Coinbase Earmarks 10% of Resources to Funding Staff-Pitched Moonshots
The publicly traded crypto exchange is launching an internal incubator program to find the Next Big Thing.

Coinbase said Wednesday it will dedicate 10% of its resources to funding crypto moonshots pitched by its employees.
The publicly traded crypto exchange’s new “Project 10 Percent” will seek industry-disrupting ideas with “10x impact,” Chief Product Officer Surojit Chatterjee said in a blog post.
Coinbase’s incubator-style effort places it among a handful of Silicon Valley giants with formal programs to foster internal innovation. For example, Google lets employees spend 20% of their work time on personal projects, an initiative that has yielded massive wins for the world's biggest search engine including Gmail.
Coinbase, which said it already reserves 10% of work time for “innovative experimentation,” is now poised to fund employees’ most promising moonshots with its deep pockets.
Read more: Coinbase Going Public Isn’t Selling Out – It’s the Start of a Long Game
Employees will have two pitch days per year to showcase their ideas. The ones chosen will be evaluated every quarter for progress, and some will be culled. “Our most successful products today started as disruptive bets,” Coinbase said in the blog post.
Chatterjee framed the project as essential to Coinbase’s continued growth.
“It’s still early days for the crypto economy. By maintaining our culture of repeatable innovation through these 10 Percent projects, we’ll be in a position to continue building powerful, simple and compelling product experiences that define the future of our industry,” Chatterjee wrote.
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Recapping Consensus Hong Kong

Crypto's role in payments for AI, regulatory changes and the digital asset market dominated conversations on the ground.
Ce qu'il:
- Speakers at CoinDesk's Consensus Hong Kong conference said crypto and stablecoins are likely to become the default payment tools for autonomous AI agents in an emerging "machine economy."
- Market participants warned that bitcoin, which has already dropped nearly $30,000 in a month, may fall further, with $50,000 seen as the level to watch.
- Hong Kong regulators are pressing ahead with crypto rules even as others wait to see how U.S. legislation develops.












