📢 Gate Square #Creator Campaign Phase 1# is now live – support the launch of the PUMP token sale!
The viral Solana-based project Pump.Fun ($PUMP) is now live on Gate for public sale!
Join the Gate Square Creator Campaign, unleash your content power, and earn rewards!
📅 Campaign Period: July 11, 18:00 – July 15, 22:00 (UTC+8)
🎁 Total Prize Pool: $500 token rewards
✅ Event 1: Create & Post – Win Content Rewards
📅 Timeframe: July 12, 22:00 – July 15, 22:00 (UTC+8)
📌 How to Join:
Post original content about the PUMP project on Gate Square:
Minimum 100 words
Include hashtags: #Creator Campaign
The United States may ease sanctions against Iran and plans to invest $30 billion to help it return to nuclear talks.
[CoinWorld][The US Plans to Discuss Easing Sanctions on Iran to Facilitate Its Return to Nuclear Talks] According to reports, four informed sources revealed that the Trump administration has discussed potentially helping Iran secure up to $30 billion in funding for the construction of civilian nuclear energy projects, easing sanctions, and unfreezing billions of dollars of Iranian funds that have been restricted—these are all part of its efforts to bring Tehran back to the negotiating table. Sources said that despite the intensive military strikes by the US and Israel against Iran over the past two weeks, key figures in the Middle East have still engaged in secret consultations with Iranian officials. Discussions related to the ceasefire agreement have continued this week. Trump administration officials emphasized that several proposals have been put forward, which are still in the preliminary stages and evolving, but there is one non-negotiable core condition: Iran must completely halt its uranium enrichment activities, which Iran has consistently claimed is necessary. However, according to two sources, at least one preliminary proposal draft includes several incentives for Iran. Trump administration officials and insiders revealed that the terms being discussed include: an expected investment of $20-30 billion in a new non-enriched nuclear energy project for civilian energy purposes. One official insisted that the funding would not come directly from the US, but would rather lean towards having Arab allies foot the bill.