
Darya is a crypto enthusiast who strongly believes in the future of blockchain. Being a hospitality professional, she is interested in finding the ways blockchain can change different industries and bring our life to a different level.
updraftplus domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/aonyeani76/cryptocurrencypanther/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6131hustle domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/aonyeani76/cryptocurrencypanther/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6131wpforms-lite domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/aonyeani76/cryptocurrencypanther/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6131In 2024, the prices are expected to further go up. According to a Wall Street analyst Brandt Montour, the rise in ticket prices for 2024 sailings will be set 20% to 30% higher than 2019 levels.
The 2023 cruise industry is booming, it has significantly surpassed pre-pandemic 2019 levels and broken sales records in a rapid comeback. Revenue in the cruise market is expected to reach as much as $25.14 billion this year. Amid a strong and increasing travel demand, cruise operators are raising ticket prices.
The top cruise operators, Carnival Corporation & PLC and Royal Caribbean Cruise Ltd (NYSE: RCL), are already setting some ticket prices at a higher level. In particular, the average price of a five-night cruise in the Royal Caribbean for December 2023 is $736, which is about 37% higher than the average price a year earlier and 43% above the pre-pandemic level.
The final price of a cruise depends on many factors: itinerary, number of nights, cabin type, amenities, and cruise line. It also depends on flights and transportation to and from the cruise ship, as well as includes various packages of drinks and specialty coffees. For example, Royal Caribbean charges about $50 to $100 a day for its Deluxe Beverage Package, which includes an unlimited drinks package. Royal Caribbean customers pay more for their drink packages and many order it, cancel it, get refunded, and buy it again if the price goes down.
Meanwhile, Carnival Corporation uses a fixed price for its Cheers beverage package. Earlier, passengers paid a set daily fee of $59.95 pre-cruise or $64.95 onboard for access to unlimited nonalcoholic beverages and a maximum of 15 alcoholic beverages per day. On October 3, the company announced a price change. Now, the Cheers beverage package is up 17%, or $69.95 a day. Passengers who opt to book onboard will see the same $10 a day increase, from $64.95 a day to $74.95 a day, which is 15% higher.
The price policy in cruise companies has been updated due to a number of reasons. Firstly, there is a widening gap between the prices of cruises and land-based vacations. For comparison, cruise vacations before the pandemic were on average 15% to 20% cheaper than land-based vacations. Now, this gap has widened to 50%.
Carnival Corporation CEO Josh Weinstein stated:
“We are working hard to close the outrageous and unwarranted 25% to 50% value gap to land-based offerings over time.”
Secondly, labor costs, marketing, and port and freight expenses are on the rise, which also leads to cruise operators setting prices higher. Besides, the demand for such tours is not going down, which fuels the price growth further.
Aaron Saunders, a senior editor at Cruise Critic, commented:
“[The higher prices] are likely subject to fluctuation – but what we’re seeing, generally speaking, is that the higher prices are here today, but those higher prices will ping pong around throughout different sectors. Cruise lines aren’t being required to drop prices the way they used to … they’re just simply not having to lower fares or to really offer too many incentives because people are just booking.”
In 2024, the prices are expected to further go up. According to a Wall Street analyst Brandt Montour, the rise in ticket prices for 2024 sailings will be 20% to 30% higher than 2019 levels.

Darya is a crypto enthusiast who strongly believes in the future of blockchain. Being a hospitality professional, she is interested in finding the ways blockchain can change different industries and bring our life to a different level.
Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson wants stake pool operators to get ready to the Vasil upgrade
In a recent tweet, Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson urged stake pool operators to upgrade their nodes to version 1.35.3 in order to get ready for the upcoming Vasil era.
Earlier this week, announced the release of the latest version, which fixes several important issues with previous versions while also providing command-line interface enhancements.
Version 1.35.3 provides full capabilities for the Vasil era, which is why stake pool operators have to get on board before the mainnet launch of the much-anticipated upgrade.
The Input Output also announced the launch of two new testnets earlier this week. One of them is a pre-production testnet, which is a new chain in the current Alonzo era that started last September. Developers are using it for trying out components in the current era before the forthcoming mainnet upgrade. There is a preview testnet, which is a new chain that is used for testing upcoming features.
As reported by U.Today, Input Output also released Cardano Rosetta 1.8.0, a set of tools for integrating with the popular proof-of-stake blockchain.
Last week, Input Output stressed that 75% of mainnet blocks have to be created by the final node candidate for the launch of the Vasil hard fork to take place.
The upgrade was initially slated to happen in June. The price of ADA actually rallied in the run-up to the event, but the Vasil launch was postponed due to technical difficulties. In late July, Kevin Hammond, technical manager at Input Output, said that the upgrade would be delayed again.
Bitcoin and other altcoins have suffered massive losses since May. But after a point, things started changing a bit. For example, bitcoin that fell to $17K on June 18 recovered to trade between $20K and $21K from June 19 to June 28 when it traded above $21K in the early hours of the day.
Unfortunately, the crypto could not sustain the recovery above $21K and lost more than $500 some hours later. The change in Bitcoin price resulted from mixed reactions in the market concerning regulators’ stance on crypto.
According to Gary Gensler, the SEC boss, regulators place Bitcoin and other tokens under commodities. Gensler mentioned that a spot Bitcoin ETF might not be the best for the financial market. So, the commission will not approve any application filed to launch a spot BTC ETF.
Related Reading | Outflows Rock Bitcoin As Institutional Investors Pull The Plug, More Downside Coming?
The Securities and Exchange Commission boss made all these assertions when a media firm interviewed him. After the interview, many Bitcoin holders started selling off again, causing a fall in Bitcoin price.
During the market crash and price plunge, many investors wondered whether to sell off or buy more to increase their portfolio. However, according to Glassnode data recently, some Bitcoin holders believe this market crash is the right time to buy more BTC. The firm disclosed the data over the weekend on Twitter, revealing that more than 100 whale addresses are buying more Bitcoin this period.
The data showed that these whales grab these coins at a discount due to the present panic in the market. Also, Glassnode noted that the current trend might last long. Another indicator showing interest in buying more among the whales is the amount of BTC in several wallets.

And the addresses that had from 10BTC to 10,000BTC have added more coins in two weeks. Then those wallets above 10,000BTC have grown since the second month of 2022.
The crypto winter of 2022 also affected miners terribly. They are trying to make a profit which hasn’t been easy due to the bear market.
Many miners have given up their equipment to reduce pressure. An analysis by strategists has shown that miners in the public sectors are responsible for 20% of miners’ sales between May & June. They also indicated that it might be the same for the private sector miners.
But then, miners struggle to pay back the $4 billion loans collateralized by their mining equipment. According to a report, many miners have defaulted on the loan agreement, while others show weakness.
Related Reading | Ethereum Fees Touch Monthly Lows As Transaction Volumes Plummet
The reason is that the bear market has crashed the value of the mining rigs used as collateral. As a result, the loan increases since the collateral worth now no longer matches the loan amount.
Featured image from BBC, charts from TradingView.com
This post was adapted from a thread originally posted by @Flantoshi on Twitter
Now, this is a bizarre issue I find myself in. If you’re an avid Cardano enthusiast, just by the title and thumbnail alone you’re either already frothing at the mouth, or in absolute agreement and anything else I’ve got to say is gravy.
On the other hand, if you’re just a casual observer of the space looking in, and someone were to explain to you the elevator pitch of the situation, you’d be positively confused. The short version is that one group of nerds is annoyed with another, smaller, group of dorks for running a bunch of computers.
Of course, the matter is not that simple, the decision of whether or not to allow stakepool operators (SPO) to run multiple pools is worth billions of dollars and the livelihood of thousands of people. More importantly, if it isn’t addressed, it has the potential to destroy the Cardano blockchain’s ability to live up to its potential and ultimately just devolve into a very expensive and inefficient Excel spreadsheet.
Needless to say, tempers can run very high surrounding this issue. So before we fully tackle the matter, I beg you to please keep things civil. This article is not about pointing fingers at any specific person, but more so to show the effects that these decisions can have if left unchecked.
The premise is simple: Cardano’s main selling point is that it’s a decentralized, tamper-proof system, if it loses this aspect through negligence or greed, then it has no real competitive advantage and it’s a worthless investment.
In this article, we will be exploring just to what extent multipool operators damage the network.
It’s easy to just take for granted that everyone knows how Cardano works when you’re on Twitter so much that you can only communicate in pithy statements and overused memes. Nevertheless, for thoroughness sake, let’s quickly go over the basics (if you’re an ADA expert, perhaps consider skipping this section).
Either way, Cardano is a decentralized computational network, where individuals can choose to become stakepool operators (SPO) and thereby help the system process transaction blocks.
In exchange for processing transactions, they receive a reward which is paid out from treasury funds and accumulated fees on the network. At the time of writing, there are 3,147 active stakepools.
This diversity of different stakepool operators, in theory, means that it’s very difficult, if not practically impossible, to control the network. As each of the unique characteristics of the SPO (their hardware setup, physical location, financial situation and the people managing them) change what attack vectors are necessary to compromise them.
The issue though is that processing blocks is not a purely random operation, it’s a probabilistic function. In other words, there’s a formula that determines how often a given stakepool gets assigned a block to process.
One of the key elements under consideration in this formula is the amount of ADA that is tied to any given pool. This comes in two forms:
Not to get too technical, as there are horrible looking formulas underpinning all this, but at its core what Cardano wants to do is to assign blocks to entities proportional to how much “skin in the game” they have, and what their standing in the community is.
In this way, hopefully, only people who have a lot to lose if they were to maliciously misrepresent the transaction data get assigned the blocks to process. However, if you don’t occasionally give new people a chance to showcase their loyalty to the network, power begins to concentrate to a handful of early adopters.
To that end, stakepools reach a saturation level at around 67m ADA, so the expected rewards per minted block go down. This is to incentivize people to go elsewhere.
Nevertheless, as running a fully saturated stakepool can be VERY lucrative (to the tune of hundreds of thousands of dollars per year), there’s naturally the incentive to open more than one. But the problem is that this becomes a positive feedback loop:
You’re able to afford more marketing because you have millions of dollars at your disposal, and you’re able to fill more pools to saturation, which gets you even more resources and thus you can expand your operations.
Meanwhile, single pool operators can barely keep the lights on and decentralization is lost, which slowly erodes the value of the network as a whole.

In an ideal world, I would like everyone to rise and fall based on their merit and grit. It’s a lovely idea, and back in the day I was a hardcore libertarian — I mean raging ‘will quote Ayn Rand at you if you look at me funny’ kinda guy.
I still broadly sympathize with the idea, though I’ve gotten a better taste in literature since, and now I have to caveat everything with a big “BUT”: I like the idea of free markets BUT I’m wary of just setting them loose without some safety rails, as early advantages compound to become insurmountable fortresses.
Just to make a point, an SPO is expected to pledge X amount of ADA for their pool. This is true whether they started today, or four years ago.
The issue though, is that the amount of money this represents is wildly different depending on when it happens. Someone four years ago might have bought in at $0.15, while if someone was unfortunate to recently buy at all-time highs, they might have bought ADA at around $3.
Meaning that the startup cost of the business is 20x steeper for starting recently. Of course, this is not a fair competition! It’d be like wanting to start a sandwich shop and your competitor is somehow able to have 2,000% lower costs.
The pledge requirement is a necessary evil, so I’m not going to suggest altering it at all. This example is more to show how stacked the deck can be for new entrants to the marketplace; as there are far more difficult to tabulate competitive advantages in favour of the old powers, such as larger audiences, established connections, partnerships (like the recent Sundaeswap ISPO) etc.
It also bears saying that the success of a large multipool stakepool, necessarily means that someone is worse off. There will only ever be 45bn ADA, so this hard cap means that every time a delegator decides to go with an SPO, every other SPO on the network loses potential revenue (assuming that they don’t already have a saturated pool and don’t have any intentions of opening a new one).
In economics terms, this would be called a “Zero Sum Game”, as in a situation where the success of one person necessarily means everyone else that participates is worse off. Think of it as having a slice of cake. Every time you take a slice, that means someone else can’t have that same portion.
To add to this, it’s worth noting that stakepool operators typically run on razor-thin margins as is. Although setups vary, and some people can do it cheaper, typically you’re looking at a few hundred dollars per month of operating costs, plus considerable man-hours in maintaining the network and doing marketing.
If you don’t have sufficient delegators to regularly mint blocks, then you’re expected to eat the costs for months on end. Then, when we consider that most people even in ostensibly rich countries like the US don’t even have $1,000 stashed away for emergencies, it’s becoming a very big ask.
Meanwhile, there’s also a negative feedback loop happening for single pool SPO with insufficient delegators. If you don’t happen to win a block early on, your Return on Assets (ROA) declines over time. So, while on paper you should be getting a c.4.5% ROA a year regardless of pool size, the reality is that you might just be unlucky and not mint a block for years.
Then people see the low ROA for your pool and are scared off, as they don’t understand that over a long enough timeframe it doesn’t matter.
At this point, you have to be very confident in your abilities and a little bit insane to attempt to run a stakepool.
It’s why while I do want to eventually open a stakepool, I’m not confident in opening one until the @Flantoshi community is large enough for it to make economic sense. As much as I like Cardano, I have to put my finances first. So I’m treating the stakepool as what it ultimately is: a business.
And much as we already saw in the real world where entities like Walmart crushed Mom & Pop stores, the same is bound to happen in Cardano if we don’t do something now while we still can.
Even though it is still within the bounds of an intelligent, capable, driven and middle-class person (in a first-world country) to successfully compete against multipool operators, the window is closing as the entry barriers rise.
Cardano ought to remember its own mission of driving power to the edges, and giving a voice to the voiceless. If we simply recreate the tyrannies of the past but ON THE BLOCKCHAIN, what’s really the point?
It is with this backdrop that it becomes particularly heinous when stakepool operators just keep opening multiple pools. They’re essentially robbing opportunity from new entrants, thereby centralizing the system and making everyone worse off in the long term, because they are trying to extract as much value as they can for themselves.
If the main value proposition of the network is decentralization, more ought to be done to defend the crown jewel through parameter changes that make monopolies less likely, otherwise, we will inevitably lose it.
Do you know why we have stars in the universe? (I promise it’s relevant)
Well, to summarize a very complex subject, shortly after the Big Bang, as matter was dispersed throughout the universe, some hydrogen atoms just happened to be closer to each other. These hydrogen gas particles then clumped together due to gravity, and suddenly they had more gravitational attraction due to their mass, so more and more hydrogen atoms were drawn by this increasing gravitational pull.
Eventually, these got so big, and there was so much gravitational force that stars formed.
In other words, early microscopic advantages in distance allowed for certain hydrogen atoms to come together. These were then bigger than any particle in its vicinity, so they gobbled everything up due to natural forces; there came a point where small particles simply had no chance to ever become that big and had no other choice but to succumb and be absorbed. So, from the tiniest atomic unit possible we got gigantic stars through small (but persistent) early advantages that kept building on top of each other.
It’s a well-studied phenomenon that in complex systems through random chance there is usually one victor that takes most of the benefits, as early advantages compound on each other until there are insurmountable barriers.
The same happens with language use. For instance, about 6% of the words you use in English are “the”, followed by “of”, and then “and”. The interesting thing though is that each successive word of the list is used 1/n as frequently as its place on the list (since “of” is the second most frequent it’s used ½ as much as the first tank, while “and” is used ⅓ of the time since it’s third, etc).
The spooky thing is that this applies to ALL languages, every language features this frequency formula if you rank the words, it’s such a consistent observation that it has a name “Zipf’s Law”.
I could go on providing examples of complex processes having disproportionally influential elements within the system, even if said power was supposedly randomly allocated. But I’ll spare you the details, just know it’s a whole field of study.
In other words, complex systems, despite seeming arbitrary and random, have patterns that keep repeating. In the case of free markets, we know what happens if left unchecked — through sheer random chance and early advantages, some players within the system start being able to buy out the competition.
Eventually, this leads to the formation of monopolies and cartels where the few remaining players in the late-stage game come together and work their differences in such a way as to be mutually beneficial while leaving the consumer to be a distant secondary consideration (if they’re even considered at all).
When people unironically say that mom & pop stores should’ve just been more creative to defeat Walmart, it’s missing the point. If it hadn’t been Walmart, it would’ve been another mart — same store and business model, different brand.
It’s simply the consolidation of power in free markets, and so every so often the system has to be reset, via antitrust regulation, or revolution, as the situation might become intolerable.
Now, as we’re in the blockchain space, there is a layer of complexity to consider. There’s a maxim that people repeat here “Code is law”, in reference to the fact that if the protocol allows something to happen it ought to be permissible.
So, if we are seeing that disaster is imminent as the accelerating system is heading to a brick wall, is it not our duty to slam the brakes? We need to change things at a protocol level, social pressure is just not gonna cut it, as the system is built in such a way as to make consolidation somewhat inevitable.
Did you know that about 1/16 websites run on AWS servers? Do most people care about what AWS even is? (It’s Amazon Web Services, the eponymous company’s cloud computing arm, in case you’re curious)
Put bluntly, if a system works, if it performs as expected, people don’t care about what’s under the hood. To quote science fiction author Arthur C. Clarke “Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.”
We live in a world of wonders that, for all intents and purposes, is magical, though our daily exposure has blinded us to this fact through its mundanity. But because of this, we don’t care how a sausage is made, we only care that it tastes good.
In much the same way, people in the Cardano community like to yammer on about decentralization but to the end consumer, it’s an airy-fairy concept that is utterly meaningless. If it works well, and it’s responsive, it’s no better or worse as an experience than a centralized system.
Nevertheless, there is one type of user that very much cares about decentralization (or at least the fact that it means that their data is secure and tamper-proof regardless of what their enemies might want to do) — large organizations.
As luck would have it, large organizations, irrespective of whether they come as governments or corporations, are also capable of directing billions of people to wherever they choose, ergo that’s the likeliest source of meaningful mass adoption.
In other words, if we want crypto to be anything other than the playtoy of degens in their mother’s basement, we must focus on decentralization. If we can’t decentralize and guarantee that this will remain so in perpetuity, then our main value proposal is nonexistent.
Multiple stakepool operators say that this type of salty rhetoric is just repeated ad nauseam by single pool SPOs because they’re jealous, and it’s effectively a marketing tactic. I don’t discount the fact that it probably is a marketing tactic, but are single stakepool operators necessarily wrong though?
Toothpaste companies run marketing campaigns where they tell me that brushing my teeth is good for my oral health and that dentists recommend doing so. As far as I can tell, this is correct, and the fact that they get paid if this is true is irrelevant. Just because you saw something in an ad doesn’t mean it’s not true!
Cards on the table, I have a dog in this fight, if the decentralization of Cardano falls past a certain threshold I’ll just sell, as I’d have been better off just buying Amazon stock, as their cloud computing is cheaper and far more efficient.
Now, it must be said that I have painted a very unflattering picture of multiple stakepool operators as if they’re greedy ghouls sucking the lifeblood out of Cardano. I stand by my broad caricature, though I’d argue that there is some nuance to be had.
Firstly, it isn’t so much about our current crop of multipool operators. They just get a bit of flak as they’re the most obvious targets. But let’s imagine these current multipool operators are saints. Every ADA that they receive is either put back into the business or donated to charity, they have nothing but goodness in their hearts.
Well, great! But what about the next generation, and the generation after that? Can you vouch for their moral fortitude hundreds of years down the line?
Because that’s what Cardano is ultimately trying to create, a system that will last generations. And the system quirks and lack of limiters now can create oligarchies later.
Secondly, the enemies of decentralization aren’t necessarily your current Youtubers that just so happen to command a high level of influence enough to fill many pools. No, the big enemies are megalithic, profit-driven, amoral corporations who cannot be reasoned with, and don’t care about anything except what impacts their bottom line.
Indeed, to a certain extent, they’re already here, after all, the Centralized Exchanges also offer staking services to their customers. Not only that, but they can also vote with those funds, so they can even impact Cardano governance to be in their favour.
This problem will only get worse as time goes by if we don’t put a stop to it now while we can. What if Google comes in tomorrow and opens 500 pools to saturation? They’re perfectly capable of doing this, and as Cardano gains importance it might even gain the attention of nation-states.
Are we prepared for the eventuality of a well-funded and dishonest player?

In economics, there’s a concept called “the tragedy of the commons” where it’s highlighted that things that are part of the common good, are not often priced into the cost of transactions, and because nobody is responsible for these goods, they get overused until they’re fully depleted.
Imagine we’re farmers and there’s a field close to where we live. It’s a luscious and beautiful field and as nobody owns it, everyone’s welcome to bring their cattle to graze without limits.
The problem though is when people start realizing those two important words “without limits.” Very quickly, some asshole will realize that they can buy many, many more cows and they’ll be fed. Then everyone else realizes it as well, and the dominant strategy becomes to bring as large of a herd as you can, as everyone else will do the same.
The field then dies, same happens with decentralization (same happened with kitchen cleanliness in my student accommodation when some asshole decided he didn’t want to clean anymore, so nobody else wanted to clean his mess and we had to live in squalor for a year — FUCK YOU DAINIS!).
Anyway, what I’m trying to get to is that just because something doesn’t have a price, it doesn’t mean it’s not valuable. Often the traditional response comes in two forms:
First, there’s an outright ban. RESULT: Nobody can use the field. That’s bad for everyone.
Second is acknowledging that the field provides value, and we should start charging for the negative externalities caused by people enjoying it, at a rate that allows people to use it but at a sustainable, self-replenishing rate. These funds can then be used to help replenish and manage the common good.
In praxis, it’s a tax that makes you pay your fair share for the usage of communal property and the damage you cause in doing so.
The same mechanism is used for pollution in the form of carbon credits, where we acknowledge that pollution is bad but it is a necessary byproduct for the creature comforts of modern life. The problem lies in that these funds are more often than not misappropriated and not used for their intended purpose, but smart contracts can be utilized so that the money is guaranteed to be used responsibly.
In other words, I’m not necessarily saying that multipool operators are bad by default. Some genuinely help the community. What we can agree on is that a hundred pools is too many.
Somewhere between 1–100, there is an optimal number of pools that we should call a limit. This needs to be modelled and researched through statistical and game theory simulations, I invite IOHK & Co to figure that one out.
Once we identify that ideal number, we should create limiters built into the network parameters and penalize multipool operators to heavily disincentivize pools beyond that number.
The problem is that Cardano is blind as a network, it possesses no AI and there’s no registry. A first good step would be to identify multipool operators with a nifty little new thing called an “oracle” which are humans or machines that verify that a certain set of parameters are true. They only get paid out if there’s a consensus with multiple independent ones, and there can also be a second layer of them that checks the work of the first.
So there could be a permanent active bounty for finding multipools, which are identified by oracles, and their work is checked by another group. Then we penalize identified multipools.
What I have admittedly haven’t found a solution for is a “Sibyl Attack” where some entity pretends to be multiple different people to gain more power over the network. I invite the community to come up with a solution for that particular hurdle.
At its core, blockchain as an emerging technology is useless if it just ends up as a handful of computers pretending to be a thousand different other users to each other.
At that point, you’re an inefficient and expensive Excel spreadsheet with macros enabled.
Cardano is supposed to be a decentralized network, if we are to accept any element within the system which harms this core tenet, then it must be an element that is such an unequivocal boon that its benefits far outweigh the cost imposed on the system.
The wider community should not be used as a piggybank by influencers just because they happen to have gotten popular. Not only do they damage their long term interests, but also severely hurt their fans (after often already charging above-average margins for their stakepools, but that’s a story for a different day).
Nevertheless, our primary enemy is large, profit-driven entities that just want to make a quick buck off of us. We must enact network parameter changes now before it’s too late, otherwise, Cardano will die.
If you’re in the crypto or in the traditional finance industry looking for someone to ghostwrite content for you, please do not hesitate to message me. I’m a full-time ghostwriter.
Join the community over at @flantoshi on Twitter.
And if you would like to support this project and help me pay rent, I’ll pass on the tip hat and you can send ADA to:
addr1qxfgs44d763uuw4hy6qatx383v9mmrrm6qazay6eren9sp5r2usruecwv33lp2t2nqp4ss6hrc9ac8yd2klxnsfnxz2qw3su4s
Thank you for your support!

Welcome to the ninth edition of our ASPA Partner Focus series. We have interviewed the latest new joiners and would like to share their mission and why they chose to be a part of the Cardano community and the Ardana project!
https://twitter.com/lovelacepool1
1LOVE started with the test network for Cardano, where they quickly discovered that stake pool operators face significant challenges in finding funding and support to get started. 1LOVE formed a group to help other pools like theirs gain stake and earn their first blocks on the test network. This gave them the opportunity to join the Ambassador Program for the Cardano Foundation moderation team on Telegram and Reddit.
Their mission is to support community members, stake pool operators (ITN bootstrap program), and developers. As their network continues to build and grow, they will continue to do their part to support others also.
1LOVE believes that Cardano has excellent potential to create a stable, secure, and sustainable blockchain foundation to build upon in the years to come. This is why they have chosen to become part of the Cardano community.
1LOVE sees Ardana as an exciting new chapter in Cardano’s journey, as community members will now be able to access direct lending and swap capabilities from Ardana’s liquidity pools with native assets without having to convert or pay higher fees on other networks. 1LOVE stated, “I think this will be the next evolution of direct personal on-chain banking.”
https:// https://twitter.com/IAM_X_IDENTITY
IAMX has been following Cardano’s development since 2020. Since some of the team members run a telecommunication company, the question arose, “How will blockchain change the telecom business?”
After much research and investigation, the team has plans to provide millions of people with a solution to manage their own identity when it comes to telecommunications. And, most importantly, they have the ability to provide a solution to many people with no identity at all.
IAMX believes Cardano is the most scalable blockchain in the world. They are impressed that Cardano is focussing on developing countries and also stated that there is no other alternative to adopting an identity solution.
The team also praised the team at Ardana and commended the project. They are excited to see what Ardana will soon bring to the Cardano blockchain.
Kawan provides emergency assistance to victims of natural disasters by depositing 10% of the pool’s reward into an emergency wallet fund, which is distributed as aid in the event of a natural disaster. Kawan is also building a solid local community in order to raise awareness of Cardano’s vision and mission.
This stake pool is inspired by Cardano’s vision and mission to lead the developing world into the new age of financial freedom. Kawan believes that Cardano will transform the world’s financial system forever through its rigorous scientific research and outstanding team.
Kawan is excited to join Ardana through the ASPA program and said they are very impressed with the stablecoin development and governance structure that Ardana brings to the community.
https://twitter.com/RiseCardano
RISE started out in August 2020 and has minted over 500 blocks so far. The team is dedicated to using its pool as a means of funding charities around the world. They do this by donating 20% of the pool’s profits to a different cause each month. A worthy cause is chosen by the community through social media polls each month. Thanks to this method and their delegates, they have donated over $6000 to eight organizations so far in 2021.
The pool’s second mission is to provide excellent staking services to their delegators with high-performance nodes and monitoring to ensure constant availability.
The team is excited to be part of the Cardano community, stating, “We like the idea of banking with unbanked people as a mechanism to mutually benefit and grow while implementing tools that will ultimately help drive innovation in these demographics. Solutions like Atala Prism appeal to us because they create an identity on a decentralized platform.”
The stake pool finds the scientific peer-review process of Cardano development inspiring. They believe that no matter what happens in the crypto market, Cardano’s scientific rigor and innovative solutions will still come out on top.
When asked about Ardana, RISE said: “I think the team has been great at communicating and explaining their stablecoin ecosystem, development methodology and the rationale behind certain decisions, as well as the interest in mission-driven pools, which sets them apart from other projects that do not have that.
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AZUL’s mission is to help workers in low-wage countries receive tips in the form of ADA. These smart contract-based donations will then arrive directly to those in need, cutting out all unnecessary intermediaries. This means no friction loss, no expensive charity parties — just fast and direct help.
The team is also a partner to the NFT’s parat-gallery.com project and hopes to bring curated art to the NFT space. Their long-term goal is to work full-time in the Cardano space.
The team fully supports Cardano and believes it will be one of the most important blockchains in the future. AZUL is also proud to be a member of the Cardano community and has found great stake pool colleagues here, with who they communicate regularly.
AZUL believes in Ardana and also stated that stablecoins will be very important for the mass adoption of cryptocurrencies. “Decentralization is the foundation of blockchain. We love that ASPA supports both and aims to bring benefits to the stake pool community.”
Thank you for reading the ninth article in the ASPA Partner Focus Series! We at Ardana understand that for DeFi on Cardano to flourish, stake pools must be engaged from inception to adoption.
This is why we created ASPA to engage stake pools that we align with to work towards the betterment of this ecosystem.
About Ardana
Ardana is Cardano’s stablecoin hub, bringing the necessary DeFi primitives needed to bootstrap & maintain any economy to Cardano. Ardana offers an on-chain asset-backed stablecoin and a decentralized stable-asset DEX. The stablecoin is verifiably backed by an excess of on-chain collateral and will enable borrowers to take leverage on their ADA or other supported assets. The DEX is a highly capital efficient exchange enabling swaps with minimal slippage & fees while providing low-risk yield opportunities to liquidity providers.
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