xAI Recruits Crypto Specialist to Train AI on Market Analysis
Elon Musk’s xAI is seeking a crypto market expert to help train its AI models on onchain data, trading behavior, and market structure dynamics.
By Matthew Clarke | Edited by Julia Sakovich
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3 mins readElon Musk’s xAI is hiring a crypto specialist to train AI models | Photo: Unsplash
Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence company xAI is expanding its push into financial intelligence by recruiting a crypto market specialist to help train its AI systems on digital asset trading and onchain analysis. The move highlights growing institutional interest in combining artificial intelligence with crypto market data as digital assets mature into a distinct financial asset class.
According to a recent job listing, xAI is seeking a remote “Finance Expert – Crypto” to generate training data that reflects how professional traders interpret blockchain metrics, token economics, and risk in highly volatile, continuous markets. The role involves producing annotated datasets, structured reasoning traces, and audio or video explanations designed to help AI models better replicate expert-level market analysis.
Teaching AI the Mechanics of Crypto Markets
The position goes beyond surface-level price analysis. xAI said the expert will help models understand complex crypto-specific challenges such as fragmented liquidity across venues, market microstructure inefficiencies, and execution risks tied to miner extractable value. These factors play a significant role in digital asset trading but remain difficult for generalized AI systems to model accurately.
By incorporating real-world trading frameworks, the company aims to improve how its models reason through probabilistic outcomes, volatility regimes, and rapid shifts in sentiment. Industry observers note that crypto markets offer a uniquely demanding training environment due to their 24-hour trading cycles, rapid innovation, and limited centralized oversight.
Compensation for the role ranges from $45 to $100 per hour, depending on experience and location. The posting underscores xAI’s willingness to source domain-specific expertise rather than relying solely on abstract financial datasets.
AI and Crypto Converge at the Infrastructure Level
The hiring effort comes amid broader convergence between artificial intelligence platforms and digital asset ecosystems. Executives across the crypto industry have argued that blockchain data, with its transparency and real-time settlement, provides a valuable training ground for AI systems designed to analyze financial behavior.
Market participants also see strategic overlap with Musk’s broader ambitions for X. The platform has increasingly positioned itself as a hub for financial discussion, real-time market commentary, and digital asset communities. Recent disclosures indicate that X is developing features that surface live price data, token metadata, and contextual market information directly within user feeds.
Separately, Musk has said X plans to launch an encrypted messaging product using peer-to-peer architecture inspired by Bitcoin’s design, further signaling interest in crypto-adjacent technologies.
For xAI, embedding crypto-native expertise into its model training reflects a shift toward applied financial intelligence rather than purely theoretical research. As AI systems are increasingly deployed in trading, risk management, and market surveillance, understanding crypto’s distinct structural features may offer a competitive edge.
The move also illustrates how digital asset markets are becoming part of the broader institutional technology stack, not just a niche for speculative trading but a data-rich environment shaping next-generation financial AI.
Matthew Clarke reports on blockchain infrastructure, network scalability, and the architecture supporting decentralized applications. His coverage focuses on layer-1 and layer-2 networks, validator economics, and the technical foundations behind major blockchain ecosystems. He frequently analyzes protocol upgrades, developer activity, and the long-term evolution of decentralized networks. Based in Toronto, Matthew follows technological developments shaping the future of blockchain systems.
a16z Crypto Unveils $2.2B Fund 5 to Bridge Infrastructure-to-Product Gap
Andreessen Horowitz’s crypto arm is deploying $2.2 billion to back founders turning blockchain infrastructure into everyday consumer products, with a heavy focus on stablecoins and AI agents.
By David Walker | Edited by Julia Sakovich
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Chris Dixon’s new $2.2 billion fund arrives as crypto pivots from speculative cycles to durable, product-led growth. Photo: Pexels
In a move that underscores a long-term commitment to the onchain era, a16z crypto announced the launch of Crypto Fund 5 on May 5, 2026. The new $2.2 billion vehicle, led by Chris Dixon and general partners Ali Yahya, Guy Wuollet, and Eddy Lazzarin, arrives during what the firm describes as a “signal-heavy” moment for the industry, where foundational infrastructure is finally maturing into usable consumer products.
From Speculation to Network Adoption
The firm’s thesis for Fund 5 is rooted in the belief that crypto cycles have reached a point of durable utility. Dixon highlights stablecoins as the clearest evidence of this shift; unlike speculative tokens, stablecoin usage has consistently climbed through market downturns, functioning as a global payment rail rather than a mere price-betting mechanism.
“Usage compounds because the technology is useful, not because of expectations about price action,” the announcement noted, pointing to the technology’s ability to bypass slow and expensive traditional alternatives.
A New Financial and AI Stack
The fund is strategically positioned to capitalize on three key pillars that have emerged since the last market cycle.
The expansion of perpetual futures, lending markets, and the tokenization of traditional assets, supported by the regulatory clarity of the GENIUS Act.
Backing the development of swarms of software agents that can autonomously acquire compute, data, and services while transacting on a user’s behalf.
Building transparent, verifiable networks that offer a trust-minimized alternative to the increasingly consolidated and opaque infrastructure of the modern internet.
By focusing on founders who can turn complex infrastructure into frictionless applications, a16z is betting that the current “quiet moments” of the cycle will produce the most lasting value. The fund seeks to replace legacy systems with a global, “always-on” architecture that settles instantly and is open to anyone with an internet connection. “The signal coming through,” Dixon wrote, “is one of the most encouraging it has been in years.”
Dutch Regulators Play Whac-A-Mole as Prediction Markets Evade Polymarket Ban
Despite a February ban on Polymarket, platforms like Kalshi and Hyperliquid are flourishing in the Netherlands as the Ksa struggles to enforce “operational” supervision.
By Laura Mitchell | Edited by Julia Sakovich
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Dutch regulators face an uphill battle as decentralized and foreign-regulated platforms continue to offer "financial contracts" to local users. Photo: Pexels
The Dutch Gaming Authority (Ksa) thought it had closed the book on crypto-native prediction markets when it sent Polymarket packing in February 2026. However, as any gambler, or “financial contract enthusiast”, knows, the house always finds a way. Despite the official ban, platforms like Kalshi, Hyperliquid, and Interactive Brokers are still actively serving Dutch users, according to a recent investigation by the financial newspaper Het Financieele Dagblad (FD).
Targeting the Eredivisie
While Polymarket was sanctioned for operating without a gambling license, its competitors are leaning into jurisdictional gray areas. Kalshi, the US-regulated heavyweight, has reportedly been aggressively courting Dutch interest by offering markets on the Eredivisie football league and previous national elections. Meanwhile, Hyperliquid, which operates as a decentralized blockchain platform, recently expanded its prediction offerings to the Netherlands, relying on its permissionless architecture to bypass traditional gatekeepers.
The Ksa has issued a stern warning: similar websites are under their supervision and will be sanctioned. Yet, enforcement remains a digital game of whac-a-mole. The regulator’s spokesperson emphasized that the Polymarket ban was not an isolated incident but a precedent for the entire category, stating that any platform offering similar betting mechanics falls under their direct oversight.
The Financial Contract Defense
Perhaps the most intriguing strategy comes from Interactive Brokers. The investment giant frames its prediction products not as gambling, but as legitimate financial contracts overseen by the Central Bank of Ireland. However, this defense hit a snag this week when the Irish central bank told the FD it had no knowledge of such an arrangement, referring questions back to the Irish gambling authority.
This jurisdictional “shell game” is part of a broader global conflict. In the United States, a federal-versus-state battle is reaching a fever pitch. The CFTC has filed lawsuits against five states, including New York, Illinois, and Wisconsin, arguing they overstepped by attempting to regulate markets that fall under federal jurisdiction. Venture capital firm a16z has sided with the federal position, claiming that state-level blocks conflict with the “impartial access” required for healthy markets.
A High-Stakes Game with Low Odds
While the platforms argue over legality, the statistics for users are sobering. Research from the London Business School published in April 2026 found that only 3% of prediction market participants make consistent profits, while nearly 70% lose money.
Compounding these losses is the persistent specter of insider trading. Suspicions reached a boiling point after anonymous traders correctly bet on high-sensitivity events, including the US attack on Iran and the attempted kidnapping of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro. As Brazil, France, and Singapore move to block these “shadow casinos,” the industry finds itself at a crossroads: either prove its utility as an “information aggregator” or risk being regulated out of existence by authorities tired of the semantic gymnastics.
UAE Free Zone Debuts Blockchain-Based Business IDs for 1,000+ Registered Firms
Innovation City Ras Al Khaimah is replacing static PDFs with dynamic onchain credentials, making sovereign digital identity a native feature for over 1,000 registered companies.
By Emily Carter | Edited by Julia Sakovich
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Innovation City’s move to onchain IDs marks a shift from traditional paper-based registries to a "blockchain-native" corporate identity framework. Photo: Pexels
In a significant leap toward fully autonomous corporate operations, Innovation City, the Ras Al Khaimah-based free zone, launched a first-of-its-kind blockchain-based digital business identity system on May 4, 2026. The initiative moves beyond traditional database entries, issuing sovereign, cryptographically verifiable credentials to more than 1,000 registered AI and Web3 firms on the OPN Chain.
Beyond the PDF: The “Native” Identity Shift
Historically, business licenses have been static documents, including PDFs or physical certificates that require manual verification by banks, landlords, and regulators. Innovation City’s new framework turns the business license into a dynamic onchain asset. This allows companies to prove their status and permissions instantly without relying on a central registrar’s manual confirmation.
According to Jimi Ibrahim, COO of IOPn (the infrastructure provider behind OPN Chain), this system differs from previous efforts like Estonia’s e-residency because the identity is a native primitive. It isn’t an optional layer added to a legacy registry. It is the registration itself.
Key features of the new framework:
Firms own their credentials and can present them to third-party providers (marketing, legal, tech) without returning to the free zone for a “stamp.”
Core transaction proofs stay onchain for security, while sensitive corporate data remains offchain to ensure privacy and compliance.
The distributed nature of OPN Chain’s validators ensures that business identities remain accessible regardless of regional geopolitical events.
Security for the AI Era
The launch arrives as “agentic commerce” (AI agents conducting business on behalf of humans) becomes a market standard. To combat social engineering risks, the system mandates a “human-in-the-loop” authorization requirement for consequential financial or legal actions.
Despite regional volatility, the UAE remains a hub for digital asset growth. Recent data suggests UAE investors are actually increasing positions in AI and blockchain infrastructure, viewing the technology as a stabilizing force. While external adoption by major banks is the next hurdle, Innovation City is betting that onchain identity will soon be the global standard for “how money works” in the machine economy.
Telegram to Absorb TON Foundation and Become The Open Network’s Largest Validator
In a monumental shift for the ecosystem, Pavel Durov announces Telegram will replace the TON Foundation as the primary driver of The Open Network, signaling a new era of tech superiority.
By Daniel Brooks | Edited by Julia Sakovich
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Telegram's deeper integration into TON infrastructure marks the culmination of a years-long journey to merge social messaging with blockchain settlement. Photo: Pexels
In a surprise announcement that has sent shockwaves through the digital asset market, Telegram founder Pavel Durov revealed on May 4, 2026, that the messaging giant will formally replace the TON Foundation as the primary driving force behind The Open Network (TON). Furthermore, Telegram is set to become the network’s largest validator, a move that effectively fuses the world’s most crypto-friendly messaging app with the core infrastructure of its native blockchain.
From Community-Led to Telegram-Driven
For years, TON has operated under the stewardship of the Switzerland-based TON Foundation, a community-driven organization that inherited the project after Telegram was forced to abandon it due to SEC litigation in 2020. Durov’s announcement marks the end of this transitional community era. By installing Telegram as the largest validator, the platform is moving beyond product distribution and into the very plumbing of the network.
While specific details regarding Telegram’s validator stake remain officially undisclosed, market reports suggest the company has already staked significant amounts of Toncoin (TON) to secure its position at the top of the network’s hierarchy. This consolidation of power is expected to streamline decision-making and accelerate the integration of blockchain features for Telegram’s nearly one billion monthly active users.
“Make TON Great Again”: Push Tech Superiority
Durov’s roadmap, which he colloquially dubbed the plan to “Make TON Great Again,” focuses heavily on what he calls “tech superiority.” The first major milestone in this new phase is the dramatic reduction of network fees. Following the activation of the Catchain 2.0 upgrade, transaction costs on TON have reportedly dropped sixfold, reaching “nearly zero”, which is roughly $0.0005 per transfer.
Over the next two to three weeks, Telegram plans to roll out a suite of upgrades to support this vision, including the revamped official website, new developer tools, and performance optimizations.
Market Reaction and Ecosystem Impact
The market responded to Durov’s “takeover” with immediate euphoria. Toncoin (TON) surged 33.8% within 24 hours of the post, climbing to $1.86 and re-entering the top 20 cryptocurrencies by market capitalization. Trading volume saw a massive expansion as investors priced in the structural demand created by a 950-million-user platform formally backing its own ledger.
However, the shift has also sparked debate regarding decentralization. By replacing a non-profit foundation with a private corporation as the lead developer and largest validator, TON is treading a path that challenges the traditional DeFi ethos. Nevertheless, for most users and developers, the trade-off for scale seems acceptable. With TON Connect now the exclusive protocol for Telegram’s ecosystem and mandatory migrations for Mini Apps already in effect, the “Telegram-TON” hybrid is now the most formidable player in the quest for mass blockchain adoption.
Ripple Deploys Intelligence Shield Against North Korean State Hackers After $500M Crypto Spree
Ripple is fighting back against the Lazarus Group’s human-first exploits, sharing critical intelligence with Crypto ISAC to stop North Korean operatives from infiltrating crypto firms through long-cycle social engineering.
By Laura Mitchell | Edited by Julia Sakovich
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Ripple is now sharing internal background check data and social profiles to prevent North Korean operatives from gaining "inside" access to crypto protocols. Photo: Pexels
In a month that saw more than half a billion dollars drained from the crypto ecosystem, the primary threat is no longer a bug in the code, but a “colleague” on a Zoom call. On May 5, 2026, Ripple announced it had begun sharing its internal threat intelligence on North Korean hackers with the broader industry via the Crypto ISAC (Information Sharing and Analysis Center). The move marks a strategic shift in how the sector defends itself against the Lazarus Group, which has transitioned from smart contract exploits to sophisticated, long-cycle social engineering.
Human-Centric Hack: $285M Drift Breach
The urgency behind Ripple’s initiative stems from a brutal April, where the Drift protocol lost $285 million, and the Kelp bridge was drained of $292 million. Unlike the DeFi Summer era of 2020, these were not “hacks” in the traditional sense. No vulnerabilities were exploited in the smart contracts; instead, North Korean operatives spent months befriending Drift’s contributors.
By passing background checks and building professional trust, these state-sponsored actors eventually slipped malware onto internal machines, granting them access to private keys. By the time the funds moved, traditional security audits had nothing to flag. The “attacker” was already a trusted member of the team. Ripple is now reframing this methodology as a “long-cycle social engineering” pattern that traditional security tools are fundamentally unequipped to catch.
Breaking the Cycle of Infiltration
Ripple’s contribution to Crypto ISAC aims to prevent these operatives from jumping from one firm to the next. The intelligence sharing includes specific data points that help security teams identify “connective tissue” between fake candidates.
“The strongest security posture in crypto is a shared one,” Ripple stated. “A threat actor who fails a background check at one company will apply to three more that same week. Without shared intelligence, every company starts from zero.” By pooling this data, Ripple hopes to turn individual company failures into a collective immune system for the industry.
Legal Warfare Over Frozen Assets
The reach of the Lazarus Group is now creating unprecedented legal friction. Following the Kelp breach, an attorney representing victims of North Korean terrorism served restraining notices on the Arbitrum DAO, claiming that 30,765 ETH frozen after the exploit is legally North Korean property under US enforcement law.
The move has sparked a fierce debate within the DeFi community. The lending giant Aave has stepped in to dispute the filing, arguing that a “thief does not gain lawful ownership of stolen property simply by taking it.” This legal battle places DAOs in a difficult position: caught between international anti-terrorism laws and the fundamental cryptographic principle that stolen funds belong to the original victims, not the state that sanctioned the theft.
As Ripple feeds its internal data into the Crypto ISAC, the industry is watching to see if intelligence sharing can move faster than the Lazarus Group’s recruiters. In an era where the biggest risk is the person you just hired, the “shared posture” may be the only defense left.