The inclusion of AERO emissions for the MXNB/USDC pool enhances liquidity incentives, potentially boosting cross-border crypto transactions.
The post Aerodrome’s MXNB/USDC pool now eligible for AERO emissions, unlocking onchain USD/MXN trading appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Velvet Capital's liquidity move to Aerodrome highlights a growing trend in DeFi towards centralized liquidity management, balancing efficiency with platform risk.
The post Velvet Capital migrates protocol-owned liquidity to Aerodrome on Base appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
tea’s open-source L2 goes live at 00:00 UTC on June 4, bringing $TEA into market as the economic layer for open-source software. tea, the open-source L2 built to make open-source work more visible, verifiable, governable, and supportable, today announced that mainnet and $TEA will go live at 00:00 UTC on
DefiLlama data shows Aerodrome at ~$453.8M TVL and $12.39B 30‑day volume as Grayscale drops AERO from its DeFi Fund. Can Base MCP flows offset waning hype?
The event could redefine investment in robotics by merging blockchain liquidity with real-world robotics, potentially transforming capital markets.
The post Aerodrome hosts first Virtuals launch with XMAQUINA on May 26 appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The platform upgrade and token consolidation could enhance cross-chain liquidity but also centralize risk, impacting investor confidence.
The post Aerodrome upgrades platform ahead of Aero launch in July appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The post Press Release appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Aerodrome voting opens May 28. Mainnet Launch: June 4. This quarter, AI started writing its own exploits. Tea is shipping the trust layer underneath it. Code Is Abundant. Trust Is Not. In the span of seven days, the ground beneath the software shifted twice. On May 4, The Conversation published the most widely-circulated post-mortem yet of Anthropic’s Claude Mythos Preview, the frontier model Anthropic itself declined to release, because it can autonomously discover zero-days, generate working exploits, and execute multi-step cyber operations with minimal human oversight. Days later, Google’s Gemma 4 landed inside Android’s AICore and Google AI Edge, putting agentic code generation, function calling, and offline reasoning on every developer’s phone and laptop under an Apache 2.0 license. The implication is unavoidable. When any device can generate, execute, and weaponize software autonomously, trust cannot live in the binary.