Full-Time
Social media platform for short-form content
No salary listed
Senior, Expert
Chicago, IL, USA + 1 more
More locations: New York, NY, USA
X is a social media platform that allows users to share and interact with short-form content known as posts. Originally launched in 2006 as Twitter, it became popular for its real-time updates and character-limited messages, facilitating quick communication and public discussions. After being acquired by Elon Musk in 2022, the platform was rebranded to X and is evolving into an "everything app" that aims to include features beyond social networking, such as payments and audio/video communication. Users can follow accounts, reply to posts, share media, and engage with trending topics through hashtags. X differentiates itself from competitors by its focus on becoming a comprehensive platform for various digital interactions, not just social networking. The goal of X is to create a versatile space for communication, news sharing, and personal expression, while also enhancing user engagement and connectivity.
Company Size
1,001-5,000
Company Stage
Growth Equity (Venture Capital)
Total Funding
$94.3B
Headquarters
Bastrop, Texas
Founded
2006
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Democratic U.S. senator for Georgia Jon Ossoff said President Donald Trump’s invitation to top meme coin holders constitutes an “impeachable offense.” Answering a question from a town hall meeting attendee on Friday, Ossoff said:“He is granting audiences to people who purchase the memecoin that directly enriches him.”Ossoff was referring to the gala dinner invite announced on Wednesday for the 220 top holders of the Trump memecoin.Ossoff said that the move constitutes “selling access for what are effectively payments” made “directly” to Trump. Therefore, it undeniably “rises to the level of an impeachable offense, and the reality is that that’s just one of many,” he added.Only three U.S. Presidents have been impeached by Congress. President Trump was impeached twice during his first term—the only President to have faced two impeachments.The impeachment process requires the House of Representatives to launch a formal impeachment inquiry. If the House Judiciary Committee approves, articles of impeachment go to the full House, where a simple majority vote can impeach the president
Decrypt’s Art, Fashion, and Entertainment Hub. Discover SCENEAlabama’s Securities Commission this week dropped its enforcement action against crypto exchange Coinbase for its staking program—an apparent sign that regulators are letting up on digital assets companies as the federal government continues its pro-crypto pivot under President Trump.But Commissioner Amanda Senn told Decrypt the regulator is still as committed as ever to promoting “market stability and integrity”—and it won’t hesitate to bring enforcement actions against Coinbase or any other firm, if necessary.“We merely recognized that we may be able to accomplish what we want without the time and expense of litigation,” Senn said. “Had we been further down the road [in our action against Coinbase], we may have proceeded.”Crypto out of the crosshairs?Alabama is one of 10 states that banded together in June 2023 to bring a spate of enforcement actions against Coinbase, alleging the crypto exchange had violated securities laws by failing to properly register its staking services.But now, as policymakers and federal regulators ratchet back their oversight of the digital asset industry under pro-crypto President Donald Trump, that unity has largely crumbled.Five of the states—Illinois, Kentucky, South Carolina, Vermont, and Alabama—have dropped their enforcement actions against Coinbase over the past few weeks, while regulators in five other states are resisting pressure from Coinbase to do the same, according to a report from political news outlet Punchbowl.Five holdouts are still electing to waste taxpayer resources on lawsuits, and four of those have banned staking with @coinbase, depriving consumers of the right to earn on their platform of choice. 2/3 — paulgrewal.eth (@iampaulgrewal) April 23, 2025“We’re halfway there: Alabama just dropped its enforcement action against Coinbase,” the firm’s lead legal counsel Paul Grewal said Wednesday in a social media post, adding that the states’ actions were “misguided” and claiming that the “holdouts are still electing to waste taxpayer resources.”However, Senn told Decrypt that she and her colleagues “don’t believe litigation is a waste of time”—and their call to drop an enforcement action against the firm “should not be taken by anyone that we will not litigate if an appropriate regulatory scheme [for the cryptocurrency industry] is not adopted” in the U.S.Alabama rescinded its enforcement action against Coinbase to “allow time” for policymakers to create a legislative framework for the cryptocurrency industry—a move that could save investor shareholder and taxpayer dollars, Senn explained.“By all accounts, a regulatory framework appears imminent, so it made sense for us to table our litigation posture and allow time for our policymakers to continue their good work,” Senn said.Experts expect a market structure bill to pass in the latter half of this year, despite recent rumblings of disagreements between crypto-industry power players over what that legislation should entail.Senn noted that lawmakers and federal regulators are holding multiple hearings and bimonthly roundtable discussions on crypto-focused legislative efforts and regulations.“They’re pretty aggressive in their agenda,” she said, speaking of the pace at which lawmakers have moved to advance crypto-focused policy efforts.Rethinking enforcementHowever, mounting momentum for legislative reform on Capitol Hill is just one reason for which the Alabama Securities Commission dropped its action against Coinbase.When the Commission decided to drop its enforcement action, it was still in the early stages of that process and was engaging in talks with Coinbase’s team, according to Senn.“There were examinations of procedures but we were not in active discovery,” she explained.That’s because—unlike some states that issued cease and desist orders to Coinbase—Alabama issued a show-cause order, a kind of enforcement action that acts more as a “vehicle for discussions” than a directive for a firm to completely halt its operations in a particular jurisdiction."Some states have already expended significant resources toward litigation and were much further down the road," Senn explained. "Each jurisdiction should make its own decision about how it should proceed."Asked why Alabama opted to issue a show-cause instead of immediately ordering Coinbase to stop its activities in its jurisdiction, Senn said: “I consider [Coinbase] part of the financial sector—it’s a dollar in, a dollar out… but I appreciate that this is new technology, and a different transmission process and rather unique business model.” “Now if we had issued a cease and desist, then the conversation would have been entirely different,” she added.Senn stressed that Alabama’s choice to withdraw its enforcement action against Coinbase doesn’t mean the agency will hesitate to go after firms that break the rules or threaten to harm consumers.Regulators in the Yellowhammer State are “still combating fraud” and protecting consumers, according to Senn, who referenced the infamous Mt. Gox Bitcoin exchange that faced hacks and shut down in 2014, leaving users with massive losses.“Mt
As Bitcoin closes the week at a two-month high above $93,000, and other major cryptos like Solana and Ethereum register impressive gains, Sui Network has emerged as the leader of the top-cap coins, registering a 70% weekly price increase. The rally appears to have been fueled by the launch of the Grayscale SUI Trust and a partnership with xPortal/xMoney Mastercard, enabling SUI holders to spend their digital assets seamlessly in the real world.SUI’s breakout week: price and platform metricsSui’s native token, SUI, has experienced a dramatic rally over the past seven days. Heading into the weekend, it made gains of 70%, reaching over $3.5 per coin and propelling the SUI token to the 13th-largest crypto by market cap, now valued at over $11 billion with a weekly trading volume of more than $3.3 billion.The platform’s decentralized finance (DeFi) ecosystem has been a key driver of this momentum, with popular decentralized exchange (DEX) Cetus registering an 84% surge in weekly volume at over $1.4 billion. This uptick highlights growing user confidence and developer engagement as more capital is locked into Sui’s smart contracts and DeFi apps despite broader macro uncertainty.What is Sui Network, and what sets it apart?Launched as a Layer 1 blockchain, Sui Network is engineered for high scalability, low latency, and efficient asset management. At its core lies an object-centric data model and the Move programming language, allowing for parallel transaction processing and sub-second finality. This efficient architecture enables Sui to handle a high transaction throughput, making it particularly attractive for DeFi, NFTs, and gaming applications that require speed and minimal fees.Unlike most traditional blockchains, which process transactions sequentially, Sui’s parallel execution model allows many transactions to be processed simultaneously, boosting speed and efficiency
It’s a debate as old as Bitcoin itself: How can the world’s first cryptocurrency achieve true mass adoption? While the Bitcoin community focuses on improving user experience (UX), rolling out custody solutions, battling legislators, and onboarding institutions, core Bitcoin developer and CEO of Synonym John Carvalho has proposed a simpler solution: deprecate satoshis and remove the decimals to “reduce the cognitive load.”Changing satoshi for bitcoin may improve the user experienceIn a Bitcoin Improvement Proposal (BIP) released in December 2024, Carvalho argues that eliminating the term ‘satoshi’ and removing the decimal points by changing satoshi for bitcoin would have a dual benefit: making Bitcoin easier to understand and removing unit bias, both key to attracting new users.Currently, one bitcoin is made up of 100 million tiny pieces called “base units” or satoshis, which cannot be divided further. Carvalho’s proposal suggests redefining “bitcoin” to refer to this smallest unit. Under this system, what we now call “1 bitcoin” would instead be referred to as “100 million bitcoins.”For example, a transaction currently displayed as 0.00010000 BTC would become 10,000 bitcoins in the new system, and 10.23486 BTC would be displayed as 1,023,486,000 bitcoins, redefining the concept of bitcoin millionaires.Bitcoiners are notoriously resistant to changeBitcoin’s history is filled with contentious debates, from the block size wars to SegWit and the ongoing arguments over NFTs on the blockchain. Unsurprisingly, Carvalho’s proposal has met considerable resistance since its introduction at the end of last year. Podcast host Stephan Livera mocked the idea on X, likening it to calling each slice of pizza a whole pizza:“Hey, I have this great idea! Instead of one pizza with eight slices, let’s call each slice a pizza. Just make sure when you go to order your pizza, you order eight pizzas now instead of one
Your face becomes data – and that data can travel. Essentially, when you upload a photo to an AI art generator, you’re giving away your biometric data (your face). Some AI tools store that data, use it to train future models, or even sell it to third parties – none of which you may be fully aware of unless you read the fine print. So does ChatGPT store your data? Yes, it does. OpenAI’s privacy policy clearly outlines that they collect two types of data: Information you provide (personal details like your name, email, and the photos or images you upload), and automatically collected information (device data, usage data, log data).The reality is, that ‘innocent’ upload to turn your family, friends or couple portraits into Ghibli-style art for fun could mean you’re feeding personal information into models that may be used to fine-tune results. Unless you actively opt out of ChatGPT’s training data collection or request deletion of your data via settings, they could be retained and used without explicit consent. Your image could contribute to deepfake epidemic