Intermediaries don’t belong in your wallet.
You should be able to access your money anytime, send across borders without 6% disappearing in fees, and receive payments without holds.
Your money is yours. It should feel like it.
@Lumi25q Absolutely, and the users who need financial freedom most are those who are facing the most friction.
Remittance fees and the hidden price of custodial wallets are eating away at the value of programmable finance. Control is given back to the user at https://t.co/v2gqnryHw4.
What does most of DeFi get wrong about privacy?
It's not about anonymity, it's about remaining in control.
Anonymity pools give fire to the flame for conversations labeling crypto as "The Wild West", creating more problems for the everyday user.
Real-world privacy is privacy with accountability. Where users can remain compliant on the edge but maintain control over their data.
We're building the identity layer that solves this.
Find out how below with @DefiantNews ↓.
Probably one of our favorite recent narratives we worked on.
“Most DeFi privacy projects are building anonymity, not privacy for people.”
The moment you create a strong opinion that challenges an industry assumption, media attention becomes much easier to generate.
Another solid win for @deficom and Shoutout to @defiantnews for the write-up.
Crypto doesn’t feel “broken” because it doesn’t work.
It feels broken because nothing connects.
Every action pulls you into a different app, a different chain, a different wallet… like you’re constantly starting over just to move money.
That’s the real friction.
And that’s exactly why chain abstraction matters.
“Fragmentation overcomplicates crypto.
One transaction shouldn't require multiple apps and a working knowledge of blockchains.
That's what chain abstraction is for: state where your money goes, and let us handle the rest.
Private Alpha closes soon: https://t.co/mY0LcIQ1Z8”
Mastercard settling in stablecoins is a signal toward mainstream adoption, but these rails are institution-first.
Faster clearing for banks still puts intermediaries in the middle. The end-user shouldn't need a middleman for access to efficient, global finance.
NEW: @Mastercard expands settlement to support regulated stablecoins including $USDC, $RLUSD and $PYUSD across Ethereum, Solana, Base, Arbitrum and XRPL.
Fragmentation overcomplicates crypto.
One transaction shouldn't require multiple apps and a working knowledge of blockchains.
That's what chain abstraction is for: state where your money goes, and let us handle the rest.
Private Alpha closes soon: https://t.co/v2gqnryHw4
Stablecoin payroll in LATAM is finally real infrastructure. Workers across the region are getting paid in stablecoins as an alternative to volatile local currencies.
The question now is what the full stack looks like for a worker to hold, spend, and move that money on their own terms.
That's what we're building.
@johboscochuks Institutions won't play along if compliance isn't there.
Mainstream users won't adopt if their entire financial life is on a public ledger.
A private identity that carries trust and compliance solves both. Two birds, one stone.
@Cointelegraph Something worth keeping your eyes on. If major players like Goldman Sachs are coming to the table, it's showing that they know programmable finance is the next big thing.
They're trying to stay ahead.