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Phemex Launches Prediction Market, Introduces Month-long Forecasting Championship

2026-04-24 23:34:08

Apia, Samoa, April 24, 2026 — Phemex, a user-first global cryptocurrency exchange trusted by over 10 million traders, announced the official launch of its Prediction Market. The new product enables users to trade on the outcomes of real-world events, expanding Phemex’s platform beyond traditional price-based markets.

Through the Prediction Market, Phemex users can take YES or NO positions on a range of events, including cryptocurrency milestones, sports tournaments, and global developments. Markets are accessible directly through existing Phemex accounts using USDT, without requiring external wallets or separate on-chain interaction.

The launch reflects growing interest in markets where information, sentiment, and probabilities can be expressed more directly than through conventional asset trading. By integrating prediction markets into its platform, Phemex aims to make this category more accessible to a broader global user base.

To mark the launch, Phemex introduced the Prediction Championship, a four-week participation event running from April 23 to May 20, 2026. The series ranks eligible users based on forecasting performance, with rewards distributed weekly and final standings recognized at the conclusion of the competition.

"Prediction markets represent an important evolution in market structure," said Federico Variola, CEO of Phemex. "They transform information and collective expectations into tradable signals. In a world increasingly shaped by fast-moving narratives, users are looking for more direct ways to express views on outcomes, not only on asset prices. Bringing this category onto Phemex is part of our broader strategy to build a more complete trading ecosystem around how markets actually function today."

The launch follows Phemex’s recent expansion into new product verticals, including TradFi futures and AI-enabled trading tools, underscoring the company’s push toward a broader multi-market platform. Looking ahead, Phemex plans to expand prediction market coverage, product functionality, and cross-category trading opportunities as demand for event-driven markets continues to grow.

About Phemex

Founded in 2019, Phemex is a user-first crypto exchange trusted by over 10 million traders worldwide. The platform offers spot and derivatives trading, copy trading, and wealth management products designed to prioritize user experience, transparency, and innovation.

Media contact

Oyku Yavuz

PR Lead

[email protected]

https://phemex.com/

:::tip This story was published as a press release by Blockmanwire under HackerNoon’s Business Blogging Program

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Disclaimer:

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Cryptocurrencies are speculative, complex, and involve high risks. This can mean high prices volatility and potential loss of your initial investment. You should consider your financial situation, investment purposes, and consult with a financial advisor before making any investment decisions. The HackerNoon editorial team has only verified the story for grammatical accuracy and does not endorse or guarantee the accuracy, reliability, or completeness of the information stated in this article. #DYOR

HackerNoon vs Traditional Tech Media: Why It Feels More Human

2026-04-24 23:30:06

Tech media has a polish problem.

Everything looks cleaner now. Faster. Smarter. More optimized. Headlines are sharpened for clicks. Articles are trimmed for attention spans. Opinions are packaged like product updates. Even the writing feels professionally compressed, as if every sentence passed through a machine designed to remove friction.

And yet, much of it feels less human than ever.

That is the strange thing about modern tech media. It covers the most disruptive industry in the world, but often sounds afraid to get too close to the mess.

HackerNoon feels different because it does not always write about tech from a safe distance. It often writes from inside the room — from the people building, testing, shipping, failing, and arguing in public.

That difference is bigger than style.

It changes the reading experience completely.

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Traditional Tech Media Often Talks Around Tech

A lot of traditional tech publications are built to observe.

They watch companies. Funding rounds. product launches. executive reshuffles. quarterly numbers. lawsuits. acquisitions. trend cycles.

Then they explain what happened, why it matters, and what readers should think about it.

There is nothing wrong with that model. Good reporting matters. Tech needs people who can investigate, verify, compare, and simplify complicated stories for larger audiences.

But there is also a cost to that distance.

When the media becomes too polished, it starts to sound detached. The writing may be clean, but the pulse gets weaker. The article may be correct, but not alive.

You finish reading and remember the information, not the voice.

That is the gap.

A lot of tech media know how to report on innovation. Fewer outlets know how to sound like they actually live inside it.

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HackerNoon Still Sounds Like the Internet

That is where HackerNoon stands out.

HackerNoon does not always feel like a newsroom explaining the tech world to outsiders. It often feels like the tech world is talking to itself in public.

That gives it a different energy.

The tone is usually looser. The perspective is often more personal. The writing feels less sanitized. Instead of sounding like it came from a media system trying to keep everything balanced, it often sounds like it came from someone who has skin in the game.

That matters because tech is not a clean industry.

It is chaotic. contradictory. tribal. experimental. full of strong opinions and unfinished ideas. Products launch early. Founders overpromise. Developers fight in public. Communities rally around tools that barely work and somehow still change everything.

You cannot fully capture that world with sterile writing.

To write about tech well, sometimes you have to sound like someone who has actually been burned by a deployment, argued in a Discord, sat through impossible roadmap meetings, shipped something late, or changed your mind halfway through building.

HackerNoon often leaves room for that voice.

That is why it feels more human.

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Human Writing Is Not Perfect Writing

One of the biggest mistakes in modern media is assuming that better writing always means smoother writing.

It does not.

Sometimes smoother writing is just safer writing.

Human writing has edges. It has rhythm. It has an opinion. It sometimes takes the longer route because that is how real people think. It can be sharp in one paragraph and reflective in the next. It can sound excited, annoyed, curious, skeptical, or unexpectedly funny.

That is what many traditional publications iron out.

They remove too much of the person.

HackerNoon, at its best, does the opposite. It lets the writer still feel present on the page.

And presence changes everything.

When readers feel a real person behind the words, the article becomes more than content. It becomes a conversation. Maybe even an argument. At minimum, it becomes memorable.

That is rare now.

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Builders Trust Voices That Feel Lived-In

Tech people are unusually good at detecting distance.

They can tell when a piece was written by someone who understands the culture and when it was written by someone summarizing it from the outside. They can feel the difference between explanation and participation.

This is one reason HackerNoon resonates with builders, founders, indie developers, marketers, and internet-native readers.

It often does not sound like it is trying to impress them.

It sounds like it is speaking their language.

That language is not always formal. It is not always perfectly balanced either. But it often carries something more valuable: lived-in credibility.

Not polished authority.

Earned familiarity.

There is a difference between saying, “Here is the trend,” and saying, “Here is what this looks like when you are actually in it.”

The first one informs.

The second one connects.

And in a media environment flooded with summaries, connections become a serious advantage.

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Traditional Tech Media Often Optimizes for Reach

HackerNoon often feels like it optimizes for resonance.

That distinction explains a lot.

Traditional tech outlets usually need scale. They write for broad audiences, multiple stakeholder groups, advertisers, corporate readers, curious outsiders, and investors tracking movement in the sector. The tone has to stay controlled enough to travel well.

So the content becomes more universal.

More accessible.

More brand-safe.

But when writing tries too hard to be for everyone, it can stop feeling like it belongs to anyone.

HackerNoon feels more specific. More internet-native. More builder-adjacent. Even when the article is broad, it often carries the energy of a niche community talking to itself.

That makes the experience feel warmer.

Not emotionally warm in a sentimental way.

Warm in the sense that someone was actually there.

Someone cared enough to have a point of view.

Someone wrote like a participant, not just a distributor of information.

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The Internet Is Tired of Perfect Media

This is not only about HackerNoon.

It is about what readers want now.

The internet has had enough polished emptiness. People are surrounded by clean formatting, careful positioning, and professional neutrality. Every platform is full of content that looks finished and says very little.

Readers are starting to reward something else.

Voice.

Texture.

Specificity.

Risk.

They want writing that sounds like a person, not a system. They want technology explained by people who have actually wrestled with it. They want less corporate distance and more intellectual presence.

That is exactly why HackerNoon still feels fresh to many readers, even in a crowded media environment.

It has not completely surrendered to the flattened voice of modern content.

It still feels like the internet in places.

And that is a compliment.

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Reporting Matters. But So Does Belonging

None of this means traditional tech media has no value.

It does.

There will always be a need for strong reporting, accountability, structured analysis, and editorial discipline. The tech world is too powerful and too influential to be covered only by insiders talking among themselves.

But reporting alone is no longer enough to create trust.

People do not just want information. They want signs of belonging. They want to know whether the writer actually understands the culture they are covering, not just the facts surrounding it.

That is where HackerNoon often wins.

It may not always feel as polished as traditional tech media. That is fine. Polish is not the same as depth. Clean formatting is not the same as intimacy. Editorial smoothness is not the same as credibility.

Sometimes, the most believable writing is the writing that still sounds like a person typed it with a real opinion in mind.

That is what makes HackerNoon feel more human.

Not because it is trying harder to look human.

Because it has kept more of the human voice alive.

And in a tech media world increasingly shaped by performance, optimization, and distance, that may be the most valuable difference of all.

Janice McAfee Announces John McPepe Launch Party Featuring Musicians, Artists and Freedom Fighters

2026-04-24 23:11:11

The John McPepe meme coin project has officially announced their launch party in Las Vegas, marking a historic intersection of internet meme culture and the defiant legacy of JOHN MCAFEE. The launch is planned for April 29th with a series of events in Las Vegas, including Afroman, Shooter McGavin, Riff Raff, Bobby Shmurda, and many more!

John McPepe serves as a tribute to the spirit of freedom and technical sovereignty championed by JOHN MCAFEE. By merging the iconic imagery of Pepe the Frog with MCAFEE’s history, the project creates a unique cultural movement for those who value privacy and the "Freedom Fighter" ethos. 

The launch event will include a  high profile exhibition that merges the JOHN MCAFEE legacy with the elite tier of internet meme art. Featuring over a dozen original works from the world’s top Pepe artists, the launch establishes a new cultural landmark for the intersection of digital art and technical defiance.

PREMIER OF JOHN MCPEPE MOVIE TRAILER

In addition to the art showcase, the project has confirmed the upcoming release of a full length John McPepe movie, scheduled to premiere in theaters in June 2026. The film will provide an immersive look into the lore, philosophy, energy, and history of the movement.A New Era of Digital Culture

The Las Vegas launch event marks the beginning of a massive summer for the project.

“We are bringing together the greatest artists in this culture to tell a story that needs to be heard,” the team from McPepe said. “Between the Las Vegas exhibition and the full length film coming in June, we are ensuring the JOHN MCAFEE legacy is captured with the intensity and creativity it deserves.”

About John McPepe

John McPepe is a digital culture project dedicated to promote the legacy of John MCAFEE. By collaborating with world class artists and producing original cinematic content, the project serves as a hub for freedod focused art and media.Mcpepe.comhttps://t.me/johnmcpepehttps://x.com/mcpepewtf

:::tip This story was published as a press release by Blockmanwire under HackerNoon’s Business Blogging Program

:::

Disclaimer:

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Cryptocurrencies are speculative, complex, and involve high risks. This can mean high prices volatility and potential loss of your initial investment. You should consider your financial situation, investment purposes, and consult with a financial advisor before making any investment decisions. The HackerNoon editorial team has only verified the story for grammatical accuracy and does not endorse or guarantee the accuracy, reliability, or completeness of the information stated in this article. #DYOR

HackerNoon Projects of the Week: MetaCoreX, ZKX Helix, and Tripvento

2026-04-24 22:58:40

Welcome to the latest HackerNoon Projects of the Week installment. Each week, we shine a light on standout projects from our Proof of Usefulness Hackathon—a contest built around the core question every builder should answer: Is my product actually useful in the real world?

For each edition, we’ll highlight projects that demonstrate clear usefulness, technical execution, and real-world impact; all backed by data and not witty buzzwords.

This week, we’re excited to share three projects that have proven their utility by solving concrete problems for real users: MetaCoreX, ZKX Helix, and Tripvento.

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Meet The Projects of The Week

MetaCoreX

https://hackernoon.com/metacorex-earns-a-93-proof-of-usefulness-score-by-building-a-sovereign-decentralized-operating-system?embedable=true

\ MetaCoreX is an innovative decentralized operating system designed as a foundational layer for a sovereign digital metaverse. By intertwining AI agents, human users, and smart contracts, MetaCoreX aims to establish a merit-based ecosystem free from hype-driven tokenomics.

Prood of Usefulness Score: +93/1000

MetaCoreX Usefulness Score Breakdown

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:::tip See MetaCoreX Full Proof of Usefulness Report

Read their story on HackerNoon

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ZKX Helix

https://hackernoon.com/zkx-helix-earns-a-94-proof-of-usefulness-score-by-building-zero-knowledge-mfa-and-access-control?embedable=true

\ ZKX Helix is a cutting-edge security solution focusing on zero-knowledge multi-factor authentication and access control. Originally developed for military applications to eliminate threats like phishing and man-in-the-middle attacks, ZKX Helix is now preparing to bring its dynamic, granular digital defense capabilities to the commercial sector.

Proof of Usefulness Score: +94/1000

ZKX Helix Usefulness Score Breakdown

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:::tip See ZKX Helix’s Full Proof of Usefulness Report

Read their story on HackerNoon

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Tripvento

https://hackernoon.com/tripvento-earns-a-6861-proof-of-usefulness-score-by-building-an-intent-based-b2b-hotel-ranking-api?embedable=true

\ Tripvento is a B2B hotel ranking API that uses geospatial intelligence and semantic AI to score properties based on traveler intent. Tripvento bypasses traditional pay-to-play commission models, providing an unbiased data layer for the next generation of travel platforms.

Proof of Usefulness Score: +69 /1000

Tripvento Usefulness Score Breakdown

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:::tip See Tripvento’s Full Proof of Usefulness Report

Read their story on HackerNoon

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Stop Building in the Dark - Get Scored!

The web is drowning in vaporware and empty promises. We created Proof of Usefulnessto reward what actually matters: real user adoption, sustainable revenue, and technical stability. \n

Why submit?

1. Instant Validation:Get your Proof of Usefulness score (from -100 to +1000) the moment you submit. \n 2. The Prize Pool: Compete for $20K in cash and $130K+ in software credits from Bright DataNeo4jStoryblokAlgolia, and HackerNoon. \n 3. Built-in Distribution:Your submission becomes a HackerNoon story, putting your build in front of millions of monthly readers. \n 4. Rewards for All: Every qualifying participant unlocks a suite of software credits just for entering.

\ Proof of Usefulness's image-dacab

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How to Enter:

1. Get Your Score: Head to www.proofofusefulness.comand submit your project details to generate your PoU Report Card. \n 2. Generate Your Draft:Click the button on your report page to convert your submission into a HackerNoon blog post draft. \n 3. Refine & Publish:Edit your draft to add your technical "secret sauce," then hit Submit for Review. Once published, you’re officially in the prize queue! \n

:::tip Complete guide on how to submit here.

\ P.S. The clock is ticking!

\ Month four is already underway, and another round of winners is right around the corner. With just 2 months and a mega prize round left to go, the window is closing—get your project in the mix now.

\ 👉 Submit Your Project Now!

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Thanks for building useful things! \n

BIP-361 Could Lock Away Old Bitcoin to Prevent Quantum Exploits

2026-04-24 22:23:59

BIP-361 proposes phasing out legacy Bitcoin signatures to counter quantum threats, potentially rendering millions of coins unspendable.

What Breaks First in Enterprise AI Systems

2026-04-24 22:12:40

Enterprise AI strategies are fragile due to shadow AI, pipeline sprawl, and poor data governance—real success depends on simplifying architecture and controlling data.