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    Mexican lawmakers to vote on president's contentious electricity overhaul

    The leftist leader has sought to concentrate more power in the hands of the state and touts the legislation as vital to his plans to “transform” Mexico. The United States, Mexico’s biggest trading partner, has criticized the reforms.An alliance of opposition parties has also ruled out supporting the legislation, meaning the government looks likely to fall short of the two-thirds majority required for approval.But Lopez Obrador, seeking to leverage his victory in last weekend’s referendum on his leadership, has vowed to plow ahead and suggested those who oppose his signature legislation are “traitors.”The president argues that past governments rigged the market in favor of private interests, and said the reform would improve Mexican independence from foreign-owned producers.Lopez Obrador has pitched the overhaul as needed to keep a lid on energy prices by giving state-owned electricity company Comision Federal de Electricidad (CFE) more control over the power market. CFE plants, whose prices are under government control, would get to sell their electricity before other generators. The president’s overhaul would move energy regulation from independent bodies to state regulators, rolling back previous constitutional changes. CFE, meanwhile, would generate 54% of the country’s total electricity and would no longer have to send the cheapest electricity first.But business groups and several of Mexico’s closest allies have flagged concerns about his energy legislation, arguing it breaches the regional trade deal, the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA).In a win for Lopez Obrador, Mexico’s Supreme Court earlier this month upheld contentious changes to electricity legislation passed last year after they were blocked by lower courts. The court found a majority of justices voted to strike down key parts of the bill but did not reach a two-thirds majority required to declare them unconstitutional. However, in an indication of legal disputes that may lie ahead, opposition Senator Emilio Alvarez Icaza this week filed a challenge to that process. The reform would also nationalize Mexico’s lithium. If the constitutional overhaul fails, Lopez Obrador said that he would send another bill to Congress to secure Mexico’s lithium to ensure that at least part of the bill succeeds. More

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    Decentralized finance: The best ways to participate and operate

    It is exactly this appeal of solid risk-free returns uncorrelated to crypto market movements that lures many investors out on to the thin ice. Remember: There is no such thing as a free lunch. In this article, we will break down the concept of DeFi and go deep into its ecosystem, strategies and the risks all of which are relevant for private and professional investors considering allocating capital to this space.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Web3 initiative Reli3f has raised over $1.5M for Ukrainian aid efforts

    Founded by several esteemed Web3 entrepreneurs — Satvik Sethi, Andrew Wang, Giovanni Gussen, Aleksandra Artamonovskaja, Raskalov, and developer SignorCrypto — in late February this year, Reli3f has unified the talents of 62 artists across the world to showcase the enormous philanthropic potential of NFTs for social good. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Venezuelans will be Able to Pay for Taxi Services with Cryptocurrencies

    The delivery and taxi services application Yummy, which operates in Venezuela, is accepting payments in cryptocurrencies through the Binance Pay platform. The announcement was made on the Twitter (NYSE:TWTR) account of the Legal Rocks firm, indicating that Binance had joined the Yummy Rides taxi service.Then the CEO of Yummy, Vicente Zavarce, confirmed the information and offered more details of the new service.“Now you can move around with Crypto on Yummy thanks to our new integration with Binance Pay. Ridesharing with stablecoins? Only at Yummy,” Zavarce wrote.
    The executive clarified that for now the company will only accept payments with stablecoins such as tether (USDT), one of the most used and commercialized digital currencies in Venezuela.Before this integration, the Yummy taxi service only offered the option of payments through banking and financial platforms such as Mobile Payment, Yappe, Zelle, credit cards and PayPal (NASDAQ:PYPL).Responding to user requestsThe option to pay for taxi rides with cryptocurrencies through Binance is launched due to the growing use of cryptocurrencies in Venezuela and the requests made by users to the Yummy company.To enjoy the new payment method available from April 12, users only have to update the Yummy app, where the Binance Pay service is already integrated.The platform created by the crypto exchange allows you to send and receive cryptocurrencies, including stablecoins, without paying commissions. Payments are made by scanning the recipient’s QR code in the app.Users of the taxi service are pleased with this integration and hope that crypto payments will be extended to other services such as deliveries, according to the local cryptonoticias.com website.However, the CEO of Yummy reported that cryptocurrency payments are only available for the transport service. It is not yet clear if payments with Binance Pay will be extended by the company to other services later.Why You Should CareContinue reading on DailyCoin More

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    Dear game developers: Blockchain is not pure evil

    The mainstream gaming industry was taking notes as the P2E rocketship shot for the moon — and its flight has left the industry bitterly splintered. On the one hand, top executives from leading games companies, such as Ubisoft and Square Enix, set their sights on the new market, seeing new business models, new revenue streams, new monetization opportunities — and telling investors that they’re in on what the cool kids are doing can always score a few bonus points. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Shielding EU energy users from high prices may backfire, warn economists

    The four biggest EU countries have announced more than €80bn of measures to shield consumers and businesses from soaring energy prices exacerbated by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine — but economists warn many of these measures could prove counterproductive.Germany, France, Italy and Spain have responded to the surge in energy prices by announcing plans to cut taxes or to fund rebates on fuel, electricity or natural gas, in an attempt to shield their economies from surging costs for companies and a drop in consumers’ disposable income.Yet by softening the blow of higher energy prices, governments may aggravate the problem by reducing the incentive for households and businesses to reduce their consumption of electricity and fuel, while making it harder to wean off their dependence on Russian fossil fuels.“This is terrible economics,” said Rüdiger Bachmann, economics professor at the University of Notre-Dame. “You want the price mechanism to have its effect, by signalling that a good is scarce, so people decide if they want to change their behaviour.” Many European countries are transferring money to vulnerable groups to help them cope with higher consumer energy prices, which have risen 45 per cent in the eurozone in the past year mainly as a result of tighter supplies. The Bruegel think-tank found only three of the 25 countries it assessed were not making such payments. But Bruegel found that 17 countries were also cutting taxes or duties on energy, while 10 countries were regulating retail energy prices and three were regulating wholesale prices.The French government has gone further by capping the increase in household electricity bills. EDF, the French state-owned energy group, estimated the cap would reduce earnings by €10bn when combined with a requirement to sell its nuclear power below wholesale rates.“The subsidy on household energy is crazy — it reduces the incentive to reduce energy consumption,” said Klaus Adam, economics professor at the University of Mannheim. “Give everyone an amount each month and let them decide if they want to use it to pay the higher gas prices or if they want to save energy consumption and spend it on something else.”Veronika Grimm, a member of the council of economic experts which advises the German government, criticised the latest package of measures announced by Berlin last week to help businesses with high energy prices. The package will include “a time-limited and narrowly defined cost subsidy” for companies whose electricity costs have at least doubled since last year. “It is very unfortunate to subsidise the use of fossil fuels by directly subsidising energy consumption,” Grimm told Die Welt newspaper. “Ultimately, this keeps the gas price high on the exchanges.”As part of Spain’s €16bn “shock plan” to address the fallout from the Ukraine conflict, it plans to cut fuel price costs in an attempt to defuse an unofficial transport strike that started last month. Spain is also working on a new scheme with Portugal to cap gas prices.France last month announced a scheme to give a €0.15-per-litre rebate on fuel for four months from this month, while Germany’s €16bn plan to help households include a three-month cut in fuel prices by €0.30 per litre for petrol and €0.14 for diesel. Italy said in February it would spend about €6bn to help cut levies on energy bills, after already spending about €10bn trying to reduce consumer power costs.By keeping demand high, economists say such measures could undermine an EU-led push to transition away from Russian energy imports. Brussels recently agreed a ban on Russian coal imports from this August and is debating a similar embargo on oil imports while working towards a plan to cut gas imports from the country by two-thirds over the next year. Germany is resisting calls for an immediate EU embargo of all Russian energy imports. Five German economic institutes warned recently that such a move would cause a major recession in the country, sending output down 2.2 per cent next year and wiping out more than 400,000 jobs.Lower household energy usage could be a key part of this shift away from Russian imports. “Household gas consumption offers substantial savings potential, for instance in heating, at a low economic cost,” said Katharina Utermöhl, senior economist at Allianz. If all German households cut their room temperature by three degrees during colder months, Utermöhl estimated it would lead to a savings in gas consumption equivalent to the amount used by the country’s basic metal and food products sectors, which employ about 1mn people. More

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    The future of the internet: Inside the race for Web3’s infrastructure

    All DApps need to communicate with blockchains, and full nodes serve billions of requests from DApps to read and write data to chains every day. We need a huge node infrastructure to keep up with vastly expanding DApp ecosystems and serve all of the requests. However, running nodes is very time and capital intensive, so DApp builders turn to providers for remote access to nodes. There is a massive monetary incentive for infrastructure providers to power as many of these Web3 ecosystems as possible, but who is winning this race so far?Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Russian oligarch Deripaska's yacht arrives in Turkish waters

    Deripaska, founder of Russian aluminium giant Rusal, has been sanctioned by the United States, European Union and Britain. He has previously called for peace.A Reuters witness saw the 73-metre (239.5 foot) yacht Clio arrive off the coast of Gocek in the Aegean coastal province of Mugla on Saturday. The Cayman Islands-flagged vessel remains in a bay off Gocek.The arrival of Clio in Turkish waters comes after two superyachts linked to Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich, who made a surprise appearance at Ukraine-Russia peace talks in Istanbul this month, docked in Turkish ports.World governments are seeking to isolate President Vladimir Putin and his allies over Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which the Kremlin calls a “special military operation”.NATO member Turkey shares a maritime border with Ukraine and Russia in the Black Sea, has good ties with both and mediates in the conflict. It has supported Kyiv, but also opposed sanctions on Moscow, including measures against Russian billionaires.Ankara relies heavily on Russian energy imports and tourists and has emerged as a safe haven for Russians fleeing sanctions, and many have invested in Turkish property.On Friday, a Ukrainian diplomat said Ukraine is working with Turkey for more support and understands – though it is not happy with – the reality of Ankara’s parallel ties to Moscow. More