European Commission consultation (May 20–Aug 31, 2026) spotlights admin keys, governance and front-end control in DeFi. Teams can map exposure and document controls now.
The integration of mGLOBAL into Aave Horizon enhances DeFi's appeal to institutional investors, boosting liquidity and capital efficiency.
The post Midas launches mGLOBAL token on Aave Horizon for USDC borrowing appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The merging of DeFi and TradFi signals a transformative shift in investment strategies, fostering diversified portfolios and new market dynamics.
The post BlackRock’s Jay Jacobs calls DeFi and TradFi merger ‘The Great Convergence’ appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Bitcoin L2 builders are shifting from token apps to overcollateralized lending as liquidity, security, and UX constraints bite. Here’s what matters now.
Uniswap's milestone highlights DeFi's potential to integrate traditional finance, though regulatory and smart contract risks persist.
The post Uniswap sees $9.1B in real-world asset swaps, driven by tokenized S&P 500 product deSPXA appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
PancakeSwap's milestone highlights DeFi's growing role in real-world asset trading, offering new opportunities and risks for investors.
The post PancakeSwap crosses $50M in total volume for tokenized assets appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Starknet's streamlined privacy features could significantly enhance user adoption of DeFi by balancing privacy with regulatory compliance.
The post Starknet outlines steps to access private DeFi with wallets appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The European Commission’s latest push to reduce dependence on foreign technology providers is not surprising. If Europe believes that critical digital services could be disrupted by foreign governments, foreign legal systems, or foreign-owned providers, it will, of course, respond. That concern is now being expressed in the language of “kill switch” risk, meaning the fear that the cloud, AI, or semiconductor services that Europe depends on could be interrupted or constrained by forces beyond its control.
At a high level, that concern is valid. Europe is right to worry about strategic dependence. If critical public services, regulated workloads, or national-interest systems rely on infrastructure controlled elsewhere, sovereignty becomes more than a policy slogan. It becomes an architectural issue. However, I am skeptical of the leap from identifying the problem to assuming that a policy response will produce a cleaner, safer, or even more sovereign market. There is a good chance it may