October 2008

Satoshi Nakamoto released the

Bitcoin white paper, with the core goal of building a peer-to-peer electronic payment system that does not rely on financial institutions. It aimed to solve the issues of trust and double spending in payment transactions through cryptography and distributed ledger technology. Bitcoin marked the beginning of a decentralized challenge to centralized payment systems.

2014

Tether issued the stablecoin token USDT, pegged 1:1 to fiat currency and backed 100% by Tether’s reserves. USDT provided a temporary solution for capital storage and reduced the friction cost in crypto token trading. The first generation of stablecoins officially emerged.

June 18, 2019,

Facebook officially released the Libra white paper, a stablecoin project backed by a basket of currencies. Its core business logic was to leverage blockchain and distributed ledger technologies to offer a low-cost, highly efficient global value transfer tool, drawing the attention of regulators worldwide. Stablecoins gradually became part of the financial regulatory framework.

June 17, 2025

The US Senate passed the GENIUS Act with a vote of 68 in favor and 30 against, and submitted it to the House of Representatives for review. This marks the formal transition of stablecoins from a regulatory gray area into a legally compliant financial business.

July 14, 2025

The US Congress will host “Digital Currency Week,” during which it plans to review three key pieces of cryptocurrency legislation, including the CLARITY Act and the GENIUS Act. These “milestone legislations” aim to establish a clear regulatory framework for digital assets.

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