# ThirdEyeCrypto: Tea Leaves #2

*My, how quickly the narrative can change*

By [Third Eye Crypto](https://paragraph.com/@thirdeyecrypto) · 2024-03-28

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Hi!

This week’s roundup is all about **narrative shifts** in crypto markets:

*   🚨Blackrock announcement puts attention on tokenizing real world assets (RWAs)
    
*   ⏰ Top AI coins looking to merge
    

If you’re trying to make sense of what you're seeing, then these are the resources you need to catch up:

### Weekly Resource List:

1.  [_Blackrock Enters Asset Tokenization Race_](https://www.coindesk.com/markets/2024/03/20/blackrock-enters-asset-tokenization-race-with-new-fund-on-the-ethereum-network/) (CoinDesk; 2 minutes)
    
2.  [_Three AI Crypto Firms Agree on Deal to Merge Tokens_](https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2024-03-27/three-ai-crypto-firms-agree-on-deal-to-merge-their-tokens?embedded-checkout=true) (Bloomberg; 4 minutes)
    
3.  [_Merging AI With RWAs Pioneers the Next Bull Market in Crypto_](https://www.forbes.com/sites/digital-assets/2024/03/26/merging-ai-with-rwas-pioneers-the-next-bull-market-in-crypto/?sh=1c6692c4671c) (Forbes; 5 minutes)
    

### Favorite **Tip Of The Week:**

Lastly, here’s my research tip of the week.

Even though domain registration info is easily masked with privacy services, useful information on a website can still be extracted from the domain.

**Three domain name pivot points I _always_ look for:**

*   1: **Domain host** can tell you a lot about how professional the project is. A large company, like, say, JP Morgan Chase, has no need to use privacy masking at all. Hosted by GoDaddy or Namecheap? There's nothing _wrong_ with that exactly, but it's not something a large organization would likely use. Using fake info instead of privacy protection? -this person doesn't really know what they're doing when it comes to domain registration and risking having the website taken away from them.
    
*   2: Checking out **the source code** of the website doesn't usually pay off, but when it does, and you find commented-out notes or a Google tracking code, it's golden.
    
*   3: **Google dork** the heck out of the domain name. You can find sub-folders of the website that were never intended to be made public, court documents, database breaches, and all kinds of other rabbit holes to follow.
    

Hope this helps!

### That’s it!

As always, thanks for reading.

**_Hit reply and let me know what you found most helpful this week—I’d love to hear from you!_**

See you next week,

Steve

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*Originally published on [Third Eye Crypto](https://paragraph.com/@thirdeyecrypto/tea-leaves-2)*
