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    Polygon launches a zk-STARK scaling solution for DApp deployment

    zk-STARK stands for zero-knowledge Scalable Transparent ARgument of Knowledge. In layman’s terms, zero-knowledge technology allows one party to prove to another that they hold private information (such as a password) without revealing what that information is. STARK is one such method to algorithmically obfuscate, prove or verify such information. Polygon has committed over $1 billion for the development of zero-knowledge technology.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Trucker pay may need to rise to resolve supply chain woes, U.S. regulator says

    In an open meeting, U.S. Federal Maritime Commission Chairman Daniel Maffei said a lack of warehouse space and truckers to move products seemed to be at least part of the problem, where vessels laden with consumer goods are stuck outside ports because there is no space to dock and unload.”We do see more employment there which is a good thing, but I suspect compared to the demand, there’s not enough,” he said. “I just don’t see how we can get sufficient workers in those sectors unless wages creep up a bit.”Retailers have struggled to bring products into the United States ahead of the peak shopping season due to shipping logjams, shuttered factories in parts of Asia and a scarcity of raw materials in recent months.Kristen Monaco, director of the FMC (NYSE:FMC)’s Bureau of Trade Analysis, said truck drivers are generally not paid for the time they spend waiting, and long waits hurt efficiency.”Think of it as sort of reducing your labor supply by having the same number of people there because you’re just not making use of their time. And that is an inefficiency. And it’s not currently paid, which means there’s very little economic incentive to fix that inefficiency,” she said.Grace Wang, director of competition analysis for the FMC, showed data that indicated a sharp drop in agricultural exports amid the shipping backups, including a 38% drop in cotton exports between July 2019 and July 2021. Maffei called it “concerning.” More

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    IoTeX ‘MachineFi’ rebrand backs 200%+ rally to a new all-time high

    IoTeX (IOTX), a blockchain-based project focused on Internet of Things (IoT) devices and the future of machine learning in the workforce, aims to design an open ecosystem that facilitates interaction between people and machines, and over the past month, the project’s IOTX token has rallied more than 200%.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    FirstFT: US and China to discuss nuclear arsenals

    Joe Biden and Xi Jinping have agreed to hold talks aimed at reducing tensions, as US anxiety grows at China’s expanding nuclear arsenal and its recent test of a hypersonic weapon. Jake Sullivan, US national security adviser, said the US and Chinese presidents had discussed the need for nuclear “strategic stability” talks in their virtual meeting on Monday. China has previously refused to hold nuclear talks, partly because the US has a much larger weapons arsenal. “The two leaders agreed that we would look to begin to carry forward discussions on strategic stability,” Sullivan told an audience at the Brookings Institution in Washington. The two sides did not decide on a format for the talks and the US wants to see if China will follow through on the pledge from Xi. The Chinese Embassy did not immediately respond to a request for comment.During yesterday’s talk, Biden and Xi also held extensive discussions about Taiwan, but failed to establish any “guardrails” to ensure that tensions over the island do not escalate into a dangerous conflict.How do you think the US and China can best improve relations? Tell me what you think at [email protected]. Thank you for reading FirstFT Asia. Here’s the rest of today’s news — EmilyFive more stories in the news1. Bill Gross says investors living in ‘dreamland’ Investors are living in a “dreamland” brought on by global central banks’ decision to continue pumping up the world economy even as it has rebounded sharply from the pandemic, the founder of bond investment group Pimco told the Financial Times in an interview. 2. Start-up electric vehicle makers surpass incumbents The electric vehicle company Rivian overtook Volkswagen in market value today, while rival start-up Lucid surpassed Ford, as shares in their largely unproven businesses continued to soar following their recent stock market listings.3. JPMorgan sues Tesla over Musk’s ‘funding secured’ tweet The US bank has sued Tesla for $162m, alleging that the automaker failed to make a required payment that was triggered after chief executive Elon Musk’s 2018 announcement that he was considering taking the company private.

    The lawsuit is just the latest fallout from Elon Musk’s tweet in 2018 in which he said he was considering taking Tesla private © Samuel Corum/Bloomberg

    4. UK launches national security probe of Nvidia’s Arm deal The British government has launched an in-depth investigation into US chipmaker Nvidia’s takeover of the UK-based technology company Arm on national security grounds, throwing another hurdle in the path of the $54bn deal.5. Germany suspends certification of Nord Stream 2 pipeline The German regulator said it “temporarily suspended” certification of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline, dealing a setback to the Kremlin-backed gas project and sparking a rise in UK and continental European gas prices.Coronavirus digest Cathay Pacific is considering asking pilots to live outside of Hong Kong for several months because of the city’s strict Covid-19 quarantine policy.Australian central bank governor Philip Lowe said national price pressures were lower than the US and the UK — a sign that price increases in some economies are because of Covid-19, rather than a global shift towards high inflation.Pfizer has followed its rival Merck and agreed a licensing deal to expand low-cost access to its Covid-19 antiviral pill throughout the developing world. It is also seeking US authorisation for the pill.The patchy return of scheduled flights is diverting record numbers of wealthy travellers to private jets. Sign up to the Road to Recovery newsletter, for an essential guide to business and the economy in a world transformed by the pandemic.The day aheadAustralia trading update The Commonwealth Bank of Australia reports its first-quarter trading update today. Anniversary of the Velvet Revolution Czech Republic and Slovakia will mark the 32nd anniversary of what is seen widely as a turning point leading to the collapse of communist regimes in eastern Europe.Vatican corruption trial A landmark Vatican alleged-corruption trial resumes today. The case revolves around the purchase by the Holy See’s secretariat of state of a commercial and residential building in London’s South Kensington. Watch this video to get up to speed.

    Video: Can the Vatican reform its finances?

    What else we’re reading and watchingInvestors pivot to India Long a promising but second choice Asian market for investors, India has emerged as a leading beneficiary of China’s crackdown on technology companies, fuelling a private- and public-market bull run in the country. But is its start-up sector already overheated?Iraqi women displaced by Isis find new freedoms Traditionally one of Iraq’s more conservative areas, and dogged by violent Islamist militancy since the US-led invasion of 2003, society in tribal and predominantly Sunni Anbar is undergoing some subtle but significant changes.China’s green investments challenge China needs to unleash $6.5tn in green investments and radically reorganise its economy if the planet is to win the fight against climate change, analysts say. The warning comes after hopes that governments would commit to bolder decarbonisation targets at COP26 were dashed by India and China watering down pledges to end coal-fired power.Don’t believe the deglobalisation narrative When Covid-19 hit, many wrote an obituary for China-focused globalisation. But there is little evidence that the pandemic has led companies to abandon the country en masse. Why hasn’t deglobalisation taken hold, asks senior fellow at Harvard Kennedy School Megan Greene. Cryptocurrencies: how regulators lost control How did regulators lose control of the $2tn crypto market and can they get a grip now? Industry voices — including Binance chief executive “CZ” and Sam Bankman-Fried of FTX — address the question in this FT film.

    Video: Cryptocurrencies: how regulators lost control

    Books A guide to Jair Bolsonaro’s Brazil, Beijing’s pursuit of international primacy and Alexei Navalny’s extraordinary courage are some of the subjects covered in Gideon Rachman’s list of the year’s best books on politics. And don’t forget you can suggest your favourite reads of the year at the bottom of this story. More

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    Tether launches Synonym to boost Bitcoin adoption through Lightning Network

    Synonym’s stated goal is to enable self-ownership and control of crypto assets by creating an open financial ecosystem that utilizes Bitcoin and the Lightning Network, the company announced Tuesday. CEO John Carvalho said “Hyperbitcoinization won’t magically happen on its own. In order to live in a world without big banks, oppressive regulations, or Big Tech presiding over our lives, we need a strategy and ecosystem to replace the legacy economy. That is where Synonym comes in.”Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    US Justice Dept is selling $56M in crypto to compensate victims of BitConnect’s fraud

    In a Tuesday announcement, the Justice Department said it would sell the seized crypto and hold the proceeds in U.S. dollars until it could use the funds to provide restitution to BitConnect victims. The U.S. government is currently holding the $56 million in crypto in wallets, and said the amount of compensation to those affected by BitConnect’s fraud would depend on a “future restitution order by the court at sentencing.”Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Bitcoin's Battle at $60K Intensifies Amid Slew of Negative News

    Investing.com – Bitcoin continued to face a battle to hold onto the key $60,000 level on Tuesday, as traders appeared to rein in their bullish bets on the popular crypto amid a slew of negative headlines.  BTC/USD fell 5.3% to $59,739.4, though had briefly dripped below $60,000. The reason for the slip in bitcoin wasn’t immediately clear, though market participants pointed to profit taking given the more than 100% gain the popular since its slip below $30,000 earlier this year. Others, meanwhile, blamed the crackdown in China on BTC miners as well as the potential tax drag on bitcoin holders after President Joe Biden signed the $1 trillion infrastructure bill into law. Under the new legislazation, cryptocurrency brokers would be required to report incoming transaction over $10,000.But the crackdown on China-based miners isn’t new, and Chinese miners have lost their clout in the crypto world as mining power has shifted from East to West. The U.S. overtook China as leader in global bitcoin mining networks, according to data from the University of Cambridge, published last month. Amidst the wave of negative headlines, there was some positive news, however, as the Square said its mobile financial platform Cash App would add support for the Taproot Bitcoin upgrade by December.The taproot upgrade — collectively made up of  a trio of updates, or Bitcoin Improvement Proposals – Schnorr Signatures, Taproot, and Tapscript – went live on Nov. 14 and sought to improve Bitcoin’s core cryptography in three ways: speed, privacy, and programmability.  More

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    Qualcomm forecasts post-Apple sales growth, shares hit all-time high

    (Reuters) -Qualcomm Inc said on Tuesday it expects chip sales to Apple Inc (NASDAQ:AAPL) to dwindle to a trickle in the coming years but predicted brisk growth in chips for autonomous cars and other connected devices, sending shares up 7.9% to a record high close of $181.81.Qualcomm (NASDAQ:QCOM) currently supplies all of the modem chips that connect Apple’s devices to mobile data networks, but Apple is working on its own modem chips.At an investor conference in New York, Qualcomm executives said they expect to supply only 20% of Apple’s modem chips by the launch of the iPhone in 2023. Qualcomm Chief Financial Officer Akash Palkhiwala expects Apple to make up a “low single-digit” percentage of the company’s chip sales by the end of fiscal 2024. But Apple losses will be more than offset by gains in other fields, Qualcomm executives said. Qualcomm expects revenue from the automotive sector, where sales were just under $1 billion in fiscal 2021, to reach $3.5 billion in five years and $8 billion in 10 years. Earlier on Tuesday, Qualcomm landed a deal to sell self-driving car chips to German automaker BMW.Qualcomm executives said that Apple had fostered a market for devices such as smart watches and premium wireless headphones.While Apple self-supplies chips for those devices, Qualcomm said it aims to supply chips for everyone else. The company said it expects $9 billion in revenue from its internet of things unit that supplies such devices, an 80% increase from the $5 billion for the unit in fiscal 2021. Growth in that segment will also come from virtual reality headsets such as Meta Platforms Inc’s Oculus Quest 2, which uses a Qualcomm chip and which has now sold 10 million units, executives said, referring to third-party estimates.”We’re no longer defined by a single end market and a single customer relationship,” Chief Executive Cristiano Amon said during the event.Amon also said that Qualcomm sells Apple what are called radio-frequency front-end chips that are paired with modem chips. Amon said Qualcomm will have a future chance to compete to sell those chips to Apple regardless of where Apple sources its modem chips.Qualcomm executives said those potential wins are not included in Qualcomm’s forecasts and that they expect phone chip revenue to grow in line with global markets thanks to strong demand from Android device makers. More