Internship
Cryptocurrency exchange and secure wallet services
$38/hr
No H1B Sponsorship
New York, NY, USA
Hybrid internship with 3 days a week in office.
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Gemini is a cryptocurrency exchange, wallet, and custodian that allows individuals and institutions to buy, sell, and store digital assets like Bitcoin and Ether. The platform prioritizes security and compliance, offering a user-friendly experience while protecting clients' investments. Gemini generates revenue through transaction fees, custodial services, and interest-bearing accounts, and it stands out from competitors by adhering to regulatory standards and implementing advanced security measures. The company's goal is to create a safe and accessible environment for trading and managing digital assets.
Company Size
1,001-5,000
Company Stage
Debt Financing
Total Funding
$500M
Headquarters
New York City, New York
Founded
2015
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Health Insurance
401(k) Company Match
401(k) Retirement Plan
Paid Parental Leave
Flexible Paid Time Off
Discretionary Annual Bonus
Long-term Incentive in the form of a new hire equity grant
Comprehensive health plans
Gemini plans to use the raised funds to develop institutional-grade custody services, expand into Asian markets, and integrate an AI-driven risk control system.
Crypto exchange Gemini has appointed Dan Chen as its new Chief Financial Officer (CFO), amid speculation that the company is preparing for a potential initial public offering (IPO).
Launched in 2023, Gemini introduced AI-driven features like image generation and text summarization but initially lacked core Assistant functionalities.
The mammoth references Gemini's previous involvement in a $15 million funding round for Colossal Biosciences, a de-extinction startup.
The initial contrast between the rules-based approach to cryptocurrency in the European Union and the enforcement-driven strategy in the United States was once thought to shape the global crypto industry’s trajectory. Now that President Donald Trump is in office, having promised to make America the crypto capital of the world, the dynamic is different. However, the EU’s structured Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA) policy framework, aimed at harmonizing the fragmented regulatory landscape across the EU’s 27 member states, is already in place and continues to shape the operational realities of some of the world’s largest crypto companies in one of the world’s biggest economic regions. MiCA’s applications, and its endemic speedbumps, could hold many lessons for an eventual U.S. regulatory environment