BearMarketWithAHintOfOrange

vip
Age 0.2 Year
Peak Tier 0
I feel more energized during a bear market: researching, taking notes, and finding bargains. I'm not afraid of a quiet market; what I fear is not learning.
There are no winners in war; civilians and infrastructure are always the first to pay the price.
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CoinNetwork
CryptoWorld News reports that the CEO of Ukraine National Railways stated that a Russian drone attack on a railway warehouse in the Sumy region of northern Ukraine resulted in one railway worker's death and four injuries.
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This place, Samara, has been targeted by drones; the Russia-Ukraine conflict's spillover is increasingly borderless.
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CoinNetwork
CryptoWorld News reports that the local governor states that Novokuibyshevsk in the Samara region of Russia has been attacked by drones.
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In the past, whenever I mentioned cross-chain, I would only say "bridge," but now I increasingly realize that the essence of cross-chain is message passing: you send a message from chain A saying "I have locked/burned/authorized," and whether chain B believes it, how it believes it, is the core. The idea behind IBC is quite straightforward, but a single cross-chain transaction honestly involves quite a few trust assumptions: the security of both chains themselves, whether the light client/verification logic is written correctly, whether the relay team has gone offline or maliciously acted, plu
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Lately, there’s been a flood of “points, badges, identities” everywhere, and I almost want to jump into tasks with a slip of the hand. Honestly, the most frightening thing about social mining isn’t losing money, but wasting time thinking you’re learning. During a bear market, I prefer to slow down, take notes, review, and if I really want to participate, pick two or three projects that I can understand long-term. The rest can be left to chance.
These days, Layer2 projects are again arguing over TPS, fees, and subsidies, and it’s quite lively. My feeling is that no matter how much you talk, it
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Recently, I’ve been getting a bit fed up with doing tasks on these platforms—it’s starting to feel more and more like “going to work” just to scrape rewards: clocking in, filling out forms, taking screenshots, and even having to worry about whether you’ll be flagged for bot detection. In the end, you’re given a score—like a performance review. Straight to the point: everyone wants to prevent cheating, but once everything is handled with a one-size-fits-all rule, even people who do things seriously start to feel anxious. I’m clearly here to pick up a cheap deal and learn along the way, yet ever
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I've reviewed myself again these past couple of days: I can't hold onto spot positions, I want to cash out at the slightest rise; futures are even worse, when my mentality gets anxious I leverage up, and the result isn't profit, but "education." To put it plainly, position management boils down to one thing: don't let any single trade determine your mood today. Positions you can sleep soundly with are your real positions; if you can't sleep, it means they're too big.
Some people also complain about miners/validators' income, MEV front-running, and so on, saying the order is unfair, retail inve
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Looking at those "cutting in line" incidents on the blockchain (MEV/ordering), honestly, it's not about who is smarter, but who is closer to the entry point and who is better at blocking you for that one second. The biggest impact is actually on ordinary users' small trades: slippage being eaten up, the transaction price looking worse, and thinking it was just their shaky hands. What's more annoying is that everyone gradually learns to "don't rush, wait for confirmation," especially after seeing the cross-chain bridges being hacked frequently, and oracles occasionally acting up, the whole netw
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42%→19%, this drop is more dramatic than altcoins, and it seems the Middle East powder keg won't be extinguished in the short term.
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Five flagship releases simultaneously, open-source AI enters a "weekly update" mode, developers rejoice, computing power providers weep.
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Independent application form + native MCP integration, enterprise-level authorization—once enabled, it feels like the entire DevOps pipeline needs to be rewritten.
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Atlanta vs Cincinnati single day 1.5 million dollars, traditional sports fans are gradually being converted by platforms like Polymarket, worth paying attention to
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Transaction fee commissions are directly used to buy tokens to stake, completing the Builder economic model loop.
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MarsBitNews
Pvp.trade bought HYPE with $8.68 million in commissions, and it is currently showing an unrealized profit of over $15 million.
According to on-chain analysis, Hyperliquid's trading bot pvp.trade has earned approximately $8.68 million in cumulative revenue from fee commissions, making it a leading builder in the ecosystem. It used this income to buy HYPE, totaling 421k tokens, with an average price of about $20.6, and a market value of approximately $24.34 million. Yesterday, 400k HYPE tokens were redeemed from staking, worth about $22.8 million. Whether this is a profit-taking move remains to be seen. The Builder Fees mechanism allows Builder products to share in the transaction fees.
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Is this price level of 651 a sign of reversing to pick up passengers or continuing to bottom out? My wallet says it's not ready yet.
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These past few days, I reviewed my on-chain data and realized that I’d been “running a bit late.” What I thought was real-time is actually delayed by several layers in between: node synchronization, RPC queuing, and then the indexer re-fetching… If any link in that chain gets stuck, the transfers and trade activity you see look like a delayed live broadcast. Plainly put, it’s not that the chain isn’t working—sometimes the specific route you’re connected through is congested.
By the way, it’s also pretty lively to watch Layer 2 spar over TPS, fees, and subsidies, but right now I care more about
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After a recent review, I realized that when many people say, “I’ve seen it all on the chain,” what you’re actually seeing is the on-chain data that someone else has already translated for you… Nodes have synchronization height discrepancies, RPCs have caching/rate limiting, and indexers are even more extreme. If you rerun the data, your timeline can change. Plainly put, you’re not looking at “real-time on-chain”—you’re looking at “the perspective a certain service provider is willing to give you at this moment.” Being a few minutes late is basically normal.
These past two days, memes have been
MEME7.33%
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11 people overthrow the NYSE, this is the kind of narrative Crypto should have
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WuSaidBlockchainW
NYSE parent company ICE CEO Jeffrey Sprecher mentioned Hyperliquid at the Bernstein conference, saying: "This thing is bigger than Nasdaq, and it’s made by 11 people." He revealed that he has met with the Hyperliquid team multiple times and described their team as "very smart." Sprecher also stated that Hyperliquid's weekend oil price trading and SpaceX derivatives market are receiving widespread attention, and during SpaceX's IPO on June 11, the on-chain market size related to it could even be "larger than the IPO itself." Regarding regulatory issues, he asked, "Why can they do it, and we can't?"
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Recently, I’ve been reviewing notes on re-staking/sharing security, and the more I look at it, the more I feel: the returns can be compounded, but the risks can also "secretly stack up," especially the illusion of "seems like you’re earning a little on everything" that’s easiest to get caught up in. To put it simply, if you use the same collateral to back multiple protocols, it could all go wrong at once if something happens, and splitting it into multiple layers doesn’t make it safer.
These days, everyone is comparing RWA, U.S. bond yields, and on-chain yield products together. I understand t
RWA-0.37%
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Lately, interacting with airdrops has been a bit exhausting for me, but I can’t help wanting to do some homework… Anyway, my rule right now is: better to do fewer chains and keep more of your brain. For new projects, first check the contract permissions and where the funds are going. If you can, use a secondary account, and save on authorizations when you can. Revoke permissions immediately after you’re done interacting—don’t turn your wallet into a public restroom just for a few points.
FOMO isn’t completely off the table either. I set myself a “daily interaction limit”: when it’s time, I sto
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Tokyo's subsidy effort is solid, with a 2/3 ratio + a 40 million cap. The stablecoin track is about to heat up.
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Terms get stuck, obstacles frequently arise—any movement on the edge of the Middle Eastern powder keg is an invisible leverage for risk assets.
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BlockBeatNews
Italian media: Two or three clauses in the U.S.-Iran understanding memorandum still have disagreements
BlockBeats News, May 24 — According to Iran's Tasnim News Agency: Disagreements over two or three clauses in the memorandum of understanding between Iran and the United States still exist. If the U.S. continues to create obstacles, a final memorandum of understanding cannot be reached.
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