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Centralized data infrastructure violates Web3’s core of decentralization

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Opinion by: Michael O’Rourke, founder of Pocket Network and CEO of Grove

Open data is currently a major contributor toward building a global emerging tech economy, with an estimated market of over $350 billion. Open data sources often rely, however, on centralized infrastructure, contrary to the philosophy of autonomy and censorship resistance.

To realize its potential, open data must shift to decentralized infrastructure. Once open data channels start using a decentralized and open infrastructure, multiple vulnerabilities for user applications will be solved.

Open infrastructure has many use cases, from hosting a decentralized application (DApp) or a trading bot to sharing research data to training and inference of large language models (LLMs). Looking closely into each helps us better understand why leveraging decentralized infrastructure for open data is more utilitarian than centralized infrastructure.

Affordable LLM training and inference 

The launch of the open-source AI DeepSeek, which wiped out $1 trillion from the US tech markets, demonstrates the power of open-source protocols. It’s a wake-up call to focus on the new world economy of open data.

To begin with, closed-source, centralized AI models have high costs for training LLMs and generating accurate results.

Unsurprisingly, the final stage of training DeepSeek R1 cost just about $5.5 million, compared to over $100 million for OpenAI’s GPT-4. Yet, the emerging AI industry still relies on centralized infrastructure platforms like LLM API providers, which are essentially at odds with emerging open-source innovations. 

Hosting open-source LLMs like Llama 2 and DeepSeek R1 is simple and inexpensive. Unlike stateful blockchains requiring constant syncing, LLMs are stateless and only need periodic updates. 

Recent: Here’s why DeepSeek crashed your Bitcoin and crypto

Despite the simplicity, the computational costs of running inference on open-source models are high, as node runners need GPUs. These models can save costs as they don’t require real-time updates to continuously sync.

The rise of generalizable base models like GPT-4 has enabled the development of new products through contextual inference. Centralized companies like OpenAI won’t allow any random network support or inference from their trained model.

On the contrary, decentralized node runners can support the development of open-source LLMs by serving as AI endpoints to provide deterministic data to clients. Decentralized networks lower entry barriers by empowering operators to launch their gateway on top of the network.

These decentralized infrastructure protocols serve millions of requests on their permissionless networks by open-sourcing the core gateway and service infrastructure. Consequently, any entrepreneur or operator can deploy their gateway and tap into an emerging market.

For example, someone can train an LLM with decentralized computing resources on the permissionless protocol Akash, which enables customized computing services at 85% lower prices than centralized cloud providers.

The AI training and inference market has immense potential. AI companies spend approximately $1 million daily on infrastructure maintenance to run LLM inference. This takes the service obtainable market, or SAM, to roughly $365 million annually.

As the data suggests, the market conditions indicate a massive growth potential for decentralized infrastructure.

Accessible research data sharing

In the scientific and research domain, data sharing combined with machine learning and LLMs can potentially accelerate research and improve human lives. Access to that data has been walled in by the high-cost journal system, which selectively publishes the research that its board approves of and is broadly inaccessible behind expensive subscriptions.

With the rise of blockchain-based zero-knowledge ML models, data can now be shared and computed trustlessly, and privacy can be preserved without revealing sensitive data. Thus, researchers and scientists can share and access research data without de-anonymizing potentially restricted personally identifiable information. 

To sustainably share open research data, researchers need access to a decentralized infrastructure that rewards them for access to that data, cutting out the middleman. An incentivized open data network can ensure that scientific data remains accessible outside the walled garden of expensive journals and private corporations.

Unstoppable DApp hosting

Centralized data hosting platforms such as Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud and Microsoft Azure are popular among app developers. Despite their easy accessibility, centralized platforms suffer from a single point of failure, affecting reliability and leading to rare but plausible outages.

There are various instances in tech history when Infrastructure-as-a-Service platforms have failed to provide uninterrupted services.

For example, in 2022, MetaMask temporarily denied access to users from specific geographical regions because Infura blocked them after some US sanctions. Although MetaMask is decentralized, its default connections and endpoints depend on centralized tech like Infura to access Ethereum.

This wasn’t an isolated incident, either. Infura clients also faced an interruption in 2020, while Solana and Polygon experienced an overloading of centralized remote procedure calls (RPCs) during peak traffic.

It is difficult for one company to handle diverse developer needs in a thriving open-source ecosystem. There are thousands of layer 1s, rollups, indexing, storage and other middleware protocols with niche use cases.

Most centralized platforms, like RPC providers, keep building the same infrastructure, which creates friction, slows growth metrics, and affects scalability because protocols focus on rebuilding the foundation instead of adding new features.

On the contrary, the massive success of decentralized social network applications like BlueSky and AT Protocol signals users’ quest for decentralized protocols. Moving past centralized RPCs into accessing open data, such protocols remind us of the need to build and work on decentralized infrastructure.

For example, a decentralized finance protocol can source onchain price data from Chainlink to stop depending on centralized APIs for price feeds and real-time market data.

There are roughly 100 billion serviceable RPC requests in the Web3 market, costing $3–$6 per million requests. Thus, the total addressable market size of Web3 RPC is $100 million–$200 million annually. With the steady growth of new data availability layers, there can be over 1 trillion RPC requests daily.

It is imperative to pivot toward decentralized infrastructure to stay in sync with open data transfers and tap into the open-source data market.

Open data requires decentralized infrastructure

We’ll see generalized blockchain clients offloading storage and networking to specialized middleware protocols in the long term.

For example, Solana led the decentralization movement when it first started to store its data on chains such as Arweave. No wonder Solana and Phantom were once again the primary tools for handling the massive TRUMP presidential memecoin traffic, a key moment in financial and cultural history.

In the future, we’ll see more data flow through infrastructure protocols, creating dependencies on middleware platforms. As protocols become more modular and scalable, it’ll make space for open-source, decentralized middleware to integrate at the protocol level.

It is unfeasible to have centralized companies function as intermediaries for light client headers.

Decentralized infrastructure is trustless, distributed, cost-effective and censorship-resistant. As a result, decentralized infrastructure will be the default choice for app developers and companies alike, leading to a mutually beneficial growth narrative.

Opinion by: Michael O’Rourke, founder of Pocket Network and CEO of Grove.

This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as legal or investment advice. The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

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Coin Market

Fund managers dump US stocks at record pace — Can recession fears hurt Bitcoin?

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Bitcoin’s (BTC) price action has closely mirrored that of the US equity market in recent years, particularly the tech-heavy Nasdaq and the benchmark S&P 500.

Now, as fund managers stage a historic exodus from US stocks, the question arises: could Bitcoin be the next casualty?

Fund managers dump US stocks at record monthly pace

Investors slashed their exposure to US equities by the most on record by 40-percentage-points between February and March, according to Bank of America’s latest survey.

This is the sharpest monthly decline since the bank began tracking the data in 1994. The shift, dubbed a “bull crash,” reflects dwindling faith in US economic outperformance and rising fears of a global downturn.

With a net 69% of surveyed managers declaring the peak of “US exceptionalism,” the data signals a seismic pivot that could ripple into risk assets like Bitcoin, especially given their persistent 52-week positive correlation over the years.

Bitcoin and S&P 500 index 52-week correlation coefficient chart. Source: TradingView

More downside risks for Bitcoin and, in turn, the broader crypto market arise from investors’ rising cash allocations.

BofA’s March survey finds that cash levels, a classic flight-to-safety signal, jumped to 4.1% from February’s 3.5%, the lowest since 2010.

BofA Global Fund Manager March survey results. Source: BofA Research

Adding to the unease, 55% of managers flagged “Trade war triggers global recession” as the top tail risk, up from 39% in February, while 19% worried about inflation forcing Fed rate hikes—both scenarios that could chill enthusiasm for risky assets like Bitcoin.

Conversely, the survey’s most crowded trades list still includes “Long crypto” at 9%, coinciding with the establishment of the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve in the US.

Meanwhile, 68% of managers expect Fed rate cuts in 2025, up from 51% last month.

Related: ‘We are worried about a recession,’ but there’s a silver lining — Cathie Wood

Lower rates have previously coincided with Bitcoin and the broader crypto market gains, something bettors on Polymarket believe is 100% certain to happen before May.

Bitcoin price hangs by a thread

Bitcoin’s price has declined by over 25% two months after establishing a record high of under $110,000 — a dropdown many consider a bull market correction, suggesting that the cryptocurrency may recover in the coming months.

“Historically, Bitcoin experiences these types of corrections during long-term rallies, and there’s no reason to believe this time is different,” Derive founder Nick Forster told Cointelegraph, adding however that the cryptocurrency’s next six months depend on how traditional markets (stocks) perform.

Technically, as of March 19, Bitcoin was holding above its 50-week exponential moving average (50-week EMA; the red wave) at $77,250.

BTC/USD weekly price chart. Source: TradingView

Historically, BTC price returns to the 50-week EMA after undergoing strong rallies. The cryptocurrency’s decisive break below the wave support has signaled a bear market in the past, namely the 2018 and 2022 correction cycles.

Source: Milkybull Crypto

A clear breakdown below the wave support could have BTC’s bears eye the 200-week EMA (the blue wave) below $50,000, echoing the downside sentiment discussed in the BofA survey.

Conversely, holding above the 50-week EMA has led prices to new sessional highs, akin to what the market witnessed in 2024. If Bitcoin recovers from the said wave support, its likelihood of testing the $100,000 psychological resistance level is high.

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

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Sophisticated crypto address poisoning scams drain $1.2M in March

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Victims of address poisoning scams were tricked into willingly sending over $1.2 million worth of funds to scammers, showcasing the problematic rise of cryptocurrency phishing attacks.

Address poisoning, or wallet poisoning scams, involves tricking victims into sending their digital assets to fraudulent addresses belonging to scammers.  

Pig butchering schemes on Ethereum have cost the crypto industry over $1.2 million worth of funds in the nearly three weeks since the beginning of the month, wrote onchain security firm Cyvers in a March 19 X post:

“Attackers send small transactions to victims, mimicking their frequently used wallet addresses. When users copy-paste an address from their transaction history, they might accidentally send funds to the scammer instead.”

Source: Cyvers Alerts

Address poisoning scams have been growing, since the beginning of the year, costing the industry over $1.8 million in February, according to Deddy Lavid, co-founder and CEO of Cyvers.

The growing sophistication of attackers and the lack of pre-transaction security measures are some of the main reasons for the increase, the CEO told Cointelegraph, adding:

“More users and institutions are leveraging automated tools for crypto transactions, some of which may not have built-in verification mechanisms to detect poisoned addresses.”

While the higher transaction volume due to the crypto bull market is a contributing factor, pre-transaction verification methods may stop a significant amount of phishing attacks, said Lavid, adding:

“Unlike traditional fraud detection, many wallets and platforms lack real-time pre-transaction screening that could flag suspicious addresses before funds are sent.”

Related: August sees 215% rise in crypto phishing, $55M lost in single attack

Address poisoning scams have previously cost investors tens of millions. In May 2024, an investor sent $71 million worth of Wrapped Bitcoin to a bait wallet address, falling victim to a wallet poisoning scam. The scammer created a wallet address with similar alphanumeric characters and made a small transaction to the victim’s account.

However, the attacker returned the $71 million days later, after he had an unexpected change of heart due to the growing attention from blockchain investigators.

Related: Ledger users targeted by malicious ‘clear signing’ phishing email

Phishing scams are a growing problem for the crypto industry

Phishing scams are becoming a growing threat to the crypto industry, next to traditional hacks.

Pig butchering scams are another type of phishing scheme involving prolonged and complex manipulation tactics to trick investors into willingly sending their assets to fraudulent crypto addresses.

Pig butchering schemes on the Ethereum network cost the industry over $5.5 billion across 200,000 identified cases in 2024, according to Cyvers.

The average grooming period for victims lasts between one and two weeks in 35% of cases, while 10% of scams involve grooming periods of up to three months, according to Cyvers data.

Pig butchering victim statistics and grooming periods. Source: Cyvers

In an alarming sign, 75% of victims lost over half of their net worth to pig butchering scams. Males aged 30 to 49 are most affected by these attacks.

Phishing scams were the top crypto security threat of 2024, which netted attackers over $1 billion across 296 incidents as the most costly attack vector for the crypto industry.

Magazine: Down to $200 one day, Pixels founder had $2.4M the next: Luke Barwikowski, X Hall of Flame

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SEC will drop its appeal against Ripple, CEO Garlinghouse says

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The United States Securities and Exchange Commission’s multi-year enforcement action against Ripple is finally coming to an end, according to the company CEO.

“This is it — the moment we’ve been waiting for. The SEC will drop its appeal — a resounding victory for Ripple, for crypto, every way you look at it,” Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse wrote on X on March 19.

Source: Brad Garlinghouse

“I’m finally able to announce that the case has ended; it’s over,” Garlinghouse said in the attached video to the X post.

The end of a long-running legal battle between Ripple and the SEC comes four years after the US securities regulator sued the company over an alleged $1.3 billion unregistered securities offering in December 2020.

“We’re now closing a chapter in crypto history,” Garlinghouse stated, adding that “it’s time to make the United States the crypto capital of the world.”

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView show that the crypto market responded positively to the development.

XRP price shot up 10% following SEC’s backout. Source: TradingView

This is a developing story, and further information will be added as it becomes available.

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