
This week’s “Deconstruction” focuses on the consequences of European compliance, Strategy’s challenges, Taiwan’s strict crypto law, the closure of Loopring exchange, StarkNet’s quantum protection, and neural networks reading thoughts.
MiCA’s Impact and Bank Controls
As of July 1, platforms without a European license are prohibited from serving EU residents. Bybit has begun restricting access to its global exchange, shifting operations to a local company with strict compliance, creating a corporate deadlock for Russians with residence permits.
The UK has also mandated that crypto companies undergo a full audit again, leaving only the DeFi sector outside its control.
A notable consequence of this structural divide is the use of traditional banks as the final barrier. Assets of users who moved to DEXs are effectively locked on the blockchain: when attempting to withdraw to fiat, banks will automatically block them as high-risk.
Strategy’s Market Cap Below Bitcoin Reserves
Strategy’s market capitalization has fallen below the value of its Bitcoin holdings. The disappearance of a premium on its shares deprives the company of the ability to issue stock to finance new purchases. The market risks losing its largest corporate cryptocurrency buyer, and Strategy is already being urged to sell assets.
The situation is exacerbated by a pessimistic OECD forecast: inflation forces the Fed and ECB to keep rates high, maintaining the attractiveness of Treasuries and prompting a capital rotation from risky assets to safe instruments.
Taiwan’s Strict Crypto Law
Taiwan’s parliament has introduced mandatory licensing for crypto platforms, requiring 100% backing of stablecoins in local banks and imposing prison terms for operating without a license and market manipulation. The law shifts the industry from a light notification regime under AML rules to a strict banking level.
Taiwan closes the last major regulatory loophole for crypto business, joining Hong Kong, Singapore, and Japan in creating a unified legal barrier in developed Asia.
Closure of Loopring Exchange
The Loopring project has announced the closure of its decentralized exchange after eight years of operation. As a pioneer of ZK-rollups technology, the project emerged before most modern layer-two solutions but failed to achieve mass adoption.
The story of Loopring proves an important point: the crypto market no longer rewards projects solely for engineering solutions. Today, a growing ecosystem is critically important, and pioneers often become merely the foundation upon which more successful competitors are built.
StarkNet’s Quantum Attack Protection
The StarkWare team has presented a protection plan for the StarkNet L2 network against future quantum computer attacks. The network’s architecture was initially designed based on hash functions, which are considered more resistant to quantum breaches. Developers will now gradually replace elliptic curve cryptography elements and implement post-quantum signatures.
The industry is no longer discussing “if,” but “when,” and StarkWare aims to position itself as a project ready for the transition in advance, rather than after a real threat emerges.
Meta’s Neural Network and Control Dictatorship
Meta’s Brain2Qwerty development has learned to non-invasively translate raw brain signals into text with up to 78% accuracy. The penetration of algorithms into the realm of human privacy provokes radical reactions: Eliezer Yudkowsky proposes a political program banning AI research and airstrikes on illegal data centers.
Humanity is forced to choose between corporate control of thoughts and state control of computing. A third path, in the form of decentralized AI models, seems utopian in the harsh arms race reality.
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