Dapp

Dapps are digital applications that run on a P2P network of computers rather than a single server, typically utilizing smart contracts to ensure transparency and uptime. In 2026, Dapps have achieved mass-market appeal through Account Abstraction, allowing for a "Web2-like" user experience with the security of Web3. This tag covers the entire ecosystem of decentralized software—from social media and productivity tools to governance platforms and identity management.

4937 Articles
Created: 2026/02/02 18:52
Updated: 2026/02/02 18:52
Best Crypto to Invest In: Top Picks for Q4 2025

Best Crypto to Invest In: Top Picks for Q4 2025

History tells us this is the phase when high-beta altcoins outperform the majors, and once again the setup looks primed […] The post Best Crypto to Invest In: Top Picks for Q4 2025 appeared first on Coindoo.

Author: Coindoo
Best Crypto to Buy Now: BlockDAG, Cardano, Hyperliquid & Chainlink Setting the 2025 Crypto Pace

Best Crypto to Buy Now: BlockDAG, Cardano, Hyperliquid & Chainlink Setting the 2025 Crypto Pace

Discover the best crypto to buy now as BlockDAG’s $420M F1-backed presale outpaces Cardano, Hyperliquid & Chainlink with real testnet delivery and hype.

Author: Blockchainreporter
Analysts Agree These 5 Tokens Could Be 2025’s Biggest Gainers

Analysts Agree These 5 Tokens Could Be 2025’s Biggest Gainers

The post Analysts Agree These 5 Tokens Could Be 2025’s Biggest Gainers appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Crypto News Cryptocurrency continues to be one of the fastest-growing sectors for wealth creation, but in 2025, the landscape has shifted. It’s no longer just about Bitcoin or Ethereum. Investors worldwide are now asking a critical question: Which crypto offers the smartest balance of upside, utility, and scalability? With thousands of tokens launching weekly, knowing where to place your next bet is more important than ever. This article presents a curated list of five promising cryptocurrencies that stand out from the crowd. These coins aren’t just hype-driven; they offer strong fundamentals, real-world adoption potential, and clear value propositions. Topping this list is BlockchainFX ($BFX), a new crypto-native trading platform that’s building an all-in-one financial ecosystem. But to provide a comprehensive outlook, we also analyze Tron ($TRX), Polkadot ($MATIC), Stellar ($XLM), and Uniswap ($UNI). Each has carved a specific niche, yet none match the current momentum of BlockchainFX. BlockchainFX ($BFX): The Next Crypto Super App for 100x Gains With the crypto space fragmented across exchanges, wallets, and platforms, BlockchainFX ($BFX) aims to unify the entire trading experience. Imagine buying meme coins, forex, ETFs, gold, or Tesla stock, all in a few taps on one sleek app. That’s the future BFX is building. Already over $9.15 million has been raised (96.33% of its $9.5M soft cap), with 13,683+ participants locking in tokens at just $0.027. With a confirmed launch price of $0.05, there’s a built-in upside of 85% for early adopters. But the real game-changer is what follows: the super app. Designed for both crypto natives and traditional investors, BlockchainFX supports over 500 assets, ranging from stocks and bonds to gaming tokens and RWAs. Investors can buy BFX using ETH, USDT, BNB, BTC, SOL, and more, making it one of the most accessible presales in 2025. The platform offers built-in advanced NFT…

Author: BitcoinEthereumNews
Top 4 Presale Cryptos to Buy Now: BlockDAG, BlockchainFX, Bitcoin Hyper & Best Wallet!

Top 4 Presale Cryptos to Buy Now: BlockDAG, BlockchainFX, Bitcoin Hyper & Best Wallet!

Explore the best presale cryptos to buy now as BlockDAG’s testnet drives a $420M surge, BlockchainFX builds app, Bitcoin Hyper brings BTC’s Layer-2, and Best Wallet adds utility to Web3 wallets!

Author: Blockchainreporter
Best Crypto Presales to Buy as Bitcoin Weakens at $121K

Best Crypto Presales to Buy as Bitcoin Weakens at $121K

Although Bitcoin has dropped slightly after a retraction around the opening of the US stock market on Thursday, we've identified the best crypto presales to buy into while you're waiting for $BTC to rise again.

Author: Brave Newcoin
Top Crypto to Buy Now: Analysts Agree These 5 Tokens Could Be 2025’s Biggest Gainers

Top Crypto to Buy Now: Analysts Agree These 5 Tokens Could Be 2025’s Biggest Gainers

Investors worldwide are now asking a critical question: Which crypto offers the smartest balance of upside, utility, and scalability? With […] The post Top Crypto to Buy Now: Analysts Agree These 5 Tokens Could Be 2025’s Biggest Gainers appeared first on Coindoo.

Author: Coindoo
4 Coins Heating Up as Odds of Litecoin, Solana, and XRP ETF Approval Hit 100%

4 Coins Heating Up as Odds of Litecoin, Solana, and XRP ETF Approval Hit 100%

The crypto market is buzzing with renewed optimism as Bloomberg’s Eric Balchunas declared that multiple spot crypto ETF approvals are now a certainty rather than a probability. Recent SEC changes have eliminated old approval timelines, paving the way for funds tied to Litecoin (LTC), Solana (SOL), and XRP to debut imminently. With ETFs historically driving […]

Author: Cryptopolitan
2021 SOL Converted $1K into $100K, Now Analysts Predict Same Trajectory For This $0.035 Gem

2021 SOL Converted $1K into $100K, Now Analysts Predict Same Trajectory For This $0.035 Gem

In 2021, investors who spotted Solana (SOL) early watched $1,000 grow into $100,000 within months. That moment changed how people looked at crypto charts — not as random speculation but as a record of real innovation. Now analysts believe Mutuum Finance (MUTM) will follow a similar growth curve as it prepares to launch a full [...] The post 2021 SOL Converted $1K into $100K, Now Analysts Predict Same Trajectory For This $0.035 Gem appeared first on Blockonomi.

Author: Blockonomi
Solana Price Prediction: SOL Price Targets $250 As Remittix Expected To top $5 From $0.11

Solana Price Prediction: SOL Price Targets $250 As Remittix Expected To top $5 From $0.11

Solana targets $250 as momentum builds, but Remittix (RTX) steals focus with $27M raised, real PayFi banking links, and analysts eyeing a $5 surge from $0.11.

Author: Blockchainreporter
The Ethereum Foundation officially announced Kohaku’s end-to-end privacy solution and user experience.

The Ethereum Foundation officially announced Kohaku’s end-to-end privacy solution and user experience.

Author: Zhixiong Pan Source: chainfeeds Although the Ethereum Foundation officially announced the privacy wallet tool Kohaku project yesterday, the project had actually been confirmed through some channels as early as June this year. Kohaku will integrate multiple components across multiple teams to create a complete browser plugin wallet that can be used as a reference for other wallets to enhance end-to-end privacy. These include the Helios light client developed by a16z, the Ethereum Foundation's PSE team, as well as Ambire, Railgun, Wonderland, and others. The origins of the word Kohaku are quite interesting. Since the project forked from Ambire, they chose the Japanese form of Amber: Kohaku. However, Kohaku also means "koi fish" (specifically red and white), so the project also used the koi fish as its image. What is Kohaku? Kohaku is a set of privacy and security primitives and SDKs for wallets, along with a reference wallet (browser extension) for advanced users to put these capabilities into practice. Kohaku isn't designed to be a mass-market consumer wallet, but rather to provide composable privacy and security building blocks for various wallet teams, allowing users to integrate all or some of these features (via plug-ins) as needed. The initial focus is on privacy features, with the reference wallet being a browser extension forked from Ambire. Officials clearly prioritize mainnet development, with support for Layer 2 (and a focus on "fast withdrawals") to follow. Kohaku's core goals are to: An SDK with strong privacy/security primitives; A reference wallet based on the SDK for heavy users; Collaborate with other wallets to access all or part of the capabilities as needed; The reference wallet is a fork of Ambire, with the mainnet first and L2 added later; Both the SDK and the reference wallet come with a plugin system, making it easy for each wallet team to select features as needed. Core Direction: Not Just "On-chain Privacy" but "End-to-End" Kohaku's privacy isn't simply about "putting transactions into a private pool." Instead, every step, from device to node, considers trust and exposure. The roadmap outlines a clear "privacy/security checklist": Built-in Helios light client (WASM): This runs blockchain state verification locally, minimizing reliance on centralized RPC. (Helios is a multi-chain Ethereum light client from a16z that compiles to WASM, making it suitable for embedding in wallets and dApps.) Minimal execution client + private eth_call: Even if you're just reading on-chain state (the common eth_call), you need to "keep the server unaware of what you're reading." The roadmap states that "TEE+ORAM (Trusted Execution Environment + ORAM) will be implemented first, with a long-term goal of pure cryptographic PIR." Private Send/Private Receive/Private Payment Request: The wallet has multiple built-in privacy protocols (Railgun is the first one to be included), supporting "private sending/receiving" and "encrypted payment requests". Unified view of private balances (multi-protocol aggregation): If you have funds in multiple privacy protocols, the wallet will provide an aggregated view. Avoid IP leakage and hide traffic, optional P2P broadcast transactions (bypassing traditional RPC broadcast). The default setting when connecting to a dApp is "one dApp, one account": this naturally reduces address correlation. Social retrieval (ZKEmail/ZKPassport, etc.): Use zero-knowledge to enable retrieval without revealing your identity. Post-quantum "emergency switch": When necessary, you can switch to post-quantum signatures such as Falcon/Dilithium (Solidity verifier optimization) to prevent quantum security risks. Universal Hardware Ethereum App / ZK Hardware Signer / Spending Limit Policy: Make hardware-side capabilities into open source reference implementations, break vendor lock-in, and introduce more detailed "spending policies." You can think of it as: Railgun and other "on-chain privacy pools" are one of the foundations, but Kohaku also needs to fill in the "loopholes that are easy to leak privacy" such as node trust, network broadcast, front-end connection, recovery, and hardware signature, so as to achieve "end-to-end less exposure." Roadmap and Collaborative Ecosystem Phase 1: Privacy/security basic capabilities. Continuing direction: Make the wallet as "close to the device/kernel" as possible, and even explore "native Ethereum browser" in the future, with IPFS front-end, deeper P2P integration, local AI transaction security scoring (no data leakage), etc. Collaborating teams: Ambire, Railgun, Wonderland, Helios, PSE, Oblivious Labs, ZKnox, etc. Product form: SDK + reference wallet (browser extension) SDK: A composable privacy/security module for other wallet teams. Kohaku Extension: A browser extension forked from Ambire, used to "run, demonstrate, and prototype these privacy and security capabilities." It's targeted at advanced users, not a final product for the general public. On GitHub, we can see that the main repository (ethereum/kohaku) is a monorepo, listing the @kohaku-eth/railgun package ("railgun privacy protocol lib"). There are also the kohaku-extension and kohaku-commons repositories. The former contains the extension code (based on Ambire), while the latter is Ambire's common logic library (introduced by the fork). The homepage of the warehouse also reminds: It is still under development and is not ready for production environment. Why is it more "private" than MetaMask? Let’s first talk about the current situation of MetaMask or other wallets: You are using an open account (EOA), where the address and transactions are permanently public. When you interact with a dApp, you often use centralized RPC (such as Infura), and the RPC service can see the request and IP you initiate. If you frequently use the same address to connect to different dApps, you are likely to be profiled by on-chain analysis. How does Kohaku change this path? Kohaku uses an end-to-end approach to minimize the amount of information that can be linked. Its core differences lie in three key areas: On-chain transfer itself Through protocols like Railgun, the funds you want to transfer are first shielded (pooled) to a private address (0zk), and then the transfer/interaction occurs within the private pool; what is seen on the chain are cryptographic records such as new commitments/Nullifiers (anti-double spending), which do not directly expose the source, destination, or amount of funds. The Railgun documentation clearly states: 0zk addresses never appear on the chain, and the system uses UTXO/Note + zk proofs to update status and prevent double spending. Note: Shield and Unshield (withdrawal) transactions are visible on-chain (because you deposit/withdraw ERC-20 into/from the contract), but transfers, swaps, and calls within the pool are private. Railgun currently charges a 0.25% fee for Shield transactions (determined by its DAO; only Shield transactions are charged, not private transfers within the pool). Interacting with nodes/network The wallet has a built-in Helios light client: many read verifications are done locally, reducing trust and exposure to RPC (especially reading). Planned "private eth_call": Even if you only read on-chain storage, you must use TEE+ORAM (the long-term goal is PIR) so that the other party cannot see what you read. Optional P2P broadcast: directly send transactions without traditional RPC, reducing the probability of binding "your IP + your transaction". Frontend/Connectivity and Relevance Default "one dApp, one account": Each time you connect to a dApp, the wallet will suggest you use a "new address/new account" to avoid cross-site profiling. Private payment request/private receipt: The payment is sent to the other party using a link/QR code, and the "0zk payment information" does not appear on the chain. Social retrieval also uses ZK: such as ZKEmail, ZKPassport, and Anon Aadhaar, so that the "recovery" process does not leak privacy. Complete user experience from MetaMask to Kohaku You can think of it as: first put the money "in a private wallet", do things in it, and then decide how to "get out". Step A: Install the Kohaku browser extension and import your mnemonic phrase or create a new one. Step B: Enable "Private Mode" in the settings and check the Railgun plugin (Kohaku supports multi-protocol plugins). The wallet will generate key material for 0zk locally. Step C: Shield (Pool Entry): Deposit the ERC‑20 you wish to “privately use” into the Railgun contract (if it is native ETH, it will be wrapped into wETH before entering the pool, this is Railgun’s rule). This step is visible on-chain (because you are depositing funds into the contract), but it is the only “public transaction” to “enter the privacy space.” Step D: Transfer/Swap/LP/interact with dApp contracts in the private pool. ZK proofs will be generated locally. Only commitment/Nullifier updates will be visible on the chain, and you cannot tell who you transferred to or how much. Step E: Private payment: You can send the 0zk payment link/QR code to others. This address information will not appear on the chain. Step F: Unshield (withdraw from the pool) to a new public address when necessary (preferably, avoid returning to the original address to reduce correlation). Some protocols or front-ends may configure delay windows/compliance checks (such as the Privacy Pools direction and the Railgun community's proof mechanism); the Railgun ecosystem has also introduced mechanisms such as a "short observation period with only original return access" to ensure compliance. Step G: Optionally enable P2P broadcasting, separate accounts for each dApp, and Helios local verification to further reduce the "metadata that can be bound." Which part is still visible? Your deposits (Shield) and withdrawals (Unshield) into and out of a privacy pool are public transactions. However, transfers/interactions within the pool are private (you can't see the sender, receiver, or amount; you can only see the "pool status" being updated). If you withdraw funds directly to the public address you previously deposited funds to, analysts may still "reasonably speculate" that the two are related - it is best to withdraw to a new address or continue spending in the private domain. Summarize Kohaku introduces a new privacy and security paradigm to the Ethereum wallet ecosystem, moving beyond a simple on-chain privacy protocol to deeply integrated end-to-end privacy protection. It will significantly enhance the privacy experience for users interacting with decentralized applications, transforming the current paradigm of transparent on-chain behavior and setting a new standard for "privacy by default" for future wallet products. As its SDK and plugin system are widely adopted by more wallet teams, the way users interact with blockchains may be reshaped: from transparency to privacy, from centralized trust to local verification, and from on-chain public identity to zero-knowledge identity. Kohaku will propel the Ethereum ecosystem into an era of mainstream privacy applications, accelerate the exploration of innovative models that coexist with compliance and privacy protection, and lay a critical foundation for the decentralized internet to enter the next stage.

Author: PANews