The9 Launches NFT Platform; HK SFC Issues Crypto Warning


    Transcript

    Welcome to The Daily Forkast, August 31, 2021. I’m Angie Lau, Editor-in-Chief of Forkast.News, covering all things blockchain.

    So much to cover today, one that’s uniquely well, China.

    A Chinese internet company which started out in gaming that did a 180 into mining crypto has made yet another move, this time into NFTs. The heat and big money behind non-fungible tokens is far from cooling off and China is just the tip of the iceberg, that and more coming up.

    Let’s get you up to speed from Asia to the world.

    First up, China-based The9 has announced that it is stepping into the NFT business with the launch of NFTStar. The platform is set to sell NFT collections featuring global stars.

    While China’s Central Bank has vowed to keep the pressure on cryptocurrency and speculative trading, NFTs have not faced any political backlash in the country. So looks like this is another sign of that market shifting up a gear.

    Forkast.News Timmy Shen reports.

    NFTStar, a wholly owned subsidiary of The9, will be based in Singapore and expects to launch in the fourth quarter.

    The company is offering incentives to those who signed up early. And while global sports stars will be the main partners initially, more collections from the entertainment and arts world are expected to follow.

    The platform says it will accept payments from credit cards to make it easier for mainstream consumers to get involved.

    The9 CEO Zhu Jun says adding NFT as a core business alongside cryptocurrency mining will help drive the company’s globalization strategy.

    For Forkast.News, Timmy Shen, Taipei, Taiwan.

    Meanwhile, in Korea, three major crypto exchanges are getting ready to follow international anti-money laundering rules. And they’re working together on this to figure out a way to abide by the Financial Action Task Force travel rule, that’s the FATF travel rule.

    Now, the joint effort is called “CODE”, short for Connect Digital Exchanges, and it’s a joint venture by Bithumb, Coinone, and Korbit in South Korea.

    Except here’s the twist – those three exchanges have yet to meet Korea’s own domestic standards, in order to continue operating in the country. And they only have 25 days left to do so. So much international intrigue.

    Forkast.News reporter Danny Park has more.

    The travel rule is the Financial Action Task Force’s guideline for virtual asset service providers, an effort to combat global money laundering and terrorist financing. It requires exchanges to collect information on senders and receivers of crypto transactions of US$1000 or more.

    Korea’s Financial Services Commission applies to requirement to any crypto transactions of over a million won, or about US$860. It has given exchanges until March 25th to construct the travel rule system.

    CODE aims to build a solution to serve any exchange that wants to comply with this international standard. The three exchanges will combine their individual anti-money laundering progress so far to further develop until the March deadline.

    In future CODE plans to link its system with those of trusted exchanges in other countries.

    However, as none of the three exchanges have been qualified by the FSC as legitimate crypto operators, they face the risk of being closed down if they don’t meet the new regulations before September 24th. Unless that happens first, we may not get to see CODE in action.

    For Forkast.News, I’m Danny Park.

    Now, over in Hong Kong, the Securities and Futures Commission, or the SFC, has warned that digital tokens and initial coin offerings, or ICOs, could be involved in unauthorized collective investment schemes.

    Ok, so what are we talking about?

    Well, the SFC’s warning comes as LABS token, a token for fractional investments into real estate projects, was added to the SFC’s suspected unauthorized CIS alert list on the same day.

    Now, professional investors or those with more than US$1 million in their portfolio are legally allowed to invest in unauthorized collective investment schemes.

    But the SFC has urged investors to exercise extreme caution and to do their own due diligence before investing.

    And finally, today, looks like you are never too young to make money from NFTs. I can’t wait to introduce you to this young lady in India.

    13-year-old Laya Mathikshara from Chennai has already made around
    US$40,000 selling her works as NFTs. Now that’s almost enough to buy a house in her home city.

    She started out exploring how to create digital art by watching online tutorials and has not looked back since she learned how to mint her works as NFTs.

    “When I was nine, I started with art, like basic paintings and drawings and portraits. When I was 11, I started with programming and stuff. And in this pandemic, I had a lot of time to kind of try to integrate both art and tech, both of my favorite hobbies together.”

    You got to love the hustle. Since then, one of her animated works of “Gratitude”, which pays tribute to Covid-19 frontline workers, has been nominated for both the All-American High School Film Festival and the 16th Busan International Kids and Youth Film Festival.

    If she’s got one fault, maybe it’s being a little too modest. Mathikshara says she’s not different, really, from any other teenager. – she loves to dance, is a picky eater, she tells us, you know, the usual.

    But it’s a great reminder. It’s never too early or late to start anything.

    And that’s The Daily Forkast from our vantage point right here in Asia. For more, visit Forkast.News. I’m Editor-in-Chief Angie Lau.Until the next time.



    Source link

    Previous articleOn-Chain Silence Before The Storm
    Next articleHow Bitcoin Bulls Can Make September A Month To Remember