Welcome to The Protocol, CoinDeskโs weekly wrap-up of the most important stories in cryptocurrency tech development. Iโm Ben Schiller, CoinDeskโs Opinion and Features editor.
In this issue:
Sonyโs blockchain faces memecoin controversy
Bubblemaps readies BMT and new intel desk
Babylon enhances Bitcoinโs interoperability
Prosecutors seek 95k BTC Bitfinex return
This article is featured in the latest issue of The Protocol, our weekly newsletter exploring the tech behind crypto, one block at a time. Sign up here to get it in your inbox every Wednesday. Also please check out our weekly The Protocol podcast.
Network news
SONY EMBRACES BLOCKCHAIN, BATTLES MEMES: Sony, the 78-year-old Japanese electronics giant, is the latest legacy megacorp to explore blockchain technology. On Tuesday, the company announced that it is officially launching โSoneium,โ its general-purpose blockchain platform built on Optimismโs OP Stack. The chain is aimed towards โbridging the gap between Web2 and Web3 audiences, especially for the creators, fans and community,โ the team behind the network told CoinDeskโs Margaux Nijkerk in a statement. Like similar general-purpose blockchains, the network is built to support a wide variety of use cases, from decentralized finance apps to entertainment and gaming services. While Sonyโs blockchain tech has attracted eyeballs over the past week, not all the attention has been positive. Within the first couple of hours of Soneiumโs launch, some X users complained that the network was blocking memecoin trading, leading to allegations that the (ostensibly decentralized) network was โcensoringโ certain kinds of transactions, a big no-no for some crypto adherents. The controversy underscored the unavoidable tension between hardline blockchain ideals and traditional corporate interests. But the incident also showcased cryptoโs resilience: Some savvy blockchain users found a workaround allowing them to โforce throughโ transactions to the base Ethereum network, rendering Sonyโs alleged transaction-blocking moot. Read more.
BUBBLEMAPS WANTS MORE CRYPTO SLEUTHS: Bubblemaps, the blockchain analytics service, announced on X this week that it will be launching a token, BMT, and a new โIntel Deskโ that will give holders a voice in driving investigations. Bubblemaps recently introduced the V2 of its platform, which helps crypto sleuths suss out who really owns the supply of a given token. The platform sorts closely related blockchain addresses into clusters, and its easy-to-read visuals have become a common sight on crypto Twitter, where theyโve been used to demonstrate suspicious supply patterns among popular memecoins and DeFi tokens. Bubblemaps V2, which started rolling out to users in November, added new AI-clustering features and made it easier to examine token distributions over time. Bubblemaps just-announced token, BMT, will be airdropped to users of the V2 platform. Holders will be given a role in the platformโs โIntel Desk,โ where community members can propose investigations and vote on how Bubblemaps allocates in-house investigators and resources.
BABYLON BRINGS ZK MOMENTUM: Babylon Labs, developer of the largest BTC staking protocol, is building a trust-minimized Bitcoin bridge with the Cosmos network to enhance the worldโs oldest blockchainโs interoperability. In partnership with developers Fiamma, Babylon is using the BitVM2 computing paradigm, which is designed to allow Ethereum-style smart contracts on Bitcoin, which then paves the way for zero-knowledge (ZK) technology. ZK computations allow different parties to verify that information is accurate without actually revealing to each other what the information is. In this sense, it is foundational to bridging digital assets between different blockchains. Developers like Babylon Labs and Fiamma are aiming to unlock the deep wells of value stored in BTC to finance other ecosystems and allow it to be transacted on blockchains that are free of some of Bitcoinโs limitations of speed and scale. Read more.
BITFINEX: U.S. prosecutors have asked a federal judge to green-light the return of nearly 80% of the 119,754 bitcoins stolen in the 2016 hack of crypto exchange Bitfinex. In a Tuesday court filing, prosecutors said the 94,643 bitcoins recovered by the government from the original wallet used by the hacker, Ilya Lichtenstein, can be paid to Bitfinex as restitution in-kind once the court gives the go-ahead. The Bitcoin Cash, Bitcoin Satoshi Vision and Bitcoin Gold generated via several hard forks following the hack will also be sent to Bitfinex. Last November, Lichtenstein was sentenced to 5 years in prison after pleading guilty to conspiracy to commit money laundering in 2023. His wife, Heather Morgan โ better known by her rap moniker Razzlekhan โ received an 18-month sentence for helping Lichtenstein to launder a portion of the hack proceeds. Both agreed to forfeit the stolen cryptocurrency as part of their plea agreements. Read more.
Money Center
You Ainโt Seen Nothing
Bitcoin ETFs had record debuts in 2024. Analysts say the best is yet to come.
Treasuries multiply
Four new U.S.-listed companies have added bitcoin treasuries recently.
Regulatory and policy
U.S. banks should loosen rules for crypto companies, new FDIC chair says
Judges ask SEC to โexplain itselfโ over rules refusal
Calendar
Jan. 20-24: World Economic Forum, Davos, Switzerland
January 21-25: WAGMI conference, Miami.
Jan. 24-25: Adopting Bitcoin, Cape Town, South Africa.
Jan. 30-31: PLAN B Forum, San Salvador, El Salvador.
Feb. 1-6: Satoshi Roundtable, Dubai
Feb. 19-20, 2025: ConsensusHK, Hong Kong.
Feb. 23-24: NFT Paris
Feb 23-March 2: ETHDenver
March 18-19: Digital Asset Summit, London
May 14-16: Consensus, Toronto.
May 27-29: Bitcoin 2025, Las Vegas.