This article is featured in the latest issue of The Protocol, our weekly newsletter exploring the tech behind crypto, one block at a time. Sign up here to get it in your inbox every Wednesday.
Welcome to The Protocol, CoinDesk's weekly wrap of the most important stories in cryptocurrency tech development. I’m Margaux Nijkerk, a reporter at CoinDesk.
In this issue:
STRIPE’S TEMPO TESTNET GOES LIVE: Tempo, a payments-focused blockchain backed by Stripe and crypto investment firm Paradigm, launched its public testnet, a key step in its effort in making stablecoin payments for mainstream use. Tempo also unveiled a roster of additions to the network’s partner group, including buy-now-pay-later firm Klarna, predictions market Kalshi, payments giant Mastercard and Swiss global bank UBS. They join a group of earlier design partners such as Deutsche Bank, Visa, Shopify, OpenAI and Nubank. Initially introduced in September, Tempo is designed to handle high-volume financial transactions with low fees, instant finality and native support for stablecoins. Now the testnet is live, developers and corporate partners can begin experimenting with real-world payments onchain. The move fits into the latest trend of building blockchains for stablecoin payments as adoption of digital dollars soars globally. Currently a $300 billion asset class, stablecoins are projected to become an integral part of cross-border payment rails with business-to-business (B2B), peer-to-peer (P2P) and card payments driving growth, a recent report by Keyrock and Bitso said. Tempo aims to solve common pain points in blockchain-based finance like network congestion and volatile transaction fees. The network charges around one-tenth of a cent per transaction, payable in U.S. dollar-denominated stablecoins and eliminating the need for a volatile gas token. — Krisztian Sandor Read more.
ZKSYNC LITE TO SUNSET IN 2026: Matter Labs plans to deprecate ZKsync Lite, the first iteration of its Ethereum layer-2 network, the team said in a post on X over the weekend. The company framed the move, happening in early 2026, as a planned sunset for an early proof-of-concept that helped validate their zero-knowledge rollup design choices before newer systems went live. ZKsync Lite, which debuted in 2020, was built for basic token transfers, and took a back seat after developers released ZKsync Era in March 2023, a more advanced zkEVM rollup, which now anchors the project’s broader ZK Stack roadmap. The Lite network will continue operating for now, with funds remaining safe and withdrawals to Ethereum mainnet still available, the team said. A detailed migration plan and timetable for the shutdown will be published next year. — Margaux Nijkerk Read more.
BLOCKSTREAM APP INTRODUCES LIGHTNING ATOMIC SWAPS: Blockstream has rolled out an update to its mobile app that allows users to swap between Bitcoin’s Lightning and Liquid networks, aiming to lower the entry barrier for private, fast bitcoin payments. A fresh version of the Blockstream Green app introduces support for trustless atomic swaps between Lightning and Liquid. The change lets users pay Lightning invoices directly from their Liquid bitcoin (LBTC) balances, avoiding the need to manage Lightning channels or maintain inbound liquidity, a process that can be technically challenging for many. Lightning is designed for instant, low-fee bitcoin payments. Liquid, by contrast, is a sidechain that offers confidential transactions and easier management of unspent bitcoin outputs (UTXOs). By linking the two networks through atomic swaps, Blockstream is attempting to give users the benefits of both without requiring deep technical involvement. The swap process happens self-custodially and relies on cryptographic hash locks, ensuring that both sides of the transaction are completed or neither is. If something fails, funds return automatically to the original wallet. — Helene Braun Read more.
AXELAR UNVEILS NEW PRIVACY AI FRAMEWORK: Axelar unveiled AgentFlux, an open-source framework designed to run AI agents locally while keeping private keys, trading strategies and client data off the cloud — a pitch aimed squarely at institutions exploring onchain finance and wary of privacy risks. Developed by Interop Labs, the team behind the Axelar network, AgentFlux lets financial firms deploy “agentic” automation without sending sensitive information to external infrastructure, the company announced. The framework tackles one of the biggest frictions in AI-driven crypto operations: tool-calling. Most agents today rely on cloud-based models to decide which blockchain tools to invoke and how to structure transactions, which can unintentionally expose the very information institutions seek to protect. AgentFlux splits those tasks into two smaller, specialized models — one for picking the right tool, and another for generating the arguments to execute. According to the team behind Axelar, this setup improves tool-calling accuracy by 46% on benchmark tests, bringing local models closer to the performance of larger cloud systems. – Margaux Nijkerk Read more.
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