For much of the world, the killer app isn't Bitcoin's volatility, it's stablecoins. According to Francis Pouliot on BTC Sessions, North Americans miss this. Outside wealthy nations, people need banking utility, not a speculative asset. They want Tether, not price swings.
This demand is driving a builder movement focused on creating dollar-pegged stablecoins natively on Bitcoin. On Presidio Bitcoin Jam, projects like Utxo and Ark debuted stablecoins that settle on Bitcoin's base layer, aiming to avoid the custodial risks of other chains. Simultaneously, Layer-2 protocols like Ark and Liquid are tackling scalability. Scott from Sideswap, on Citadel Dispatch, explained their non-custodial swap market on the Liquid sidechain, where adoption is led by the Brazilian stablecoin Depix.
These technical leaps introduce new complexities for user sovereignty. Bitcoin Optech detailed the 'half-key problem' with ARK, where exiting requires both a private key and a map to your funds. New verification tools like VPAC are emerging as independent audit layers, a critical second set of eyes for rapidly evolving code. The builder ethos is spreading geographically, too, with the first New York Builder event marking an incursion into a legacy finance stronghold.
All this builds toward a system where the technology fades into the background, providing seamless utility. This quiet development contrasts with a shifting regulatory landscape. The Bitcoin And podcast highlighted a new U.S. Treasury report that acknowledges legitimate uses for privacy tools while seeking expanded surveillance powers. Meanwhile, Bitcoin itself marches on with predictable scarcity, its 20 millionth coin mined this week - a non-event that underscores its core value proposition against a backdrop of political fights over programmable government money.
Francis Pouliot, BTC Sessions:
- This is what North Americans don't understand.
- Outside of North America, people don't have money and they can't withstand volatility.




