TL;DR
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Circle, the company behind the world’s second largest stablecoin, has just announced the launch of their programmable crypto wallet service.
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While WaaS isn’t new, an essential part of onboarding the masses into Web3 (at least, as it stands right now) is having a place to store digital assets that’s easy enough for Grandma to use.
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Every innovation that makes Web3 just that little bit more user-friendly adds up to make Web3 what it will become.
Full story
Circle, the company behind the world’s second largest stablecoin, has just announced the launch of their programmable crypto wallet service.
Their head is one of beauty: Web3 wallets for the next billion users.
Wallets-as-a-Service (Waas) isn’t new and Circle isn’t the only one working on it.
(Heck, we wrote about another company offering something similar last week! Plus Coinbase has their WaaS also offer).
But that’s what makes it so exciting.
Any company that jumps into this space raises the bar.
While WaaS isn’t new, an essential part of onboarding the masses into Web3 (at least, as it stands right now) is having a place to store digital assets that’s easy enough for Grandma to use.
Rome wasn’t built in a day; nor the internet.
Every innovation that makes Web3 just that little bit more user-friendly adds up to make Web3 what it will become.