
Edward
309 posts

Edward
@Dao1sm
Alum @umich | Cofounder @Goldback | CEO @CertenOfficial - The Control Layer of Digital Finance | Portable Identity. Provable Control. Every Chain
United States Katılım Ocak 2023
405 Takip Edilen96 Takipçiler
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Native hierarchical multisig, with unified control across chains, in an identity-based interoperable network that is permissionless, yet can be optionally permissioned and private.
No-code. Risk efficient. Built for institutions.
@CertenOfficial
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Edward retweetledi

@DetBlockchain If you haven't attended a @DetBlockchain Collective x @standwithcrypto Michigan event... you should do that 😏😁 @ElizabethHa
Gravitates great people like @HecTheProtector and @Dao1sm. You won't want to miss the next one @onboredmi @vtatvio @DaKindKid @bitfiendd @ontherisecc34
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As Michigan positions itself in the crypto economy, understanding where policy is headed matters.
We hosted Shanelle Jackson at Crypto Connect last week for a conversation on crypto policy and its impact on Michigan.
Shanelle is a former Michigan State Representative and former Speaker Pro Tempore, member of the House Appropriations Committee, and current Congressional candidate for the 12th District.
With 21 years of policy and legislative experience, she brought real depth to understanding why this matters for our state.
Detroit Blockchain Collective exists to build a stronger Michigan crypto community grounded in education and engaging dialogue. Thanks to everyone who helped make this night a success.
Thank you to @ElectShanelle for spending the evening with us and talking crypto policy.
Appreciation to @standwithcrypto for sponsoring 🙏
📸 Hats off to the one and only @KingDabTech Dab for the photos.
Detroit, MI 🇺🇸 English

@brettcalhounn Cross-chain native hierarchical multisig unified across chains in an identity-based network. Enables orchestration of authorization for managing and issuing assets across chains, designed for compliance with Genius, Clarity, MiCA, etc.
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Edward retweetledi

BREAKING: The SEC is set to release its so-called "innovation exemption" for tokenized stocks which will pave the path for trading digital versions of securities, per Bloomberg.
Details include:
1. In a "surprise move," the SEC is leaning toward allowing the trading of tokenized assets
2. These tokenized assets would be tradeable on decentralized crypto platforms
3. The move could "reshape the landscape of the American stock market"
4. This would also be one of the US' biggest shifts into crypto infrastructure yet
Tokenized assets are rapidly expanding.
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Edward retweetledi

.@mcuban says humanoid robots won't last more than 5-10 years.
Instead, we'll "design the house to fit the robot, and design the robot to fit the house."
"You could create a house where the pantry, the refrigerator, and the washing machines were hidden behind the garage, if you even have a garage. That way you could redesign the house so that all the living space was for people."
From his appearance on the show in March.
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@CertenOfficial ensures no transaction can execute unless approved by the proper authorities in your organization.
Even if an entire keyset in your hierarchy is compromised, you maintain full control.
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Back in early 2010s we all looked at projects built on bitcoin. It started out great. Then something happened. I think it was control issues or infighting. But bitcoin changed. Remember their used to be soft fork after soft fork?, then crickets. Eth came along and took many great programmers because they like to build.
Then bitcoins process came to a stall. I see the writing on the wall and it's not good.
I truly believe that eCash fork this August will change this. We've gotta do something. Before you say it's another shitcoin, go to ecash.com or do your own research on bip 300/301 maybe that will help you understand where we're headed if things don't change. No investment needed. You'll get free coins. I could be wrong but I think we need to try.
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@emilios_eth @dragonfly_xyz @paraficapital @HaunVentures @a16zcrypto @bcap @paradigm Polishing as we speak. Testnet's live on 13 chains. Happy to show you what we've got.
We could have prevented several of the recent exploits
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@Dao1sm @dragonfly_xyz @paraficapital @HaunVentures @a16zcrypto @bcap @paradigm Time to polish your pitch Edward
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$ 6B+ in fresh crypto VC closing or raising rn
@dragonfly_xyz / $650M
@paraficapital / $125M
@HaunVentures / $1B
@a16zcrypto / $2.2B
@bcap / $700M (raising)
@paradigm / $1.5B (rumored for AI/robotics)
thesis is the same across the board: stables, RWAs, AI agents transacting onchain 24/7
VC money is chasing the infra to bring IRL finance and autonomous economies onchain at bear valuations
infra supercycle?
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Real-World Assets Need Lots of layers to click into place in order to become complete:
Asset origination
Legal structuring
Custody & asset verification
Tokenization layer
Onchain issuance
Compliance / KYC & AML
Oracles & data feeds
Liquidity venues (DEXs/CEXs)
Settlement & clearing
Risk management / ratings
Investor access layer
Servicing & reporting
What layers are we forgetting?
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Nobody asks which intranet won in '95 - the value went to the internet standards. History is repeating today in blockchain. Certen is building the LDAP, OAuth, and PKI of Web3. Cross-chain identity, authorization, and provable control for institutional operators. Testnet is live. Would love to chat.
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Edward retweetledi

AI will create more jobs than any other technology in history.
The doomers' fundamental error isn't just the lump of labor fallacy. It's deeper than that.
They assume a finite problem space.
This is the fundamental error of AI and job doomers. They look at the economy and see a fixed amount of work to be done, a pie that can only be sliced thinner as machines take bigger bites. They see humans a competitive resource for a finite amount of work and a finite amount of problems to solve that must be eliminated.
This is fundamentally, totally and completely wrong.
The pie isn't fixed. It never was. And the reason it isn't fixed is baked into the very nature of technology itself.
Technology is nothing but abstraction stacking. And abstraction stacking is infinite. Therefore the work is infinite.
The hammer didn't reduce the amount of work. It moved the work up the stack. And the new work was more complex, more varied, and more interesting than the old work.
Complexity breeds more complexity and more variety.
Once you have houses instead of mud huts, you have a cascade of new problems that didn't exist before. Plumbing. Wiring. Insulation. Roofing materials that don't rot. Drainage systems so the foundation doesn't flood. Fire codes so your neighbor's bad wiring doesn't burn down the whole block.
Each of those problems becomes a job. A plumber. An electrician. An insulator. A roofer. A civil engineer. A building inspector. None of those jobs existed when we lived in mud huts.
They exist because we solved the mud hut problem.
Think of all of human technological development as a stack of abstraction layers, each one built on top of the ones below it.
At the bottom: raw survival. Finding food. Building shelter. Making fire. These are the base-layer problems.
Each major technology wave solved a base-layer problem and in doing so created an entirely new layer of problems above it:
Agriculture solved "how do we reliably eat?" — and created problems of land ownership, irrigation, crop rotation, storage, trade, taxation, and governance.
Writing solved "how do we remember things across generations?" — and created problems of literacy, education, record-keeping, law, bureaucracy, and literature.
The printing press solved "how do we spread knowledge at scale?" — and created problems of intellectual property, censorship, journalism, publishing, public opinion, and democratic discourse.
The steam engine solved "how do we generate mechanical power without muscles?" — and created problems of factory design, worker safety, urban planning, railroad engineering, coal mining, labor relations, and environmental pollution.
Electricity solved "how do we deliver energy anywhere?" — and created problems of grid design, power generation, appliance manufacturing, electrical safety codes, utility regulation, and an entire consumer electronics industry.
The Internet solved "how do we connect all human knowledge?" — and created problems of cybersecurity, digital privacy, online commerce, content moderation, network infrastructure, cloud computing, social media dynamics, and an entire digital economy that employs tens of millions.
Notice the pattern?
Each solution didn't just solve a problem.
It created an entirely new problem space that was larger, more complex, and more varied than the one it replaced.
The stack grows. It never shrinks.
It's turtles all the way down and all the way up.
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Edward retweetledi

@CertenOfficial is a web3 standard akin to LDAP + OAuth + PKI.
We're at an inflection point in blockchain. Things are about to start changing rapidly.
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