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Dell Joins Hedera Governing Council to Explore Developing Decentralized Applications

The council that runs the Hedera public ledger now has up to 39 members, each of which run a node on the network.

Updated May 9, 2023, 4:07 a.m. Published Feb 7, 2023, 3:05 p.m. 1 min read
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Computer manufacturer Dell (DELL) has become a member of the Hedera Governing Council to develop decentralized applications to help its customers with their blockchain and Web3-related ventures.

Hedera's HBAR token spiked higher on the news. It's retraced a bit since, but remains up nearly 6% for the day.

Specifically, Dell will explore developing applications on the Hedera network for decentralized environments such as edge computing – a paradigm in which data is processed using networks and devices near to where it is generated, enabling it to be processed at greater speeds and volumes.

"With secure, provisioned [distributed ledger technolgies], customers can build cost effective and efficient applications across IT environments, including edge, that provide scalable data persistence, protection, control and process automation," Hedera said on Tuesday.

The council that runs the Hedera public ledger now has up to 39 members, each of which run a node on the network. Other members include Google, IBM Deutsche Telekom, Boeing, DBS and Nomura Holdings.

Hedera's aim is to provide a public distributed network with the security and stability to attract big businesses to build on it.

Dell's association with blockchain and crypto goes back nearly a decade. In 2014 it started accepting bitcoin as a means of payment in partnership with Coinbase. Joining the Hedera council would appear to be its first public blockchain-related move for some time however.

Read more: UK Investment Giant Abrdn Joins Hedera Governing Council to Advance Tokenization Goals



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The U.S. Department of Justice headquarters in Washington (Jesse Hamilton/CoinDesk)

Fuller allegedly diverted $6.2 million for personal use and $5.5M for Ponzi-like payments; only 3% of funds went to crypto trading.

知っておくべきこと:

  • Texas man Nathan Fuller allegedly raised $12.3 million from 150 investors via a false AI crypto bot scheme promising up to 100% returns.
  • Fuller allegedly diverted $6.2 million for personal use and $5.5M for Ponzi-like payments; only 3% of funds went to crypto trading.
  • To cover losses, Fuller used fabricated...