Oracle

Oracles are essential infrastructure components that feed real-time, off-chain data (such as price feeds, weather, or sports results) into blockchain smart contracts. Without decentralized oracles like Chainlink and Pyth, DeFi could not function. In 2026, oracles have evolved to support verifiable randomness and cross-chain data synchronization. This tag covers the technical evolution of data availability, tamper-proof price feeds, and the critical role oracles play in ensuring the deterministic execution of complex decentralized applications.

5165 Articles
Created: 2026/02/02 18:52
Updated: 2026/02/02 18:52
The Cheapest Crypto Under $0.05 That Could 25x Next Year

The Cheapest Crypto Under $0.05 That Could 25x Next Year

Bitcoin and Ethereum are close to all-time highs, so most traders are currently seeking cheap tokens which can be profitable. The largest returns in a market cycle are normally observed in top crypto projects that have low entry price, true utility, and distinct developmental growth. One of such projects is Mutuum Finance (MUTM). It is […]

Author: Cryptopolitan
Exploring Stablecoins on BNB Chain: Types, Mechanisms, and Use Cases

Exploring Stablecoins on BNB Chain: Types, Mechanisms, and Use Cases

The post Exploring Stablecoins on BNB Chain: Types, Mechanisms, and Use Cases appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Terrill Dicki Nov 04, 2025 20:07 Discover the role of stablecoins on BNB Chain, including their types, mechanisms, and real-world applications in DeFi and beyond. Stablecoins have emerged as a pivotal component of the Web3 ecosystem, facilitating a range of financial activities without the volatility typically associated with cryptocurrencies. According to the BNB Chain blog, the BNB Chain plays a crucial role in this landscape, supporting over $14 billion in stablecoin total value locked (TVL) and serving more than 4 million daily users across its platforms like BSC and opBNB. With rapid transaction settlements and minimal fees, BNB Chain is a hub for stablecoin innovation and activity. Types of Stablecoins Stablecoins on BNB Chain can be categorized into four primary types, each with distinct mechanisms and objectives: Fiat-Backed Stablecoins: Supported by cash reserves and short-term U.S. government obligations, these include tokens like USDT and USDC. They provide a stable 1:1 USD peg for trading, payments, and DeFi activities. Real World Asset (RWA) Backed Stablecoins: Offering yield-bearing options, these include tokens like USYC, backed by U.S. Treasury bills and money market funds, providing native yields to holders. Crypto-Backed Stablecoins: Users can mint these by collateralizing crypto assets such as BNB or ETH. They may offer yield strategies but require active management compared to RWA-backed stablecoins. Algorithmic Stablecoins: These maintain a USD peg through algorithmic mechanisms and dynamic collateral ratios, as seen with protocols like Spice Protocol’s USDS. Integrations and Infrastructure BNB Chain’s ecosystem supports stablecoin activity through various platforms and infrastructure providers. Key DeFi platforms like PancakeSwap and Venus facilitate lending, borrowing, and decentralized exchange (DEX) trading. Infrastructure providers such as Chainlink and Trust Wallet ensure seamless operations through oracles, custody solutions, and payment gateways. Real-World Applications Stablecoins on BNB Chain are utilized…

Author: BitcoinEthereumNews
Nubila Network and APRO Oracle Ally to Connect Real World with an intelligent OnChain Ecosystem

Nubila Network and APRO Oracle Ally to Connect Real World with an intelligent OnChain Ecosystem

Nubila Network, the earliest weather oracle onchain, is pleased to announce its strategic partnership with APRO Oracle, a decentralized oracle for verifiable real-world data. The primary objective behind this partnership is to enable smarter, data-driven artificial intelligence (AI) models and onchain applications. We're excited to partner with @APRO_Oracle, the No.1 AI-enhanced Oracle powering next-gen ecosystems across RWA, AI, DeFi, and Prediction Markets.🤖 APRO AI Oracle is the first oracle solution designed for AI models and autonomous agents, solving the fundamental issue that LLMs… pic.twitter.com/1MuKLT7DU1— Nubila Network (@nubilanetwork) November 4, 2025 Both partners are known in the market for their special features that sort out the weather problems with certified solutions. Their collaboration definitely opens an innovative way in the weather domain to help the entire world. Nubila Network has revealed this news through its official social media X account. Nubila and APRO Forge a Data-Driven Alliance Nubila Network is a decentralized physical infrastructure network (DePIN) that focuses on the collection, validation, and delivery of real-world environmental data for certification. The basic aim before APRO AI Oracle is to solve the issues that large language models (LLMs) and smart contracts face in accessing reliable, real-time data. Furthermore, Nubila’s Real-world Data API will give verifiable, real-world environmental data to enhance APRO’s decentralized oracle network, which in turn empowers AI models and smart contracts with authentic physical-world insights. In short, Nubila handover the authentic data to the APRO oracle, and then further AI agents or smart contracts can integrate it. Nubila Network Partners with APRO Oracle to Solve Real-World Problems The history-breaking news of Nubila Network’s partnership with APRO Oracle will expand the knowledge and solutions of environmental problems. Together, they are going to make a productive contribution to solving real-world problems with attested solutions. APRO Oracle is also known in the field of real-world assets (RWA), artificial intelligence (AI), decentralized finance (DeFi), and Prediction Markets. This provides a strong foundation for APRO Oracle to be trusted by the entire world.

Author: Coinstats
Lost keys, lost fortunes: the inheritance crisis of digital assets

Lost keys, lost fortunes: the inheritance crisis of digital assets

Written by Reid A. Winthrop, Managing Partner, Winthrop Law Group, PC Digital assets have moved from the fringes of speculation into the mainstream of finance. According to CoinDesk, stablecoins alone now account for more than $288 billion in circulation, with nearly 99% pegged to the US dollar. Tokenised bonds, real estate and even art are being traded daily across distributed ledgers and these real world assets that have been tokenised are projected to be worth $24 billion by the end of 2025 and up to $30 trillion by 2034. Yet beneath the promise of borderless liquidity and programmable money lies a vulnerability often overlooked until it is too late. What happens to digital wealth when its owner dies? 5% of Ethereum tokens and 20% of Bitcoins potentially lost forever Source: X/Coinbureau The central problem is one of irretrievability. In traditional finance, executors can locate bank accounts, contact custodians and obtain court orders to access frozen funds. On the blockchain, there is no such recourse — lose the private keys, and the assets are gone forever. Chainalysis estimates that as much as 3.7million Bitcoins worth approximately 20% of all Bitcoin has been lost and 5% of Ethereum tokens are lost due to inaccessible wallets, some forever locked behind forgotten seed phrases. The BBC reported the case of James Howells, who inadvertently threw away a hard drive containing 8,000 BTC, now worth close to a billion and the local council will not allow him to go search for his computer in the refuse tip where he believes the Bitcoins are stored. Unlike a misplaced stock certificate, blockchain-powered digital assets can vanish without a trace once authentication fails. Lawmakers are only beginning to grapple with this new frontier of inheritance. In the United States, adoption of the Revised Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act (RUFADAA) has given executors conditional rights to access accounts, provided explicit authorisation exists in wills or trusts. The Uniform Law Commission notes, however, that implementation varies widely across states, leaving estates vulnerable to patchwork enforcement. In the United Kingdom, the proposed Property (Digital Assets) Bill aims to classify crypto holdings as property, making them formally inheritable. Yet even here, the General Data Protection Regulation in Europe complicates matters, sometimes preventing executors from accessing personal digital data without explicit pre-death consent. In emerging markets, where tokenisation is accelerating fastest, probate systems often do not recognise digital assets at all, leaving heirs with no enforceable claim. The legal uncertainty is compounded by technical barriers. Many exchanges and platforms employ strict two-factor authentication systems that are tied to personal devices. If a phone is lost or a SIM card deactivated, heirs can find themselves permanently locked out. Terms of service often bar third-party access, even for executors with court approval. Big technology firms have tried to provide workarounds: Apple has introduced its “Legacy Contact” program, allowing users to designate successors to iCloud data and Google offers an “Inactive Account Manager” that transfers access after prolonged inactivity. Yet these remain fragmented solutions in a world where most blockchain-native platforms lack similar mechanisms. At the heart of the issue lies a deeper philosophical tension between self-custody and traditional custody services. Advocates of self-sovereignty argue that control of private keys embodies the very ethos of blockchain — financial independence from institutions. Yet this autonomy creates a profound estate planning risk if owners fail to pass on keys securely. According to Fidelity, fewer than 15% of holders of digital assets in 2024 had included these assets in their estate plans. By contrast, custodial models, where banks, platforms or exchanges manage client assets, allow smoother inheritance procedures but often blur the line between ownership and custodianship. When FTX and Celsius collapsed, users discovered that “their” crypto was legally part of the bankruptcy estate, leaving heirs with nothing more than creditor claims, as Reuters has detailed. Solutions are emerging, but none are yet universal. Some estate planners recommend maintaining a secure digital asset inventory, i.e. an encrypted record of wallets, platforms and authentication instructions kept offline or in a safety deposit box. Blockchain developers are experimenting with inheritance modules in smart contracts where ownership can automatically shift to heirs upon verification of a death certificate through trusted oracles. Multi-signature wallets, where heirs, executors and the original owner each hold a share of the signing authority, provide another safeguard, although they require technical literacy and trust. The notion of a “digital executor” is also gaining ground: a professional specifically tasked with navigating the technical and legal dimensions of digital estate transfer. But without global standards, such roles remain vulnerable to conflict across jurisdictions. Beyond the legal and technical hurdles lies a human reality — inheriting wealth is already a time of emotional complexity and therefore adding layers of cryptographic processes can deepen the burden. For heirs unfamiliar with digital finance, a stablecoin wallet or tokenised property dashboard may feel alien, even intimidating; the risk is that assets are sold prematurely, transferred incorrectly, or abandoned entirely. Clear communication in life, explaining what digital assets exist, how they fit into an investment strategy and why they were chosen may be as important as estate planning when it comes to digital assets. In the end, inheritance is not just about transmitting value, but about transmitting meaning. The next decade is likely to bring significant convergence between law, technology and financial practice. Regulators are beginning to recognise that tokenisation is not a niche but a structural shift. The European Union’s plan for a unified digital identity wallet could eventually integrate inheritance rights across borders. Platforms issuing tokenised assets may embed succession planning into their protocols, allowing owners to set heirs, contingent beneficiaries, and even conditional allocations directly into smart contracts. This could reduce disputes and ensure that assets remain productive rather than frozen in limbo. Yet technology cannot erase the paradox at the heart of the issue. The same features that make blockchain valuable (immutability, decentralisation and autonomy) make it resistant to human contingencies such as death. Will we see digital assets that have not been claimed or moved for 15 years being subject to the UK’s Dormant Assets Scheme, which, already, according the UK government, “has unlocked more than £745m for social and environmental initiatives, from over £1.35bn in dormant bank and building society accounts”? Legal harmonisation may narrow gaps, custodial platforms may offer bridges and smart contracts may automate transfers, but the irreducible challenge remains. How to align a self-sovereign system with the collective needs of society? How can we protect a decentralised product from being lost forever? And, is there an insurance product that can be developed to bring confidence to these assets? Digital inheritance is thus more than a private planning concern — it is a stress test for the entire digital economy. If billions in tokenised wealth disappear each year into inaccessible wallets, confidence in blockchain as an infrastructure for intergenerational wealth will erode. Conversely, if frameworks for secure transfer mature, blockchain technology could underpin not just the circulation of value in life, but the preservation of legacies across generations. Which raises the central question: can digital finance evolve fast enough to ensure that the wealth we create in code survives us in the world of flesh and blood? Reid Winthrop is an attorney at Winthrop Law Group, PC in Newport Beach, California, where he advises clients on business and technology matters, including digital asset regulation and insurance issues. This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Reading it does not create an attorney-client relationship. The views expressed are those of the author and not legal advice. Readers should consult qualified counsel regarding their own circumstances. Lost keys, lost fortunes: the inheritance crisis of digital assets was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story

Author: Medium
PPHE Hotel Group Enhances Operations with Oracle OPERA Cloud

PPHE Hotel Group Enhances Operations with Oracle OPERA Cloud

The post PPHE Hotel Group Enhances Operations with Oracle OPERA Cloud appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Joerg Hiller Nov 04, 2025 19:33 PPHE Hotel Group adopts Oracle OPERA Cloud to streamline operations across its 18 properties, enhancing guest experiences and operational efficiency through innovative technology. PPHE Hotel Group, a prominent name in the international hospitality and real estate sector, is set to revolutionize its operational framework by implementing Oracle OPERA Cloud as its global property management system (PMS). This strategic move will cover 18 properties with a total of 5,200 rooms located in the UK, the Netherlands, and Italy, according to oracle.com. Standardizing Operations for Enhanced Performance The integration of Oracle’s cloud-based PMS will allow PPHE to standardize its business processes, thereby optimizing its operational performance. This technological upgrade aims to deliver superior guest experiences, aligning with PPHE’s commitment to excellence. Jawad Sabir, Senior Vice President of Technology and Business Solutions at PPHE Hotel Group, emphasized the importance of mobile access, which now includes tools for housekeeping and loyalty rewards, empowering staff to focus on high-value guest interactions. Seamless Transition and Cost Efficiency PPHE, a long-time user of Oracle Hospitality’s OPERA 5, is transitioning to the cloud-based OPERA Cloud PMS to eliminate on-premises hardware requirements. This shift significantly reduces IT overhead and ensures continuous innovation with regular software updates. The system’s intuitive dashboards and mobile functionality enable staff to reduce manual tasks, allowing for more personalized guest services. Integrative Capabilities and Future Innovation Through the Oracle Hospitality Integration Platform (OHIP), PPHE can integrate existing IT systems using open-source REST APIs. This integration facilitates the management of sales, reservations, loyalty programs, and front desk operations from a unified platform. The flexibility offered by OPERA Cloud allows PPHE to access over 1,000 pre-integrated business services, paving the way for rapid innovation and customization of operations. Alex Alt, Executive Vice President…

Author: BitcoinEthereumNews
SoftBank fell about 13% as AI-linked stocks across Asia sold off sharply

SoftBank fell about 13% as AI-linked stocks across Asia sold off sharply

SoftBank shares fell sharply on Wednesday, dropping 13% in Tokyo, as investors across Asia pulled back from AI-linked stocks after a wave of selling hit U.S. tech names the night before, according to markets coverage from Wednesday’s trading sessions. The sell-off hit fast and without hesitation, wiping gains from some of the most crowded trades […]

Author: Cryptopolitan
La Culex Tops Best Crypto Presales Buzz With 6 More Cryptos

La Culex Tops Best Crypto Presales Buzz With 6 More Cryptos

The post La Culex Tops Best Crypto Presales Buzz With 6 More Cryptos appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Crypto in Q4 2025 feels like summer in Florida. Hot markets. Thick humidity. And suddenly there is a mosquito in the conversation that refuses to leave. Yes, the La Culex swarm arrived and the vibe has shifted. This season belongs to coins that bite, coins that build, and one mosquito with ambition levels higher than your caffeine bill during finals week. Early holders are buzzing, and somehow Web3 turned into a backyard BBQ where the mosquitoes are winning. While the La Culex presale draws early investors like a flashlight draws bugs at 2 am, six strong names are getting market attention for real reasons. This list breaks down the best crypto presales pick leading the buzz and the established heavyweights stacking strong fundamentals for 2025. Brace for memes, stings, and some well aimed crypto facts. It is feeding season in this market. 1. La Culex: The Mosquito Turning Buzz Into Buying Pressure If crypto had a backyard barbecue, La Culex would be that one mosquito that refuses to leave and somehow ends up running the party. Funny mascot, serious execution. No fluff. Just wings and wins. La Culex is currently in its 4th presale phase, Hive Signal, trading at $0.00002458. Over $11,000 has already swarmed in, more than 80 holders have joined, and over 500 million tokens have been scooped. Stage 1 swarm members are already up 26.2%, and the projected $0.007 listing price points to a wild 28378.43775% upside from here if momentum keeps flying. A $10,000 entry at this stage? That tiny mosquito bite could evolve into a full-blown sting flex if hype and liquidity spike at listing. People joke. People analyze. And then people join. That is how meme legends start. Some call it a swarm. Others call it the only insect allowed anywhere near their finance…

Author: BitcoinEthereumNews
Exploring Chainlink (LINK) Runtime Environment (CRE) Use Cases

Exploring Chainlink (LINK) Runtime Environment (CRE) Use Cases

The post Exploring Chainlink (LINK) Runtime Environment (CRE) Use Cases appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Caroline Bishop Nov 04, 2025 19:15 Discover five innovative use cases for Chainlink (LINK) Runtime Environment (CRE), including stablecoin workflows, tokenization orchestration, and AI prediction markets, according to Chainlink. Chainlink (LINK), a leader in the blockchain oracle space, has spotlighted five transformative use cases for its Chainlink Runtime Environment (CRE). These use cases aim to leverage the cutting-edge capabilities of CRE to enhance various blockchain applications, according to Chainlink. Stablecoin Workflows One of the primary applications of CRE is in stablecoin workflows. The environment facilitates seamless integration and automation of processes involving stablecoins, ensuring that transactions are both efficient and secure. Tokenization Orchestration CRE also supports tokenization orchestration, allowing for the management and deployment of tokenized assets. This feature is crucial for industries looking to digitize and streamline their asset management processes. AI Prediction Markets Artificial Intelligence (AI) prediction markets are another innovative use case. By utilizing CRE, developers can build markets that leverage AI for predicting outcomes, thus providing more accurate and reliable data-driven insights. Agent-Driven Triggers The environment supports agent-driven triggers, which enable automated responses to specific conditions or events within blockchain networks. This capability is vital for creating responsive and adaptive blockchain applications. Custom Data Feeds Lastly, CRE allows for the creation of custom data feeds. This feature offers developers the flexibility to tailor data inputs for their specific needs, enhancing the accuracy and relevance of blockchain applications. These use cases demonstrate the versatility and potential of the Chainlink Runtime Environment in advancing blockchain technology across various sectors. By providing robust tools for developers, CRE continues to push the boundaries of what is possible in the decentralized ecosystem. Image source: Shutterstock Source: https://blockchain.news/news/exploring-chainlink-runtime-environment-cre-use-cases

Author: BitcoinEthereumNews
When the AI capex ouroboros meets the power bill

When the AI capex ouroboros meets the power bill

The post When the AI capex ouroboros meets the power bill appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. AI capex ouroboros The AI trade isn’t just a boom; it’s a capital structure. Revenues loop through the system like an ouroboros—hyperscalers sell compute to foundation models, models kick back usage to clouds, vendors book “tomorrow’s” dollars today—and the whole wheel is greased by increasingly non-traditional credit. That’s fine while free cash flow covers the tab. It stops working the moment the cash fountain slows and the bill moves from retained earnings to term sheets. Oracle’s mega-pledge crystallized the turn. It wasn’t a story about software; it was a story about funding: promises sized like nations, facilities that don’t exist yet, and power draw measured in Hoover Dams. That’s not “product-market fit”; that’s balance-sheet drag racing. Once a disciplined, cash-funded oligopoly morphs into a debt-fuelled arms race, the capital cycle changes character. Equity cheerleading gives way to creditors with clipboards. Private credit is the new pit crew—until it isn’t. The street wants us to believe there’s infinite “dry powder” to span a trillion-plus gap in data-center buildout. But when listed proxies for that ecosystem wobble and the consumer credit gears grind, the go-go narrative meets a carry cost with teeth. If that funding axle seizes, AI capex doesn’t glide lower—it lurches. The weak link isn’t a chip shortage anymore; it’s a term-sheet shortage at non-concessionary rates. Beyond funding, physics intrudes. You can financial-engineer a data center; you can’t financial-engineer 4–5 gigawatts onto a stressed grid overnight. Specialized tariffs that don’t fully load new-build generation costs simply shift the invoice to everyone else, and that’s before we argue about interconnect queues measured in years. The macro punchline: what was priced as secular, self-funded productivity could look suspiciously cyclical once it collides with rate duration, credit spread beta, and electrons. So are we in a bubble? Maybe. But bubbles don’t pop on…

Author: BitcoinEthereumNews
AMD Q3 Earnings Beat Estimates, Bolstering AI Partnerships Outlook

AMD Q3 Earnings Beat Estimates, Bolstering AI Partnerships Outlook

The post AMD Q3 Earnings Beat Estimates, Bolstering AI Partnerships Outlook appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. COINOTAG recommends • Exchange signup 💹 Trade with pro tools Fast execution, robust charts, clean risk controls. 👉 Open account → COINOTAG recommends • Exchange signup 🚀 Smooth orders, clear control Advanced order types and market depth in one view. 👉 Create account → COINOTAG recommends • Exchange signup 📈 Clarity in volatile markets Plan entries & exits, manage positions with discipline. 👉 Sign up → COINOTAG recommends • Exchange signup ⚡ Speed, depth, reliability Execute confidently when timing matters. 👉 Open account → COINOTAG recommends • Exchange signup 🧭 A focused workflow for traders Alerts, watchlists, and a repeatable process. 👉 Get started → COINOTAG recommends • Exchange signup ✅ Data‑driven decisions Focus on process—not noise. 👉 Sign up → AMD reported Q3 earnings of $1.20 adjusted EPS and $9.25 billion in revenue, surpassing Wall Street estimates, though gross margin guidance met expectations without exceeding them. This performance drove a decline in shares during extended trading, highlighting ongoing AI and data center growth amid market pressures. Data center revenue hit $4.34 billion, up 22% year-over-year, fueled by demand for Instinct GPUs in AI infrastructure. Client segment revenue reached $2.75 billion, a 46% increase, driven by strong processor sales. Gaming revenue surged 181% to $1.30 billion, boosted by new product launches and partnerships. Explore AMD’s Q3 earnings: $9.25B revenue beats estimates with AI partnerships shining. Discover impacts on tech sectors—read now for key insights. What were AMD’s Q3 2024 earnings highlights? AMD’s Q3 earnings showcased robust growth with adjusted earnings per share at $1.20, exceeding the $1.16 consensus estimate, and revenue of $9.25 billion, topping the $8.74 billion forecast. This represents a 36% year-over-year revenue increase, ending September 27. Net income rose to $1.24 billion, or 75 cents per share, from $771 million the prior year, though shares dipped in…

Author: BitcoinEthereumNews