Block.one says the time is right for it to take an active role in the EOS community voting for block producers.
EOS creator Block.one has acquired the team behind once-prominent block producer EOS New York, which has now entirely ceased operations.
Buying votes is a big no-no in traditional democracies, but on the world’s eighth-largest blockchain it’s become an accepted way of doing business.
For the first time in three months, bitcoin’s price is being quoted in five digits to the left of the decimal.
In a departure from earlier announcements, the company now says its Facebook rival, Voice, "will be run on a purpose-made EOSIO blockchain."
EOS VC is looking for "world-conquerors and local heroes" for its new grants program.
Equilibrium will hold 6.5 million EOS tokens in reserve as an insurance policy for users should its stablecoin lose its peg.
Maximum transactions: How a project called EIDOS is congesting the EOS blockchain.
Early supporters of EOS, the world's seventh-largest blockchain by market cap, are leaving. Here's why.
LiquidApps, an EOS scaling project, imitated Block.One's record-setting ICO strategy but has been met with far less investor interest.
Uplandme, a "Monopoly"-like property game built on the EOS blockchain, has raised $2 million in seed funding.
Programmed to boost rankings, increase liquidity of tokens, and sabotage competitors, bots are challenging the integrity of Dapps.
Block.one is buying back more equity from early investors. Some – but not the most famous ones – made 6,500 percent on the last buyback.
Coinbase has added support for the EOS cryptocurrency for customers on Coinbase.com and its Android and iOS apps.
Galaxy Digital, the crypto bank founded by Michael Novogratz, has sold its position in Block.one, the maker of the EOS blockchain, for $71 million.