
Arthur Morgan
1.5K posts




A beautiful Morning legends It’s a Friday PermawebDAO shifts Web3 thinking @Permaweb_DAO toward long-term Arweave systems built to last decades. Execution strength shows early @0G_labs as Geth struggles with AI load, causing lag and sync friction. Real value gets proven through outcomes @XOOBNetwork where action matters more than surface attention. Engagement turns into impact @3look_io rewarding users whose activity actually drives meaningful results. Open AI workflows scale across nodes @dgrid_ai with built-in checks keeping every task transparent. Consistent creators win over time @RiverdotInc via River4FUN tracking, ranking, and rewarding real input.












Most people think tokenizing a loan brings it onchain. It does not. The token moves onchain. The truth behind it stays offchain, sitting in accounting software, bank statements, and legal documents that the blockchain cannot read. This is exactly why onchain lending works in DeFi but falls apart in private credit. In DeFi everything is visible. -> Collateral is onchain -> Prices are public -> Liquidations happen automatically The system sees everything it needs, so it can act without trusting anyone. Private credit is the opposite. -> Company financials live in external systems -> Loan agreements are complex and customized -> Data comes from banks, accounting tools, and multiple other sources You can write smart contracts all day. But a smart contract is only as reliable as the data feeding it. If that data is invisible to the chain, the contract is just enforcing rules in the dark. The missing piece is not another token standard or a better smart contract. It is a layer that sits between real world data and the blockchain. One that pulls verified data from trusted sources, processes it without exposing sensitive information, and delivers results that anyone can check. Without that layer, private credit onchain is just a pitch deck. The infrastructure has to come first. @RialoHQ @RialoBangladesh

Everyone wants to be early. Next week is where that gets tested 🍡












Every day, billions of dollars worth of goods are delivered, services are completed, and orders are fulfilled across global commerce networks. And then everyone just sits and waits for money to move. That waiting is not an accident. It is baked into the infrastructure of how commerce has always worked. And it is costing every small supplier, every logistics provider, and every service operator more than they realize. I have been following a project called Rialo and the way they are thinking about this problem is different from what I have seen before. Most projects try to fix one broken piece at a time. Better payment rails. Smarter tracking tools. A cleaner procurement dashboard. @RialoHQ is not doing that. They are building something that connects the entire network. Suppliers, logistics providers, service operators, buyers, all operating through agreements that are tied directly to real events happening in the real world. Here is what that actually looks like. A delivery gets confirmed. An order gets fulfilled. A service gets completed. That event becomes the trigger. Not a human clicking a button. Not an accountant processing paperwork at the end of the month. The moment the thing happens, the network responds. Payments go out. Settlements close. Everything updates on its own. The hard part is not the idea. The hard part is making it actually work. You have to verify that the real world event genuinely happened. That verification has to be trusted by every party in the network without anyone needing to vouch for it manually. And then that verified event has to connect to agreements that can execute across multiple parties at the same time. Rialo is building all of that together, not one piece at a time. The thing most people are not talking about is what slow settlement does to smaller players in a network. When a big buyer takes 30 or 60 days to pay, every supplier and logistics provider downstream is quietly financing that buyer's operations out of their own pocket. They are carrying a cost that was never agreed to. It just became normal because the system was always slow. When payments move the moment work is verified, that hidden cost disappears. Cash flows when work happens, not when paperwork finally catches up. What Rialo is building is not just a faster version of what already exists. It is a different foundation. Commerce right now moves at the speed of human coordination, which means it moves at the speed of emails, approvals, and manual checks. Rialo is building toward a network where the coordination is automatic. Not automatic in a way that removes judgment from decisions that matter, but automatic in a way that removes humans from steps that should never have needed a human in the first place. A confirmed delivery should not need someone to manually release a payment. A completed service record should not need three approvals before settlement happens. The framing they are working with, connecting real world verification to programmable agreements, is the right way to attack this. It does not just make existing workflows faster. It makes entirely new kinds of workflows possible across commerce networks. This one is worth watching closely.
























3 key advantages of @liquidtrading: > onboarding take seconds. when you open any crypto exchange app, you immediately receive a flood of notifications. 4 popups about promos, 3 about security and "friendly reminders", boring asf! Liquid moved away from this: open app -> choose market -> choose leverage and open position. done. > your wallet - your money. full self-custody without KYC and account bans, feel safe with Liquid. > markets 24/7. access to over 500 assets at all times - this market can never be closed and trading never stops. 24/7 access to liquidity, trade whatever, whenever! gLiquid fam! art by @Vikki_arts