From Nothing to Millions: Inside CZ’s "Freedom of Money"
There’s a tendency to read Freedom of Money as just another founder story. Another success, another timeline, another “how it all started.” But that would be missing the entire point. This book is not about a company, and it’s not even just about crypto. It’s about Changpeng Zhao, the decisions he made when nothing was guaranteed, and how those decisions ended up shaping an entire financial era. What makes CZ’s story different is how unpolished it is. No dramatic exaggeration, no attempt to make things look smoother than they were. He walks you through uncertainty the way it actually feels, messy, fast, and unforgiving. Before Binance became what it is today, it was just an idea moving inside an industry that most people didn’t believe in. Crypto at the time wasn’t “the future.” It was dismissed, misunderstood, and often attacked. And yet, CZ didn’t wait for validation. He moved anyway. That’s where the real shift begins. Not in the technology, but in the mindset. While others were trying to make crypto fit into traditional systems, CZ approached it differently. He didn’t try to adjust to the system, he built around the user. Accessibility became a priority. Speed became a standard. And suddenly, finance started feeling less like a closed system and more like something people could actually enter. Reading this, you realize that Binance didn’t just grow fast. It grew with intention. Every move, every expansion, every decision carried weight. It wasn’t about being the biggest for the sake of it. It was about building something that worked at scale, in an environment that was constantly shifting. And that’s something most people underestimate. It’s easy to build when things are stable. It’s different when you’re building while everything is moving under your feet. The book also doesn’t ignore the pressure that came with that growth. If anything, it highlights it. User protection, for example, isn’t treated as a feature. It’s treated as a responsibility that kept evolving. As millions of people started relying on Binance, the stakes changed. One decision could impact millions. One mistake could break trust instantly. And in an industry where trust is already fragile, that responsibility becomes part of the foundation, not an addition. Then comes resilience, and this is where CZ’s personality becomes impossible to ignore. Market crashes, regulatory challenges, constant scrutiny, these weren’t side events. They were part of the journey. But what stands out is how they were handled. Not with hesitation, not with panic, but with adaptation. There’s a level of calm decision-making throughout the story that shows you this wasn’t someone reacting to the market. This was someone who understood it deeply enough to move through it. What Freedom of Money does brilliantly is show how all of this wasn’t happening in isolation. As CZ was building, the industry itself was evolving. What started as a niche space slowly turned into global infrastructure. And Binance didn’t just follow that evolution, it pushed it forward. It set standards, influenced expectations, and in many ways, forced the industry to mature faster than it would have on its own. But beyond all of that, beyond the strategy, the scale, and the impact, there’s something much simpler at the core of this story. CZ started with nothing extraordinary. No perfect setup, no guaranteed outcome. Just a clear vision, the discipline to execute, and the ability to move when others were still thinking. And that’s exactly why this book matters. Because when you read Freedom of Money, you’re not just learning what happened. You’re understanding how one person’s mindset can shift more than just their own life. It can create opportunities for millions of others. It can open access where there was none. It can challenge systems that felt untouchable. Changpeng Zhao didn’t just build Binance. He built something that changed how people see money, access, and freedom itself. And whether you’re deep into crypto or just starting to understand it, this is exactly the kind of story that makes you see the space differently. Not as hype. Not as trend. But as something that was built, step by step, by someone who chose to move when it mattered most. And that’s a story worth reading. #freedomofmoney #CZ #Binance
The launch is set for next week. Unless the editors pull me in for one more round 😂
E-books are now available for pre-order.
English 👉 https://a.co/d/08NMxBOH Traditional Chinese 👉 https://a.co/d/01f7iQTn
The English physical book will also launch next week. Regional language editions will follow in the coming months — taking a bit longer, but we’re on it.
Saw some people panicking or asking about quantum computing's impact on crypto.
At a high level, all crypto has to do is to upgrade to Quantum-Resistant (Post-Quantum) Algorithms. So, no need to panic. 😂
In practice, there are some execution considerations. It's hard to organize upgrades in a decentralized world. There will likely be many debates on which algorithm(s) to use, resulting in some forks.
And some dead project may not upgrade at all. Might be a good to cleanse out those projects anyway.
New code may introduce other bugs or security issues in the short term.
People who self custody will have to migrate their coins to new wallets.
This brings to the question of Satoshi's bitcoins. If those coins move, then it means he/she is still around, which is interesting to know. If they don't move (in a certain period of time), it might be better to lock (or effectively burn) those addresses so that they don't go to the first hacker who cracks it. There is also the difficulty of identifying all his addresses, and not confuse with some old hodlers. Anyway, it's a different topic for later.
Fundamentally: It's always easier to encrypt than decrypt. More computing power is always good.
Not owned by me personally, but a portfolio company. Good to see them advancing on AI.
TopCryptoNews
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🌕 CZ-owned Trust Wallet launches AI agents that can execute crypto trades
The digital wallet owned by Binance founder Changpeng Zhao, which has more than 220 million customers, said Thursday that users can now employ artificial intelligence-powered agents to perform a variety of crypto transactions.
"Today, Trust Wallet launches the Trust Wallet Agent Kit (TWAK) — infrastructure that lets AI agents execute real crypto transactions, across more than 25 blockchains, within rules that users define and control," the company said in a blog post. The agents can handle cross-chain swaps across several networks, including Solana and Bitcoin, in addition to managing recurring buys.
Crypto firms are increasingly experimenting with AI-powered automation, aiming to allow users to enlist agents that can actively manage portfolios and execute trades.
The new toolkit offers two ways to operate, one where the AI agent has its own wallet and can execute trades automatically based on set rules, and the other where it suggests transactions that users then need to approve.
"Trust Wallet has always been built on a single principle: your keys, your crypto. TWAK extends that principle into the age of AI agents," also according to the blog post. "With WalletConnect mode, an AI can help you act on your portfolio — research, propose, execute — without ever holding your keys. You stay in control."
While the cryptocurrency exchange initially bought Trust Wallet in 2018, it now operates as an independent company.
We have recently received feedback from our community about Square’s algorithm. Based on this input, we are updating our recommendation algorithm for English language content to focus on two key areas that matter most to the community: meaningful engagement and trades. You will soon notice these updates in your recommendation feed, and we will continue to adjust the algorithm throughout this period based on feedback received, please feel free to share your suggestions with us.
Make sure your iOS devices are up-to-date. Stay SAFU.
Google Threat Intelligence Group (GTIG) has identified a new iOS full-chain exploit that leveraged multiple zero-day vulnerabilities to fully compromise devices. Based on toolmarks in recovered payloads, we believe the exploit chain to be called DarkSword. Since at least November 2025, GTIG has observed multiple commercial surveillance vendors and suspected state-sponsored actors utilizing DarkSword in distinct campaigns. These threat actors have deployed the exploit chain against targets in Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Malaysia, and Ukraine.
SEC Clarifies Crypto Asset Classification, Excludes Most from Securities Definition
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) announced on Tuesday that the majority of cryptocurrency assets will not be classified as securities. According to NS3.AI, the SEC specifically stated that activities such as protocol mining, staking, and airdrops do not fall under the definition of an investment contract. SEC Chair Paul Atkins highlighted that this interpretation provides market participants with clearer guidelines under federal securities laws, addressing over a decade of ambiguity.Following the SEC's announcement, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) declared that it would align its administration of the Commodity Exchange Act with the SEC's interpretation. Atkins further noted that this guidance could act as a transitional measure while Congress develops bipartisan legislation on market structure.
YZi Labs Leads $52 Million Investment in RoboForce AI
YZi Labs has announced a $52 million investment in RoboForce AI, a Silicon Valley-based company specializing in industrial robotics. YZi Labs posted on X that Ella Zhang, Head of YZi Labs, has joined RoboForce AI's board. The company focuses on industries such as solar energy, data centers, mining, and logistics, where labor demands are beyond human capabilities. RoboForce's TITAN robot is designed to operate with millimeter-level precision in the most challenging environments. The company has a deep collaboration with NVIDIA and was highlighted by Jensen Huang at the GTC event.