Rebuh
745 posts

Rebuh
@Rebuh98
gamecock/Keetard/bitcoiner/HoldFastveteran

OUT OF BOUNDS: Megan Rapinoe slams the new IOC policy limiting women’s events to biological females based on sex testing. "This committee is framing it as based in science, which it’s not," she said. "This will ultimately just prevent people from competing within the women’s category that they feel like they have an unfair advantage. It’s just really hateful."



No. 2 EDGE KJ Green spent three days at Alabama last week & the latest trip to campus didn’t disappoint… June 18-21 official visit set for a while, too. “I felt like I was part of the team … they are definitely at the top of the top, for sure…” 🔗 bit.ly/4m5U5bd


SpaceX trying to go public at 80x forward sales, 500x forward earnings, and 125x forward EV/EBITDA multiple

(2/8) Users globally will be able to open multi-currency accounts in 25+ currencies, enabling them to: • Hold balances in multiple currencies • Send and receive via international SWIFT transfers • Perform FX conversions between currencies In addition to legacy rails, stablecoins can be utilized to instantly fund and withdraw from these accounts. Support will begin with: USD, CAD, AED, GBP, EUR, HKD, JPY, MXN, CNY Following that, we will release support for: AUD, CNH, CZK, DKK, HUF, ILS, NZD, NOK, PLN, RON, SGD, ZAR, SEK, CHF, THB

I always was under the impression KTA network access was gated for institutions like they would have to hold KTA to use the network They actually don’t And it’s a bit more nuanced than that… but it’s actually a great plan Here’s what people are missing You can use Keeta without holding KTA But that only applies if you’re just using the network There are different ways to use the network Let’s use a simple example A business needs to send $1,000 USD to a partner that requires EUR That transaction runs on Keeta’s rails either way But there are different ways to route it One route does not utilize KTA it relies on traditional rails the payment moves through banks and correspondent banks each additional step adds cost and increases the total fee Another route utilizes KTA inside the network so instead of passing through multiple intermediaries, the value moves directly across the system without those extra steps and without the extra fees Now here’s the important part The people running the network, the representatives these are the banks, institutions, or service providers handling your transaction, basically running their own mini network, a subnet on Keeta They decide what transactions cost what tokens are accepted how routing works And their influence is tied to how much KTA they hold So they are incentivized to push usage toward KTA Because it benefits them If a KTA route costs them less to process they can charge you less while making more themselves That’s better margins So they discount transactions that utilize KTA which pushes more transactions through KTA Not because it’s required because it’s the most profitable option If an institution wants more than just basic access If they want to earn fees to control routing to have privacy and sovereignty they run a representative or their own subnet This is key An institution not running a subnet would lack privacy and sovereignty But if they are running a subnet they are holding KTA So the ones actually operating the network the ones moving real volume the ones that matter are the ones holding it So the model isn’t force everyone to buy KTA It’s get them in the door without it let them scale then let economics pull them into it KTA becomes the most efficient way to route value And that’s why this is such a strong model Institutions don’t have to commit upfront which makes it easier for them to start using the network Then once they’re inside cost and competition take over And that naturally drives usage toward KTA Not by forcing it, but by real business incentives @KeetaNetwork $KTA





















