I am a living testimony.
558 posts


@kasmediadotcom Kaspa doesn't need Trump, but Trump will need kaspa.
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This just in. Trump buys Kaspa! cryptotimes.io/2026/05/15/tru…
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@benjamincowen @Tonyspidalierii Benjamin is one of the best youtuber, I wish I followed him since buying crypto.
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@DarouJean @okx Hi! We're grateful for your continued support and patience. Any updates regarding our return to Canada will be shared via our official channels, so keep an eye out! 🙏
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@czbinanceprd Kaspa. Do you have a surprise for this project?
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@SenatorTimScott How America will be the crypto capital of the world when your president is lunching shitcoin.
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🚀 Help us get Crypto.com attention!
We want to see Kaspa (KAS) listed on @cryptocom one of the fastest and most innovative PoW cryptocurrencies out there.
👉 Like, repost, and share this flyer so it reaches Crypto.com!
The stronger the community, the louder the message. Let’s make it happen.
#ListKaspa #Kaspa #Cryptocom $kas

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Yonatan’s interview is not a payments pitch. It is a rejection of the lazy “Kaspa Accepted Here” narrative as the primary adoption vector. Payments are too small of a frame. Stablecoins already captured most of the generic medium-of-exchange demand, and Bitcoin already dominates the store-of-value imagination. Kaspa’s real thesis is more precise: Base of Liquidity — a proof-of-work asset that can sit between trades, applications, collateral systems, prediction markets, coordination markets, and real-time financial state without forcing users back into custodial liquidity or slow settlement rails.
That is why “real-time Bitcoin” is only the primitive, not the product. Kaspa’s base layer already brands itself around real-time decentralization: Bitcoin-like proof-of-work security without the long confirmation wait, operating at 10 blocks per second today. But Yonatan is clearly saying that speed alone does not create adoption. A faster empty chain is still an empty chain. The missing layer is activity that could not exist before: markets where time, information, liquidity, and execution rights update continuously instead of waiting for external bots, centralized sequencers, or fragmented L2 domains.
This is where Toccata becomes the hinge. The hard fork is not “Kaspa gets smart contracts” in the generic Ethereum sense. It introduces two distinct programmability paths: native L1 covenant programming through Silverscript, and based ZK applications anchored into Kaspa through covenant and ZK verification infrastructure. More importantly, KIP-21’s partitioned sequencing commitment is designed so a ZK application proves work proportional to its own activity, not the entire DAG’s global activity — a critical scaling property if Kaspa is going to support real application load without turning the L1 into a bloated execution landfill.
The deeper story is that Kaspa is trying to become a universal scheduler for decentralized liquidity. Not an EVM clone. Not another rollup host. Not a merchant-payment mascot. A real-time proof-of-work clock where covenants constrain money, ZK proves computation, vProgs aim toward sovereign yet composable execution, and future coordination markets can price urgency, truth, risk, and settlement priority at the base of the system. Toccata is the first hard structural turn in that direction: the moment Kaspa stops being understood as fast money and starts becoming programmable liquidity under proof-of-work time.
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@mikeneder They are scared of kaspa. Only thing that I know you can't hide the light forever.
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Why isn't $KAS on Coinbase?
Because there's no premine to pay for the listing.
Memecoins fund their CEX listings out of insider bags. Pre-allocated chains too.
$KAS has no insider bag. That's why it's not there.
The exclusion is the receipt of fair launch.
#Kaspa
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