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Crypto Today: What's Changing in Blockchain 🔄10-04-2026

Posted by Simon Keighley on April 10, 2026 - 8:20am

Crypto Today: What's Changing in Blockchain 🔄10-04-2026

Crypto Today: What's Changing in Blockchain 🔄10-04-2026


Bitcoin rally extends toward $73K despite concerning US economic data

Bitcoin strengthened to around $72,000 despite growing concerns over US recession risks, weak economic growth and renewed geopolitical tensions linked to a fragile ceasefire between the US and Iran. The move higher came as rising oil prices and uncertainty in risk markets supported demand for scarce assets, even while inflation data showed sticky price pressures and GDP growth was revised lower. Traders also noted that Bitcoin’s gains coincided with a weaker US dollar, which tends to increase interest in alternative stores of value.

US economic indicators added to the mixed outlook, with core inflation rising and growth momentum softening, increasing expectations that policymakers may need to support the economy. At the same time, fears around escalating geopolitical tensions briefly pushed oil prices higher and weighed on sentiment, though equity markets remained close to record levels. Overall, Bitcoin’s direction appeared more closely tied to shifts in global risk sentiment and expectations around liquidity than to domestic economic weakness alone, with recession fears currently seen as supportive for scarce assets. Source


 

Stablecoin Giant Tether Launches Toolkit for Building Local, Offline AI Apps

Tether has introduced QVAC SDK, an open-source software development kit designed to let developers build artificial intelligence applications that run entirely on local devices rather than relying on cloud-based servers. The toolkit supports a range of functions including text generation, speech processing, translation and vision capabilities, and is intended to work across different platforms while prioritising on-device processing.

The move represents a major expansion of Tether’s activities beyond its stablecoin business into decentralised AI infrastructure. CEO Paolo Ardoino framed the launch as preparation for a future where billions of humans and even more AI agents operate simultaneously, arguing that centralised systems will struggle with issues such as latency, reliability and control. The initiative positions Tether as a competitor to established AI providers by promoting privacy-focused, local-first computing models. Source


 

Bitcoin Profit Supply Drops to 59%, Closing In on Bear Market Levels

The share of Bitcoin supply currently in profit has fallen to around 59%, edging closer to levels typically associated with bear markets, according to analyst Darkfost. Historically, around 75% of supply being in profit is considered a long-term average, while readings near 50% have previously aligned with market bottoms. The decline suggests a weaker overall market structure, with nearly half of Bitcoin holders now sitting at a loss, which can reduce selling pressure but also limits strong upward momentum.

On-chain data also shows a significant drop in exchange activity, with the number of Bitcoin addresses depositing to exchanges falling to its lowest level since 2017. Analysts attribute this to reduced investor engagement, lack of incentive to sell at current prices, and a broader shift towards holding assets in self-custody. Despite these bearish signals, some observers suggest conditions may be more suited to accumulation than distribution, as selling pressure appears to be gradually exhausting itself. Bitcoin was trading near 71,000 dollars after recently pulling back from a 73,000 dollar high. Source


 

Bitcoin Depot discloses $3.7M BTC theft in cybersecurity breach

Bitcoin Depot, a major crypto ATM operator, has disclosed that a hacker stole 50.9 Bitcoin worth around $3.7 million after gaining access to internal systems linked to its corporate wallets. The breach occurred on March 23 when attackers obtained credentials that allowed them to compromise company systems, though the firm confirmed that customer accounts, user platforms and personal data were not affected.

The company reported the incident in a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission, noting that the full scope of the attack is still under investigation and that insurance may cover part of the losses. Despite the breach, Bitcoin Depot said its day-to-day operations were not significantly disrupted, and its share price rose following the disclosure. The firm has also faced increasing regulatory scrutiny and legal challenges in the US, alongside broader concerns about fraud risks associated with crypto ATMs. Source


 

Nunchuk Launches Open-Source Bitcoin Tools for AI Agents With 'Bounded Authority'

Nunchuk has released two open-source tools designed to allow AI agents to interact with Bitcoin wallets while keeping strict human control over spending. The system is built around multisignature wallets and policy-based controls, meaning agents can perform certain financial tasks such as setting up wallets or preparing transactions, but cannot move funds beyond predefined limits without human approval. The tools, released under an MIT licence, include a command-line interface and an extension that enables AI models to carry out wallet-related operations in shared environments.

The approach separates the act of funding a wallet from granting spending authority, so depositing Bitcoin does not automatically increase what an AI agent is allowed to use. Spending is governed by rules such as limits, delays, or multi-step approvals, ensuring that humans retain final signing power for higher-risk actions. Nunchuk says the aim is to enable useful automation for developers working with AI-driven financial systems while reducing the risk of loss or misuse if an agent is compromised or makes an error. Source


 

North Korean cyber spies are no longer just remote threats

North Korean state-backed cyber operatives are increasingly moving beyond purely online attacks, expanding their tactics to include in-person contact, long-term infiltration and complex social engineering within the crypto industry. Recent incidents, including a $285 million exploit on the Drift decentralised exchange and the $1.4 billion Bybit hack, have been attributed to suspected North Korean actors. In the Drift case, attackers allegedly posed as a trading firm and built relationships with protocol contributors over months, even meeting them at industry conferences before carrying out the exploit.

Investigations suggest the attackers used a combination of on-chain manipulation, fake tokens and compromised approval processes to trick multisignature signers into granting elevated permissions, ultimately draining funds once trust had been established. Alongside high-profile hacks, researchers also highlight a parallel strategy of embedding operatives in crypto and tech companies through fake identities and remote IT jobs, generating steady income that may support state objectives. Security experts say these tactics show a shift towards persistent, hybrid operations that blend hacking, fraud and long-term infiltration, making detection increasingly difficult as North Korean actors continue to adapt their methods. Source


 

Pyth Network targets traditional data distribution with new marketplace

Pyth Network, a blockchain oracle provider, has launched a new Pyth Data Marketplace designed to let financial institutions publish and monetise market data directly onchain. The platform uses a pay-as-you-go model, allowing users to access specific datasets such as foreign exchange, precious metals and crude oil swaps without paying for full bundled data packages. At launch, seven institutional providers, including major exchanges and financial firms such as Euronext, Fidelity Investments, OTC Markets Group, Singapore Exchange FX and Tradeweb, will supply pricing feeds.

The initiative aims to challenge traditional financial data distribution systems, which are often dominated by a small number of expensive data vendors. By using a pull-based model, Pyth allows customers to pay only for the data they need, potentially reducing costs for banks, hedge funds and trading firms that rely on market information for compliance and trading decisions. The company also noted that blockchain oracles like Pyth and Chainlink are increasingly being used to bring official economic data onchain, with future plans to expand into more government datasets. Source


 

Treasury Secretary Bessent Slams Crypto Industry 'Nihilists' as Clarity Act Remains in Limbo

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has criticised parts of the crypto industry, labelling some leaders “nihilists” for resisting the stalled Clarity Act, a major crypto market structure bill that aims to formalise regulation of the sector. In an op-ed, he argued that clearer and more durable laws are needed to prevent crypto innovation from moving to jurisdictions with clearer frameworks, such as Abu Dhabi and Singapore. The legislation remains stuck in the Senate amid ongoing disputes, with time running short ahead of upcoming election cycles.

The main sticking point is disagreement over whether stablecoin holders should be allowed to earn yield, a proposal opposed by banking groups who warn it could destabilise traditional lending. Crypto firms, including Coinbase, have pushed back against restrictions, while lawmakers and industry stakeholders continue to negotiate a compromise. Additional political complications have also emerged around President Donald Trump’s personal crypto ventures, which some senators say must be addressed for the bill to gain wider support. Despite claims that a deal is close, the legislation faces multiple unresolved hurdles and uncertain timing. Source


 

Redefining Intelligence: Hive Intelligence Collaborates with the New Markethive AI Assistant

Markethive has introduced what it calls “HIVE Intelligence” alongside a new AI Assistant, positioning it as an alternative to traditional artificial intelligence systems. The platform claims its approach differs from conventional AI by prioritising user control, privacy and “proactive innovation”, where entrepreneurs retain ownership of their data while using AI-driven tools to analyse and improve their digital activity. The assistant is integrated into the Markethive ecosystem and is designed to help users manage content, advertising performance, network growth and overall platform engagement.

The system is described as combining algorithmic analysis with “Human Intelligence” from its community, using user-provided or authorised data from areas such as blogs, banners and networks to generate insights and reports. It can produce performance summaries, suggest optimisation strategies, track engagement metrics and export data for further analysis. The article also highlights additional features such as community chat tools, global and country-specific messaging spaces, and branding flexibility for the assistant’s name. Markethive frames the development as part of a broader vision of decentralised, user-controlled technology shaped by community input and a guiding spiritual mission. Source


 

CoreWeave’s $8.5B loan shows how AI is replacing crypto mining finance

CoreWeave’s $8.5 billion AI-linked financing deal reflects a broader shift on Wall Street away from volatile crypto mining lending towards more stable, cash-flow-based funding models for artificial intelligence infrastructure. The loan, backed by major financial institutions and supported by Meta Platforms, signals how data centre expansion and GPU deployment are increasingly being financed through arrangements tied to operational AI workloads rather than speculative crypto mining assets. Unlike earlier “MinerFi” models that relied on ASIC hardware as collateral, this new approach requires GPUs to be actively deployed and generating revenue before capital is released, reducing lender risk.

The transition highlights weaknesses in traditional Bitcoin mining finance, where falling crypto prices and rapid hardware depreciation often undermined both revenues and collateral value. CoreWeave’s model, described as a more mature version of what MinerFi attempted to become, is seen as aligning funding with predictable AI-driven cash flows. Analysts note that the company’s pivot has strengthened its position in the “neocloud” sector, with a large backlog of around 67 billion compared with smaller peers, and a commercial model built on contracted and on-demand AI services. While competitors continue transitioning from mining, CoreWeave is viewed as more advanced in scaling AI infrastructure, although some rivals retain advantages in physical data centre assets. Source


 

Another Solo Bitcoin Miner Hits the Jackpot, Scoring $225K BTC Reward

A solo Bitcoin miner has successfully solved a block and earned a reward worth around $225,000, highlighting how individual participants can still occasionally win large payouts despite extremely low odds. The win, achieved through the CKPool mining service, is the second such solo success reported in a week, underlining the continued unpredictability of Bitcoin mining even as most blocks are typically found by large-scale mining operations or pools. The reward amounted to 3.12 BTC, reflecting the current block subsidy, which halves roughly every four years.

CKPool enables individuals to take part in solo-style mining without running full mining infrastructure, though users pay a small fee when they succeed. The service operator noted that a miner of this scale typically has about a one in 100,000 daily chance of finding a block, making such events rare “lottery-like” wins. Recent increases in Bitcoin’s network hash rate further illustrate how competitive mining has become, even as Bitcoin’s price remains well below its previous peak, with broader market commentary noting ongoing volatility and uncertainty around future price direction. Source


 

US Treasury expands cybersecurity threat intel to crypto industry

The US Department of the Treasury’s Office of Cybersecurity and Critical Infrastructure Protection (OCCIP) has expanded its cybersecurity threat intelligence programme to include digital asset companies, reflecting growing concerns about increasingly frequent and sophisticated cyberattacks targeting the crypto sector. Under the initiative, participating blockchain firms will receive the same threat intelligence shared with traditional financial institutions at no cost, aiming to strengthen defences across the industry.

Officials said the move aligns with policy recommendations from a 2025 government report on strengthening US leadership in digital financial technology. The expansion comes amid rising losses from crypto-related hacks, including significant breaches in decentralised finance, and ongoing concerns about state-linked hacking groups such as North Korea’s Lazarus Group. Recent incidents have included major exploits against DeFi platforms and prolonged social engineering attacks, highlighting how threat actors are using both technical and human-targeted methods to infiltrate crypto projects. Source


 

Bitcoin and Ethereum Open Interest Rises, Signaling Renewed Risk Appetite: CryptoQuant

Bitcoin and Ethereum prices have risen alongside a sharp increase in futures market activity, with open interest in perpetual contracts climbing by more than $2 billion for each asset over the past 24 hours. According to CryptoQuant, this surge in open interest suggests renewed investor appetite for risk, with leveraged positions returning to levels not seen for several weeks. Data from market trackers also shows Bitcoin open interest at its highest point in over two months, while Ethereum has reached a three-week high.

The rise in derivatives positioning has coincided with a broader recovery in prices, reversing recent bearish pressure linked to macroeconomic uncertainty. Analysts also point to a positive Coinbase Premium Index for both Bitcoin and Ethereum, indicating stronger demand from US-based investors compared with other markets such as Binance. This combination of rising futures activity and regional buying pressure is being interpreted as a potential sign of improving market sentiment and strengthening bullish momentum. Source


 

OKX Ventures, HashKey back VPBank-linked CAEX for Vietnam crypto pilot push

OKX Ventures and HashKey Capital have invested in CAEX, a Vietnam-linked crypto platform backed by VPBank’s ecosystem, as part of efforts to position the firm for participation in Vietnam’s tightly controlled crypto exchange pilot programme. CAEX said the funding will help it meet the country’s high capital requirement of 10 trillion dong, equivalent to about 380 million dollars, which is necessary to qualify for licencing under the government’s five-year pilot scheme.

The initiative is part of Vietnam’s broader push to regulate its fast-growing crypto market, where only a small number of exchanges will be permitted and foreign ownership is capped at 49 percent. Authorities are also considering restricting access to unlicensed offshore platforms once domestic exchanges are operational. While Vietnam has seen strong crypto adoption, ranking among the top countries globally, regulators have increased oversight following fraud cases and scams, prompting stricter rules for market entry and compliance. OKX said the partnership aims to strengthen CAEX’s technical infrastructure, compliance, and security as it seeks approval under the new regulatory framework. Source


 

Tom Lee's BitMine Uplisted to NYSE as Ethereum Firm Expands Buyback Program to $4 Billion

BitMine Immersion Technologies, an Ethereum-focused treasury firm, has been uplisted from the NYSE American exchange to the main New York Stock Exchange. Alongside the move, the company’s board approved a significant expansion of its share buyback programme, increasing authorisation from $1 billion to $4 billion. The firm has not yet carried out any share repurchases despite the programme being in place. Following the announcement, BitMine’s shares rose by around 1%, while Ethereum prices remained broadly flat over the past 24 hours. Source

The company has also continued its aggressive accumulation of Ethereum, purchasing tens of thousands of ETH in the past week alone. Its total holdings now exceed 4.8 million ETH, valued at roughly $10.3 billion and representing just under 4% of the total circulating supply. Including additional assets such as Bitcoin and cash reserves, BitMine’s overall holdings are estimated at around $11.4 billion, highlighting its position as one of the largest corporate holders of Ethereum. Source


 

BlackRock’s Bitcoin ETF inflows $269M, marking a 5-week high

BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust recorded $269.3 million in inflows in a single day, its strongest performance in around five weeks and helping to reverse two consecutive days of net outflows across US spot Bitcoin ETFs. The broader group of 12 ETFs saw a combined net inflow of $358.1 million, with additional contributions from Fidelity’s Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund at $53.3 million and Morgan Stanley’s newly launched Bitcoin Trust at $14.9 million, alongside smaller inflows from Bitwise, ARK 21Shares, Franklin Templeton and VanEck products.

The renewed inflows come despite a wider crypto market pullback that has seen Bitcoin fall from around $97,000 to $72,100, with BlackRock’s Bitcoin ETF still attracting strong long-term investor demand and reaching $1.5 billion in net inflows so far this year. The activity has pushed US spot Bitcoin ETFs close to turning year-to-date inflows positive again, narrowing the gap to roughly $80 million, while Morgan Stanley highlighted strong early demand for its ETF launch and continues to explore additional crypto-linked products including staked Ether and Solana funds. Source


 

'Operation Atlantic': US and UK Team With Firms to Trace, Freeze Millions in Stolen Crypto

US and UK law enforcement agencies, alongside major crypto firms including Coinbase, Binance, Kraken, Chainalysis and Tether, have collaborated in a joint initiative called Operation Atlantic aimed at tackling crypto fraud and phishing schemes. The operation identified around $45 million in stolen or suspicious funds linked to fraud networks and successfully froze approximately $12 million, with the goal of returning assets to victims where possible.

The effort, coordinated with the US Secret Service and the UK’s National Crime Agency, focused heavily on approval phishing scams where victims are tricked into granting access to their wallets through fake prompts or alerts. More than 20,000 victims were identified, and over 120 malicious web domains were flagged during the operation, which officials say will continue as investigators analyse gathered intelligence and work to disrupt wider fraud networks. Source


 

Disclaimer: These articles are provided for informational purposes only. They are not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or any other advice.

 

 

 

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