There was a time when talking about Bitcoin meant talking about something marginal. For some, a cryptographer’s experiment, a geek’s toy, and an unsubstantiated promise. But the code remained silent and stubborn, and someone had to read it.
11 years ago CriptoNoticias decided to do just that.
Not as a price medium or rumor collector; As a bridge between complex code and the Spanish-speaking community That he has a right to understand what’s really going on. We have experts dedicated to reviewing the Bitcoin source code, reading the Bitcoin Core developers’ mailing list, and researching each one. paper At CriptoNoticias, scientists from the Institute of Cryptography and Quantum Computing are building something that most financial technology media don’t have: a real technical profession.
There’s code behind every heading
When the industry celebrates the halving, most media focuses only on prices and how this event will impact the halving. We are used to reading cycles of about four years. But in CriptoNoticias we go further and talk about protocols. It’s about how emissions reductions work, what it means for miners, and how the lines of code Satoshi writes continue to be executed every four years with mathematical precision, beyond the views of markets and governments. This is the situation for Q2, Q3, and Q4, each of which is addressed as an actual situation rather than a market event. Monetary policy implemented by code.
The difference is not small. That’s why we track every proposed improvement (BIP) from first draft to final activation or rejection, long before it becomes news. CriptoNoticias has already covered the technical debate between BIP8 and BIP9 when Taproot activation was being discussed. Governance mechanisms that determine how the decentralized network is updated No one can force it. And when the update finally hits mainnet, we prepared our readers to understand what the Schnorr signature is, what MAST is for, and why it all matters beyond the price of BTC.
Tech journalism works like this. Instead of waiting for something to happen, understand why it happens.
Attacks that the market didn’t know what to expect
The technological history of ecosystems is not just a story of progress. It’s also a story of vulnerabilities, audit failures, and lessons learned at great cost.
When Ethereum was attacked by DAO, The subsequent discussion was not only about the leaked 3.6 million ethers. Via a recursive call vulnerability. It was deeper. Can a decentralized network reverse transactions? Who decides what is immutable and what is immutable? CriptoNoticias joined us to find out not only the method of attack, but also the reason for the argument that ultimately led to Ethereum being split in two.
Years later, when hackers stole 7,074 BTC from Binance’s hot wallet, we didn’t just report the amount stolen. We analyze fund flows, cybersecurity reports, and limitations of manual withdrawal systems. And in February 2025, as a result of the Bybit hack, 400,000 ETH lost due to multi-signature transaction vulnerability Regarding smart contracts, the coverage this time was again technical rather than sensational. What went wrong, where did it go wrong, and what does it mean for those managing digital assets?
Because understanding how attacks occur is the only way to understand how to prevent them.
ongoing protocols
Large-scale protocol updates are perhaps the area where the differences between popular and specialized media are most pronounced.
SegWit wasn’t just a technical improvement. This was the first step towards enabling the Lightning Network and was a bitter battle over Bitcoin governance that divided the community for months. The merge wasn’t just the end of mining on Ethereum. This was an infrastructure migration of unprecedented complexitybillions of dollars are at stake. At CriptoNoticias, we explained what many people were confused about at the time: Energy efficiency will improve, but gas fees won’t go down anytime soon. It’s a small technical detail, but it makes a big difference to millions of users.
In 2023, the advent of Bitcoin ordinal numbers sparked a debate that no one expected. Should the Bitcoin network host arbitrary data? How will it affect miner fungibility and fees? We address this phenomenon About the technical complexity that makes it relevant. And in May 2025, when Ethereum enabled Pectra with 11 improvement proposals, including EIP-7702 for account abstraction, as usual, coverage was already in place before the update became a trend.
In each moment, at CriptoNoticias, we did what we know how to do: explain the technical reasons before they make the headlines of the day.
The next frontier: When physics threatens code
Today, the biggest challenges don’t come from hackers or controversial forks. It comes from physics.
Google quantum AI research, analyzed in detail by CriptoNoticias, shows that with a sufficiently powerful quantum computer, Crack Bitcoin Key in Less than 9 Minutesfaster than blocks are mined. This isn’t an immediate threat, but it’s also not science fiction. This is the next chapter in a story the team is already reading with the same care they read the first SegWit proposal or the first draft of Taproot.
The industry’s response is already taking shape. Coinbase is calling for action against this threat. Hardware manufacturers are working on solutions: CriptoNoticias documents it Which wallets are preparing for the quantum erathe integration of resilient algorithms into devices like Trezor and Ledger, and proposals like Blockstream’s SHRIMPS scheme. each paper All discussions among scientists, on the Bitcoin Core mailing list, and among developers regarding post-quantum cryptography. At CriptoNoticias, we track events before they reach the market’s radar.
Because this is how CriptoNoticias has operated for 11 years. In other words, arrive when there is still time to understand the threat before it becomes imminent.
Even now, 11 years after its founding, that bet remains the same. It’s not just about where the price is, it’s also about where the code is. Don’t wait for the big headlines, build the understanding that makes them possible. In an ecosystem that changes faster than most people can keep up, it’s not an editorial detail.
That’s what makes the difference.
(Tag translation) Bitcoin (BTC)

