DigitalAddict
6.5K posts

DigitalAddict
@DigitalAddict0
Crypto Enthusiast | Geek | Musician @Block_Bonez Ambassador | @_DigitalDynamix Mod | @AstralCredits Spectre https://t.co/tPgnS0zQsq

Grotesque satire about a die-hard #XRP fan. Everything here is exaggerated to absurdity… but I’m pretty sure everyone in this community will recognize a little bit of themselves in it. Salute you fam🫡 @JoelKatz @bgarlinghouse @ashgoblue @SaluteXRPL @Ripple @chrislarsensf @binance @Bybit_Official @Toobit_official





🚨 Early release documentation for Flare Confidential Compute! Let me set expectations clearly: we are preparing for a soft release in which TEEs will be introduced as part of this broader system. There is no public code yet, but I highly recommend learning more about it now. The TLDR is that Flare Confidential Compute gives Flare a way to safely handle the parts of blockchain applications that are difficult or impractical to do fully onchain. Instead of forcing everything into a smart contract, Flare can send certain jobs to secure machines called TEEs, where sensitive logic and private keys can be handled safely. Those machines can then return signed results that Flare can trust and use. On top of that, FCC includes Protocol Managed Wallets (PMWs), which allow Flare-triggered logic to safely sign and execute transactions on other blockchains such as XRPL or Bitcoin, as well as a faster TEE-based version of FDC for data attestations. The simple mental model is this: Flare contracts request an action, secure TEE machines perform the sensitive work, and FCC makes the result usable onchain or across chains.










Infrastructure first, distribution next. Where do you want to see Flare Smart Accounts integrated next for 1-click yield on $XRP?

WHO IS THE REAL FUZZYBEAR???? 👀👀👀👀👀 ARE YOU BEING PYSOPED??? YOU BE THE JUDGE 🫵 SOURCE: bitcointalk.org/index.php?acti… 1/ FuzzyBear (real name Peter) joined BitcoinTalk in July 2012 from the UK. He posted 1,421 times over 13 years. Every single post is public. I just went through all 72 pages. Here's what's actually there. 2/ His #1 passion was DevCoin — a tiny open-source writing/dev reward coin. He was a custodian of its fund, ran its mining pool, hosted its infrastructure, managed its forum (devcointalk.org), and processed 60+ writer signups on DevTome. He did this for YEARS. 3/ His #2 passion was Peercoin (PPC). He held ~60,000 PPC, founded and ran peercointalk.org for 3+ years, and was one of the loudest Proof-of-Stake advocates on the forum. He also ran primecointalk.org for Primecoin. 4/ He actively traded and discussed: Terracoin, BBQCoin, Litecoin, RPICoin, Feathercoin, Namecoin, Freicoin, IXCoin, NovaCoin, DigitalCoin, and others. He built a WordPress e-commerce plugin for Terracoin. He ran a P2Pool called fuzzypool.mine.bz. 5/ Now here's the important part — XRP/Ripple appears exactly ONE time in 1,421 posts. Post #941, February 2013. He participated in a Ripple giveaway. That's it. A faucet claim. Nothing else. No analysis. No advocacy. No bags. No conviction. 6/ His actual stated beliefs? He was anti-hype, anti-speculation. Direct quotes from his posts: he called market frenzies "lemmings at the cliff," said merchant adoption is the only thing that gives a coin real value, and was skeptical of anything premined or over-promoted. 7/ He was a Proof-of-Stake guy, not a Ripple/XRP consensus guy. His entire ideology was that PoS was the energy-efficient future. He championed Peercoin's model specifically. This is the opposite of the XRP Ledger's consensus mechanism. 8/ The claim that FuzzyBear "knew Bitcoin would flip to XRP" has zero basis in his post history. He never compared BTC to XRP. He never predicted an XRP flippening. His actual prediction framework was about merchant adoption and energy efficiency via PoS coins. 9/ As for a connection to bearableguy123 — there is nothing. FuzzyBear's identity is straightforward: a UK guy named Peter who ran altcoin forums and mining pools. His writing style is casual, friendly, technical. He talked about walking his dog, his houseboat, buying silver bullion, and Cuban cigars. 10/ He was a community builder doing unglamorous work — hosting receiver files, fixing SSL certs, restoring crashed forums, processing wiki signups — for coins that never mooned. That's the opposite of someone pushing a "secret XRP knowledge" narrative. 11/ TL;DR — FuzzyBear was a DevCoin/Peercoin community admin from the UK. He mentioned XRP once in 13 years to claim a faucet drop. He was not an XRP maxi. He had no connection to bearableguy123. The token using his name is building on a narrative that doesn't exist in the actual record.







👋 Hey family, please join us in welcoming @BrukerikkenavnJ to the #DigitalDynamix team! He's selflessly been creating incredible images, not just relating to Digital Dynamix, but also the broader Flare Community for many years. So now it's official and we have him on board to help increase awareness for what we're creating in his very special and creative way! ❤️








