Normal view

There are new articles available, click to refresh the page.
Yesterday — 5 December 2025Main stream

Polymarket to Launch In-House Trading Desk That Bets Against Users: Report

5 December 2025 at 16:20

Polymarket is recruiting staff for an internal market-making team that would trade against its own customers, mirroring a controversial feature already used by rival Kalshi that has drawn criticism and legal challenges.

According to Bloomberg, the New York-based prediction market startup has approached traders, including sports bettors, to join the new unit, people familiar with the matter said, requesting anonymity because the plans remain private.

Polymarket declined to comment on the recruitment effort.

The move comes as the platform prepares its full U.S. relaunch after securing regulatory clearance from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, having paid a $1.4 million penalty in 2022 for operating an unregistered derivatives exchange.

Kalshi’s Market-Making Unit Faces Legal Scrutiny

Kalshi already operates an in-house trading arm, Kalshi Trading, which places bids on the exchange and effectively takes opposing positions to customers’ bets.

Company executives have defended the unit as necessary to create liquidity and improve the user experience.

Still, critics argue it creates inherent conflicts of interest and makes Kalshi resemble a traditional sportsbook rather than a neutral peer-to-peer platform.

Some are now claiming that the company is a gambling company and not a prediction company.

“Let’s just call a spade a spade, it’s gambling, lots of things are gambling,” a X user said.

😂😂😂😂
it has been decided by the courts
🤣🤣🤣🤣 https://t.co/lU0S6XWrkA

— Martin Shkreli (@MartinShkreli) December 5, 2025

A proposed class action lawsuit filed last month alleges that Kalshi Trading sets betting lines that disadvantage customers, claiming “consumers place bets on Kalshi, they face off against money provided by a sophisticated market maker on the other side of the ledger.

Kalshi co-founder Luana Lopes Lara dismissed the lawsuit as a “pure smear campaign” on social media.

She stated that Kalshi Trading operates unprofitably and receives “no preferential access or treatment.

However, the legal challenge shows mounting concerns about whether prediction markets function as advertised, neutral platforms where users with differing opinions trade directly with each other.

1. Rebrand gambling as asset allocation
2. Rebrand sportsbook as truth engine
3. Rebrand bets as predictions
4. Spin up in-house market maker to c̶o̶m̶p̶e̶t̶e̶ collaborate with c̶u̶s̶t̶o̶m̶e̶r̶s̶ fellow investors for the greater good

It's really noble if you think about it. https://t.co/UQx67fg3DI

— Harry Crane (@HarryDCrane) December 5, 2025

Push for Market-Making Comes Amid Rapid U.S. Expansion

Polymarket’s decision to build an internal trading desk arrives as the company executes its return to American markets following years offshore.

In December, the CFTC issued a no-action letter covering QCX LLC and QC Clearing LLC, two entities Polymarket acquired earlier in 2025 for $112 million to gain licensed designated contract market status and regulated clearing capabilities.

The agency granted temporary relief from certain swap data reporting requirements, allowing the platform to operate within the same framework governing federally supervised U.S. trading venues.

🇺🇸 Prediction market platform Polymarket says it has received an Amended Order of Designation from the CFTC.#Crypto #CFTChttps://t.co/H44tIIxPaz

— Cryptonews.com (@cryptonews) November 25, 2025

Founder and CEO Shayne Coplan confirmed receiving “the green light to go live in the USA” and credited CFTC staff for completing the process in record time.

The regulatory clearance caps a lengthy journey that intensified in November 2024 when the FBI raided Coplan’s Manhattan residence and seized electronic devices as part of an investigation into whether Americans continued accessing the site through VPNs despite the 2022 ban.

Despite being barred from U.S. operations since 2022, Polymarket expanded aggressively overseas, recording roughly $6 billion in wagers during the first half of 2025 alone.

The platform gained global attention during the 2024 presidential election cycle, as its markets closely tracked Donald Trump’s odds of winning.

Market Makers and Growing Institutional Interest

Prediction markets rely heavily on market makers willing to take less popular trades, as the platforms match buyers with sellers on binary yes-or-no contracts.

Both Polymarket and Kalshi have offered incentives rewarding heavy users who provide liquidity, while a small number of traditional financial trading firms, including Susquehanna International Group and Jump Trading, have begun serving as external market makers on Kalshi.

🔮 @GalaxyDigital is in talks to provide liquidity on Polymarket and Kalshi, reflecting the growing momentum of prediction markets among retail traders and Wall Street.#PredictionMarkets #Galaxy https://t.co/2wgytQSkZ4

— Cryptonews.com (@cryptonews) November 25, 2025

Mike Novogratz’s Galaxy Digital is currently in talks with both platforms to become a liquidity provider, with Novogratz telling Bloomberg that the firm is “doing some small-scale experimenting with market-making on prediction markets.

The broader debate centers on whether prediction markets genuinely differ from traditional gambling operations.

During a public appearance last month, Coplan called conventional sportsbooks a “scam” that “rip off the consumer,” positioning Polymarket as a transparent alternative where users trade against each other rather than facing house odds designed to extract profits.

The post Polymarket to Launch In-House Trading Desk That Bets Against Users: Report appeared first on Cryptonews.

Bitcoin Price Craters to $88,000, But JPMorgan Maintains $170,000 Target

5 December 2025 at 12:08

Bitcoin Magazine

Bitcoin Price Craters to $88,000, But JPMorgan Maintains $170,000 Target

Bitcoin price plunged to $88,000s on Friday, down over 4% in the past 24 hours. The cryptocurrency is trading near its seven-day low of $88,091, and about 4% below its seven-day high of $92,805. 

The global market capitalization for Bitcoin now stands at $1.77 trillion, with a 24-hour trading volume of $48 billion.

Despite the recent drop, Wall Street bank JPMorgan remains bullish on the Bitcoin price over the long term. The bank continues to maintain its gold-linked volatility-adjusted BTC target of $170,000 over the next six to twelve months. 

Analysts say the model accounts for fluctuations in price and mining costs.

One key factor in the market is Strategy (MSTR), the largest corporate Bitcoin holder. The company owns 650,000 BTC. Its enterprise-value-to-Bitcoin-holdings ratio, known as mNAV, currently stands at 1.13. 

JPMorgan analysts describe this as “encouraging.” A ratio above 1.0 indicates Strategy is unlikely to face forced sales of its Bitcoin.

JUST IN: JPMorgan says it is sticking to its Bitcoin vs gold model target, which would see BTC hit $170,000 over the next year 🐂 pic.twitter.com/PNt9ojpBRv

— Bitcoin Magazine (@BitcoinMagazine) December 5, 2025

Strategy has also built a $1.44 billion U.S. dollar reserve. The reserve is designed to cover dividend payments and interest obligations for at least 12 months. The company aims to extend coverage to 24 months. 

Bitcoin mining pressure

Mining pressures continue to weigh on Bitcoin. The network’s hashrate and mining difficulty have fallen. High-cost miners outside China are retreating due to rising electricity costs and declining prices. Some miners have sold Bitcoin to remain solvent. 

JPMorgan now estimates Bitcoin’s production cost at $90,000, down from $94,000 last month. Falling hashrates can push production costs lower, but the short-term effect is sustained selling pressure from miners.

Institutional investors also show caution. BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust, or IBIT, has recorded six consecutive weeks of net outflows. Investors pulled more than $2.8 billion from the ETF over this period, according to Bloomberg.

The withdrawals highlight subdued appetite among traditional investors, even as Bitcoin prices stabilize. Analysts note that the trend marks a reversal from the persistent inflows seen earlier in the year.

The broader market is still recovering from the October 10 liquidation event. That crash wiped out over $1 trillion in crypto market value and pushed Bitcoin into a bear market.

Although the Bitcoin price has recovered some ground this week, momentum remains fragile.

JPMorgan analysts now say Bitcoin’s next major move depends less on miner behavior. Instead, it depends on Strategy’s ability to hold its Bitcoin without selling. The mNAV ratio and reserve fund provide confidence that the company can weather market volatility.

Other potential catalysts remain. The MSCI index decision on January 15 could impact Strategy’s stock and, indirectly, Bitcoin. Analysts say a positive outcome could trigger a strong rally.

Last week, Strategy’s Michael Saylor disputed MSCI index disputes and clarified that Strategy is a publicly traded operating company with a $500 million software business and a treasury strategy using Bitcoin, not a fund, trust, or holding company. 

He emphasized the firm’s recent activity, including five digital credit security offerings totaling over $7.7 billion in notional value.

Bitcoin price analysis

Bitcoin Magazine analysts believe that the bitcoin price correlation with Gold has recently strengthened mainly during market downturns, offering a clearer view of its purchasing power when analyzed against Gold instead of USD.

Breaking below the 350-day moving average (~$100,000) and the $100K psychological level signaled Bitcoin’s entry into a bear market, dropping roughly 20% immediately. 

While USD charts show a 2025 peak, Bitcoin measured in Gold peaked in December 2024 and has fallen over 50%, suggesting a longer bear phase. 

Historical Gold-based bear cycles indicate potential support zones approaching, with current declines at 51% over 350 days reflecting institutional adoption and constrained supply rather than cycle shifts.

For now, bitcoin price hovers near $88,000. 

Bitcoin price

This post Bitcoin Price Craters to $88,000, But JPMorgan Maintains $170,000 Target first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

Internet Computer (ICP) crashes to $3.50 as AI hype fades and market pressure mounts

5 December 2025 at 10:39
  • Internet Computer (ICP) price has dropped 6% in the past 24 hours to under $3.50.
  • Recently, the altcoin pumped from lows of $2.80 to above $9.62.
  • Overall market weakness could see ICP price tank further, although an uptick for Bitcoin will boost altcoins.
The Internet Computer (ICP) token has endured a sharp downturn in the past month, culminating in a 24-hour dip of over 6% as the price broke below $3.50.

Losses for Internet Computer come amid a 29% decrease in trading volume, suggesting bulls could benefit from reduced selling pressure.

However, with ICP briefly rallying on hype around AI integrations like the Caffeine platform, only to reverse course, it may yet allow bears to strengthen the upper hand.

Internet Computer price slips to $3.50

The ICP project, launched by the DFINITY Foundation, is one of the top artificial intelligence-related coins.

DFINITY aims to revolutionize the internet by enabling fully on-chain applications, from decentralized finance to AI-driven services, without reliance on traditional cloud providers.

In early November, the DFINITY Foundation unveiled an update for its AI platform Caffeine DeAI.

The news saw the price of ICP surge sharply, with bulls eventually hitting highs of $9.62 on Nov. 8, 2025.

ICP Price Chart
Internet Computer price chart by TradingView

The uptick aligned with market cheer for an update that pushed the narrative of the Internet Computer as a key AI cloud engine.

As well as allowing users to create and deploy apps easily, Caffeine features an App Market and supports monetization.

DFINITY said Caffeine will help drive network usage and transition ICP to a deflationary asset, among other features.

However, the token’s price has tumbled since that November peak and hit $3.50 on December 5, 2025. That’s a 64% dump in the past month and reflects broader market pressure.

What could catalyze short-term losses for ICP?

Market analysts have attributed the sell-off pressure across crypto to a confluence of factors.

As well as macroeconomic headwinds, FUD around Tether and Strategy (MSTR) has dampened risk appetite for Bitcoin (BTC) and the speculative assets across altcoins.

These same aspects apply to ICP and the dip to $3.50, with intraday revisits of lower levels, strengthening the fragile outlook.

Adding to this is the overall sentiment around token dumps if BTC price tanks.

Recently, when Bitcoin dipped to near $80,000, the Internet Computer token plummeted from above $5 to below $4.2.

Price currently hovers around $3.51 as Bitcoin flirts with support near $90,500. If momentum escapes bulls further, sellers could eye the all-time lows of $1.98 reached in October 2025.

On the flipside, the altcoin could benefit from network upgrades and adoption trends.

This, amid a resurgence in AI tokens and tokenized Bitcoin demand, may help buyers. A shift in sentiment as the macro environment improves will be crucial to bulls.

The post Internet Computer (ICP) crashes to $3.50 as AI hype fades and market pressure mounts appeared first on CoinJournal.

Chainlink partners with Coinbase on Base–Solana bridge as LINK targets new breakout levels

5 December 2025 at 09:16
  • Chainlink price hovered near $14, down 2% in the past 24 hours.
  • LINK remained under pressure despite two key integrations on Solana.
  • Coinbase and Chainlink have launched a Base-Solana bridge.

Chainlink continues to play a key role in the blockchain interoperability and asset tokenisation space, and that shows in the two latest integrations.

As a pivotal oracle network bridging decentralised finance (DeFi) with traditional systems, Chainlink’s traction is forecast to be a major factor for the native token LINK.

On December 5, 2025, LINK traded around $14.

Bulls were under pressure but remained upbeat amid recent advancements. Among these is the collaboration with Coinbase on the Base-Solana bridge and the integration into a Solana-based RWA consortium.

Chainlink and Coinbase to power Base-Solana bridge

Three major industry players here: Coinbase, Chainlink and Solana. Industry reaction to their latest collaboration highlights the potential impact.

Simply, the launch of the Base-Solana bridge marks a significant milestone in multi-chain connectivity. Chainlink’s Cross-Chain Interoperability Protocol (CCIP) serves as the security backbone alongside Coinbase’s node operators.

As announced, this mainnet deployment enables seamless asset transfers between Base and Solana.

CCIP will help verify all messages, ensuring tamper-proof and reliable token movements on Solana. In this case, users can now deposit SOL into Base applications, import any Solana Program Library (SPL) token, and export Base assets back to Solana.

“The bridge is now live on mainnet and rolling out for anyone to use in apps including Zora, Aerodrome, Virtuals, Flaunch, and Relay,’ Base said in a blog post. “Users will be able to trade SOL, CHILLHOUSE, TRENCHER, and many more Solana assets on Base.”

The Base-Solana bridge is live

Secured by @Chainlink CCIP alongside Coinbase, the bridge unlocks new cross-chain experiences:

• Support Solana assets natively in Base apps
• Enable users to trade & use assets across chains
• Bridge assets and tap into both ecosystems

🧵

— Base Build (@buildonbase) December 4, 2025

Chainlink joins RWA initiative on Solana

Another major development is news that Chainlink has joined the newly formed RWA Consortium on Solana. The initiative, led by Figure Technology Solutions in partnership with Kamino Finance, CASH, Raydium, Privy, and Gauntlet, was announced on December 4, 2025.

Experts say real-world assets onchain value will grow exponentially in the next five years.

Early adoption has virtually every RWA now onchain and Solana plays a key role in this space. Chainlink too.

The new alliance aims to democratize access to over $1 billion in monthly onchain loan originations. First to deploy is PRIME,  a liquid staking token on the Hastra liquidity protocol.

“We’re democratizing access to institutional lending markets,” said Mike Cagney, founder and executive chairman of Figure. “For the first time, a DeFi user with $100 can participate in the same loan pools as major financial institutions, earning yields from real lending activity with full transparency and instant liquidity.”

LINK price forecast

Chainlink’s oracle infrastructure is central to this goal. Its technology will connect Solana’s developer-friendly environment with Figure’s $19 billion in tokenized loan originations.

These initiatives could further catalyse price appreciation for both LINK and SOL.

At the time of writing, LINK changed hands at $14 while Solana price hovered at $136. If prices rise further, the main short-term target will be highs above $26, last seen in August. SOL bulls will eye $200.

Other bullish catalysts will include crypto ETFs, regulatory clarity and a flip in global macroeconomic outlook.

The post Chainlink partners with Coinbase on Base–Solana bridge as LINK targets new breakout levels appeared first on CoinJournal.

Why The Bitcoin Bear Market Is Almost Finished

5 December 2025 at 09:16

Bitcoin Magazine

Why The Bitcoin Bear Market Is Almost Finished

Bitcoin has struggled to maintain a sustained correlation with Gold, recently only moving in unison during market downturns. However, examining Bitcoin’s price action through the lens of Gold rather than USD reveals a more complete picture of the current market cycle. By measuring Bitcoin’s true purchasing power against comparable assets, we can identify potential support levels and gauge where the bear market cycle may be approaching its conclusion.

Bitcoin Bear Market Officially Begins Below Key Support

Breaking beneath the 350-day moving average at about $100,000 and the significant psychological 6-figure barrier marked the functional entry into bear market territory, with Bitcoin declining approximately 20% immediately thereafter. From a technical perspective, trading beneath The Golden Ratio Multiplier moving average has historically indicated Bitcoin entering a bear cycle, though the narrative becomes more interesting when measured against Gold rather than USD.

Figure 1: BTC breaking beneath the 350DMA has historically coincided with the start of bear markets. View Live Chart

The Bitcoin versus Gold chart tells a notably different story than the USD chart. Bitcoin topped out in December 2024 and has since declined over 50% from that level, whereas the USD valuation peaked in October 2025, significantly beneath the highs set the prior year. This divergence suggests that Bitcoin may have been in a bear market for considerably longer than most observers realize. Looking at historical Bitcoin bear cycles when measured in Gold, we can see patterns that suggest the current pullback may already be approaching critical support zones.

Figure 2: When priced in Gold, BTC dropped beneath its 350DMA back in August.

The 2015 bear cycle bottomed at an 86% retracement lasting 406 days. The 2017 cycle saw 364 days and an 84% decline. The previous bear cycle produced a 76% drawdown over 399 days. Currently, at the time of this analysis, Bitcoin is down 51% in 350 days when measured against Gold. While percentage drawdowns have been diminishing as Bitcoin’s market cap grows and more capital flows into the market, this trend reflects the rising tide of institutional adoption and lost Bitcoin supply rather than a fundamental change in cycle dynamics.

Figure 3: Plotting BTC’s value in Gold reveals a cycle pattern that suggests we could already be 90% of the way through this bear market.

Multi-Cycle Confluence Signals Bitcoin Bear Market Bottom Approaching

Rather than relying solely on percentage drawdowns and time elapsed, Fibonacci retracement levels mapped across multiple cycles provide greater precision. Using a Fibonacci retracement tool from bottom to top across historical cycles reveals striking levels of confluence.

Figure 4: In previous cycles, bear market bottoms have aligned with key Fibonacci retracement levels.

In the 2015-2018 cycle, the bear market bottom occurred at the 0.618 Fibonacci level, which corresponded to approximately 2.56 ounces of Gold per Bitcoin. The resulting price action marked the bottom with remarkable clarity, far cleaner than the equivalent USD chart. Moving forward to the 2018-2022 cycle, the bear market bottom aligned almost perfectly with the 0.5 level at approximately 9.74 ounces of Gold per Bitcoin. This level later acted as meaningful resistance-turned-support once Bitcoin reclaimed it during the subsequent bull market.

Translating Bitcoin Bear Market Gold Ratios Back to USD Price Targets

From the previous bear market low through the current bull cycle high, the 0.618 Fibonacci level sits at approximately 22.81 ounces of Gold per Bitcoin, while the 0.5 level rests at 19.07 ounces. Current price action is trading near the midpoint of these two levels, presenting what may be an attractive accumulation zone from a purchasing power perspective.

Figure 5: Applying Fibonacci levels to predict market lows for BTC versus Gold and subsequently pricing these back into USD, illustrates where Bitcoin’s price may bottom.

Multiple Fibonacci levels from different cycles create additional confluence. The 0.786 level from the current cycle translates to approximately 21.05 ounces of Gold, corresponding to a Bitcoin price around $89,160. The 0.618 level from the previous cycle aligns near $80,000 again. These convergence zones suggest that if Bitcoin were to decline further, the next meaningful technical target would be around $67,000, derived from the 0.382 Fibonacci retracement level at approximately 15.95 ounces of Gold per Bitcoin.

Conclusion: The Bitcoin Bear Market May Be 90% Complete Already

Bitcoin has likely been in a bear market for substantially longer than USD-only analysis suggests, with purchasing power already declining significantly since December 2024, when measured against Gold and other comparable assets. Historical Fibonacci retracement levels, when properly calibrated across multiple cycles and converted back into USD terms, point toward potential support confluence in the $67,000 to $80,000 range. While this analysis is inherently theoretical and unlikely to play out with perfect precision, the convergence of multiple data points across time horizons and valuation frameworks suggests the bear market may be approaching its conclusion sooner than many anticipate.

For a more in-depth look into this topic, watch our most recent YouTube video here: Proof This Bitcoin Bear Market May Be OVER Already


For deeper data, charts, and professional insights into bitcoin price trends, visit BitcoinMagazinePro.com. Subscribe to Bitcoin Magazine Pro on YouTube for more expert market insights and analysis!


Bitcoin Magazine Pro

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial advice. Always do your own research before making any investment decisions.

This post Why The Bitcoin Bear Market Is Almost Finished first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Matt Crosby.

Quiet de‑leveraging: what total Bitcoin futures open interest signals now

5 December 2025 at 07:33
Total BTC futures open interest is slipping, signaling a quiet de‑leveraging across CME, Binance and offshore venues rather than outright panic. Total BTC futures open interest remains elevated, with a measured reduction in leverage rather than a disorderly unwind.​ Total…

Mono Protocol presale updates: how blockchain usability and chain abstraction are redefining Web3 crypto presales

5 December 2025 at 06:03
  • Mono Protocol steps into this environment with solutions designed to reduce friction and make multi-chain activity easier.
  • Mono Protocol recently passed its full smart contract audit with CertiK, a widely respected blockchain security firm.
  • The Mono Protocol presale continues to see strong participation, bringing the total raised to $3.75M so far.

Many users still struggle with the complexity of blockchain transactions, cross-chain tools, and fragmented web3 experiences.

These challenges affect adoption across the wider crypto presale space and limit how people interact with DeFi platforms.

As demand rises, users look for the next potential big presale crypto that solves these everyday issues.

Mono Protocol steps into this environment with solutions designed to reduce friction and make multi-chain activity easier.

Interest in the presale crypto stage has continued to grow as the project gains visibility across the crypto presale list and broader cryptocurrency presale discussions.

Blockchain usability and chain abstraction are redefining Web3

The shift toward better usability is becoming essential across the top presale crypto market.

Many teams building in blockchain face similar issues: complex infrastructure, confusing routing, and high development costs.

Mono tackles these challenges by offering tools that let developers build apps that just work.

This direction supports the growing interest in new crypto presale platforms focused on function instead of noise.

Developers save time and reduce expenses because they no longer need to build cross-chain infrastructure from scratch.

The system manages routing and execution so teams can focus on product design and quicker shipping.

This aligns with trends seen across crypto ICO presale discussions as builders aim to create smoother user experiences.

Mono also introduces transaction fee configuration, helping teams generate revenue while offering users dependable execution and MEV protection.

As web3 adoption grows, this type of clean, reliable process supports the rise of strong presale ICO projects and helps shape what the community expects from a next potential big presale crypto.

Rewards hub that simplifies earning in the crypto presale journey

Mono’s Rewards Hub acts as the central space where users complete tasks during the presale crypto stage.

It includes social quests, referral steps, and presale challenges that reward participants with promo codes.

These codes can be redeemed for bonus MONO once connected through a supported wallet, giving users a simple path to engage with the presale process.

The clear structure helps new users navigate web3 interactions without confusion.

By making each step easy to follow, the system supports growth across cryptocurrency presales and gives users an active role in the process.

This approach has made Mono stand out among crypto presale projects that aim to streamline participation.

As users complete quests and claim their promo codes, bonuses are delivered directly as MONO.

This strengthens involvement within the top presale crypto market and shows how clean design can improve presale experience across the broader blockchain ecosystem.

CertiK audit complete

Mono Protocol recently passed its full smart contract audit with CertiK, a widely respected blockchain security firm.

This achievement supports growing confidence across the presale ICO stage as users look for secure options in the crypto presales environment.

With increased attention on blockchain safety, this milestone plays a central role in shaping long term trust.

The technology enables faster and cheaper on-chain transactions while remaining consistently reliable during peak activity.

Chain abstraction ensures compatibility across networks, tokens, and routes, reducing friction that often affects DeFi and web3 users.

As part of this system, Mono Balances introduce a single balance per token across networks.

Instead of switching chains or facing failed routes, users experience unified execution across blockchain environments.

This solves a major problem across the crypto presale list, helping Mono stand out among the best presale crypto 2025 projects focused on practical improvements to cross-chain use.

Presale growth and upcoming milestones for this presale ICO

The Mono Protocol presale continues to see strong participation, bringing the total raised to $3.75M so far.

This growth reflects rising interest across the crypto presale market as users search for the next potential big presale crypto based on utility and long term vision.

Exciting updates continue to expand the ecosystem, offering new ways to connect, explore, and earn through the platform.

Stage 19 is now live, with a current price of $0.0550. The projected launch price of $0.500 represents around 809% potential profit once the token goes live.

This data has placed Mono among the most discussed new crypto presale options within the wider blockchain and web3 community.

Looking ahead at the future of Web3 usability

The push for better blockchain usability continues to shape how people explore presale crypto opportunities.

As more users engage with DeFi and web3 platforms, the demand for simple workflows, dependable routing, and reliable infrastructure becomes more important.

Mono’s approach directly addresses these challenges and contributes to improving how users interact with connected chains.

The CertiK audit, Rewards Hub activity, and chain abstraction tools highlight the direction many crypto presale projects are now moving toward.

These improvements support the rise of platforms that focus on clarity instead of complexity, making blockchain easier to navigate for new and experienced users.

Learn more about Mono Protocol:

Website: https://monoprotocol.com/

X: https://x.com/mono_protocol

Telegram: https://t.me/monoprotocol_official

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/monoprotocol/

 

The post Mono Protocol presale updates: how blockchain usability and chain abstraction are redefining Web3 crypto presales appeared first on CoinJournal.

Agents-as-a-service are poised to rewire the software industry and corporate structures

5 December 2025 at 05:00

This was the year of AI agents. Chatbots that simply answered questions are now evolving into autonomous agents that can carry out tasks on a user’s behalf, so enterprises continue to invest in agentic platforms as transformation evolves. Software vendors are investing in it as fast as they can, too.

According to a National Research Group survey of more than 3,000 senior leaders, more than half of executives say their organization is already using AI agents. Of the companies that spend no less than half their AI budget on AI agents, 88% say they’re already seeing ROI on at least one use case, with top areas being customer service and experience, marketing, cybersecurity, and software development.

On the software provider side, Gartner predicts 40% of enterprise software applications in 2026 will include agentic AI, up from less than 5% today. And agentic AI could drive approximately 30% of enterprise application software revenue by 2035, surpassing $450 billion, up from 2% in 2025. In fact, business users might not have to interact directly with the business applications at all since AI agent ecosystems will carry out user instructions across multiple applications and business functions. At that point, a third of user experiences will shift from native applications to agentic front ends, Gartner predicts.

It’s already starting. Most enterprise applications will have embedded assistants, a precursor to agentic AI, by the end of this year, adds Gartner.

IDC has similar predictions. By 2028, 45% of IT product and service interactions will use agents as the primary interface, the firm says. That’ll change not just how companies work, but how CIOs work as well.

Agents as employees

At financial services provider OneDigital, chief product officer Vinay Gidwaney is already working with AI agents, almost as if they were people.

“We decided to call them AI coworkers, and we set up an AI staffing team co-owned between my technology team and our chief people officer and her HR team,” he says. “That team is responsible for hiring AI coworkers and bringing them into the organization.” You heard that right: “hiring.”

The first step is to sit down with the business leader and write a job description, which is fed to the AI agent, and then it becomes known as an intern.

“We have a lot of interns we’re testing at the company,” says Gidwaney. “If they pass, they get promoted to apprentices and we give them our best practices, guardrails, a personality, and human supervisors responsible for training them, auditing what they do, and writing improvement plans.”

The next promotion is to a full-time coworker, and it becomes available to be used by anyone at the company.

“Anyone at our company can go on the corporate intranet, read the skill sets, and get ice breakers if they don’t know how to start,” he says. “You can pick a coworker off the shelf and start chatting with them.”

For example, there’s Ben, a benefits expert who’s trained on everything having to do with employee benefits.

“We have our employee benefits consultants sitting with clients every day,” Gidwaney says. “Ben will take all the information and help the consultants strategize how to lower costs, and how to negotiate with carriers. He’s the consultants’ thought partner.”

There are similar AI coworkers working on retirement planning, and on property and casualty as well. These were built in-house because they’re core to the company’s business. But there are also external AI agents who can provide additional functionality in specialized yet less core areas, like legal or marketing content creation. In software development, OneDigital uses third-party AI agents as coding assistants.

When choosing whether to sign up for these agents, Gidwaney says he doesn’t think of it the way he thinks about licensing software, but more to hiring a human consultant or contractor. For example, will the agent be a good cultural fit?

But in some cases, it’s worse than hiring humans since a bad human hire who turns out to be toxic will only interact with a small number of other employees. But an AI agent might interact with thousands of them.

“You have to apply the same level of scrutiny as how you hire real humans,” he says.

A vendor who looks like a technology company might also, in effect, be a staffing firm. “They look and feel like humans, and you have to treat them like that,” he adds.

Another way that AI agents are similar to human consultants is when they leave the company, they take their expertise with them, including what they gained along the way. Data can be downloaded, Gidwaney says, but not necessarily the fine-tuning or other improvements the agent received. Realistically, there might not be any practical way to extract that from a third-party agent, and that could lead to AI vendor lock-in.

Edward Tull, VP of technology and operations at JBGoodwin Realtors, says he, too, sees AI agents as something akin to people. “I see it more as a teammate,” he says. “As we implement more across departments, I can see these teammates talking to each other. It becomes almost like a person.”

Today, JBGoodwin uses two main platforms for its AI agents. Zapier lets the company build its own and HubSpot has its own AaaS, and they’re already pre-built. “There are lead enrichment agents and workflow agents,” says Tull.

And the company is open to using more. “In accounting, if someone builds an agent to work with this particular type of accounting software, we might hire that agent,” he says. “Or a marketing coordinator that we could hire that’s built and ready to go and connected to systems we already use.”

With agents, his job is becoming less about technology and more about management, he adds. “It’s less day-to-day building and more governance, and trying to position the company to be competitive in the world of AI,” he says.

He’s not the only one thinking of AI agents as more akin to human workers than to software.

“With agents, because the technology is evolving so far, it’s almost like you’re hiring employees,” says Sheldon Monteiro, chief product officer at Publicis Sapient. “You have to determine whom to hire, how to train them, make sure all the business units are getting value out of them, and figure when to fire them. It’s a continuous process, and this is very different from the past, where I make a commitment to a platform and stick with it because the solution works for the business.”

This changes how the technology solutions are managed, he adds. What companies will need now is a CHRO, but for agentic employees.

Managing outcomes, not persons

Vituity is one of the largest national, privately-held medical groups, with 600 hospitals, 13,800 employees, and nearly 14 million patients. The company is building its own AI agents, but is also using off-the-shelf ones, as AaaS. And AI agents aren’t people, says CIO Amith Nair. “The agent has no feelings,” he says. “AGI isn’t here yet.”

Instead, it all comes down to outcomes, he says. “If you define an outcome for a task, that’s the outcome you’re holding that agent to.” And that part isn’t different to holding employees accountable to an outcome. “But you don’t need to manage the agent,” he adds. “They’re not people.”

Instead, the agent is orchestrated and you can plug and play them. “It needs to understand our business model and our business context, so you ground the agent to get the job done,” he says.

For mission-critical functions, especially ones related to sensitive healthcare data, Vituity is building its own agents inside a HIPAA-certified LLM environment using the Workato agent development platform and the Microsoft agentic platform.

For other functions, especially ones having to do with public data, Vituity uses off-the-shelf agents, such as ones from Salesforce and Snowflake. The company is also using Claude with GitHub Copilot for coding. Nair can already see that agentic systems will change the way enterprise software works.

“Most of the enterprise applications should get up to speed with MCP, the integration layer for standardization,” he says. “If they don’t get to it, it’s going to become a challenge for them to keep selling their product.”

A company needs to be able to access its own data via an MCP connector, he says. “AI needs data, and if they don’t give you an MCP, you just start moving it all to a data warehouse,” he adds.

Sharp learning curve

In addition to providing a way to store and organize your data, enterprise software vendors also offer logic and functionality, and AI will soon be able to handle that as well.

“All you need is a good workflow engine where you can develop new business processes on the fly, so it can orchestrate with other agents,” Nair says. “I don’t think we’re too far away, but we’re not there yet. Until then, SaaS vendors are still relevant. The question is, can they charge that much money anymore.”

The costs of SaaS will eventually have to come down to the cost of inference, storage, and other infrastructure, but they can’t survive the way they’re charging now he says. So SaaS vendors are building agents to augment or replace their current interfaces. But that approach itself has its limits. Say, for example, instead of using Salesforce’s agent, a company can use its own agents to interact with the Salesforce environment.

“It’s already happening,” Nair adds. “My SOC agent is pulling in all the log files from Salesforce. They’re not providing me anything other than the security layer they need to protect the data that exists there.”

AI agents are set to change the dynamic between enterprises and software vendors in other ways, too. One major difference between software and agents is software is well-defined, operates in a particular way, and changes slowly, says Jinsook Han, chief of strategy, corporate development, and global agentic AI at Genpact.

“But we expect when the agent comes in, it’s going to get smarter every day,” she says. “The world will change dramatically because agents are continuously changing. And the expectations from the enterprises are also being reshaped.”

Another difference is agents can more easily work with data and systems where they are. Take for example a sales agent meeting with customers, says Anand Rao, AI professor at Carnegie Mellon University. Each salesperson has a calendar where all their meetings are scheduled, and they have emails, messages, and meeting recordings. An agent can simply access those emails when needed.

“Why put them all into Salesforce?” Rao asks. “If the idea is to do and monitor the sale, it doesn’t have to go into Salesforce, and the agents can go grab it.”

When Rao was a consultant having a conversation with a client, he’d log it into Salesforce with a note, for instance, saying the client needs a white paper from the partner in charge of quantum.

With an agent taking notes during the meeting, it can immediately identify the action items and follow up to get the white paper.

“Right now we’re blindly automating the existing workflow,” Rao says. “But why do we need to do that? There’ll be a fundamental shift of how we see value chains and systems. We’ll get rid of all the intermediate steps. That’s the biggest worry for the SAPs, Salesforces, and Workdays of the world.”

Another aspect of the agentic economy is instead of a human employee talking to a vendor’s AI agent, a company agent can handle the conversation on the employee’s behalf. And if a company wants to switch vendors, the experience will be seamless for employees, since they never had to deal directly with the vendor anyway.

“I think that’s something that’ll happen,” says Ricardo Baeza-Yates, co-chair of the  US technology policy committee at the Association for Computing Machinery. “And it makes the market more competitive, and makes integrating things much easier.”

In the short term, however, it might make more sense for companies to use the vendors’ agents instead of creating their own.

“I recommend people don’t overbuild because everything is moving,” says Bret Greenstein, CAIO at West Monroe Partners, a management consulting firm. “If you build a highly complicated system, you’re going to be building yourself some tech debt. If an agent exists in your application and it’s localized to the data in that application, use it.”

But over time, an agent that’s independent of the application can be more effective, he says, and there’s a lot of lock-in that goes into applications. “It’s going to be easier every day to build the agent you want without having to buy a giant license. “The effort to get effective agents is dropping rapidly, and the justification for getting expensive agents from your enterprise software vendors is getting less,” he says.

The future of software

According to IDC, pure seat-based pricing will be obsolete by 2028, forcing 70% of vendors to figure out new business models.

With technology evolving as quickly as it is, JBGoodwin Realtors has already started to change its approach to buying tech, says Tull. It used to prefer long-term contracts, for example but that’s not the case anymore “You save more if you go longer, but I’ll ask for an option to re-sign with a cap,” he says.

That doesn’t mean SaaS will die overnight. Companies have made significant investments in their current technology infrastructure, says Patrycja Sobera, SVP of digital workplace solutions at Unisys.

“They’re not scrapping their strategies around cloud and SaaS,” she says. “They’re not saying, ‘Let’s abandon this and go straight to agentic.’ I’m not seeing that at all.”

Ultimately, people are slow to change, and institutions are even slower. Many organizations are still running legacy systems. For example, the FAA has just come out with a bold plan to update its systems by getting rid of floppy disks and upgrading from Windows 95. They expect this to take four years.

But the center of gravity will move toward agents and, as it does, so will funding, innovation, green-field deployments, and the economics of the software industry.

“There are so many organizations and leaders who need to cross the chasm,” says Sobera. “You’re going to have organizations at different levels of maturity, and some will be stuck in SaaS mentality, but feeling more in control while some of our progressive clients will embrace the move. We’re also seeing those clients outperform their peers in revenue, innovation, and satisfaction.”

❌
❌