While initially it was just major financial entities — such as PayPal, Square, Microstrategy, amongst many others — dipping their toes into the blockchain scene, now we have players from a host of other realms also making their presence felt across these markets. For example, earlier in 2021, Twitter announced to the world that it was going to allow its users to tip its content creators via the use of several different digital assets (including Bitcoin and Ethereum). Similarly, earlier this year, it came to light that the social media behemoth was fostering its in-house crypto team by onboarding new talent in an effort to bolster its rapidly expanding creator economy as well as explore a host of novel domains including membership tokens, DAOs, and much more Twitter adopts NFTs with the help of QuickNode Staying in line with its crypto-centric vision, Twitter announced recently that it has integrated a non-fungible token (NFT) profile picture feature on its TwitterBlue platform, a subscription version of the microblogging and social networking service — with the entire operation being helmed by QuickNode, a Web3 developer platform that allows users to build & scale blockchain-powered applications (dApps) seamlessly. QuickNode, in its most basic sense, is a project that enables non crypto, blockchain-focused companies to launch their very own nodes (with a global network of RPC endpoints) across a total of 10+ blockchains — ...