Dusk Privacy-Focused Blockchain for Finance #Dusk @Dusk $DUSK Dusk Network is built to help financial apps run on blockchain while keeping user data safe and private. It focuses on things like confidential transactions, identity protection, and meeting regulations so banks and institutions can use crypto tech without exposing sensitive information.
Dusk wants to bring traditional finance on-chain the smart way. By mixing privacy tools with fast settlement and compliance features, it aims to make tokenized stocks, bonds, and real-world assets trade securely in a decentralized world. #Dusk @Dusk $DUSK
Walrus Protocol is a blockchain-based storage system that helps apps save big files like videos, NFTs, and game data in a secure and decentralized way. Instead of relying on one company’s servers, Walrus spreads data across many nodes, making it harder to lose, censor, or shut down.
The goal is to make Web3 apps smoother and cheaper to run. By focusing on fast access, reliability, and long-term data safety, Walrus wants to be the quiet backbone behind games, social platforms, and AI projects that need serious storage power without the usual Web2 risks. #Walrus @Walrus 🦭/acc $WAL
Feb 2021: $2,200 April 2021: $2,200 May 2021: $2,200 July 2021: $2,200 Jan 2022: $2,200 May 2022: $2,200 Dec 2023: $2,200 Feb 2024: $2,200 Sept 2024: $2,200 May 2025: $2,200 Feb 2026: $2,200
After the massive crypto crash on October 10, when about $19 billion worth of positions were wiped out in one day, the market still hasn’t fully recovered. Trading liquidity remains weak, meaning there are fewer buyers and sellers, bigger price gaps, and thinner order books which has helped push Bitcoin down from around $125,000 to much lower levels.
Many traders have been pointing fingers at Binance, the world’s largest crypto exchange, saying it may have played a role in triggering or worsening the crash. Binance has denied that any internal problem caused it, but critics argue that the exchange hasn’t shared enough details about what really happened, which has fueled rumors and distrust.
During the crash, $BTC fell as much as 12.5% in a single day, forcing exchanges to automatically close highly leveraged trades that ran out of margin. These forced liquidations made prices drop even faster.
Because Binance is so big especially in derivatives trading it became the main target of blame on social media. However, market makers and industry leaders say the problem is bigger than one exchange. They believe the event exposed deeper issues in crypto markets, like heavy reliance on leverage and weak liquidity, and that the whole industry may need stricter oversight to avoid similar disasters in the future.
Bitcoin’s recent drop has pushed many spot ETF investors into losses, and some may start selling if the market stays weak.
On average, people who bought $BTC through U.S. spot ETFs paid around $90,200 per BTC. With Bitcoin now near $76,800, they’re sitting on roughly a 15% paper loss.
Short-term traders might panic and redeem their ETF shares, which could add more selling pressure. However, big long-term institutions are expected to stay calmer and hold their positions instead of rushing to exit.