At least 75 crypto and blockchain firms received approximately $30 million in government-backed PPP loans during the COVID-19 economic crunch while Binance continues to donate personal protective equipment equipment through its charitable wing. Hereâs the story:
Youâre reading Blockchain Bites, the daily roundup of the most pivotal stories in blockchain and crypto news, and why theyâre significant. You can subscribe to this and all of CoinDeskâs newsletters here.Â
Crypto Loans
More than 75 companies in the blockchain and cryptocurrency industry collected at least $30 million from the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP), a program meant to provide loans to small businesses affected by the COVID-19-led economic fallout, CoinDesk has found. According to information published Monday by the U.S. Small Business Administration, loan recipients include Zcash developer Electric Coin Company, Ethereum venture studio ConsenSys and several crypto venture firms.Â
Binance: Wins and Losses
Binance, the worldâs biggest crypto exchange by trading volume, has donated 27,000 KN95 masks worth more than $60,000 to the U.K. National Health Serviceâs Pru Trust. Binance Charity recently created the PPE Token stablecoin, which has been used to track the delivery of masks and other equipment to hospitals. Thatâs as the exchange acquired crypto wallet app Swipe.io. Swipes wallet is available in more than 30 countries and allows users to purchase items with crypto via a Visa debit card. In less positive news, the Brazilian Securities and Exchange Commission (CVM) on Monday ordered Binance to immediately cease offering derivatives trading in the country.Â
Lightning Bug
Researchers at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem have detailed vulnerabilities in Bitcoinâs Lightning Network that could lead to a loss of funds. The attack, explained in a paper called âFlood & Loot: A Systemic Attack on the Lightning Network,â games the slow confirmation times on Bitcoinâs network, Lightningâs âhash time-locked contractsâ and the difference in settlement times.Â
Benz on the Blockchain?
Ocean Protocol has completed a proof-of-concept with Mercedes-Benz maker Daimler, showing how blockchain can begin monetizing data streams within the company and across its supply chains. Announced Tuesday, the Singapore-based Ocean collaborated with Daimler AG to explore the decentralized sharing of internal sales and financial data among the multinationalâs production hubs, and externally between some of its supply chain procurement partners.Â
Mining Disclosures
Iranâs vice president issued a directive Monday that states crypto miners in the nation will have to disclose their identities, the size of their mining farms and their mining equipment type with the Ministry of Industry, Mines and Trade within a month. Â
Unique Addresses
The seven-day moving average of the number of active ether addresses rose to 405,014 on Friday â a threshold not seen since May 2018, according to data provided by the blockchain analytics firm Glassnode. Active addresses are the number of unique addresses that are active in the network either as a sender or receiver. The increased ether activity could be associated with the explosive growth of Ethereum-based decentralized finance (DeFi) platforms, as well as the number of daily tether (USDT) transactions on the network.Â
ADA Gains
Cardanoâs ADA token has recorded a 170% return in the second quarter, propelling the crypto to its highest price level since June 2019. According to Daniel Ferraro, marketing director at blockchain intelligence firm IntoTheBlock, ADAâs impressive rally is the result of the excitement surrounding the âShelleyâ upgrade, which would make Cardano 50 to 100 times more decentralized than other prominent blockchain networks, according to the company. Further, it will introduce an incentive scheme, or staking, designed to reach equilibrium around 1,000 stake pools. Â
Exchange LossesÂ
Trading volumes on âtop tierâ crypto spot exchanges fell by 36% in June, according to a report from London-based data provider CryptoCompare, potentially related to bitcoinâs recent low volatility. Similarly, crypto derivatives exchanges experienced a 35.7% drop in volume to $393 billion â the lowest monthly volumes since the start of 2020.
The Pirate Bay Age of Money
Lex Sokolin, a CoinDesk columnist and Global Fintech co-head at ConsenSys, writes about a pyramid scheme called Forsage that is eating up 25% of Ethereumâs bandwidth. Currently the most popular decentralized app, Forsage is just one example of the type of software that can take advantage of a permissionless system and cheat people out of their funds. â[W]e are in the Pirate Bay age of money: There is nothing to shut down, many will argue,â Sokolin writes, but âwhite hat hackers should come together to protect their users against naked pyramid schemes. If we donât, there may never be real money in the system. Or worse yet, there will be no real decentralized system at all.â