Blockchains will face increasing pressure to compromise on decentralization to meet user demand for speed and scalability, Injective CEO Eric Chen said.
The post What Is RWA.xyz? Real-World Asset Tokenization Data Explained appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Page Last Reviewed: July 7, 2026 As tokenized Treasuries, private credit, and institutional funds have moved on-chain at a pace no other crypto sector has matched, one analytics platform has become the default reference point for tracking where that capital actually sits. RWA.xyz aggregates on-chain data across tokenization platforms, asset managers, and blockchains to answer a question institutions increasingly care about: how much real-world value is now represented on public blockchains, and by whom. Its data is now cited by the U.S. Treasury Department, JPMorgan, and S&P Global, among others. Key Takeaways RWA.xyz tracks tokenized real-world assets across categories including U.S. Treasuries, private credit, stocks, institutional funds, and stablecoins. The platform reports roughly $33.1 billion in distributed tokenized asset value as of July 2026, up from around $6 billion a
The post What are cross-chain bridges? Why they keep getting hacked appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Blockchains cannot talk to each other on their own. Bridges are the software that moves value between them, and they have leaked more money to hackers than any other kind of crypto infrastructure, billions across a handful of catastrophic breaches. Here is how bridges actually work, the different trust models behind them, and why the connective tissue of crypto is also its most dangerous single point of failure. Summary Cross chain bridges move assets and data between separate blockchains by locking, burning, or swapping tokens through different trust models. The security of a bridge depends largely on how it verifies transactions, with cryptographic models offering stronger protection than signer based systems. Bridges remain one of crypto’s biggest security risks because they hold large pools of assets and rely on complex infrastructure that has repeatedly been targeted by hackers
Blockchains cannot talk to each other on their own. Bridges are the software that moves value between them, and they have leaked more money to hackers than any other kind of crypto infrastructure, billions across a handful of catastrophic breaches.…
Hexens found a critical flaw in Aptos that was patched before any funds moved. The bug could have let an attacker forge assets and push them across bridges. Aptos disputes the severity, yet Polygon’s CTO validated the proof-of-concept. The case revives the argument for on-chain circuit breakers on fast L1s. A security firm has revealed [...]
Stablechains like Tempo, Arc, Plasma, and Stable are blockchains built for stablecoin payments with dollar gas fees. How they work and who builds them.
Injective's MCP server could democratize blockchain interactions, enabling seamless AI-driven smart contract deployment and fostering innovation.
The post Injective MCP server lets AI agents deploy smart contracts with a simple prompt appeared first on Crypto Briefing.