El Salvador Bitcoin learning initiative to introduce a fresh syllabus in the English language.
Mi Primer Bitcoin, an educational program focusing on Bitcoin in El Salvador, has revealed an improved curriculum for its diploma course, which will now be available in English. The goal of the program is to revolutionize Bitcoin education by providing an interactive, entertaining, original, convenient, and easy-to-understand course using examples that can impact people worldwide.
The course's student workbook provides lessons on a range of topics, including "Managing Scarcity in a Booming Economy" and "What is Money?". Head of Curriculum Dalia Platt stated that the project has made significant progress, having taught over ten thousand students this year, twenty-five times more than the previous year. Mi Primer Bitcoin seeks to be at the forefront of Bitcoin education, with El Salvador being the first Bitcoin nation. When the program launched in June 2022, over 35 high school students received their Bitcoin diplomas, and the program's educational goal remains unchanged.
Binance says it didn’t use billions of dollars of users' funds
Binance, the biggest cryptocurrency exchange globally, refuted the accusations made by Forbes claiming that it transferred $1.8 billion linked to clients' funds between August and December 2022 without authorization. Forbes suggests that $1.1 billion in USDC tokens was transferred to Cumberland/DWR, while other players such as Amber Group, Alameda Research, and Tron received hundreds of millions of dollars from Binance.
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Binance refutes the claims of any misconduct and ensures that the transactions were part of its internal billing methods, which did not influence the collateralization of user properties. Binance has faced various incidents that have affected its reputation.