"Web3 Daily Briefing" is an official newsletter from Web3Caff, summarizing important news, official updates, and selected articles from the past 24 hours for the Web3.0 community. It aims to help Web3.0 enthusiasts and builders quickly understand the latest industry developments. For more timely and comprehensive updates on the latest industry trends and insightful articles, please follow our official Twitter account.
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- The EU's digital asset tax transparency law will come into effect in January 2026.

- Aave founder accused of manipulating governance votes after spending millions of dollars on cryptocurrency.

- The Philippines cracks down on unlicensed virtual asset service providers, blocking Coinbase and Gemini.

- Circle's press release regarding the launch of CircleMetals and tokenized precious metals services is untrue.

- Pudgy Penguins advertises on Las Vegas Sphere.

- Vitalik Buterin predicts that bug-free code will emerge in the 2030s.

- The Marshall Islands distributes basic national income through Stellar.

- Scroll: The governance restructuring of the Scroll DAO system has not been shut down .

- easy.fun announced the completion of a $2 million seed funding round, led by Mirana Ventures.

Great articles you might have missed
Recently, LazAI, the AI service framework built by Metis, officially launched its Alpha mainnet. LazAI aims to unify the definition and management of data, models, and their usage processes through verifiable computation and on-chain mechanisms. While ensuring privacy and traceability, it guides data contributors, model developers, and users to form a more collaborative operating environment. This issue of Web3Caff Research's Market Trend Insights will focus on analyzing LazAI's overall architecture design, core mechanism logic, and its exploratory significance in the path of AI-native assetization, and discuss its potential impact on the AI application ecosystem.
This article includes a key structure diagram and a schematic of the core mechanisms to help you quickly understand how LazAI builds an infrastructure framework for AI-native applications around data verification, computation execution, and settlement logic.
"Revenue exceeding 100 million, monthly income of millions"—the business of U-commerce sounds glamorous, but its high legal risks are often overlooked. Many U-commerce sellers believe that as long as they don't directly defraud people, they're fine. However, there's a catch-all offense in criminal law: simply put, it's when you're doing something that the state clearly stipulates requires a license to do, yet you're thriving and seriously disrupting the market. This article breaks down the crimes and penalties associated with U-commerce.
Mainland residents who provide employment for overseas cryptocurrency exchanges certainly face legal risks, which, according to my country's legal system, can be categorized from minor to serious as criminal, administrative, and civil legal risks. This article analyzes the criminal liability related to the aforementioned "September 24th Notice" and its so-called "pursuit of relevant responsibilities."
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