hooks often have to "lobby" large solvers for integration, sometimes even requiring behind-the-scenes deals. In particular, v4 hooks offer a very broad design space where every invariant can be broken, yet currently only 4% of v4 trading volume flows through pools with hooks. Chance: Flashbots' BuilderNet coordinates order flows and MEV-boost boosts by coordinating independent block builder instances within a TEE (Trusted Execution Environment). A similar idea could be applied to solver marketplaces, where solvers can coordinate and share information such as intent order flows, RFQ (Request for Quote) integrations, analytics/liquidity metrics, routing integrations, and collaborative solving, i.e., intent auctions sold in wholesale, without requiring trust. 2. Infrastructure – DePIN, combining hybrid cryptography and hardware security for high-performance and private computing. question: TEE promises "private AI in the cloud," but recent side-channel attacks demonstrate that they can still leak data—especially in decentralized, permissionless environments. On the other hand, while pure cryptography (MPC/FHE) is highly secure, it's too slow and complex for most real-world AI workloads. Currently, no platform simultaneously offers TEE-level speed, cryptographic security, and a clear, usage-based model billing model. Chance: This product is a secure AI runtime environment that runs models in a high-speed terminal environment (TEE) by default, but automatically routes the most sensitive steps to a small MPC cluster and logs verifiable "proof of correct execution" and metered usage. Customers gain cloud-like performance, audit-compliant privacy protection, and a built-in model provider monetization model. This is crucial for regulated industries and a growing target audience, as businesses and consumers increasingly rely on AI, and the exposure of sensitive data threatens IP ownership, thereby jeopardizing profitability and freedom. 3. Infrastructure – Unified Stablecoin Liquidity Layer question: The stablecoin liquidity layer provides a shared infrastructure for stablecoin trading and settlement across multiple blockchains. Instead of maintaining separate liquidity pools on each network, liquidity providers pool funds to establish a unified reserve accessible to any chain. A coordination mechanism tracks the total balance and instructs local contracts to deliver funds when a transaction occurs. Liquidity is dynamically rebalanced to meet demand, ensuring consistent depth and pricing efficiency across all connected networks. Chance: This infrastructure addresses one of the core inefficiencies of DeFi—the fragmentation of stablecoin liquidity. By consolidating liquidity, stablecoin transfers and exchanges become more capital-efficient, cheaper, and more predictable. This architecture offers traders lower slippage, liquidity providers higher capital utilization, and a universal settlement layer for payments, vaults, and stablecoin-based applications. It represents a foundational step towards frictionless, cross-network financial infrastructure. 4. DEFI – Risk Management and Smart Underwriting question: Risk management in the DeFi space remains a massive and unresolved issue. There are numerous approaches to risk management, ranging from in-protocol governance mechanisms to outsourcing to risk management firms. Chance: In a highly competitive field like cryptocurrency, it's not surprising that some institutions are willing to push the limits of risk, especially given the lack of clear safeguards or frameworks to ensure the broader market understands these risks. One approach to addressing these risks is to more clearly define them, such as by introducing structured stratification or other mechanisms to more precisely allocate risk exposure among participants. Historically, effective pricing and allocation of risk has been difficult and costly due to limited historical data, weak trust frameworks, and inadequate risk monitoring infrastructure. However, tools are improving, confidence in DeFi is growing, and on-chain risk assessment capabilities are increasing. This is gradually narrowing the gap between those seeking returns and those willing to take specific risks. We hope to see more experiments focused on building and mitigating risk across DeFi systems. Furthermore, the lack of industry-wide risk scoring standards and inter-protocol dependencies (often hidden behind complex code) is also a problem. This creates an opportunity for the emergence of DeFi-native, real-time on-chain risk scoring entities. 5. DeFi – Transparent Market Making Protocol question: Market maker (MM) protocols remain one of the least transparent and most obscure parts of the industry, with the actual terms rarely disclosed. Many token project teams lack understanding and control over these trades, leading them to pay excessive fees for market maker services due to their inability to fully understand the market. They also often give away more tokens than necessary and spend considerable time learning how to achieve ideal market maker trades. While this is partly a matter of social coordination, and investors and exchanges (or regulators) can demand increased disclosure, coordination remains extremely difficult. Chance: We believe that innovation can improve the efficiency of this market. A simple aggregation front-end platform where project teams or market makers can post trading quotes and the parameters they are willing to meet would be extremely useful. Coinwatch has already improved the transparency of market maker behavior by embedding API keys in the TEE, enabling project teams to track the activities of their market makers. We can also see that the combined use of zkTLS and staking mechanisms can always enforce certain behaviors (especially for market makers with less brand influence), such as deducting staked amounts if the bid-ask spread (or any other metric) exceeds a certain threshold. 6. DEFI – DeFi Smart Investment Advisor 2.0 (LVR Capture) question: Current automated investment tools are unable to capture on-chain microstructure alpha returns on a large scale. Chance: Leveraging LVR to capture opportunities in AMMs (bulk auctions, solver rebalancing, dynamic fees) allows "arbitrage" to generate returns for our portfolio while maintaining a balanced asset allocation (hint: impermanent loss is a characteristic, not a flaw, if you explicitly want your portfolio to be rebalanced). This could be similar to DeFi robo-advisors that convert arbitrage into returns. Tokenized RWA funds/ETFs (AAA-rated fixed income, money market funds, S&P 500 index funds) are growing rapidly, complementing crypto-native investable assets (BTC, staked ETH, etc.). Account abstraction enables a streamlined user experience: smart contract-enforced strategies provide transparent risk control, and compliant encapsulation offers regulated yield tokens. Battle-tested infrastructure, coupled with potential additional insurance, provides state-of-the-art security. Asset allocators gain access to automatically rebalanced portfolios, and traders gain liquidity. Smart contracts achieve a win-win situation of disintermediation—all the components are already in place—they just need someone to assemble them for scalability. 7. Consumer-grade – LLM ⇋ Prediction Market Interface question: Prediction markets have gained widespread acceptance, and new markets are constantly emerging, but discovery problems persist. Currently, users either browse the front-end pages of these prediction markets to find one that suits them or use external aggregators or front-ends for discovery, which is largely based on manual screening—time-consuming and laborious. There is currently no intuitive way to directly express predictions (e.g., "Team A will win") and act accordingly. Therefore, most potential bettors never translate their opinions into actual on-chain bets. Chance: The discovery problem in prediction markets can be solved through an LLM-based interface. We believe that a chat-like interface that can parse user predictions and route them to the best on-chain market will significantly reduce friction in the user experience, dramatically increase engagement, and make prediction markets even more dominant than they are now, as more predictions bring more liquidity. 8. Consumer-grade – Expanding the scale of on-chain capital formation question: On-chain fundraising tools (such as Echo.xyz, pump.fun, and Zora) have validated the effectiveness of community-driven on-chain fundraising models, but current participants are primarily limited to native cryptocurrency users. Now, it's time for these models to expand beyond the native cryptocurrency user base and into the mainstream market through distribution channels. Chance: Coinbase's acquisition of Echo is a first step in this direction. Next, we'll see the next major step in on-chain capital formation—embedding these fundamental functionalities into mass-market platforms. Imagine reaching hundreds of millions of users globally by integrating on-chain token/equity sale infrastructure as a white-label solution into apps like Revolut, Nubank, or Kickstarter. This would unlock massive new capital pools and expand proven fundraising models far beyond niche token buyers. 9. Consumer-grade – Cryptocurrency Discovery Layer question: The cryptocurrency space still lacks a unified "landing page" or search engine. Existing tools offer limited coverage, forcing users to rely on cryptocurrency Twitter and decentralized forums for information. No platform integrates all relevant information—prices, on-chain metrics, news, social media activity, yields, governance, attention, and market sentiment—in one place. This fragmentation means that most participants today need a complex and extensive set of specialized tools to stay informed about the latest developments in the cryptocurrency space. Chance: Aggregation in the cryptocurrency space has long been siloed, and no one has yet solved the discovery problem. We see an opportunity to build a fully-fledged, AI-driven landing page (a true "Google of cryptocurrency") that integrates on-chain data, news feeds, and social signals into a coherent search/discovery feed. Occupying this position will lock in early adopters and new entrants, building a strong distribution moat as cryptocurrency adoption grows. 10. Regulation – Clear agreement rules and open access for banks Clearly, this is not a challenge that any single agreement can solve alone—it requires the coordinated participation of the entire ecosystem. Given that regulatory clarity is crucial to everything we build in the future, we have added it to our wish list as an expectation for all stakeholders to work together. question: Despite significant progress, regulatory frameworks continue to play a crucial role in shaping the pace of the next phase of cryptocurrency growth. Decentralized protocols still lack clear and applicable rules: the US has no explicit definition of when a token ceases to be a security, and the EU lacks clear decentralized standards under the MiCA framework. Frameworks designed for intermediaries impose undue burdens on decentralized systems and introduce legal uncertainty into protocol design, token architecture, and ecosystem participation. Meanwhile, due to Basel III's imposition of punitive risk weights of up to 1250% on most digital asset exposures, regulated financial institutions, particularly banks, are effectively excluded from cryptocurrencies. This prevents banks from investing, providing liquidity, or supporting the ecosystem's development. The combination of ambiguous decentralized rules and restrictive prudential standards has led to market fragmentation, reduced liquidity, and makes it difficult for protocols and institutions to participate with confidence. Chance: Clear, globally consistent regulatory standards will unleash innovation and encourage institutional participation. For decentralized protocols, simple, transparent standards—such as the maturity test in the U.S. Clarity Act—will ultimately provide teams with the necessary certainty to design architectures that are appropriate to their risk profiles and subject to regulation. Europe could follow suit by adopting practical, decentralization thresholds, rather than vague or overly complex tests. At the institutional level, the ongoing Basel III reassessment and the US proposal to differentiate stablecoins reflect a growing recognition that existing rules are not aligned with actual risks. Updating prudential regulatory standards will allow banks to hold digital assets, participate in DeFi, and provide new liquidity channels. Taken together, these reforms will build a regulatory foundation that supports borderless decentralized innovation, facilitates institutional capital inflows into the ecosystem, and expands global access to liquidity without compromising consumer protection.Source: Greenfield Compiled by: Zhou, ChainCatcher The digital asset ecosystem is evolving in unexpected ways: new fundamental elements, new behavioral patterns, and new coordination tools are constantly emerging. What was considered experimental a year ago may now be a basic element. As investors, our responsibility is to closely monitor these changes, understand which emerging ideas can develop into lasting infrastructure, and truly gain market acceptance. Last year, we shared our predictions for trends in the coming year. This year, we're taking a different approach. Instead of claiming to predict the future, we want to share our vision: a wish list of ten ideas, questions, and products that we hope founders will begin addressing in 2026. Through these reflections, we can gain a deeper understanding of the next wave of significant opportunities that may emerge in the infrastructure, decentralized finance (DeFi), and consumer sectors, and how the evolving regulatory environment will shape the foundation of these opportunities. 1. Infrastructure - BuilderNet for Solvers question: Over 50% of “non-toxic” (i.e., low-risk) retail order flows through the EVM via an intent aggregator that utilizes a solver model. However, the solver often faces latency when integrating new routes because a significant amount of work is required to fully understand its logic, prevent rollbacks, and maintain low simulation latency. This presents a chicken-and-egg problem for many new Automated Market Makers (AMMs) such as Uniswap v4 hooks: solvers need existing order flows to integrate new liquidity sources, but they themselves are responsible for routing the majority of those flows. This hinders innovation in AMMs, as hooks often have to "lobby" large solvers for integration, sometimes even requiring behind-the-scenes deals. In particular, v4 hooks offer a very broad design space where every invariant can be broken, yet currently only 4% of v4 trading volume flows through pools with hooks. Chance: Flashbots' BuilderNet coordinates order flows and MEV-boost boosts by coordinating independent block builder instances within a TEE (Trusted Execution Environment). A similar idea could be applied to solver marketplaces, where solvers can coordinate and share information such as intent order flows, RFQ (Request for Quote) integrations, analytics/liquidity metrics, routing integrations, and collaborative solving, i.e., intent auctions sold in wholesale, without requiring trust. 2. Infrastructure – DePIN, combining hybrid cryptography and hardware security for high-performance and private computing. question: TEE promises "private AI in the cloud," but recent side-channel attacks demonstrate that they can still leak data—especially in decentralized, permissionless environments. On the other hand, while pure cryptography (MPC/FHE) is highly secure, it's too slow and complex for most real-world AI workloads. Currently, no platform simultaneously offers TEE-level speed, cryptographic security, and a clear, usage-based model billing model. Chance: This product is a secure AI runtime environment that runs models in a high-speed terminal environment (TEE) by default, but automatically routes the most sensitive steps to a small MPC cluster and logs verifiable "proof of correct execution" and metered usage. Customers gain cloud-like performance, audit-compliant privacy protection, and a built-in model provider monetization model. This is crucial for regulated industries and a growing target audience, as businesses and consumers increasingly rely on AI, and the exposure of sensitive data threatens IP ownership, thereby jeopardizing profitability and freedom. 3. Infrastructure – Unified Stablecoin Liquidity Layer question: The stablecoin liquidity layer provides a shared infrastructure for stablecoin trading and settlement across multiple blockchains. Instead of maintaining separate liquidity pools on each network, liquidity providers pool funds to establish a unified reserve accessible to any chain. A coordination mechanism tracks the total balance and instructs local contracts to deliver funds when a transaction occurs. Liquidity is dynamically rebalanced to meet demand, ensuring consistent depth and pricing efficiency across all connected networks. Chance: This infrastructure addresses one of the core inefficiencies of DeFi—the fragmentation of stablecoin liquidity. By consolidating liquidity, stablecoin transfers and exchanges become more capital-efficient, cheaper, and more predictable. This architecture offers traders lower slippage, liquidity providers higher capital utilization, and a universal settlement layer for payments, vaults, and stablecoin-based applications. It represents a foundational step towards frictionless, cross-network financial infrastructure. 4. DEFI – Risk Management and Smart Underwriting question: Risk management in the DeFi space remains a massive and unresolved issue. There are numerous approaches to risk management, ranging from in-protocol governance mechanisms to outsourcing to risk management firms. Chance: In a highly competitive field like cryptocurrency, it's not surprising that some institutions are willing to push the limits of risk, especially given the lack of clear safeguards or frameworks to ensure the broader market understands these risks. One approach to addressing these risks is to more clearly define them, such as by introducing structured stratification or other mechanisms to more precisely allocate risk exposure among participants. Historically, effective pricing and allocation of risk has been difficult and costly due to limited historical data, weak trust frameworks, and inadequate risk monitoring infrastructure. However, tools are improving, confidence in DeFi is growing, and on-chain risk assessment capabilities are increasing. This is gradually narrowing the gap between those seeking returns and those willing to take specific risks. We hope to see more experiments focused on building and mitigating risk across DeFi systems. Furthermore, the lack of industry-wide risk scoring standards and inter-protocol dependencies (often hidden behind complex code) is also a problem. This creates an opportunity for the emergence of DeFi-native, real-time on-chain risk scoring entities. 5. DeFi – Transparent Market Making Protocol question: Market maker (MM) protocols remain one of the least transparent and most obscure parts of the industry, with the actual terms rarely disclosed. Many token project teams lack understanding and control over these trades, leading them to pay excessive fees for market maker services due to their inability to fully understand the market. They also often give away more tokens than necessary and spend considerable time learning how to achieve ideal market maker trades. While this is partly a matter of social coordination, and investors and exchanges (or regulators) can demand increased disclosure, coordination remains extremely difficult. Chance: We believe that innovation can improve the efficiency of this market. A simple aggregation front-end platform where project teams or market makers can post trading quotes and the parameters they are willing to meet would be extremely useful. Coinwatch has already improved the transparency of market maker behavior by embedding API keys in the TEE, enabling project teams to track the activities of their market makers. We can also see that the combined use of zkTLS and staking mechanisms can always enforce certain behaviors (especially for market makers with less brand influence), such as deducting staked amounts if the bid-ask spread (or any other metric) exceeds a certain threshold. 6. DEFI – DeFi Smart Investment Advisor 2.0 (LVR Capture) question: Current automated investment tools are unable to capture on-chain microstructure alpha returns on a large scale. Chance: Leveraging LVR to capture opportunities in AMMs (bulk auctions, solver rebalancing, dynamic fees) allows "arbitrage" to generate returns for our portfolio while maintaining a balanced asset allocation (hint: impermanent loss is a characteristic, not a flaw, if you explicitly want your portfolio to be rebalanced). This could be similar to DeFi robo-advisors that convert arbitrage into returns. Tokenized RWA funds/ETFs (AAA-rated fixed income, money market funds, S&P 500 index funds) are growing rapidly, complementing crypto-native investable assets (BTC, staked ETH, etc.). Account abstraction enables a streamlined user experience: smart contract-enforced strategies provide transparent risk control, and compliant encapsulation offers regulated yield tokens. Battle-tested infrastructure, coupled with potential additional insurance, provides state-of-the-art security. Asset allocators gain access to automatically rebalanced portfolios, and traders gain liquidity. Smart contracts achieve a win-win situation of disintermediation—all the components are already in place—they just need someone to assemble them for scalability. 7. Consumer-grade – LLM ⇋ Prediction Market Interface question: Prediction markets have gained widespread acceptance, and new markets are constantly emerging, but discovery problems persist. Currently, users either browse the front-end pages of these prediction markets to find one that suits them or use external aggregators or front-ends for discovery, which is largely based on manual screening—time-consuming and laborious. There is currently no intuitive way to directly express predictions (e.g., "Team A will win") and act accordingly. Therefore, most potential bettors never translate their opinions into actual on-chain bets. Chance: The discovery problem in prediction markets can be solved through an LLM-based interface. We believe that a chat-like interface that can parse user predictions and route them to the best on-chain market will significantly reduce friction in the user experience, dramatically increase engagement, and make prediction markets even more dominant than they are now, as more predictions bring more liquidity. 8. Consumer-grade – Expanding the scale of on-chain capital formation question: On-chain fundraising tools (such as Echo.xyz, pump.fun, and Zora) have validated the effectiveness of community-driven on-chain fundraising models, but current participants are primarily limited to native cryptocurrency users. Now, it's time for these models to expand beyond the native cryptocurrency user base and into the mainstream market through distribution channels. Chance: Coinbase's acquisition of Echo is a first step in this direction. Next, we'll see the next major step in on-chain capital formation—embedding these fundamental functionalities into mass-market platforms. Imagine reaching hundreds of millions of users globally by integrating on-chain token/equity sale infrastructure as a white-label solution into apps like Revolut, Nubank, or Kickstarter. This would unlock massive new capital pools and expand proven fundraising models far beyond niche token buyers. 9. Consumer-grade – Cryptocurrency Discovery Layer question: The cryptocurrency space still lacks a unified "landing page" or search engine. Existing tools offer limited coverage, forcing users to rely on cryptocurrency Twitter and decentralized forums for information. No platform integrates all relevant information—prices, on-chain metrics, news, social media activity, yields, governance, attention, and market sentiment—in one place. This fragmentation means that most participants today need a complex and extensive set of specialized tools to stay informed about the latest developments in the cryptocurrency space. Chance: Aggregation in the cryptocurrency space has long been siloed, and no one has yet solved the discovery problem. We see an opportunity to build a fully-fledged, AI-driven landing page (a true "Google of cryptocurrency") that integrates on-chain data, news feeds, and social signals into a coherent search/discovery feed. Occupying this position will lock in early adopters and new entrants, building a strong distribution moat as cryptocurrency adoption grows. 10. Regulation – Clear agreement rules and open access for banks Clearly, this is not a challenge that any single agreement can solve alone—it requires the coordinated participation of the entire ecosystem. Given that regulatory clarity is crucial to everything we build in the future, we have added it to our wish list as an expectation for all stakeholders to work together. question: Despite significant progress, regulatory frameworks continue to play a crucial role in shaping the pace of the next phase of cryptocurrency growth. Decentralized protocols still lack clear and applicable rules: the US has no explicit definition of when a token ceases to be a security, and the EU lacks clear decentralized standards under the MiCA framework. Frameworks designed for intermediaries impose undue burdens on decentralized systems and introduce legal uncertainty into protocol design, token architecture, and ecosystem participation. Meanwhile, due to Basel III's imposition of punitive risk weights of up to 1250% on most digital asset exposures, regulated financial institutions, particularly banks, are effectively excluded from cryptocurrencies. This prevents banks from investing, providing liquidity, or supporting the ecosystem's development. The combination of ambiguous decentralized rules and restrictive prudential standards has led to market fragmentation, reduced liquidity, and makes it difficult for protocols and institutions to participate with confidence. Chance: Clear, globally consistent regulatory standards will unleash innovation and encourage institutional participation. For decentralized protocols, simple, transparent standards—such as the maturity test in the U.S. Clarity Act—will ultimately provide teams with the necessary certainty to design architectures that are appropriate to their risk profiles and subject to regulation. Europe could follow suit by adopting practical, decentralization thresholds, rather than vague or overly complex tests. At the institutional level, the ongoing Basel III reassessment and the US proposal to differentiate stablecoins reflect a growing recognition that existing rules are not aligned with actual risks. Updating prudential regulatory standards will allow banks to hold digital assets, participate in DeFi, and provide new liquidity channels. Taken together, these reforms will build a regulatory foundation that supports borderless decentralized innovation, facilitates institutional capital inflows into the ecosystem, and expands global access to liquidity without compromising consumer protection.

Greenfield 2026 Crypto Outlook: Top 10 Key Issues and Opportunities

2025/12/05 11:00
11 min read

Source: Greenfield

Compiled by: Zhou, ChainCatcher

The digital asset ecosystem is evolving in unexpected ways: new fundamental elements, new behavioral patterns, and new coordination tools are constantly emerging. What was considered experimental a year ago may now be a basic element. As investors, our responsibility is to closely monitor these changes, understand which emerging ideas can develop into lasting infrastructure, and truly gain market acceptance.

Last year, we shared our predictions for trends in the coming year. This year, we're taking a different approach. Instead of claiming to predict the future, we want to share our vision: a wish list of ten ideas, questions, and products that we hope founders will begin addressing in 2026.

Through these reflections, we can gain a deeper understanding of the next wave of significant opportunities that may emerge in the infrastructure, decentralized finance (DeFi), and consumer sectors, and how the evolving regulatory environment will shape the foundation of these opportunities.

1. Infrastructure - BuilderNet for Solvers

question:

Over 50% of “non-toxic” (i.e., low-risk) retail order flows through the EVM via an intent aggregator that utilizes a solver model. However, the solver often faces latency when integrating new routes because a significant amount of work is required to fully understand its logic, prevent rollbacks, and maintain low simulation latency.

This presents a chicken-and-egg problem for many new Automated Market Makers (AMMs) such as Uniswap v4 hooks: solvers need existing order flows to integrate new liquidity sources, but they themselves are responsible for routing the majority of those flows. This hinders innovation in AMMs, as hooks often have to "lobby" large solvers for integration, sometimes even requiring behind-the-scenes deals. In particular, v4 hooks offer a very broad design space where every invariant can be broken, yet currently only 4% of v4 trading volume flows through pools with hooks.

Chance:

Flashbots' BuilderNet coordinates order flows and MEV-boost boosts by coordinating independent block builder instances within a TEE (Trusted Execution Environment). A similar idea could be applied to solver marketplaces, where solvers can coordinate and share information such as intent order flows, RFQ (Request for Quote) integrations, analytics/liquidity metrics, routing integrations, and collaborative solving, i.e., intent auctions sold in wholesale, without requiring trust.

2. Infrastructure – DePIN, combining hybrid cryptography and hardware security for high-performance and private computing.

question:

TEE promises "private AI in the cloud," but recent side-channel attacks demonstrate that they can still leak data—especially in decentralized, permissionless environments. On the other hand, while pure cryptography (MPC/FHE) is highly secure, it's too slow and complex for most real-world AI workloads. Currently, no platform simultaneously offers TEE-level speed, cryptographic security, and a clear, usage-based model billing model.

Chance:

This product is a secure AI runtime environment that runs models in a high-speed terminal environment (TEE) by default, but automatically routes the most sensitive steps to a small MPC cluster and logs verifiable "proof of correct execution" and metered usage. Customers gain cloud-like performance, audit-compliant privacy protection, and a built-in model provider monetization model. This is crucial for regulated industries and a growing target audience, as businesses and consumers increasingly rely on AI, and the exposure of sensitive data threatens IP ownership, thereby jeopardizing profitability and freedom.

3. Infrastructure – Unified Stablecoin Liquidity Layer

question:

The stablecoin liquidity layer provides a shared infrastructure for stablecoin trading and settlement across multiple blockchains. Instead of maintaining separate liquidity pools on each network, liquidity providers pool funds to establish a unified reserve accessible to any chain. A coordination mechanism tracks the total balance and instructs local contracts to deliver funds when a transaction occurs. Liquidity is dynamically rebalanced to meet demand, ensuring consistent depth and pricing efficiency across all connected networks.

Chance:

This infrastructure addresses one of the core inefficiencies of DeFi—the fragmentation of stablecoin liquidity. By consolidating liquidity, stablecoin transfers and exchanges become more capital-efficient, cheaper, and more predictable. This architecture offers traders lower slippage, liquidity providers higher capital utilization, and a universal settlement layer for payments, vaults, and stablecoin-based applications. It represents a foundational step towards frictionless, cross-network financial infrastructure.

4. DEFI – Risk Management and Smart Underwriting

question:

Risk management in the DeFi space remains a massive and unresolved issue. There are numerous approaches to risk management, ranging from in-protocol governance mechanisms to outsourcing to risk management firms.

Chance:

In a highly competitive field like cryptocurrency, it's not surprising that some institutions are willing to push the limits of risk, especially given the lack of clear safeguards or frameworks to ensure the broader market understands these risks. One approach to addressing these risks is to more clearly define them, such as by introducing structured stratification or other mechanisms to more precisely allocate risk exposure among participants. Historically, effective pricing and allocation of risk has been difficult and costly due to limited historical data, weak trust frameworks, and inadequate risk monitoring infrastructure.

However, tools are improving, confidence in DeFi is growing, and on-chain risk assessment capabilities are increasing. This is gradually narrowing the gap between those seeking returns and those willing to take specific risks. We hope to see more experiments focused on building and mitigating risk across DeFi systems. Furthermore, the lack of industry-wide risk scoring standards and inter-protocol dependencies (often hidden behind complex code) is also a problem. This creates an opportunity for the emergence of DeFi-native, real-time on-chain risk scoring entities.

5. DeFi – Transparent Market Making Protocol

question:

Market maker (MM) protocols remain one of the least transparent and most obscure parts of the industry, with the actual terms rarely disclosed. Many token project teams lack understanding and control over these trades, leading them to pay excessive fees for market maker services due to their inability to fully understand the market. They also often give away more tokens than necessary and spend considerable time learning how to achieve ideal market maker trades. While this is partly a matter of social coordination, and investors and exchanges (or regulators) can demand increased disclosure, coordination remains extremely difficult.

Chance:

We believe that innovation can improve the efficiency of this market. A simple aggregation front-end platform where project teams or market makers can post trading quotes and the parameters they are willing to meet would be extremely useful. Coinwatch has already improved the transparency of market maker behavior by embedding API keys in the TEE, enabling project teams to track the activities of their market makers. We can also see that the combined use of zkTLS and staking mechanisms can always enforce certain behaviors (especially for market makers with less brand influence), such as deducting staked amounts if the bid-ask spread (or any other metric) exceeds a certain threshold.

6. DEFI – DeFi Smart Investment Advisor 2.0 (LVR Capture)

question:

Current automated investment tools are unable to capture on-chain microstructure alpha returns on a large scale.

Chance:

Leveraging LVR to capture opportunities in AMMs (bulk auctions, solver rebalancing, dynamic fees) allows "arbitrage" to generate returns for our portfolio while maintaining a balanced asset allocation (hint: impermanent loss is a characteristic, not a flaw, if you explicitly want your portfolio to be rebalanced). This could be similar to DeFi robo-advisors that convert arbitrage into returns. Tokenized RWA funds/ETFs (AAA-rated fixed income, money market funds, S&P 500 index funds) are growing rapidly, complementing crypto-native investable assets (BTC, staked ETH, etc.).

Account abstraction enables a streamlined user experience: smart contract-enforced strategies provide transparent risk control, and compliant encapsulation offers regulated yield tokens. Battle-tested infrastructure, coupled with potential additional insurance, provides state-of-the-art security. Asset allocators gain access to automatically rebalanced portfolios, and traders gain liquidity. Smart contracts achieve a win-win situation of disintermediation—all the components are already in place—they just need someone to assemble them for scalability.

7. Consumer-grade – LLM ⇋ Prediction Market Interface

question:

Prediction markets have gained widespread acceptance, and new markets are constantly emerging, but discovery problems persist. Currently, users either browse the front-end pages of these prediction markets to find one that suits them or use external aggregators or front-ends for discovery, which is largely based on manual screening—time-consuming and laborious. There is currently no intuitive way to directly express predictions (e.g., "Team A will win") and act accordingly. Therefore, most potential bettors never translate their opinions into actual on-chain bets.

Chance:

The discovery problem in prediction markets can be solved through an LLM-based interface. We believe that a chat-like interface that can parse user predictions and route them to the best on-chain market will significantly reduce friction in the user experience, dramatically increase engagement, and make prediction markets even more dominant than they are now, as more predictions bring more liquidity.

8. Consumer-grade – Expanding the scale of on-chain capital formation

question:

On-chain fundraising tools (such as Echo.xyz, pump.fun, and Zora) have validated the effectiveness of community-driven on-chain fundraising models, but current participants are primarily limited to native cryptocurrency users. Now, it's time for these models to expand beyond the native cryptocurrency user base and into the mainstream market through distribution channels.

Chance:

Coinbase's acquisition of Echo is a first step in this direction. Next, we'll see the next major step in on-chain capital formation—embedding these fundamental functionalities into mass-market platforms. Imagine reaching hundreds of millions of users globally by integrating on-chain token/equity sale infrastructure as a white-label solution into apps like Revolut, Nubank, or Kickstarter. This would unlock massive new capital pools and expand proven fundraising models far beyond niche token buyers.

9. Consumer-grade – Cryptocurrency Discovery Layer

question:

The cryptocurrency space still lacks a unified "landing page" or search engine. Existing tools offer limited coverage, forcing users to rely on cryptocurrency Twitter and decentralized forums for information. No platform integrates all relevant information—prices, on-chain metrics, news, social media activity, yields, governance, attention, and market sentiment—in one place. This fragmentation means that most participants today need a complex and extensive set of specialized tools to stay informed about the latest developments in the cryptocurrency space.

Chance:

Aggregation in the cryptocurrency space has long been siloed, and no one has yet solved the discovery problem. We see an opportunity to build a fully-fledged, AI-driven landing page (a true "Google of cryptocurrency") that integrates on-chain data, news feeds, and social signals into a coherent search/discovery feed. Occupying this position will lock in early adopters and new entrants, building a strong distribution moat as cryptocurrency adoption grows.

10. Regulation – Clear agreement rules and open access for banks

Clearly, this is not a challenge that any single agreement can solve alone—it requires the coordinated participation of the entire ecosystem. Given that regulatory clarity is crucial to everything we build in the future, we have added it to our wish list as an expectation for all stakeholders to work together.

question:

Despite significant progress, regulatory frameworks continue to play a crucial role in shaping the pace of the next phase of cryptocurrency growth. Decentralized protocols still lack clear and applicable rules: the US has no explicit definition of when a token ceases to be a security, and the EU lacks clear decentralized standards under the MiCA framework. Frameworks designed for intermediaries impose undue burdens on decentralized systems and introduce legal uncertainty into protocol design, token architecture, and ecosystem participation.

Meanwhile, due to Basel III's imposition of punitive risk weights of up to 1250% on most digital asset exposures, regulated financial institutions, particularly banks, are effectively excluded from cryptocurrencies. This prevents banks from investing, providing liquidity, or supporting the ecosystem's development. The combination of ambiguous decentralized rules and restrictive prudential standards has led to market fragmentation, reduced liquidity, and makes it difficult for protocols and institutions to participate with confidence.

Chance:

Clear, globally consistent regulatory standards will unleash innovation and encourage institutional participation. For decentralized protocols, simple, transparent standards—such as the maturity test in the U.S. Clarity Act—will ultimately provide teams with the necessary certainty to design architectures that are appropriate to their risk profiles and subject to regulation. Europe could follow suit by adopting practical, decentralization thresholds, rather than vague or overly complex tests.

At the institutional level, the ongoing Basel III reassessment and the US proposal to differentiate stablecoins reflect a growing recognition that existing rules are not aligned with actual risks. Updating prudential regulatory standards will allow banks to hold digital assets, participate in DeFi, and provide new liquidity channels. Taken together, these reforms will build a regulatory foundation that supports borderless decentralized innovation, facilitates institutional capital inflows into the ecosystem, and expands global access to liquidity without compromising consumer protection.

Market Opportunity
TOP Network Logo
TOP Network Price(TOP)
$0.0000951
$0.0000951$0.0000951
0.00%
USD
TOP Network (TOP) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

SEC greenlights new generic standards to expedite crypto ETP listings

SEC greenlights new generic standards to expedite crypto ETP listings

The post SEC greenlights new generic standards to expedite crypto ETP listings appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has approved a new set of generic listing standards for commodity-based trust shares on Nasdaq, Cboe, and the New York Stock Exchange. The move is expected to streamline the approval process for exchange-traded products (ETPs) tied to digital assets, according to Fox Business reporter Eleanor Terret. However, she added that the Generic Listing Standards don’t open up every type of crypto ETP because threshold requirements remain in place, meaning not all products will immediately qualify. To add context, she quoted Tushar Jain of Multicoin Capital, who noted that the standards don’t apply to every type of crypto ETP and that threshold requirements remain. He expects the SEC will iterate further on these standards. The order, issued on Sept. 17, grants accelerated approval of proposed rule changes filed by the exchanges. By adopting the standards, the SEC aims to shorten the time it takes to bring new commodity-based ETPs to market, potentially clearing a path for broader crypto investment products. The regulator has been delaying the decision on several altcoin ETFs, most of which are set to reach their final deadlines in October. The move was rumored to be the SEC’s way of expediting approvals for crypto ETFs. The approval follows years of back-and-forth between the SEC and exchanges over how to handle crypto-based products, with past applications facing lengthy reviews. The new process is expected to reduce delays and provide more clarity for issuers, though the SEC signaled it may revisit and refine the standards as the market evolves. While the decision marks progress, experts emphasized that the so-called “floodgates” for crypto ETPs are not yet fully open. Future SEC actions will determine how broadly these standards can be applied across different digital asset products. Source: https://cryptoslate.com/sec-greenlights-new-generic-standards-to-expedite-crypto-etp-listings/
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 08:43
Optimizely Named a Leader in the 2026 Gartner® Magic Quadrant™ for Personalization Engines

Optimizely Named a Leader in the 2026 Gartner® Magic Quadrant™ for Personalization Engines

Company recognized as a Leader for the second consecutive year NEW YORK, Feb. 5, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Optimizely, the leading digital experience platform (DXP) provider
Share
AI Journal2026/02/06 00:47
Lovable AI’s Astonishing Rise: Anton Osika Reveals Startup Secrets at Bitcoin World Disrupt 2025

Lovable AI’s Astonishing Rise: Anton Osika Reveals Startup Secrets at Bitcoin World Disrupt 2025

BitcoinWorld Lovable AI’s Astonishing Rise: Anton Osika Reveals Startup Secrets at Bitcoin World Disrupt 2025 Are you ready to witness a phenomenon? The world of technology is abuzz with the incredible rise of Lovable AI, a startup that’s not just breaking records but rewriting the rulebook for rapid growth. Imagine creating powerful apps and websites just by speaking to an AI – that’s the magic Lovable brings to the masses. This groundbreaking approach has propelled the company into the spotlight, making it one of the fastest-growing software firms in history. And now, the visionary behind this sensation, co-founder and CEO Anton Osika, is set to share his invaluable insights on the Disrupt Stage at the highly anticipated Bitcoin World Disrupt 2025. If you’re a founder, investor, or tech enthusiast eager to understand the future of innovation, this is an event you cannot afford to miss. Lovable AI’s Meteoric Ascent: Redefining Software Creation In an era where digital transformation is paramount, Lovable AI has emerged as a true game-changer. Its core premise is deceptively simple yet profoundly impactful: democratize software creation. By enabling anyone to build applications and websites through intuitive AI conversations, Lovable is empowering the vast majority of individuals who lack coding skills to transform their ideas into tangible digital products. This mission has resonated globally, leading to unprecedented momentum. The numbers speak for themselves: Achieved an astonishing $100 million Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR) in less than a year. Successfully raised a $200 million Series A funding round, valuing the company at $1.8 billion, led by industry giant Accel. Is currently fielding unsolicited investor offers, pushing its valuation towards an incredible $4 billion. As industry reports suggest, investors are unequivocally “loving Lovable,” and it’s clear why. This isn’t just about impressive financial metrics; it’s about a company that has tapped into a fundamental need, offering a solution that is both innovative and accessible. The rapid scaling of Lovable AI provides a compelling case study for any entrepreneur aiming for similar exponential growth. The Visionary Behind the Hype: Anton Osika’s Journey to Innovation Every groundbreaking company has a driving force, and for Lovable, that force is co-founder and CEO Anton Osika. His journey is as fascinating as his company’s success. A physicist by training, Osika previously contributed to the cutting-edge research at CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research. This deep technical background, combined with his entrepreneurial spirit, has been instrumental in Lovable’s rapid ascent. Before Lovable, he honed his skills as a co-founder of Depict.ai and a Founding Engineer at Sana. Based in Stockholm, Osika has masterfully steered Lovable from a nascent idea to a global phenomenon in record time. His leadership embodies a unique blend of profound technical understanding and a keen, consumer-first vision. At Bitcoin World Disrupt 2025, attendees will have the rare opportunity to hear directly from Osika about what it truly takes to build a brand that not only scales at an incredible pace in a fiercely competitive market but also adeptly manages the intense cultural conversations that inevitably accompany such swift and significant success. His insights will be crucial for anyone looking to understand the dynamics of high-growth tech leadership. Unpacking Consumer Tech Innovation at Bitcoin World Disrupt 2025 The 20th anniversary of Bitcoin World is set to be marked by a truly special event: Bitcoin World Disrupt 2025. From October 27–29, Moscone West in San Francisco will transform into the epicenter of innovation, gathering over 10,000 founders, investors, and tech leaders. It’s the ideal platform to explore the future of consumer tech innovation, and Anton Osika’s presence on the Disrupt Stage is a highlight. His session will delve into how Lovable is not just participating in but actively shaping the next wave of consumer-facing technologies. Why is this session particularly relevant for those interested in the future of consumer experiences? Osika’s discussion will go beyond the superficial, offering a deep dive into the strategies that have allowed Lovable to carve out a unique category in a market long thought to be saturated. Attendees will gain a front-row seat to understanding how to identify unmet consumer needs, leverage advanced AI to meet those needs, and build a product that captivates users globally. The event itself promises a rich tapestry of ideas and networking opportunities: For Founders: Sharpen your pitch and connect with potential investors. For Investors: Discover the next breakout startup poised for massive growth. For Innovators: Claim your spot at the forefront of technological advancements. The insights shared regarding consumer tech innovation at this event will be invaluable for anyone looking to navigate the complexities and capitalize on the opportunities within this dynamic sector. Mastering Startup Growth Strategies: A Blueprint for the Future Lovable’s journey isn’t just another startup success story; it’s a meticulously crafted blueprint for effective startup growth strategies in the modern era. Anton Osika’s experience offers a rare glimpse into the practicalities of scaling a business at breakneck speed while maintaining product integrity and managing external pressures. For entrepreneurs and aspiring tech leaders, his talk will serve as a masterclass in several critical areas: Strategy Focus Key Takeaways from Lovable’s Journey Rapid Scaling How to build infrastructure and teams that support exponential user and revenue growth without compromising quality. Product-Market Fit Identifying a significant, underserved market (the 99% who can’t code) and developing a truly innovative solution (AI-powered app creation). Investor Relations Balancing intense investor interest and pressure with a steadfast focus on product development and long-term vision. Category Creation Carving out an entirely new niche by democratizing complex technologies, rather than competing in existing crowded markets. Understanding these startup growth strategies is essential for anyone aiming to build a resilient and impactful consumer experience. Osika’s session will provide actionable insights into how to replicate elements of Lovable’s success, offering guidance on navigating challenges from product development to market penetration and investor management. Conclusion: Seize the Future of Tech The story of Lovable, under the astute leadership of Anton Osika, is a testament to the power of innovative ideas meeting flawless execution. Their remarkable journey from concept to a multi-billion-dollar valuation in record time is a compelling narrative for anyone interested in the future of technology. By democratizing software creation through Lovable AI, they are not just building a company; they are fostering a new generation of creators. His appearance at Bitcoin World Disrupt 2025 is an unmissable opportunity to gain direct insights from a leader who is truly shaping the landscape of consumer tech innovation. Don’t miss this chance to learn about cutting-edge startup growth strategies and secure your front-row seat to the future. Register now and save up to $668 before Regular Bird rates end on September 26. To learn more about the latest AI market trends, explore our article on key developments shaping AI features. This post Lovable AI’s Astonishing Rise: Anton Osika Reveals Startup Secrets at Bitcoin World Disrupt 2025 first appeared on BitcoinWorld.
Share
Coinstats2025/09/17 23:40