While Metas Horizon Worlds is suffering from a low user base, metaverse platforms have focused on building, says Yuga Labs CEO Daniel Alegre. 2142 Total views 19 Total shares Listen to article 0:00 Interview Join us on social networksBig Tech player Meta gave the metaverse a bad name when it pushed its janky vision to the masses. Luckily, open online virtual worlds have continued to evolve, says Yuga Labs CEO Daniel Alegre.
Speaking to Cointelegraph at Token 2049 in Singapore, Alegre said the problem with the metaverse is that Meta ruined the term because it said: This is something brand new despite other metaverse platforms already existing.I was at Activision Blizzard, we had World of Warcraft. World of Warcraft is a metaverse, Fortnite is a metaverse so the metaverse is evolving, I think, in very, very positive ways.
Alegre said the low userbase is a core issue of Metas Horizon Worlds but its otherwise useful if only there was a reason to be there.[Users] go in and say Hey, Mark, so cool to see youSo now what? It just flopped, there’s a huge echo in the room.
He added that,unlike Horizon Worlds, Yugas upcoming Otherside metaverse in development since at least March 2022 with no official launch date came from a need by their community of nonfungible tokenholders to have a digital space to connect.
Otherside Test Group: A Recap pic.twitter.com/57gh9g8VlA Othersidemeta (@OthersideMeta) July 28, 2023
The digital connection is what they’ve asked us to do, Alegre said. At its core, [Otherside] is a way for our community to connect digitally in one location.
So far, Otherside has only been glimpsed through a handful of early access demos and a vibe check by a focus group in July. Alegre said Yuga recently conducted another limited experience of Otherside with core members.
Othersides up-and-running peer, The Sandbox, has also sought to bring culture online, with its co-founder Sebastien Borget telling Cointelegraph that its creating neighborhoods on its platform that mirror countries such as Singapore and Trkiye.NFTs diverging down two avenues
Alegre said hes also seeing a divergence in how NFTs are being viewed. On one hand, NFTs are being valued purely for their art and history. On the other, theyre being valued for their community and intellectual property rights.
Those are two avenues that this is all going down, he opined.
He compared the use cases between the NFT projects CryptoPunks and Bored Ape Yacht Club (BAYC) both Yuga-owned properties where holders own the commercial IP to highlight how holders use them.
CryptoPunks an early NFT collection are being exposed to top museums and collectors, who are starting to see the value of owning the original, according to Alegre.
Related: Shrapnel Web3 shooter won’t let US users cash out, thanks to Gensler
Meanwhile, BAYC holders have created a community and Alegre claims more than 900 holders of Apes are building businesses on top of the Apes.Alegre shows a coffee pack emblazoned with a Bored Ape given to him by the owner of the BAYC #9472 NFT. Source: Andrew Fenton/Cointelegraph
He said Yuga was in a similar position to YouTube where its user-generated content (UGC) model allowed businesses to be built around sharing videos on the platform.You have media companies based on UGC and creative agencies and advertising. Youre starting to see the same thing evolve with the Bored Ape community.
It shows you that NFTs, and NFT ownership, if you give it to the community they take it in ways that you can never imagine, Alegre said. Both in the offline space as well as the online space.
Magazine: NFT Collector: Creative AI art, Tomorrowland sells tomorrows future # Business # Adoption # Metaverse # NFT # Meta
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The Home Office has lost a Court of Appeal bid to challenge a High Court ruling granting an Eritrean man a temporary block on being deported to France.
The ruling will be a blow to ministers, who had been hoping to make headway with their “one in, one out” migrant returns deal with France.
Under the deal, the UK can send back any migrant who crosses the Channel illegally in return for accepting the same number of migrants in France who have a valid asylum claim here.
However, only four people have been deported under the scheme so far, including one Afghan individual who was deported to France this afternoon.
The Eritrean man was granted a temporary block on his removal after he claimed he had been a victim of modern slavery.
The government has said up to 50 people a week could be deported under the scheme initially, but it believes numbers would grow and eventually act as a deterrent to those considering making the dangerous journey across the Channel.
The latest Home Office figures show 1,072 people made the journey in 13 boats – averaging more than 82 people per boat. It means the number of migrants arriving in the UK after crossing the English Channel has topped 30,000 for the year so far.
She has vowed to do “whatever it takes” to end crossings – but the Conservatives have branded the “one in, one out” deal with France “meagre” and have called for their Rwanda policy to be reinstated.
Chris Philp, the shadow home secretary, said: “Yet again the courts have stepped in to block a deportation, proving what we warned from the start, unless you tackle the lawfare strangling Britain’s borders, nothing will change.
“This is nothing but a gimmick. Even if by some miracle it worked, it would still be no deterrent, as 94 per cent of arrivals would still stay.”
Meanwhile, Reform UK has promised to crack down on both legal and illegal migration.
On Monday, he announced fresh policies to reduce legal migration, saying his party would ban access to benefits to migrants and get rid of indefinite leave to remain – the term used to describe the right to settle in the UK, with access to benefits, after five years.
Sir Ed Davey has used his keynote speech to warn that the UK has a choice between “the real change people crave”, and a Reform government turning Britain into “Trump’s America”.
The leader of the Liberal Democrats has sought to paint a picture of the country at a crossroads, and has heaped accusations on Nigel Farage – suggesting he would reverse gun laws and scrap the NHS.
Sir Ed has spent the past few days of the party’s conference in Bournemouth attacking tech titan Elon Musk and the Reform UK leader.
But now he has used his speech to try and tie the ideas of Mr Farage and President Trump together in voters’ minds.
Image: Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey delivering his speech during the autumn conference.
Pic: PA
He said: “Imagine living in the Trump-inspired country Farage wants us to become.
“Where there’s no NHS, so patients are hit with crippling insurance bills. Or denied healthcare altogether.
“Where we pay Putin for expensive fossil fuels and destroy our beautiful countryside with fracking – while climate change rages on.
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“Where gun laws are rolled back, so schools have to teach our children what to do in case of a mass shooting. Where social media barons are free to poison young minds with impunity.”
Image: Sir Ed called Nigel Farage a “hypocrite” who should “apologise” for his record on tackling immigration.
Sir Ed also accused Mr Farage’s party of allowing “the government [to] trample on our basic rights and freedoms” by saying it will pull the UK out of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) – and of giving “tacit support” to racism and misogyny.
The Lib Dem claimed a Reform government would be “where everything is in a constant state of chaos”.
Under Mr Farage, those with mental health problems would be told they are “making it up”, and children with special educational needs that they have “been wrongly diagnosed”, Sir Ed said.
“That is Trump’s America. Don’t let it become Farage’s Britain,” he warned.
But Sir Ed has not only attacked Reform UK for what could happen if they came to power, but also for the “crisis”, which he accused Mr Farage of having already caused.
He pointed to the Reform leader’s support for leaving the EU, which led to 27 existing migrant return agreements being abolished.
Sir Ed said: “He caused this [small boats] crisis, and he should apologise.
“And look at this hypocrite’s big announcement on deportation last month.
“Look at what his plan really means. Sending men, women and children who have fled the Taliban back to Afghanistan to be murdered by them. And even paying the Taliban to do it.
“That isn’t patriotic. That isn’t British. That isn’t who we are.
“So much that is broken in our country today is broken thanks to Nigel Farage. And now he wants to break it even more. Unless we stop him.”
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3:04
Sky News political editor Beth Rigby analyses her interview with the Lib Dem leader.
Farage is allied with Musk, Putin and Trump, Davey claims
But Sir Ed also had tech billionaire, Elon Musk, in his sights once again.
The Lib Dem leader repeated his allegation that the X owner was “inciting far-right violence” with his speech at the “Unite the Kingdom” rally last weekend.
He called for the UK to stand up to Mr Musk, and for the government to “properly enforce our laws so he can’t get away with inflicting harm on our kids”.
Image: ‘Trump’s America’ was a key line of attack for Sir Ed, who said a new coalition should be established to fight the president’s tariffs.
Pic: Reuters
“Nigel Farage is on the side of Elon Musk, Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump,” he alleged. “Liberal Democrats are on the side of the British people.”
Sky News has approached X and Elon Musk for comment about these comments that he has made previously, but as of publication has received no response.
X maintains it has “zero tolerance for child sexual abuse material” and claims tackling those who exploit children is a “top priority”.
Trump is ‘the biggest threat to the fight against cancer’
Another person to face Sir Ed’s ire was President Trump, who the leader accused of becoming “the biggest threat to the fight against cancer”.
“The US is by far the world’s biggest funder of cancer research – mostly through its National Cancer Institute,” the leader said.
“But since Donald Trump returned to the White House, he has cancelled hundreds of grants for cancer research projects.
“He’s slashing billions of dollars from the National Cancer Institute’s budget.”
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10:51
Sir Ed Davey said he believed Nigel Farage was seeking to mimic the politics of US President Donald Trump.
Sir Ed appealed for scientists who have had projects cancelled or funding cut to “come here and finish it in the UK”.
He said a dedicated scheme should be established to allow them to move to work at British research institutions, without having to pay large visa fees.
He also used his speech to pledge to boost healthcare and cancer research more widely.
He told party members: “The UK should step up and say: if Trump won’t back this research, we will.
“We’ll boost funding for cancer research in the UK. We’ll rebuild a National Cancer Research Institute, after it was closed under the Conservatives, to coordinate research and drive it forward.
“We’ll pass a Cancer Survival Research Act to ensure funding for research into the deadliest cancers.”
He also announced a “cast-iron guarantee” that each patient in the UK diagnosed with cancer will start treatment within two months under the Liberal Democrats.
Sir Ed also:
Urged the government to create a new “coalition of the willing” to take on Trump’s tariffs
Said he would like to win more seats than the Conservatives at the next general election, for the first time since 1910
Appealed to traditional Tory voters and urged them to vote for him “to oppose this failing Labour government”
Eli Lederman covers college football and recruiting for ESPN.com. He joined ESPN in 2024 after covering the University of Oklahoma for Sellout Crowd and the Tulsa World.
Sep 23, 2025, 12:59 PM ET
Mike Gundy, the second-longest-tenured FBS head coach, has been fired by Oklahoma State, effective immediately, it was announced Tuesday.
Gundy, 58, was in his 21st season leading the Cowboys this fall. His exit comes four days after Oklahoma State fell to 1-2 in a 19-12 loss to Tulsa last Friday and less than 24 hours after Gundy publicly stated on Monday his “100 percent” intention to remain with the program beyond the 2025 season.
“I’m under contract, here, for I think 3½ years,” Gundy said Monday. “When I was hired here to take this job, ever since that day, I’ve put my heart and soul into this and I will continue to do that until at some point, if I say I don’t want to do it or if somebody else says we don’t want you to do it.”
Gundy will be owed $15 million by the university.
“This is a decision about what’s best for our football program, our student-athletes and Oklahoma State University and it reflects our unwavering commitment to championship-level football and competing for national success,” university president Jim Hess said in a statement.
“Coach Gundy dedicated decades of his life to OSU, achieving significant success and positively impacting hundreds of young men who wore the OSU uniform. His contributions to our university, both as a player and coach, deserve our profound respect and will not be forgotten. We are grateful for his service and wish him and his family the very best.”
Gundy compiled a record of 170-90 from 2005 to 2025, overseeing a rapid transformation of the Oklahoma State football program across two-plus decades in charge. He led the Cowboys to eight 10-win seasons, including a 2011 Big 12 title campaign that saw Oklahoma State finish No. 3 in the AP Top 25 and a Fiesta Bowl win over Stanford.
Gundy and the Cowboys reached the Big 12 championship game as recently as 2023. But his departure follows in the wake of a downward spiral over recent seasons.
The Cowboys have dropped 11 of their past 12 games dating to the start of the 2024 season, with 11 consecutive defeats against FBS opponents — the longest such streak among Power 4 programs nationally.
“College football has changed drastically in the last few years, and the investment needed to compete at the highest level has never been more important,” athletic director Chad Weiberg said in a statement. “As we search for the next head coach of Cowboy Football, we are looking for someone who can lead our program in this new era.
“… Moving forward, it is critical for our fans, alumni and donors to align behind Cowboy Football. This is a pivotal moment, the stakes have never been higher and we need everyone on board.”
Once a beacon for high-flying, offensive football, Gundy, who was a star quarterback for Oklahoma State in the late 1980s, leaves with the Cowboys ranked 81st in total offense and 74th in scoring this season.
Gundy agreed to a restructured contract to remain the program’s coach late last year following a 3-9 finish to the 2024 season.
Oklahoma State added more than 60 new players to its roster before the 2025 season. After a Week 1 win over UT-Martin, the Cowboys suffered a 69-3 drubbing on the road at Oregon before falling to in-state Group of 5 rivals Tulsa in Week 4.
The Cowboys gave up 11 plays of 15-plus yards, made just three trips to the red zone and were outgained 424-403 in the loss to Tulsa — the program’s first home loss to the Golden Hurricane since 1951.
Oklahoma State opens Big 12 play against Baylor on Saturday.