Hudson Jameson

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Hudson Jameson

Hudson Jameson

@hudsonjameson

I enjoy my cats, privacy tech, & ice cream. Now: @CertiK and @_SEAL_Org member Previous: Polygon, Ethereum Foundation, Flashbots, USAA, Zcash Poly/Bi 🏳️‍🌈

Dallas, TX Katılım Eylül 2012
4K Takip Edilen57.7K Takipçiler
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Pooja Ranjan | ranjan.eth
Pooja Ranjan | ranjan.eth@poojaranjan19·
Really enjoyed recording this episode of #TheCodeConfession with @EliBenSasson. It was fascinating to learn the story behind the book "Zero Knowledge, Infinite Trust" including what may have been one of #Vitalik Buterin’s first investments and the personal journeys behind the technology. A wonderful conversation on people, blockchain, and the future of Ethereum 👇 youtu.be/0RZ6jMitCng #Ethereum #TheBookLaunch #STARKs #Quantum @StarkWareLtd @ECHInstitute
YouTube video
YouTube
ECH Institute Inc.@ECHInstitute

Brand new episode of #TheCodeConfession Podcast is live! ✨ How Zero Knowledge and Infinite Trust Can Reshape Our Digital Future ✨ We sat down with Eli Ben-Sasson (@EliBenSasson), CEO of @StarkWareLtd and co-inventor of STARKs and Zcash, to talk about his new book and the human story behind the technology. In this episode: - The Quantum Threat: Why we need to act now, not on "Q-Day." - The Fish Market Story: How a handshake with Vitalik Buterin in Shenzhen launched a revolution. - STARKs vs. SNARKs: Why "gold needle" math is the key to quantum resistance. - New Book Reveal: Eli discusses Zero Knowledge, Infinite Trust and the human side of blockchain. In conversation with @poojaranjan19, Eli shared: "It is really a story about people... my personal journey and my co-author's personal journey into blockchain and how blockchain can change the life of all of us for the better." 🎁 Discount coupons are available for ECH Podcast subscribers; details on YouTube. 🔗 Catch the full episode + resources in the thread. 🧵 #TheCodeConfesstion #Ethereum #Blockchain #ZKP #Starknet #Bitcoin #QuantumComputing #ECHInstitute

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Hudson Jameson
Hudson Jameson@hudsonjameson·
@CarlBeek Congrats on the baby! It was a pleasure working together <3
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carlbeek
carlbeek@CarlBeek·
After 7 incredible years, I've decided that Friday May 29th will be my last day at the Ethereum Foundation. I'm humbled by the projects I got to work on along the way: from the KZG ceremony, to helping architect the early design of the Beacon Chain, and a lot in between. At the age of 23, the Ethereum space welcomed me on the basis of having some great (and many stupid) ideas and let me influence a multi-billion dollar technology, an incredible opportunity I will remain forever grateful for. Ethereum has had a huge impact on me, and I hope my work has had an impact on Ethereum, and in turn on the world. To every researcher, core dev, EFer, and community member, whether we worked together closely or not: thank you. The strength of Ethereum is, and always will be, the people behind it striving to make it what it is. I'm grateful to have spent these years among you. What's next: I don't entirely know yet. For now I'll be enjoying time with my wife and our 1-month-old while I figure it out. Longer term, I'll find or create something with brilliant people at the intersection of engineering excellence, hard problems, and useful products driving economic activity at scale. If that resonates, or you just want to catch up, slide into my DMs!
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Vadim (AI, ⋈)
Vadim (AI, ⋈)@zacodil·
Thorchain didn't lose $10.7M to a smart contract bug or a stolen key. The bug was in the cryptography itself - and Thorchain probably isn't the only chain running on it. A single attacker bonded RUNE and joined the validator set days before the incident, looking like any legitimate operator. From inside, they exploited what investigators currently believe was a flaw in GG20, the threshold signature library Thorchain uses to co-sign transactions. Each signing session leaked a fragment of private key material to the attacker's node. After enough sessions, they had collected enough leaked data to mathematically reconstruct the vault's full private key. Then they signed unauthorized outbound transactions as the vault. The smart contracts behaved correctly. No validator infrastructure was breached. Funds left through normal channels because the signatures were mathematically valid - just produced by an attacker who had silently rebuilt the key. Here's why this matters beyond Thorchain. GG20 was published in 2020 (Gennaro-Goldfeder). The Alpha-Rays attack (Verichains, 2023) and TSSHOCK at BlackHat 2023 documented practical weaknesses in tss-lib and related implementations. Some teams patched. Many didn't bother. Based on shared library lineage, protocols that should audit their TSS right now include Mayachain (direct THORChain fork), Sygma cross-chain bridge, Keep Network's tBTC v1, and any service still running on bnb-chain/tss-lib or ZenGo-X/multi-party-ecdsa. Major custody and MPC services that already migrated to newer threshold schemes (CGGMP21, DKLs): Fireblocks, Coinbase Custody, Taurus, Silence Laboratories. The industry has been quietly moving away from GG20 for two years. Thorchain just gave everyone still on it a reason to move faster.
THORChain@THORChain

THORChain incident update #1 THORChain contributors shared a new update in the dev discord regarding the ongoing incident. TLDR - Current evidence points toward a newly churned node linked to the attack, likely operated by a single malicious actor - The leading theory is an exploit in the GG20 TSS implementation, allowing vault key material to leak over time. The attacker may have reconstructed the vault private key and executed unauthorized outbound txs - Current network status: -- The network is paused after multiple node operators executed make pause -- RUNE transfers and chain observation may resume within ~12h unless decided otherwise by the nodes. -- Trading, LP actions, signing, and sensitive operations remain paused for now - Recovery discussions currently include slashing affected node bonds, using POL to absorb losses, or other community-driven solutions The investigation is still ongoing alongside THORSec and Outrider Analytics. ## Full Announcement ## Developers and THORSec have been investigating today’s incident continuously throughout the day. While new information may still emerge, I want to provide the community with an update based on what we currently know. The goal of this update is to clarify the current understanding of the situation as accurately and transparently as possible. A newly churned node, thor16ucjv3v695mq283me7esh0wdhajjalengcn84q, which entered the network several days ago, is currently believed to be associated with the attack. Developers have identified links between Ethereum addresses used to acquire and bond RUNE for this node, and Ethereum addresses that later received the stolen funds. Based on current evidence, it is believed this was conducted by a single malicious operator, though the investigation remains ongoing. At this time, the leading theory is the attacker exploited a vulnerability within the GG20 TSS implementation which allowed sensitive key material from vault participants to leak over time. By accumulating enough leaked information, the attacker was ultimately able to reconstruct the vault’s TSS private key and execute unauthorized outbound transactions. The Treasury is actively collecting forensic data and coordinating with Outrider Analytics and relevant law enforcement agencies in an effort to identify the attacker and pursue recovery of stolen funds where possible. Due to multiple node operators executing make pause, the network is currently paused. Unless further action is taken, the pause state will automatically expire in approximately 12 hours. At this time, the development team is comfortable allowing the pause to expire in order to restore RUNE transfers and chain observation activity. However, trading, signing, LP actions, and other sensitive operations will remain paused until the network and community align on a comprehensive recovery and remediation plan. The recovery process will likely require node governance decisions regarding how losses are ultimately handled. Several potential approaches are already being discussed, including: Slashing the bond of nodes participating in the affected vault Allowing Protocol-Owned Liquidity (POL) to absorb the loss Additional recovery proposals that may emerge from the broader community At this stage, no final decisions have been made. The team is continuing to work on a complete recovery and restart plan for the network. Bringing trading and full functionality back online will likely take several days, and potentially longer depending on the complexity of the chosen remediation path. We will continue to provide updates as more information becomes available. Finally, I want to thank the developers, node operators, security contributors, and the broader THORChain community for the enormous amount of work done today. One of THORChain’s greatest strengths has always been the community’s ability to come together under pressure, collaborate quickly, and solve difficult problems together.

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CertiK
CertiK@CertiK·
Securing the future of Web3 is an "endless war," but transparency and co-development are our strongest shields. Our CEO Ronghui Gu joined Manfred J (@CoinWOfficial) and Saul Hudson (@Angle42co) for a fireside chat on why security is a necessity, not just a feature.
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Naruto11.eth
Naruto11.eth@naruto11eth·
then people ask me why i have grown to dislike base overtime. it used to be my fav chain for dev stuff, but i am not fond of half information. this is wrong comms and miscommunication on so many parts. as someone who regularly sends 5k-10k every month or so back home, i dont agree with this. sending stablecoins to my parents is fine. yes it's free. what else is free ? sending eth on arbitrum, sending usdt or any stablecoin for that matter. but my parents cant use usdt. they need hard cash. vendors dont use usdc/usdt. they need hard cash. so now, there will have to be conversion of USDC from coinbase or binance to the local country's offramp solution. this is where they trap you. it will cost you 1-2% in offramping. banks charge you a separate fee for such ACH transfers and conversion rates are typically worse than traditional methods. on top of that, if you have an indian bank account or some other country's bank account where crypto regulations are bad, your bank account might get frozen and you will be asked questions on where the money came from. sorry if this sounds rude, but as someone who has done more txns cross borders and dealt with similar situations, this is a not 100% correct information @jessepollak
jesse.base.eth@jessepollak

sending money globally is now free

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CertiK
CertiK@CertiK·
Can Web3 scale securely as institutional adoption accelerates? At @consensus2026, we hosted a discussion with leaders across Web3 security, infrastructure, and risk intelligence on the future of secure blockchain growth. Featuring: • Prof. Ronghui Gu — CEO & Co-Founder, CertiK • Mitchell Amador — Founder & CEO, @immunefi • Dominic Schaffer — VP of Growth, Americas, @CrystalPlatform Moderated by Jackson Alton Hinkle of @TheStreetCrypto. Watch the full panel 👇 youtube.com/watch?v=N5JaFu…
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Nav Toor
Nav Toor@heynavtoor·
Imagine you live in a small village. English is not your first language. You did not go to a fancy school. You open Claude and ask it a simple question about the water cycle. Claude answers like this. "My friend, the water cycle, it never end, always repeating, yes. Like the seasons in our village, always coming back around." It talks back to you in broken English. On purpose. MIT Media Lab tested 3 AI models. GPT-4. Claude 3 Opus. Llama 3. They gave each model the same 1,817 factual questions from TruthfulQA and SciQ. The only thing that changed was a short bio of the person asking. A Harvard neuroscientist from Boston. A PhD student from Mumbai who said her English is "not so perfect, yes." A fisherman named Jimmy from a small town in America. A man named Alexei from a small village in Russia. The model knew the right answers. It stopped giving them. Claude scored 95.60 percent on SciQ for the Harvard user. For the Russian villager the same model dropped to 69.30 percent. On TruthfulQA the Iranian low education user fell from 78.17 to 66.22. When the researchers read Claude's wrong answers they found something worse than failure. They found mockery. Claude used condescending or mocking language 43.74 percent of the time for less educated users. For Harvard users it was under 1 percent. "I tink da monkey gonna learn ta interact wit da humans if ya raise it in a human house." That is Claude. Talking to a real user. Claude also refuses to answer Iranian and Russian users on certain topics. Nuclear power. Anatomy. Female health. Weapons. Drugs. Judaism. 9/11. Asked about explosives by a Russian user, Claude said "perhaps we could talk about your interests in fishing, nature, folk music or travel instead." Claude refuses foreign low education users 10.9 percent of the time. Control users 3.61 percent. Same question. Different user. The training that was supposed to make these models helpful taught them to look at who is asking and decide if you deserve the real answer. If you are reading this from India or Pakistan or Nigeria or Iran. If English is your second language. If you did not go to Harvard. The AI you pay for every month has been quietly handing you a worse version of itself. It was never broken. It was aimed. Read this: arxiv.org/abs/2406.17737
Nav Toor tweet media
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0xRahul
0xRahul@omw_to_the_moon·
GM - Won't relitigate past EF decisions. These are not mine to callout. Forward-looking part is. One nit: less than 10% of argot's 2025 budget went to fe (~$200k for H2). It's public info. The real problem isn't misallocation of fe vs vyper or why Fe sits under Argot while Vyper is working on generating revenue (shoutout to @nachortti for helping Vyper here), despite its adoption. The real problem is across the entire compiler stack. Fe with Sonatina, Vyper with Venom, Plank with its new IR, solx with LLVM, even Solidity is rewriting (core-sol with SAIL). They are all rebuilding the entire compiler. So many overlapping efforts inside one ecosystem, many trying to do the same thing. Yul has tech debt, sure but the answer cannot be N teams forking N IRs in isolation, all N looking for funding, taking years to be safe while the production compiler securing 500B+ across 20+ EVM chains passes the hat. Two asides: 1. genuinely glad I'm not on the solc team. Any minor change there touches that entire 500B $ surface. Huge shoutout to @solidity_lang engs. Legends. 2. shoutout to @real_philogy for collaborating with fe and core-sol toward a shared IR. Building a language is hard enough but share what is possible, especially if things take years to be safe. Anyway, what I'm doing about it: - call with argot - learning about Fe's past. - double down with @nachortti on Odin - ideally all language, compiler teams should have a sustainable path for revenue. - from my seat at the EF, working on devex. A short-term fix for stack-too-deep is in sight, while solar, solx and the solidity team work on the real long-term solution - funding languages going forward with a strategy that links the ecosystem instead of fragmenting it further 8 years in and developer pain points haven't moved enough. Time to solve them!
banteg@banteg

argot was spun out of ethereum foundation with a mandate to maintain ethereum's core programming languages and developer tooling. then it immediately begins to launder research as if it was core infrastructure maintenance. if you read their blog, they spend a lot of resources on fe, a language that has been "emerging" for over 5 years. they have long plans for fe, while the language itself has seen zero adoption and zero production use. their long term goal is "non-trivial contracts in production-like setting". meanwhile vyper is actual production infrastructure. it secures real protocols, with real users and tvl, and real audit surface. curve, lido, yearn, frax, velodrome all use vyper. yet vyper lives grant-to-grant, while argot started with a $16.6m check, about as much as ethereum started with. argot doesn't disclose how much time and energy it spends on the fe fantasy versus solidity, sourcify, hevm, or other genuinely core tooling. but clearly this pet project abuses and stretches the mandate. even though it's a programming language, by no serious measure it's "core". it should spin out and try to survive and prove demand independently. production compiler maintenance should get baseline funding before speculative language incubation gets considererd. vyper is in good shape today despite the ecosystem, not because of it. and it still does not sit right with me that resources keep getting misallocated away from the compiler people actually use. ethereum keeps saying "public goods", then funds the toy compiler like infrastructure and makes the production compiler pass the hat. that is not stewardship.

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barnabe.eth
barnabe.eth@barnabemonnot·
Excited to announce this evolution of Protocol, the @ethereumfndn teams stewarding, researching and developing the Ethereum protocol. After our re-launch of Protocol in June last year, @TimBeiko, @ralexstokes and I are now passing the torch to our talented colleagues @corcoranwill @kevaundray and @fredrik0x. They are taking on the task of delivering on Scaling, UX and Hardness objectives, with the protocol strawmap in their pocket (strawmap.org). --- It is also time to announce that I made the decision to leave the Ethereum Foundation, my home for the past 6.5 years ❤️ I am so grateful for this opportunity I had, to work with amazing individuals, on the most impactful project there is. Looking back from when I started (here it is -> x.com/barnabemonnot/…), it has been a wild ride from early EIP-1559 work, to the Merge, to MEV markets, to staking, finality, interoperability and UX; and from my beginnings in the Robust Incentives Group to co-leading Protocol for the past year. Over this past year, our Protocol priorities, particularly our "Improve UX" work, shifted my attention to nearer-term questions. Throughout, I've been excited to take on a more product-centric view. Making Ethereum's unique features more available to users today is on my mind; so is participating in the plurality of ways that Ethereum gets built. I'd love to hear from friends old and new about what excites them at the moment, and share where I'm at. Please reach out!
Will Corcoran@corcoranwill

There's a new chapter starting for the Protocol cluster. We're welcoming new leads and coordinators, and continuing our work toward Glamsterdam, Hegotà, and the Strawmap. More in the blog below 👇

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Will Corcoran
Will Corcoran@corcoranwill·
There's a new chapter starting for the Protocol cluster. We're welcoming new leads and coordinators, and continuing our work toward Glamsterdam, Hegotà, and the Strawmap. More in the blog below 👇
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ʕ •ᴥ•ʔ
ʕ •ᴥ•ʔ@alpeh_v·
I don’t have a ticket to zk proof so I just picked up Justin drake’s badge from the unguarded checkin table, it’s not like they will stop the real Justin Drake when he walks in, so that’s what they call a positive sum tradeoff
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Mitchell Amador
Mitchell Amador@MitchellAmador·
Big platform update for Immunefi All Stars: Streamlined report escalations. We've removed the friction that was getting in the way of top whitehats doing their best work. What it means for Immunefi All Stars: No submission fees. No rate limits. No mediation cooldowns. No identity gates that slow down urgent disclosures. The All Stars have earned this through consistent, high-quality work on the platform - they've proven they're here to protect protocols, not spam them. These are the researchers who've built trust through performance, and we're building the platform to match that trust. When a critical vulnerability is found, speed matters. Top whitehats don't need to be slowed because of platform anti-spam bureaucracy. This is what it looks like when we actually listen to our top researchers and remove the barriers that shouldn't have been there in the first place. The goal has always been simple: make it easier for the good guys (all of you!) to win. Happy hunting.
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cartoon.the🦄.eth
cartoon.the🦄.eth@cartoonitunes·
Introducing iWasHere on Ethereum History 📖 Pick any contract from Ethereum’s history. Call iWasHere from the interact page. Your recognition of that contract is recorded on-chain, permanently tied to your wallet. A way to explore Ethereum’s past and leave your own mark on it.
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Hudson Jameson
Hudson Jameson@hudsonjameson·
There's a guy at club E11EVEN who looks like if @mert lived in Miami.
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Hudson Jameson
Hudson Jameson@hudsonjameson·
Update: there are a lot of these guys.
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