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16
Sorting Box / Re: Ways to keep Your Bitcoin Safe
« on: March 02, 2021, 02:40:09 PM »


Ways to keep your Bitcoin safe!

• Always buy Bitcoin from a reputable exchange.

• Always enable 2-factor authentication. It will help you to protect your account from many threads.

• Don't keep large amount on exchanges. Always diversify your funds.

• Use the best hardware wallets to keep your Bitcoin safe.

protect your Bitcoin is as much important as earning.

Happy Bitcoin Holding

Nice one mate. Good information from you. It is really important to protect our coins.

17
Crypto Exchanges / Re: 1inch better than uniswap?
« on: March 02, 2021, 02:37:12 PM »
1inch and uniswap both Decentralized exchange but recently two exchanges trading fees so high that we can trade any ERC 20 based assets. I already left both exchanges .

Both decentralized, but of course I'm still counting on uniswap.

18
En route to $200K? Bitcoin closed February 26% above Stock-to-Flow model price
Bitcoin is actually overshooting the popular S2F model price as the month of March begins.

En route to $200K? Bitcoin closed February 26% above Stock-to-Flow model priceMARKET ANALYSIS
The price of Bitcoin (BTC) is outpacing the popular Stock-to-Flow (S2F) model, which predicts that the BTC price would eventually reach $200,000.

The S2F model forecasts the long-term price trend of Bitcoin by taking two main factors into account, namely the amount of BTC in existence (the stock) against the amount of newly mined coins entering the market (the flow).

Bitcoin is on track to $200,000 based on S2F
According to the the S2F multiple, the price of Bitcoin should be hovering at around $36,851 in order for the S2F model to be on track.

Due to the recent bull cycle and Bitcoin's strong momentum, BTC/USD is now well above the S2F estimate at around $49,000.


Saifdean Ammous, the renowned author of The Bitcoin Standard, emphasized that Bitcoin rarely diverged from the S2F model since it was created well over two years ago.

The accuracy of the S2F model to date suggests that the market is recognizing the value of Bitcoin based on its scarcity and growing demand. Moreover, it highlights Bitcoin's value proposition against the depreciating U.S. dollar and the programmed reduction of the flow (i.e. Bitcoin halvings).

Ammous noted:

"PlanB released this model two years ago. Even after everything that has happened in bitcoin and the world over the last two years, the bitcoin market price has never diverged more than 1 standard deviation from the model's predicted price."
As Cointelegraph previously reported, S2F creator PlanB said that he has no doubt the price of Bitcoin would reach $100,000 by December 2021, based on the model.


In mid-2020, PlanB said Bitcoin could tap anywhere between $100,000 to $288,000 by December of next year. He said:

“People ask if I still believe in my model. To be clear: I have no doubt whatsoever that #bitcoin S2FX is correct and #bitcoin will tap $100K-288K before Dec2021. In fact I have new data that confirms the supply shortage is real. IMO 2021 will be spectacular. Not financial advice!”
BTC is being used more than the USD M1
According to Willy Woo, a prominent on-chain analyst, Bitcoin's monetary velocity is higher than USD M1.

This simply means that Bitcoin is moving more value than the amount used for spending with the U.S. dollar.


Bitcoin velocity versus U.S. money stock. Source: Woobull.com
Such a trend indicates that Bitcoin is being actively used as a means to transfer value and a store of value simultaneously, as it evolves into an established asset. Woo said:

"Bitcoin's monetary velocity is now higher than USD M1. M1 is the USD held in short term accounts for buying stuff; none of it is moving. BTC's making a joke out of it. BTC is moving more than the money we have for spending. Nevermind BTC is for long term investment."
Currently, Bitcoin is considered a store of value and a way to hedge against inflation. When the dominant cryptocurrency's adoption as a means of payment and a settlement layer rises, it would likely catalyze a second wave of mainstream adoption and usage.

At that point, the value of Bitcoin could accelerate further, moving in tandem with the S2F model as the next block reward halving in about three years materializes, potentially moving BTC price further up the S2F curve.

Bitcoin could still see major corrections in price, as it did many times during the current and past bull cycles. But the S2F model would still be on track as long as BTC/USD remains within its range of short-term deviations.

Source: https://cointelegraph.com/news/en-route-to-200k-bitcoin-closed-february-26-above-stock-to-flow-model-price/amp

19
No, Goldman Sachs isn’t a bearish indicator for Bitcoin
The Bitcoin market is a different beast compared to late 2017 when Goldman Sachs balked at launching its crypto trading desk.

No, Goldman Sachs isn’t a bearish indicator for BitcoinMARKET ANALYSIS
Peter Brandt, a popular veteran trader and CEO of proprietary trading firm Factor LLC, recently gave his thoughts on Goldman Sachs potentially restarting its cryptocurrency desk.


On Dec. 21, 2017, a similar Bloomberg piece stated that Goldman Sachs would set up a cryptocurrency trading desk, although the bank was “still trying to work out security issues.”

Although Brandt’s chart seems significant, one needs to understand that such speculation had been ongoing for a couple of months. Wall Street Journal already covered Goldman Sachs’ intention to do this on Oct. 2, 2017.

Even if we disregard the exact date, Goldman Sachs apparently ditched those plans to launch its Bitcoin (BTC) trading desk. But, more importantly, there aren’t many similarities between the 2017 bull run and the current market in terms of their structure.


Bitcoin market cap, volume late-2017, USD billion. Source: TradingView
Take notice of how BTC volume soared from a $2 billion average daily volume in November 2017 to $14.6 billion by year-end, a seven-fold increase. The incoming retail demand was so impressive that it caused Binance, Bitfinex, and Bittrex exchanges to reject new users temporarily.

Binance accounts were even sold by users directly to other users at the time when no new sign-ups were being accepted. In other words, there is currently no retail frenzy in Bitcoin similar to what happened in late 2017. In fact, the current bull cycle appears to be driven by institutions that are seemingly scooping up BTC on every dip.


Bitcoin market cap, volume, USD billion. Source: TradingView
Meanwhile, the $66 billion daily average traded volume seen on Feb. 22, 2021, as Bitcoin's market capitalization peaked at $1.09 trillion, has been relatively flat for the previous six weeks.

Therefore, an experienced technical analyst such as Brandt should have added the caveat that volume is the most relevant market participation indicator (which he frequently emphasizes in his other analysis).

To settle this difference for good, one needs to understand the basics of futures markets. Derivatives exchanges charge either perpetual futures longs (buyers) or shorts (sellers) a fee every eight hours to keep a balanced risk exposure. This indicator, known as the funding rate, will turn positive when longs are the ones demanding more leverage.


Bitmex BTC perpetual futures weekly funding rate, late-2017. Source: TradingView
As the above chart indicates, buyers were willing to pay up to 40% per week to leverage their long positions. This is entirely unsustainable and a sign of extreme optimism. Any market downturn would have caused cascading liquidations, with the BTC price accelerating to the downside.


BitMEX BTC perpetual futures weekly funding rate. Source: TradingView
Such exorbitant rates no longer exist, albeit the current 4% weekly funding rate has been the highest since June 2019. Nevertheless, scales of magnitude lower than late-2017 outrageous retail-driven long leverage frenzy.

Lastly, one should factor in that December 2017 marked the launch of CME and CBOE futures contracts. As Cointelegraph astutely put back then: “This unprecedented event could have a significant impact on the Bitcoin economy.” In retrospect, this seems to have been the peak euphoria signal the bears were waiting for. Thus, Goldman Sachs balking was likely the effect, not the cause.

But while Brandt has become well-known in the cryptocurrency space for anticipating the 80%+ correction after the 2017 Bitcoin price top, his track record has been less impressive in recent times.

So to sum up, there is zero evidence to support Peter Brandt’s theory besides a single event that happened once in the 11 years of Bitcoin trading. Not to mention that the 2017 Goldman Sachs cryptocurrency trading desk rumors had been going for a while.

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph. Every investment and trading move involves risk. You should conduct your own research when making a decision.

Source: https://www.google.com/amp/s/cointelegraph.com/tags/bitcoin/amp

20
Sorting Box / Re: Ethics in crypto
« on: March 01, 2021, 12:30:29 PM »
Ethics is a set of moral character. Sometimes doing what is right is not that easy, because doing what is right sometimes can hurt others.

21
You can be a terrible tiger, if you can't do anything for the communityor young generations, can't observe something manually, then I know you as small cat.

So do research on cryptocurrency. A person who is interested in learning a lot can improve his life. Do not do the so-called things constantly. Learn something new all the time.

Bring something good for the future cryptocurrency community. Your creation or teaching efforts will benefit future generations.

I'm teaching right information especially to the next generation. Wrong information means wrong application.

22
Forum related / Re: Some users make difficult to survive in forum
« on: March 01, 2021, 11:38:58 AM »
Shitposting, giving knowledge like misbehaving with other users through post, posting without knowledge, post quality gets bad, new users can't learn, misbehaving can happen. It is important to be careful.

Users make one mistake after another. But I think moderators look at them with forgiveness. However, if the level of error is exceeded, then the decision should be too strict. I think it should be a bit harsh. One mistake after another, new users will have the opportunity to behave unfairly.

Knowledge needs to be improved. New users of the forum can learn something. Correct spellings, without reporting against each other, without bothering anyone with personal messages. Be careful.

Discuss coins, you need knowledge about the market. If you are a trader, always review the coins. LQP. Can follow senior older members to refrain from.

You may have more karma in your account. So you are not powerful. You have to understand. Users need to be respected. Cooperation with each other is desirable. Learn good manners. Able to improve life.

If you have any questions you can ask in the For bigenners section.

In my own opinion. If we are recruiting others in this forum, we should guide them so that they will enjoy and become knowledgeable of do's and don'ts of this forum.

23
Forum related / Re: Hi, introduce yourself
« on: March 01, 2021, 11:34:33 AM »
Hi Everyone! My name is Nakul and Im new to the crypto world. Im looking forward to connecting with all of you!


Hello Nakul and to all the newbie in this forum. Stay active in this forum.

24
Sorting Box / Re: Blockchain wallet is it good?
« on: March 01, 2021, 11:32:19 AM »
Indeed Blockchain wallet is highly secured and easy to use, but they are still some great wallets out there, that are also good with great UI, wallets like Trust wallet is one of the most used crypto wallet I use it too, cool UI and easy to understand even for noobs in crypto,usually use it in holding small amount of crypto, when it comes to holding large amount of crypto the best wallets are the hardware wallets,  example are ledger and Trevor wallet, their security is top notch.

Yes it is. Blockchain  wallet is secured and easy to use, that is why there are a lot of users of it out there.

25
Sorting Box / Re: I need advice about buy some good coins.
« on: March 01, 2021, 11:30:39 AM »
You need to Chose a coin that is potential and at the same time affordable.

26
Bitcoin Forum / Re: Is Bitcoin Cash or Gold now?
« on: February 28, 2021, 11:56:13 PM »
I am not a fan of both Bitcoin cash or even Bitcoin gold.

I am also a fan of this particular coins. But of course I believe that they are potential coins.

27
Increasing stock market volatility drags Bitcoin and altcoin prices lower
Growing concerns over rising U.S. Treasury yields are putting pressure on global financial markets and possibly dragging cryptocurrency prices lower.

Increasing stock market volatility drags Bitcoin and altcoin prices lowerMARKET UPDATE
The cryptocurrency market faced another day of downward pressure as the unease in the traditional markets continues to spread following the recent interest rate spike on the 10-year U.S. Treasury bond.

Data from Cointelegraph Markets and TradingView shows that the price of Bitcoin (BTC) fell to a low at $44,710 late on Feb. 25 before buying at the key support returned to help the digital asset recover back above $46,500 but generally, analysts are looking for $50,000 to become an established support before expecting bullish continuation.


BTC/USDT 4-hour chart. Source: TradingView
Despite major BTC purchases by MicroStrategy, Tesla and MassMutual, a majority of institutional investors still have security and tax treatment concerns that prevent them from investing in Bitcoin, according to Galaxy Digital co-president Damien Vanderwilt.

Institutional investment has been a significant source of optimism in the cryptocurrency sector in 2021, but its influence in helping BTC reach a market cap of $1 trillion may be overstated as recent analysis shows that stablecoin whales and retail traders still hold the most buying power.

Interest rate increase puts pressure on GBTC
On Feb. 25, the interest rate for the 10-year U.S. Treasury spiked to 1.52%, its highest level in over a year.

According to Chad Steinglass, Head of Trading at CrossTower, the move led to market-wide pressure that pushed the “GBTC premium down as low as negative 6% and it closed around negative 2% today.” The analyst sees interest rate volatility as a major source of market volatility, as the long end of the curve steepens while the U.S. dollar is pushed lower.


Daily cryptocurrency market performance. Source: Coin360
Cryptocurrencies fell under increased pressures as equity markets deteriorated throughout the day, possibly due to a “scramble for liquidity” resulting from traders “pushing up against margin calls and needing to free up cash.”

Steinglass said:

“I interpret the GBTC premium collapse as a sign that either retail is dumping to free liquidity, or large fund holders like ARKW are seeing outflows, which causes them to sell GBTC along with everything else.”
Traditional markets are still choppy
The 10-year Treasury yield pulled back .0582 basis points to 1.46 on Feb. 26, marking a 3.82% decrease from its high on the previous day. This leadi to a choppy day in the markets which saw the major indices close mixed.

The NASDAQ finished the day up 0.56%, recovering some of its losses from the 3.5% drop on Feb. 25. Meanwhile, the S&P 500 and DOW finished the day in the red, down 0.48% and 1.51% respectively.

A majority of the top cryptocurrencies also took on sharp losses on Friday, with the exception of Cardano (ADA), which became the third-ranked cryptocurrency by market cap after its price broke out to a new all-time high at $1.29. The current excitement for the altcoin appears to be connected to the upcoming 'Mary' mainnet launch scheduled for March 1.


ADA/USDT 4-hour chart. Source: TradingView
Basic Attention Token (BAT) has also battled back against the market sell-off to post a 6.43% gain following the Feb. 23 announcement of the upcoming Brave Decentralized Exchange (DEX).

Ether (ETH) price is down 7.19%  and trading below $1,500, while Binance Coin (BNB) has dropped 8.36% to $224.14

The overall cryptocurrency market cap now stands at $1.533 trillion and Bitcoin’s dominance rate is 61.3%.

Source: https://cointelegraph.com/news/increasing-stock-market-volatility-drags-bitcoin-and-altcoin-prices-lower

28
Grayscale's Bitcoin premium has dropped to record lows below zero
Grayscale Investments’ GBTC might be the absolute market leader but it is currently trading below fair value as the TSX Purpose Bitcoin ETF is seeing record inflows.

Grayscale's Bitcoin premium has dropped to record lows below zero MARKET ANALYSIS
Grayscale Bitcoin Trust ($GBTC) is currently the largest listed cryptocurrency asset with $30.17 billion in assets under management. The firm currently holds more than 655,730 BTC and the security is tradable in the United States through over-the-counter markets.

How is GBTC different from a Bitcoin ETF?
The fund was launched in 2013 and the Grayscale Bitcoin Trust became the preferred institutional vehicle in the U.S. for BTC due to the lack of a Bitcoin exchange-traded fund (ETF).

Investment trust funds are regulated by the U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) and they are designed exclusively for accredited investors. Nevertheless, those can be sold to retail traders after a six-month lock-up period.

This specificity causes GBTC shares to trade above the equivalent BTC held by the trust whenever there's retail demand on secondary markets. Meanwhile, institutional clients can buy at par directly from Grayscale Investments regardless of the price on OTC markets.


Grayscale GBTC Bitcoin Trust premium (blue) vs. Marker price (green). Source: Bybt.com
As displayed above, such a premium sometimes surpassed 40%, indicating heavy buying pressure from investors. The situation changed over the past four weeks as Bitcoin price peaked at $58,000 and initiated a substantial correction, causing the GBTC premium to range between 5% and 10%.

A diminished appetite in the secondary markets creates a potential imbalance as there is currently no redemption program for the GBTC. Had there been a way to convert it back to BTC, a market maker would gladly buy the trust shares at a discount.


Grayscale GBTC Bitcoin Trust premium to BTC. Source: YCharts.com
Although the recent price crash could explain the 7% discount seen on Feb. 26, Bitcoin faced multiple 30% corrections in the past with no apparent impact on GBTC premium. Even during the horrific bear market in late 2018, GBTC traded above the net asset value (NAV).

A new challenger appears
Although no better alternative was previously offered, Canada’s TSX launched a Bitcoin ETF on Feb. 18, providing investors direct exposure to BTC. This structure allows the market maker to create and redeem shares, thus minimizing eventual premium or discount to the net asset value.

This time around, the selling pressure that took place found less buying activity from non-accredited investors. On the other hand, the Canadian Purpose Investments ETF surpassed 10,000 BTC under management in one week, which signals the instrument's success despite a sharp downturn in BTC price.

Unless Grayscale Investments opens a redemption program, nothing is preventing GBTC from continuing to trade below its net asset value.


Source: https://cointelegraph.com/news/grayscale-s-bitcoin-premium-has-dropped-to-record-lows-below-zero

29
What DeFi needs to do next to keep institutional players interested
In order for DeFi to have access to institutional actors, it will need to adapt. But by adapting, it might lose some of its core tenets.


What DeFi needs to do next to keep institutional players interestedOPINION
The last few months’ frenzy of institutional money flowing into Bitcoin (BTC) has seen crypto hitting the headlines — at the least as a novelty asset, at the most as a must-have. There is undoubtedly a trend in the market toward greater awareness and acceptance of digital assets as a new investable asset class.

A June 2020 report by Fidelity Digital Assets found that 80% of institutions in the United States and Europe have at least an interest in investing in crypto, while more than a third have already invested in some form of digital asset, with Bitcoin being the most popular choice of investment.

A good starting point for institutional investors would be to differentiate between crypto (Bitcoin, in particular) and decentralized finance products. To date, most institutional interest has involved simply holding Bitcoin (or Bitcoin futures), with few players dipping into more exotic DeFi products.

There are a plethora of reasons for the recent Bitcoin rage. Some would cite the relative maturity of the market and increased liquidity, which means sizable trades can now take place without resulting in excessive market movement. Others would cite the unusual high volatility, high return and positive excess kurtosis (meaning a greater probability of extreme values compared with the stock market) of the asset class. Bitcoin’s backstory and its limited supply that makes it akin to digital gold have also been highlighted, making it more and more attractive in a world of inflated asset prices and unruly monetary and fiscal policies.

However, the main reason for the recent institutional interest in crypto is much less philosophical, much more practical and has to do with regulations and legacy infrastructure.

Financial institutions are old behemoths, managing billions of dollars’ worth of other people’s money, and are therefore required by law to fulfill an overabundance of rules regarding the type of assets they are holding, where they are holding them and how they are holding them.

On the one hand, in the past two years, the blockchain and crypto industry has made leaps forward in terms of regulatory clarity, at least in most developed markets. On the other hand, the development of the high-standard infrastructure that provides institutional actors with an operating model similar to that offered in the traditional world of securities now allows them to invest directly in digital assets by taking custody or indirectly through derivatives and funds. Each of these represents the real drivers in giving institutional investors enough confidence to finally dip their toes into crypto.

Keeping institutional interest alive: What about other DeFi products?
With U.S. 10-year Treasurys yielding a little higher than 1%, the next big thing would be for institutions to look at investing in decentralized yield products. It might seem like a no-brainer when rates are in the doldrums and DeFi protocols on U.S. dollar stablecoins are yielding between 2% and 12% per annum — not to mention more exotic protocols yielding north of 250% per annum.

However, DeFi is in its infancy, and liquidity is still too thin in comparison with more established asset classes for institutions to bother upgrading their knowledge, let alone their IT systems to deploy capital into it. Additionally, there are real, serious operational and regulatory risks when it comes to the transparency, rules and governance of these products.

There are many things that need to be developed — most of which are already underway — to ensure institutional interest in DeFi products, whether on the settlement layer, asset layer, application layer or aggregation layer.

Institutions’ primary concern is to ensure the legitimacy and compliance of their DeFi counterparts at both the protocol level and the sale execution level.

One solution is a protocol that recognizes the status of a wallet owner or of another protocol and advises the counterparty as to whether or not it fits its requirements in terms of compliance, governance, accountability and also code auditing, as the potential for malicious actors to exploit the system has been proved over and over.

This solution will need to go hand in hand with an insurance process to transfer the risk of an error, for example, in validation to a third party. We are starting to see the emergence of a few insurance protocols and mutualized insurance products, and adoption and liquidity in DeFi need to be large enough to caution the investments in time, money and expertise to fully develop viable institutional insurance products.

Another venue to be enhanced is the quality and integrity of data through trustful oracles and the need to increase the confidence in oracles to achieve compliant levels of reporting. This goes hand in hand with the need for sophisticated analytics to monitor investments and on-chain activity. And it goes without saying that more clarity on accounting and taxes is needed from certain regulators who haven’t emitted an opinion yet.

Another obvious issue concerns network fees and throughput, with requests taking from a few seconds to double-digit minutes depending on network congestion, and fees twirling between a few cents and 20 bucks. This is, however, being resolved with plans for the development of Ethereum 2.0 in the next two years and also the emergence of blockchains more adapted to faster transactions and more stable fees.

A final, somewhat funny point would be the need for improvement in user experience/user interfaces in order to turn complex protocols and code into a more user-friendly, familiar interface.

Regulation matters
People like to compare the blockchain revolution to the internet revolution. What they fail to remember is that the internet disrupted the flow of information and data, both of which were not regulated and had no existing infrastructure, and it is only in the last few years that such regulations were adopted.

The financial industry, however, is heavily regulated — even more so since 2008. In the United States, finance is three times more regulated than the healthcare industry. Finance has a legacy operational system and infrastructure that makes it extremely hard to disrupt and tedious to transform.

It’s likely that in the next 10 years, we will see a fork between instruments and protocols that are fully decentralized, fully open source and fully anonymous and instruments that will need to fit in the tight framework of the heavy regulation and archaic infrastructure of financial markets, resulting in a loss of some of the above characteristics along the way.

This will by no means slow down the fantastic rate of creativity and the relentless, fast-paced innovation in the sector, as a large number of new products in the DeFi space — products we haven’t even predicted — are anticipated. And within a quarter of a century, once DeFi will have first adapted to and then absorbed capital markets, its full potential will be unleashed, leading to a frictionless, decentralized, self-governing system.

The revolution is here, and it is here to stay. New technologies have undeniably shifted the financial industry from a sociotechnical system — controlled through social relations — to a technosocial system — controlled through autonomous technical mechanisms.

There is a fine equilibrium to be reached between tech-based, fast-paced crypto and antiquated, regulated fiat systems. Building a bridge between the two will only benefit the system as a whole.

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

Source: https://cointelegraph.com/news/what-defi-needs-to-do-next-to-keep-institutional-players-interested

30
Blockchain Technology / Blockchain soccer gaming startup Sorare raises $50M
« on: February 25, 2021, 02:31:10 PM »
Blockchain soccer gaming startup Sorare raises $50M
Sorare has raised $50 million in a Series A round, bringing its total funding to $60 million.
Blockchain soccer gaming startup Sorare raises $50MNEWS
Sorare, a major blockchain-based soccer gaming platform, has raised $50 million from high-profile investors backing major companies like Twitter, Instagram and Discord

The fresh Series A round brings Sorare’s total funding to $60 million, the company told Cointelegraph Thursday.

The funding round was led by Benchmark, an investment giant famous for funding companies like Twitter, Uber and Snap. Accel Partners was another lead investor, known for backing companies like Facebook and Spotify. The round also included some additional investment from investors like Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian, VaynerMedia CEO Gary Vaynerchuk, and Barcelona striker Antoine Griezmann.

With the new funding, Sorare is planning to continue growing its ecosystem, including launching a mobile application and onboarding the top global 20 football leagues. “We’re designing an experience where fans can celebrate, share, and live football moments at a deeper connection. We’re making fantasy football a reality,” Sorare said.

Founded in 2018, Sorare provides a digital collectibles platform based on the Ethereum blockchain. With non-fungible tokens, the platform offers a collective fantasy football experience allowing players to manage their players and earn prizes.

Gerard Piqué, strategic advisor at Sorare, explained that the platform aims to meet the significant shift to online and digital fan experiences:

“As world football has shifted from local supporters to global fanbases, football fans are looking for new ways to be connected to the game, the players and other fans.”
Blockchain and cryptocurrency startups have been actively tapping the soccer industry in order to bring new ways of fan engagement using emerging technologies. Socios and Chiliz represent some of the best-known industry efforts, jointly providing blockchain fan tokens for popular global soccer clubs like FC Barcelona, Juventus and Paris Saint-Germain. Earlier this week, Polish Legia Warsaw became the latest soccer club to join Chiliz and Socios.

Source: https://cointelegraph.com/news/blockchain-soccer-gaming-startup-sorare-raises-50m

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