BSV TIMES — From the Community

BSVAssociation — AgenticPay winners announced
BSV Association highlighted the winners of the Open Run // AgenticPay hackathon, framing the event around payment systems for the emerging agentic-AI era. A same-day BSV Association release says the hackathon awarded $10,000 across five projects, giving the post a concrete builder-and-execution angle rather than a vague ecosystem message.

BSVAssociation — Builders and adoption
Another BSV Association post emphasized that real-world adoption can happen in a matter of months when builders create the kind of systems they themselves want to see in the world. The message was less about headline news and more about the culture of building now being pushed around BSV Blockchain.

BSVAssociation — AgenticPay preview
Ahead of the results, BSV Association also previewed hackathon submissions, including examples where AI agents interact with scientific or simulation-based workflows and are paid in BSV. That made the post one of the more interesting “what people are building” snapshots in the current cycle.

deggen — BSV Browser growth update
deggen posted a straightforward product update for BSV Browser, saying the app now has 336 Android users and 402 iOS users, with version 1.4.2 available on both platforms. It is a simple post, but useful because it offers a measurable signal of product traction.

deggen — Default-browser request denied
Another deggen post said BSV Browser’s request for default-browser entitlement had been denied, with the stated reason tied to Bluetooth permissions. That made it a candid builder post about platform friction rather than a promotional one.

deggen — China ban claim
deggen also posted that BSV Browser is now banned in China and called on users there to lobby their government. This is the sharpest post in tone among the recent updates and would fit best as a short community note rather than a major headline.

MNEE_cash — T+2 called legacy infrastructure
MNEE_cash argued that T+2 settlement is not an unavoidable rule but an old infrastructure design choice inherited from legacy payment rails. The post continues MNEE’s broader theme of contrasting modern digital settlement with card-network delay.

MNEE_cash — Merchant friction explained plainly
In a companion post, MNEE_cash spelled out the merchant problem more directly: delayed settlement means inventory can run out before funds arrive and payroll timing becomes tighter. It is one of the clearest short-form business posts in the current community flow.

Editorial read
The community conversation over the last 72 hours has been notably grounded. The strongest posts were not abstract slogans, but updates about builders shipping, products facing real-world constraints, hackathon outputs, and payment-rail inefficiencies. That gives this cycle a more practical and infrastructure-minded feel than a speculative one.

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