Core DAO 🔶

5.3K posts

Core DAO 🔶 banner
Core DAO 🔶

Core DAO 🔶

@Coredao_Org

The Bitcoin Everything Chain. 🔶 → Unlock trustless Bitcoin staking yield via Bitcoin-native timelocks. → Explore fast, low-cost Bitcoin DeFi.

Katılım Mayıs 2022
276 Takip Edilen2.3M Takipçiler
Core DAO 🔶
Core DAO 🔶@Coredao_Org·
Most chains hope demand shows up. Core is designing products that create it. Fixed supply. More product lines. More reasons for CORE to matter. 🔶
Core DAO 🔶 tweet media
English
125
242
742
13.6K
Core DAO 🔶
Core DAO 🔶@Coredao_Org·
Every bank will custody Bitcoin. The harder question is what they let users do with it. Core Alpha will be how users and institutions can start to earn safely on their Bitcoin. 🔶
English
127
222
686
16.5K
Core DAO 🔶
Core DAO 🔶@Coredao_Org·
Bitcoin finance is bigger than yield alone. Collateral. RWAs. New financial primitives. Core is turning Bitcoin into the foundation for a full on-chain capital market. 🔶
Core DAO 🔶 tweet media
English
155
280
869
22.4K
Core DAO 🔶
Core DAO 🔶@Coredao_Org·
Bitcoin already won as an asset. Now it needs a consumer layer. Earn, borrow, and spend Bitcoin through a product normal people can actually use. @Sat_Pay
English
148
278
844
28.4K
Core DAO 🔶
Core DAO 🔶@Coredao_Org·
The only yield-bearing Bitcoin ETPs are powered by Core. That is what institutional Bitcoin yield looks like when it leaves the pitch deck. Live products. Regulated markets. Real infrastructure. 🔶
Core DAO 🔶 tweet media
English
136
277
835
23.4K
Core DAO 🔶
Core DAO 🔶@Coredao_Org·
The next Bitcoin yield user may never touch a staking dashboard. They may find it inside a bank, wallet, or neobank. That is the Core Alpha opportunity. 🔶
English
134
265
817
23.8K
Core DAO 🔶
Core DAO 🔶@Coredao_Org·
Institutional Bitcoin finance starts with proof. Core has it where it matters: public markets, corporate treasuries, and Bitcoin hashrate. 🔶
Core DAO 🔶 tweet media
English
144
306
903
26K
Core DAO 🔶
Core DAO 🔶@Coredao_Org·
Core is not trying to win one Bitcoin use case. It is building the rails for all of them. Yield, collateral, payments, distribution, all connected to Core. 🔶
Core DAO 🔶 tweet media
English
173
305
950
28.4K
Core DAO 🔶
Core DAO 🔶@Coredao_Org·
The best Bitcoin yield model is not necessarily the one with the highest APY. It is the one built to protect the asset first. This is why institutions are choosing Core.
English
142
244
733
22.3K
Core DAO 🔶
Core DAO 🔶@Coredao_Org·
Bitcoin is long-term money. The infrastructure around it should be built with the same timeline. Not later. Now. 🔶
Core DAO 🔶 tweet media
English
170
283
887
27.6K
Core DAO 🔶
Core DAO 🔶@Coredao_Org·
Bitcoin is not just something to hold. It is becoming one of the cleanest collateral assets in the world. Core is building the products for that future.
English
160
270
915
31.8K
Core DAO 🔶
Core DAO 🔶@Coredao_Org·
Institutions are not looking for another crypto product. They are looking for Bitcoin yield infrastructure that can meet their requirements. That is the market Core Alpha is being built for. 🔶
English
127
272
845
27.6K
Core DAO 🔶
Core DAO 🔶@Coredao_Org·
People borrow against winning assets for a reason. They do not want to sell the upside. Core is becoming the home for borrowing against BTC for the largest crypto institutions.
English
138
256
806
29.7K
Core DAO 🔶
Core DAO 🔶@Coredao_Org·
~90% of Bitcoin's hashrate secures Core. That's more than any chain in crypto outside of Bitcoin itself. Institutions deploying billions in Bitcoin can't afford to settle for less. 🔶
Core DAO 🔶 tweet media
English
170
306
1K
36.3K
Core DAO 🔶
Core DAO 🔶@Coredao_Org·
Institutions are increasingly looking for non-dilutive ways to grow their Bitcoin position. That's why they're coming to Core. Self-custodial, productive Bitcoin is becoming the standard.
English
139
249
742
28.1K
Core DAO 🔶
Core DAO 🔶@Coredao_Org·
Core Alpha for institutional Bitcoin yield. @sat_pay for retail Bitcoiners. @_zprotocol for AI x Privacy. The most important verticals in crypto all lead back to CORE. 🔶
MR SHIFT 🦁@KevinWSHPod

Rich Rines on Bitcoin Yield, Privacy, and Crypto’s Next Chapter In this episode of DROPS, I sit down with @richrines to discuss the future of Bitcoin, why privacy is becoming one of crypto’s most urgent themes, and how @Coredao_Org is trying to turn dormant digital assets into yield-earning capital. Rich’s story stretches back to Bitcoin’s early years, through time at Coinbase, and into building infrastructure designed for a more mature phase of crypto. The conversation moves from ideology to product design, from self-custody to institutions, and from Bitcoin maximalism to a broader view of what financial freedom could mean in the years ahead. From Skeptic to Builder Rich first encountered Bitcoin in 2011 through a college professor. Like many people at the time, he dismissed it because digital value seemed absurd. Then Bitcoin came back into his orbit in 2013, and this time he did the homework. After reading the white paper, he says his “mind was totally blown.” He saw a system for peer-to-peer money, a sovereign-resistant store of value, and a financial network that didn’t need permission to operate. That second look changed the trajectory of his life. He has now spent more than a decade in the space, including time at Coinbase during its rise to becoming a public company. But while many builders were drawn toward newer ecosystems, Rich remained anchored to Bitcoin and the belief that its role in global finance was only beginning. What Core Is Really Building When asked to explain Core in one sentence, Rich keeps it simple: “Scaling Bitcoin.” Bitcoin’s strengths, in his view, come from restraint. It is intentionally slow, limited, and conservative. Those trade-offs reduce attack surfaces and preserve trust. But many holders want more than digital gold sitting idle. They want to earn from their Bitcoin. They want to borrow against it. They want to use it as productive collateral without selling it. And that is the opportunity Core is chasing. Rather than trying to replace Bitcoin, Core is attempting to extend its usefulness. The thesis is that trillions of dollars in dormant Bitcoin capital could eventually move into yield strategies, lending systems, and the broader decentralised finance ecosystem. Why Bitcoin Holders Want Yield Rich says the two dominant demands from Bitcoin holders today are straightforward: Safe yield and access to leverage. This reflects a maturing asset class. In earlier years, owning Bitcoin itself was the strategy. Today, large holders and institutions increasingly think like capital allocators. They ask: How can an asset be monetised without being sold? How can long-term conviction be maintained while unlocking liquidity? That is why borrowing against Bitcoin has become more attractive. Rather than liquidating a position, holders can keep upside exposure while accessing capital elsewhere. Of course, the risks are real. Crypto has already seen what happens when yield products depend on weak counterparties or reckless leverage. Rich openly references the failures of prior lending platforms and argues that the next generation must be built differently. The Self-Custody Problem One of crypto’s oldest principles is simple: not your keys, not your coins. That creates tension for yield products, because many historical models required users to hand over custody of their Bitcoin. Rich argues Core’s design tries to avoid that trade-off through Bitcoin time-locking. Instead of transferring ownership, users can lock coins for a set period, which helps in securing the network and receiving rewards. As he puts it: “We don’t want your Bitcoin.” The foundation is far more interested in a model where users keep as much control as possible. Why Privacy Is Back on the Agenda One of the most intellectually interesting parts of the conversation may be Rich’s views on privacy. He believes crypto’s early transparent systems increasingly look outdated. In his words, the industry may move from everything being public by default to everything being private by default within the next 12 to 24 months. Why? Because transparency at scale creates unintended consequences such as wallet surveillance, personal security risks, criminal targeting, corporate intelligence leaks and AI-powered financial monitoring. Rich argues that AI has made surveillance “trivial.” Tools that once required specialised teams can now be assembled quickly and cheaply or simply vibe-coded. Moreover, he contrasts Crypto with traditional banking, which is private by default. You would never expect every payment, transfer, and balance to be publicly visible. Yet crypto normalised exactly that. He sees privacy-focused systems like Zcash as a response to this imbalance. Why He’s Bullish on Zcash Rich describes Zcash as preserving some of Bitcoin’s original cypherpunk spirit: sovereignty, freedom, and privacy. Where Bitcoin has become institutionalised through ETFs and mainstream adoption, Zcash represents a more values-driven branch of the movement. He stops short of making sensational price predictions, but he is clear that the opportunity is meaningful. His core thesis is that the market for private money could be enormous, especially in a world where surveillance capabilities keep improving. That does not mean anti-government or anti-law. He points to selective disclosure models, such as viewing keys, where users can reveal information when they choose. The Bigger Lesson: Crypto Is Growing Up, Across the interview, Rich returns to one consistent idea: crypto is entering a more serious era. The next winners are no longer determined by tokens or narratives but through the problems they solve. This includes yield generation, custody architecture, privacy infrastructure, consumer-friendly interfaces, and institutional-grade trust systems. He also talks about neobanks, backend yield rails, and integrated products, which are gaining far more relevance than memes. Final Thoughts Rich Rines comes across as someone shaped by crypto’s first principles but focused on second-order execution. He still believes in freedom, self-sovereignty, and open systems. But he also understands that ideals alone are not enough. Products need to work, risks need to be managed, user interfaces must improve, and privacy must be guaranteed. If the first era of crypto was about proving digital assets could exist, the next may be about proving they can be useful, secure, and normal. And if Rich is right, Bitcoin earning yield and privacy becoming standard may both arrive sooner than many expect. 👉If you enjoyed reading the summary, head over to When Shift Happens on YouTube or your favorite podcast platform to access the full convo.

English
124
292
872
37.3K