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Centralized data infrastructure violates Web3’s core of decentralization

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Opinion by: Michael O’Rourke, founder of Pocket Network and CEO of Grove

Open data is currently a major contributor toward building a global emerging tech economy, with an estimated market of over $350 billion. Open data sources often rely, however, on centralized infrastructure, contrary to the philosophy of autonomy and censorship resistance.

To realize its potential, open data must shift to decentralized infrastructure. Once open data channels start using a decentralized and open infrastructure, multiple vulnerabilities for user applications will be solved.

Open infrastructure has many use cases, from hosting a decentralized application (DApp) or a trading bot to sharing research data to training and inference of large language models (LLMs). Looking closely into each helps us better understand why leveraging decentralized infrastructure for open data is more utilitarian than centralized infrastructure.

Affordable LLM training and inference 

The launch of the open-source AI DeepSeek, which wiped out $1 trillion from the US tech markets, demonstrates the power of open-source protocols. It’s a wake-up call to focus on the new world economy of open data.

To begin with, closed-source, centralized AI models have high costs for training LLMs and generating accurate results.

Unsurprisingly, the final stage of training DeepSeek R1 cost just about $5.5 million, compared to over $100 million for OpenAI’s GPT-4. Yet, the emerging AI industry still relies on centralized infrastructure platforms like LLM API providers, which are essentially at odds with emerging open-source innovations. 

Hosting open-source LLMs like Llama 2 and DeepSeek R1 is simple and inexpensive. Unlike stateful blockchains requiring constant syncing, LLMs are stateless and only need periodic updates. 

Recent: Here’s why DeepSeek crashed your Bitcoin and crypto

Despite the simplicity, the computational costs of running inference on open-source models are high, as node runners need GPUs. These models can save costs as they don’t require real-time updates to continuously sync.

The rise of generalizable base models like GPT-4 has enabled the development of new products through contextual inference. Centralized companies like OpenAI won’t allow any random network support or inference from their trained model.

On the contrary, decentralized node runners can support the development of open-source LLMs by serving as AI endpoints to provide deterministic data to clients. Decentralized networks lower entry barriers by empowering operators to launch their gateway on top of the network.

These decentralized infrastructure protocols serve millions of requests on their permissionless networks by open-sourcing the core gateway and service infrastructure. Consequently, any entrepreneur or operator can deploy their gateway and tap into an emerging market.

For example, someone can train an LLM with decentralized computing resources on the permissionless protocol Akash, which enables customized computing services at 85% lower prices than centralized cloud providers.

The AI training and inference market has immense potential. AI companies spend approximately $1 million daily on infrastructure maintenance to run LLM inference. This takes the service obtainable market, or SAM, to roughly $365 million annually.

As the data suggests, the market conditions indicate a massive growth potential for decentralized infrastructure.

Accessible research data sharing

In the scientific and research domain, data sharing combined with machine learning and LLMs can potentially accelerate research and improve human lives. Access to that data has been walled in by the high-cost journal system, which selectively publishes the research that its board approves of and is broadly inaccessible behind expensive subscriptions.

With the rise of blockchain-based zero-knowledge ML models, data can now be shared and computed trustlessly, and privacy can be preserved without revealing sensitive data. Thus, researchers and scientists can share and access research data without de-anonymizing potentially restricted personally identifiable information. 

To sustainably share open research data, researchers need access to a decentralized infrastructure that rewards them for access to that data, cutting out the middleman. An incentivized open data network can ensure that scientific data remains accessible outside the walled garden of expensive journals and private corporations.

Unstoppable DApp hosting

Centralized data hosting platforms such as Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud and Microsoft Azure are popular among app developers. Despite their easy accessibility, centralized platforms suffer from a single point of failure, affecting reliability and leading to rare but plausible outages.

There are various instances in tech history when Infrastructure-as-a-Service platforms have failed to provide uninterrupted services.

For example, in 2022, MetaMask temporarily denied access to users from specific geographical regions because Infura blocked them after some US sanctions. Although MetaMask is decentralized, its default connections and endpoints depend on centralized tech like Infura to access Ethereum.

This wasn’t an isolated incident, either. Infura clients also faced an interruption in 2020, while Solana and Polygon experienced an overloading of centralized remote procedure calls (RPCs) during peak traffic.

It is difficult for one company to handle diverse developer needs in a thriving open-source ecosystem. There are thousands of layer 1s, rollups, indexing, storage and other middleware protocols with niche use cases.

Most centralized platforms, like RPC providers, keep building the same infrastructure, which creates friction, slows growth metrics, and affects scalability because protocols focus on rebuilding the foundation instead of adding new features.

On the contrary, the massive success of decentralized social network applications like BlueSky and AT Protocol signals users’ quest for decentralized protocols. Moving past centralized RPCs into accessing open data, such protocols remind us of the need to build and work on decentralized infrastructure.

For example, a decentralized finance protocol can source onchain price data from Chainlink to stop depending on centralized APIs for price feeds and real-time market data.

There are roughly 100 billion serviceable RPC requests in the Web3 market, costing $3–$6 per million requests. Thus, the total addressable market size of Web3 RPC is $100 million–$200 million annually. With the steady growth of new data availability layers, there can be over 1 trillion RPC requests daily.

It is imperative to pivot toward decentralized infrastructure to stay in sync with open data transfers and tap into the open-source data market.

Open data requires decentralized infrastructure

We’ll see generalized blockchain clients offloading storage and networking to specialized middleware protocols in the long term.

For example, Solana led the decentralization movement when it first started to store its data on chains such as Arweave. No wonder Solana and Phantom were once again the primary tools for handling the massive TRUMP presidential memecoin traffic, a key moment in financial and cultural history.

In the future, we’ll see more data flow through infrastructure protocols, creating dependencies on middleware platforms. As protocols become more modular and scalable, it’ll make space for open-source, decentralized middleware to integrate at the protocol level.

It is unfeasible to have centralized companies function as intermediaries for light client headers.

Decentralized infrastructure is trustless, distributed, cost-effective and censorship-resistant. As a result, decentralized infrastructure will be the default choice for app developers and companies alike, leading to a mutually beneficial growth narrative.

Opinion by: Michael O’Rourke, founder of Pocket Network and CEO of Grove.

This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as legal or investment advice. The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

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Mashinsky’s 12-year sentence sets tone of enforcement in Trump era

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The US federal court for the Southern District of New York has sentenced former Celsius CEO Alex Mashinsky to 12 years in prison for fraud.

Mashinsky’s legal team sought a light sentence. They highlighted his spotless record before the Celsius incident, along with his military service and willingness to plead guilty. But US prosecutors were less inclined to leniency, suggesting on April 28 that the judge deliver a 20-year sentence for his actions.

Betting markets predicted a light sentence ahead of the May 8 hearing. Polymarket showed only 11% odds for a 20-year sentence or higher.

Source: Polymarket

President Donald Trump began his second term with high-profile pardons of crypto executives, signalling that his administration may bring leniency to crypto fraudsters like Mashinsky. His sentencing today, however, suggests otherwise.

Trump’s DOJ wants Mashinsky sentence to serve as a warning

Crypto-related crimes have their limits, according to the current US Department of Justice. Jay Clayton, the Trump-nomianted US attorney leading the prosecution, said on April 28 that the suggested 20-year sentence serves as a “critical warning to other entrepreneurs, executives, and promoters in the cryptocurrency industry and in any future industry as-yet unconceived: that fraud will be punished severely, regardless of the technology or industry in which it occurs.”

Bitcoin advocate Jameson Lopp quotes the prosecution’s argument that Mashinsky targeted retail investors. Source: Jameson Lopp

Clayton argued that a strong sentence was warranted as the fraud targeted unsophisticated retail investors rather than institutional parties with protections and expertise. Mashinsky “preyed on ordinary individuals who relied on his promises of safety and financial security.” 

The Mashinsky defense team drew attention to Mashinsky’s character, highlighting his long career in business, devotion to family and service with the Israel Defense Forces. 

His lawyers also drew distinctions between Mashinsky’s case and that of Bankman-Fried, claiming, “There are no allegations — let alone any proof — that Alex misappropriated, embezzled or stole any customer assets or any Celsius money.”

On May 5, Mashinsky’s legal team argued that these mitigating factors should warrant a sentence of no more than 366 days.

“The government’s venom-laced submission recasts this case as one involving a predator with an intent to target victims, harm them, and steal their money,” his team said.

Mashinsky’s lawyers called the suggested 20-year term a “death-in-prison sentence.”

Mashinsky’s sentence follows high-profile Trump pardons for crypto execs

Trump started his term with the pardon of Silk Road 2.0 founder Ross Ulbricht, whose acceptance of Bitcoin (BTC) on his narcotics trading platform endeared him to the crypto community. 

The president also commuted the sentences of Arthur Hayes, Benjamin Delo and Samuel Reed, three BitMEX crypto exchange executives who pleaded guilty to violating the Bank Secrecy Act and failing to establish a proper Anti-Money Laundering program.

Sam Mangel, a consultant to white-collar convicts who advised former Trump staffer Steve Bannon and Bankman-Fried, told Politico there has been a large spike in interest in presidential pardons.

“Everybody that is in prison now is keenly aware of the environment, and it’s become a very hot topic within the low- and minimum-security inmate communities,” said Mangel.

Related: US stablecoin bill loses democrats amid Trump corruption concerns

High-profile crypto defendants seem to have taken notice, too. Roger Ver, an early Bitcoin advocate and libertarian activist, is facing federal tax evasion charges. In January, he released a video making an outright plea to Trump for a commutation. Ver claimed that he is the victim of lawfare and likened his persecution to Trump’s legal problems following the Jan. 6 scandal. 

Sam Bankman-Fried, the disgraced former CEO of now-defunct exchange FTX, likened his court experience with Trump’s defamation lawsuit in an interview with The New York Sun on Feb. 18. He claimed his trial was politicized under the Biden administration and that he didn’t think there was “a very fair and balanced view or approach.” His parents also reportedly met with lawyers and people close to the Trump administration to explore the possibility of a presidential pardon. 

Trump’s commutation of the BitMEX executives has even led former Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao to apply for clemency. On May 6, Zhao said that his lawyers had submitted an application and were awaiting a response.

The current administration is still writing the rules of the road as regulators reshuffle personnel and priorities and new legal frameworks for crypto take shape. The picture is further muddled by Trump’s own crypto projects, which have raised concerns over corruption and conflicts of interest. Mashinsky’s sentence shows that, for the financial world, certain crimes will not go unpunished. 

Magazine: Adam Back says Bitcoin price cycle ’10x bigger’ but will still decisively break above $100K

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Former FTX exec's wife says gov't 'induced a guilty plea'

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Michelle Bond, the wife of former FTX Digital Markets co-CEO Ryan Salame, who faces federal campaign finance charges, is pushing for dismissal on the grounds that US prosecutors deceived her husband in a plea deal.

In a May 7 filing in the US District Court for the Southern District of New York, Bond’s lawyers reiterated some of the claims Salame made in opposing his plea deal with the government, which ultimately still led to him serving time in prison. She claimed that prosecutors obtained a deal with Salame through “stealth and deception” by allegedly agreeing they would not file charges against Bond. 

“Mr. Salame and Ms. Bond’s attorneys were advised that the agreement to cease investigating Ms. Bond could not be placed within the four corners of the Salame plea or other written agreement, but the government still offered it as an inducement to induce the plea,” said the filing, adding:

“At a minimum, enough exists to demonstrate a legitimate factual dispute as to the nature and scope of the promises made to Mr. Salame and Ms. Bond to induce his guilty plea such that a hearing with discovery is required.”May 7 filing requesting a dismissal of one charge for Michelle Bond. Source: Courtlistener

Prosecutors charged Bond in August 2024 with conspiracy to cause unlawful campaign contributions, causing and accepting excessive campaign contributions, causing and receiving an unlawful corporate contribution, and causing and receiving a conduit contribution related to her failed run for a seat in the US House of Representatives in 2022. Salame, who pleaded guilty to two felony charges in 2023 and was later sentenced to more than seven years in prison, attempted to void his deal with prosecutors, claiming it had included an agreement not to charge Bond.

Related: Former FTX executive Ryan Salame’s prison sentence reduced by 1 year

The May 7 filing requested the court suppress any statements Bond made after the alleged “inducement” in Salame’s deal. The former FTX executive made similar claims in court filings attempting to nullify his plea, but later dropped the matter and reported to prison in October 2024.

Bond hinted that her running as a Republican — similar politically-motivated claims made by Salame — had contributed to the campaign finance charges. The indictment alleged she filed false reports to the Federal Election Commission related to funds used for her campaign.

The FTX saga hasn’t ended… yet

Since the collapse of FTX in 2022, nearly all former executives indicted on charges related to the misuse of the crypto exchange’s funds have had their day in court.

Former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried, who pleaded not guilty, went through a trial in 2023 and was later sentenced to 25 years in prison. His lawyers filed a notice of appeal, and reports suggested he may be looking for a pardon from US President Donald Trump.

Caroline Ellison, the former CEO of Alameda Research, was sentenced to two years in prison in September 2024 as part of a plea deal and began serving her time in November. Nishad Singh and Gary Wang, former FTX executives who also pleaded guilty to charges, were each sentenced to time served in 2024.

Magazine: XRP win leaves Ripple and industry with no crypto legal precedent set

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Trump tricked into pushing XRP for crypto reserve: Report

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US President Donald Trump was reportedly manipulated by a lobbyist tied to Ripple Labs into announcing the XRP token would be part of his plans for a national cryptocurrency reserve.

According to a May 8 Politico report, an employee of pro-Trump lobbyist Brian Ballard gave the president the text to a social media post she recommended he write announcing a US strategic crypto reserve that would include XRP, Solana (SOL), and Cardano (ADA). After he posted the message to his social media platform on March 2, Trump learned Ripple was one of Ballard’s clients, infuriating the president, who felt like he’d been used, Politico reported, citing two people familiar with the incident.

“He is not welcome in anything anymore,” said Trump, referencing Ballard, according to the report.

March 2 Truth Social post announcing US crypto reserve. Source: Donald Trump

Trump had connections to Ripple long before the announcement of XRP in the proposed crypto reserve. The blockchain firm’s chief legal officer, Stuart Alderoty, donated more than $300,000 to fundraising and political action committees supporting Trump in the 2024 election, and both he and CEO Brad Garlinghouse met with the then-president-elect in January and attended inauguration events.

Related: Democrats aim at Trump’s crypto profits with a 3-prong pincer move

Ripple also donated $5 million worth of XRP to Trump’s presidential inaugural fund and has been one of the largest contributors to Fairshake, a political action committee (PAC) that supports those it considers “pro-crypto” candidates through media buys. A spokesperson for the PAC said in January that it would continue its efforts in the 2026 midterm elections.

Trump moved forward on crypto reserve days later

The president often uses his social media platform to suggest policies before any official announcement through the White House. Trump signed an executive order to create a “Digital Asset Stockpile” on March 6 — roughly four days after the post, which was still live at the time of publication.

The price of XRP did not appear to significantly react to the May 8 report. At the time of publication, it was $2.23, having risen roughly 5% in the previous 24 hours. Cointelegraph reached out to a Ripple spokesperson for comment, but did not receive a response at the time of publication.

Magazine: Trump’s crypto ventures raise conflict of interest, insider trading questions

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