2 hours ago
Startups are no longer launching basic exchanges. They’re building all-in-one crypto ecosystems inspired by Coinbase.
If you want to compete, you need more than just a trading engine.
✔ Multi-asset trading (crypto, stocks, ETFs)
✔ Prediction markets
✔ Solana DEX integration
✔ Token launchpad
✔ AI-powered trading tools
Know more and get a demo here: https://www.trioangle.com/... Whatsapp: +91 9361357439, Email: salesinnblockchain.com, Telegram: https://telegram.me/teamin...
.
#CryptoStartup #Web3 #Fintech #Coinbase #Blockchain #Cryptoexchange
If you want to compete, you need more than just a trading engine.
✔ Multi-asset trading (crypto, stocks, ETFs)
✔ Prediction markets
✔ Solana DEX integration
✔ Token launchpad
✔ AI-powered trading tools
Know more and get a demo here: https://www.trioangle.com/... Whatsapp: +91 9361357439, Email: salesinnblockchain.com, Telegram: https://telegram.me/teamin...
.
#CryptoStartup #Web3 #Fintech #Coinbase #Blockchain #Cryptoexchange
4 months ago
From Crypto to Checkout: How Clevor Cards Make Web3 Safe and Simple
Web3 promises financial freedom, but complexity and security concerns often prevent mainstream adoption. This blog breaks down how Clevor Cards simplify the Web3 experience while maintaining high security standards. By bridging decentralised wallets with familiar card-based payments, Clevor Cards allow users to interact with blockchain technology without technical barriers. The article explains how on-chain ****** et management, built-in protections, and regulatory alignment make everyday crypto spending safer and more accessible. Ideal for readers curious about how Web3 can move beyond early adopters.
Visit us : https://clevorcards.wordpr...
Web3 promises financial freedom, but complexity and security concerns often prevent mainstream adoption. This blog breaks down how Clevor Cards simplify the Web3 experience while maintaining high security standards. By bridging decentralised wallets with familiar card-based payments, Clevor Cards allow users to interact with blockchain technology without technical barriers. The article explains how on-chain ****** et management, built-in protections, and regulatory alignment make everyday crypto spending safer and more accessible. Ideal for readers curious about how Web3 can move beyond early adopters.
Visit us : https://clevorcards.wordpr...
Building a Safer Digital Economy: The Role of Clevor Cards in Web3 Finance – Site Title
The digital economy is rapidly evolving due to blockchain technology, decentralised finance (DeFi), and Web3 applications. While these innovations offer transparency, autonomy, and global access, they also introduce challenges related to security, usability, and regulatory compliance. One of the key..
https://clevorcards.wordpress.com/2025/12/30/building-a-safer-digital-economy-the-role-of-clevor-cards-in-web3-finance/
4 months ago
Beginner’s Guide to Web3 Security: Protect Your Crypto the Smart Way
Web3 gives users full control over their digital ******* ets - but that freedom comes with responsibility. This beginner-friendly guide breaks down Web3 security in simple terms, covering everything from Web3 Hardware Wallets and smart cards to Crypto Debit Cards and FIDO2 authentication. Learn how a Web3 Wallet works, why private keys matter, and how hardware-based security helps protect you from hacks and phishing. Perfect for newcomers looking to secure their crypto journey with confidence.
For more information, read the full blog:- https://clevorcards.stck.m...
Web3 gives users full control over their digital ******* ets - but that freedom comes with responsibility. This beginner-friendly guide breaks down Web3 security in simple terms, covering everything from Web3 Hardware Wallets and smart cards to Crypto Debit Cards and FIDO2 authentication. Learn how a Web3 Wallet works, why private keys matter, and how hardware-based security helps protect you from hacks and phishing. Perfect for newcomers looking to secure their crypto journey with confidence.
For more information, read the full blog:- https://clevorcards.stck.m...
5 months ago
The Ultimate Crypto Security Upgrade | How Clevor Cards Reinvents Web3 Wallets
If you care about your digital ******* ets, don’t settle for standard wallets. This ultimate guide introduces Clevor Cards the next-gen smart card that replaces seed phrases, risky software wallets, and clunky setups. With hardware-level security, offline signing, instant spendable crypto, and passwordless logins, Clevor redefines what a wallet can be. Whether you’re a long-time crypto user or just starting out this guide breaks down how to upgrade your security, simplify your setup, and make crypto part of your daily life.
For more information visit us : https://clevor-cards.hashn...
#ClevorCards #Web3Security #HardwareWallet #CryptoPayments #SelfCustody #BlockchainTech
If you care about your digital ******* ets, don’t settle for standard wallets. This ultimate guide introduces Clevor Cards the next-gen smart card that replaces seed phrases, risky software wallets, and clunky setups. With hardware-level security, offline signing, instant spendable crypto, and passwordless logins, Clevor redefines what a wallet can be. Whether you’re a long-time crypto user or just starting out this guide breaks down how to upgrade your security, simplify your setup, and make crypto part of your daily life.
For more information visit us : https://clevor-cards.hashn...
#ClevorCards #Web3Security #HardwareWallet #CryptoPayments #SelfCustody #BlockchainTech
2 yr. ago
3 yr. ago
The Guardian
Mark Zuckerberg’s metaverse vision is over. Can Apple save it?
Story by Alex Hern • 22-5-2023
Such an expansive definition – simply setting up a Memoji on your iPhone or logging into Fortnite could count as “using the metaverse” – helps Meta dodge criticism that the dream the company promised looks no closer to fruition now than it did 18 months ago.
It also helps to make the prospect of actually building the damn thing look more appealing.
In a piece of research commissioned by Meta this month, the Deloitte consultancy said that the metaverse could contribute “between £40bn and £75bn in additional GDP [gross domestic product]” to the UK alone by 2035.
The 25-page report – one of nine commissioned for every large market Meta operates in, from “the metaverse and its potential for the United States” to “Enabling the metaverse in sub-Saharan Africa” – argues optimistically that “there is a large opportunity for the UK as a metaverse leader” and concludes that the benefits could reach as high as 2.4% of GDP. To reach those figures, Deloitte applied much the same vague definition as Clegg, but stretched the net even further, pulling in the entirety of the cryptocurrency space as a side benefit.
“The metaverse will also likely necessitate the use of new verification technologies based on ledgers of permanent entries – blockchains, broadly referred to as ‘Web3’ – to support its decentralised nature,” the report argued. Some challengers for Meta’s claim to the metaverse are more like blockchains with rudimentary 3D engines attached: virtual worlds such as Decentraland and the Sandbox trade “land” and “objects” for real-world money but attract few active users otherwise.
“Economic value will be created by new markets, business models, skills development and better ways of working in the UK,” said Deloitte. What new markets? Well, Liverpool football club launched an NFT (non-fungible token) collection in March 2022 “and generated revenue of £1.13m, even though 95% of the digital collection did not sell”. A few months later, Liverpool spent £85m on Benfica striker Darwin Núñez, so it is fair to guess that the NFT collection did not have a huge impact on the club’s bottom line for the year.
“You see a lot of poorly reported or badly written articles referring to the metaverse as ‘3D worlds such as the Sandbox, Decentraland and Roblox’. The frustrating thing is, two of those are terrible website experiences that serve hundreds of people and one of them is a video game platform that serves 66 million active users per day,” said James Whatley, the chief strategy officer at creative agency Diva.
He added: “Beware of the consultant that promises you metaverse numbers but then delivers a Web3 website experience. If you’re a serious player in this space, you want to speak to hundreds of millions of people – and those people play video games. Not crap 3D websites.”
Education could also be booted, Deloitte insisted. “The metaverse could help transform classroom settings while allowing students to avoid the costs of moving to and living in the UK. This could be a boon for the approximately 600,000 international students currently attending UK universities.” So could healthcare, industry, live entertainment – and even just plain old office jobs.
Meta’s chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, denied that his company had shifted its focus away from the metaverse towards AI. Photograph: David Ramos/Getty Images
© Provide
Mark Zuckerberg’s metaverse vision is over. Can Apple save it?
Story by Alex Hern • 22-5-2023
Such an expansive definition – simply setting up a Memoji on your iPhone or logging into Fortnite could count as “using the metaverse” – helps Meta dodge criticism that the dream the company promised looks no closer to fruition now than it did 18 months ago.
It also helps to make the prospect of actually building the damn thing look more appealing.
In a piece of research commissioned by Meta this month, the Deloitte consultancy said that the metaverse could contribute “between £40bn and £75bn in additional GDP [gross domestic product]” to the UK alone by 2035.
The 25-page report – one of nine commissioned for every large market Meta operates in, from “the metaverse and its potential for the United States” to “Enabling the metaverse in sub-Saharan Africa” – argues optimistically that “there is a large opportunity for the UK as a metaverse leader” and concludes that the benefits could reach as high as 2.4% of GDP. To reach those figures, Deloitte applied much the same vague definition as Clegg, but stretched the net even further, pulling in the entirety of the cryptocurrency space as a side benefit.
“The metaverse will also likely necessitate the use of new verification technologies based on ledgers of permanent entries – blockchains, broadly referred to as ‘Web3’ – to support its decentralised nature,” the report argued. Some challengers for Meta’s claim to the metaverse are more like blockchains with rudimentary 3D engines attached: virtual worlds such as Decentraland and the Sandbox trade “land” and “objects” for real-world money but attract few active users otherwise.
“Economic value will be created by new markets, business models, skills development and better ways of working in the UK,” said Deloitte. What new markets? Well, Liverpool football club launched an NFT (non-fungible token) collection in March 2022 “and generated revenue of £1.13m, even though 95% of the digital collection did not sell”. A few months later, Liverpool spent £85m on Benfica striker Darwin Núñez, so it is fair to guess that the NFT collection did not have a huge impact on the club’s bottom line for the year.
“You see a lot of poorly reported or badly written articles referring to the metaverse as ‘3D worlds such as the Sandbox, Decentraland and Roblox’. The frustrating thing is, two of those are terrible website experiences that serve hundreds of people and one of them is a video game platform that serves 66 million active users per day,” said James Whatley, the chief strategy officer at creative agency Diva.
He added: “Beware of the consultant that promises you metaverse numbers but then delivers a Web3 website experience. If you’re a serious player in this space, you want to speak to hundreds of millions of people – and those people play video games. Not crap 3D websites.”
Education could also be booted, Deloitte insisted. “The metaverse could help transform classroom settings while allowing students to avoid the costs of moving to and living in the UK. This could be a boon for the approximately 600,000 international students currently attending UK universities.” So could healthcare, industry, live entertainment – and even just plain old office jobs.
Meta’s chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, denied that his company had shifted its focus away from the metaverse towards AI. Photograph: David Ramos/Getty Images
© Provide