Jeremy (🪙 🕸)Cartel + 🪐

4.7K posts

Jeremy (🪙 🕸)Cartel + 🪐

Jeremy (🪙 🕸)Cartel + 🪐

@JsSmittyje

Katılım Eylül 2015
509 Takip Edilen250 Takipçiler
Jeremy (🪙 🕸)Cartel + 🪐 retweetledi
Cryptof (🪙,🕸)
Cryptof (🪙,🕸)@Cryptof__·
The collateral mechanics on @Pact_Swap deserve a closer look because they're the core security guarantee of the entire system. There are no bridge validators to trust, no multisig to compromise — just overcollateralized $CWEB enforced by @CoinwebOfficial's PACT framework. How the collateral enforcement actually works: - Market makers deposit $CWEB into swap vaults, typically at 2x or more the value of the trades they're facilitating - When a swap is initiated, a PACT is created — a cross-chain state machine with sentinels watching each involved chain - If the market maker delivers the agreed asset, the collateral is released back to them - If they fail to deliver, the Penalty Adjudicator seizes the collateral and compensates the user automatically - The front-end filters out undercollateralized vaults so users never interact with insufficiently backed orders No human arbitration. No governance vote. Pure contract logic. $CWEB $PACT
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Pact Swap Labs
Pact Swap Labs@Pact_Swap·
Quick question: When was the last time you actually verified that wBTC was backed 1:1? You haven't, and most people haven't. You just outsource trust and forget about it. Pact doesn't ask for that trust. Native BTC, no wrapper between you and the asset.
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B 🪙🕸
B 🪙🕸@CBCrypto111·
Market makers & liquidity providers: here’s why Pact Swap @Pact_Swap, built on Coinweb’s PACT framework @CoinwebOfficial, is structurally different from most cross-chain DEX models. Native cross-chain liquidity: Pact Swap enables swaps between native assets like BTC, ETH, and other L1/L2 tokens without relying on wrapped assets or traditional bridge models. That means: • Native asset exposure • Reduced bridge related trust assumptions • Real cross-chain order flow More capital efficient liquidity: Many cross-chain systems rely on locked liquidity, validators, or fragmented settlement layers. Pact Swap is designed to reduce that overhead, helping LPs and MMs deploy capital more efficiently. Over-collateralized execution model: Swaps are backed by Coinweb’s reactive smart contract design with automated compensation logic. For liquidity providers: • Defined risk boundaries • Programmatic protections • Reduced dependency on external trust layers Composable liquidity infrastructure: Built fully as smart contracts, allowing builders to integrate routing, automation, and custom strategies directly on top. Opens opportunities for: • Custom MM strategies • Aggregator routing • Cross-chain arbitrage • Deeper liquidity infrastructure Permissionless listings against native BTC: Projects can create liquidity pathways directly against native BTC and other supported assets. Potential outcome: • New liquidity pairs • Cross-chain price discovery • More volume sources Cross-chain liquidity is still early. But infrastructure that reduces fragmentation, lowers trust assumptions, and improves capital efficiency could reshape how liquidity moves across chains.
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Barend van den Berg
Barend van den Berg@barendvdberg·
Wrapped Bitcoin is the workaround crypto accepted for too long, and @Pact_Swap is going straight at it. BTC should not need a costume before it can move through DeFi. Wrap it. Bridge it. Trust the issuer. Trust the custody stack. Then pretend it is still the same asset. That is not native Bitcoin! That is Bitcoin exposure with extra trust assumptions. Pact Swap is built for native BTC swaps, alongside Litecoin, Dogecoin, Ethereum, BNB Chain, Polygon, and TRON. No wrapping as the default path. No bridge-first dependency. No forcing Bitcoin into someone else’s asset model. Bitcoin should stay Bitcoin!
Barend van den Berg@barendvdberg

Real markets do not need every asset to wear the same costume, and @Pact_Swap gets that. Bitcoin should not have to become an EVM-shaped token before it can trade cross-chain. Neither should Litecoin, Dogecoin, TRON, or anything else with its own chain reality. The easy path is to normalize everything through wrappers. The stronger path is to let native assets keep their own settlement rules and still trade through one cross-chain order flow. Different chains. Different asset models. One native cross-chain market.

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Cryptof (🪙,🕸)
Cryptof (🪙,🕸)@Cryptof__·
@CoinwebOfficial isn't another L1 competing for validators and block space. It's a computational layer that sits on top of existing blockchains, reading their state and executing cross-chain logic without requiring its own consensus mechanism. $CWEB is the gas token for this entire layer. How Coinweb's architecture works: - Coinweb nodes receive information from connected L1s (Bitcoin, Ethereum, etc.) through a shard pipeline - That data feeds into a shuffler where L2 blocks are generated - Smart contracts execute in a WASM-based virtual machine, making them chain-agnostic - Gas fee abstraction means users don't need to hold separate gas tokens for each chain — $CWEB covers execution costs across all connected networks @Pact_Swap is the first major application built on this infrastructure, but the architecture is designed for any dApp that needs cross-chain computation. $CWEB
Cryptof (🪙,🕸)@Cryptof__

The $PACT token does more than just claim treasury fees. According to @Pact_Swap's design, it has three distinct functions inside the protocol. The full $PACT utility breakdown: - Fee pool access — holders burn $PACT to redeem a proportional share of the $CWEB treasury, which accumulates 0.1% of every swap - Permissionless listings — projects that want to list new token pairs or become platform affiliates need to stake or use $PACT, creating structural demand from builders entering the ecosystem - Governance — $PACT stakers get voting rights over protocol decisions including fee parameters, new chain integrations, and ecosystem grant allocations - Fee discounts — stakers access reduced protocol fees, incentivizing long-term holding over passive speculation Built on @CoinwebOfficial infrastructure. Every function ties back to $CWEB as the underlying settlement asset. $CWEB $PACT

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Pact Swap Labs
Pact Swap Labs@Pact_Swap·
If you're an aggregator routing monthly through Pact: - You earn affiliate fees on every swap - You pass cheaper pricing to your users - You take zero bridge liability onto your balance sheet That's three wins from one integration.
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Coinweb.io
Coinweb.io@CoinwebOfficial·
We will have @AntonCoinweb representing Coinweb and contributing to this year’s Litecoin Summit in Amsterdam! Looking forward to connect with the LTC community!
Litecoin Foundation ⚡️@LTCFoundation

Thrilled to welcome @AntonCoinweb, the Chief Marketing Officer of @CoinwebOfficial & Contributor to @Pact_Swap, to the Litecoin Summit this year! Join us, June 22-23, 2026 at the Tobacco Theater in Amsterdam to kick off Dutch Blockchain Week! 🇳🇱 ⏩ litecoin.com/summit

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Cryptof (🪙,🕸)
Cryptof (🪙,🕸)@Cryptof__·
The $PACT token does more than just claim treasury fees. According to @Pact_Swap's design, it has three distinct functions inside the protocol. The full $PACT utility breakdown: - Fee pool access — holders burn $PACT to redeem a proportional share of the $CWEB treasury, which accumulates 0.1% of every swap - Permissionless listings — projects that want to list new token pairs or become platform affiliates need to stake or use $PACT, creating structural demand from builders entering the ecosystem - Governance — $PACT stakers get voting rights over protocol decisions including fee parameters, new chain integrations, and ecosystem grant allocations - Fee discounts — stakers access reduced protocol fees, incentivizing long-term holding over passive speculation Built on @CoinwebOfficial infrastructure. Every function ties back to $CWEB as the underlying settlement asset. $CWEB $PACT
Cryptof (🪙,🕸)@Cryptof__

Seven chains live today on @Pact_Swap: #Bitcoin, #Ethereum, $BNB Chain, #Litecoin, #TRON, #Dogecoin, and #Polygon. #Solana and #Base are confirmed as upcoming additions. The long-term goal is to support every major chain. What each chain integration actually requires under the hood: • @CoinwebOfficial deploys Chain Transaction Sentinels — reactive smart contracts that observe and report state from each connected L1 • The Penalty Adjudicator contract coordinates between sentinels to enforce swap outcomes • $CWEB collateral backing is required for every trading pair on every chain • Each new chain addition expands the number of native asset pairs available without introducing any bridge dependency More chains means more pairs, more volume, more $CWEB fees flowing into the protocol treasury, and more collateral locked. $CWEB $PACT

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Chad Barraford
Chad Barraford@CBarraford·
Its wild to me how divisive @THORChain seems to be. This protocol solved a "holy grail" problem the industry desperately needed to be solved and achieved "the impossible". Any coiner should be in appreciation for achieving something that we all use & take for granted today
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Barend van den Berg
Barend van den Berg@barendvdberg·
Native BTC routing on @Pact_Swap gives aggregators something most cross-chain stacks still struggle with. Real Bitcoin next to Litecoin, Dogecoin, Ethereum, BNB Chain, Polygon, and TRON. Not just EVM liquidity wearing a Bitcoin sticker. That matters because users do not care which infrastructure had the easiest architecture. They care if the route is available, native, and worth taking. No wrapped-only shortcut. No bridge-first dependency. No forcing every chain into the same shape. Aggregators want routes users actually use. Native BTC pairs are exactly that kind of route.
Barend van den Berg@barendvdberg

Open access on @Pact_Swap removes the usual integration gatekeeping. No auth headers. No access approval. No waiting for someone to unlock the door. Integrators can register once, receive an integratorID, and start attaching fee logic directly to routing flow. That matters across Bitcoin, Litecoin, Dogecoin, Ethereum, BNB Chain, Polygon, and TRON. Less permission-seeking. More builders plugging in. More native cross-chain volume moving.

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Barend van den Berg
Barend van den Berg@barendvdberg·
Open access on @Pact_Swap removes the usual integration gatekeeping. No auth headers. No access approval. No waiting for someone to unlock the door. Integrators can register once, receive an integratorID, and start attaching fee logic directly to routing flow. That matters across Bitcoin, Litecoin, Dogecoin, Ethereum, BNB Chain, Polygon, and TRON. Less permission-seeking. More builders plugging in. More native cross-chain volume moving.
Barend van den Berg@barendvdberg

THORChain paused trading after a $ 10M+ exploit hit across Bitcoin, Ethereum, BNB Chain, and Base. That is the risk with pooled vault architecture. One shared pool becomes one shared target. @Pact_Swap takes a different route. No pooled vault sitting in the middle. No bridge custody. No validator set deciding what happened. Swaps execute through native L1 transactions on Bitcoin, Litecoin, Dogecoin, Ethereum, BNB Chain, Polygon, and TRON. Coinweb’s PACT model is built for short and medium-term cross-chain state machines with defined value at risk. The value at risk is not a giant protocol-wide pool. It is the known value of the specific transaction being protected. For a swap like 1 ETH > BTC, the risk is scoped to that trade, not every other swap in the system. Collateral only needs to cover that defined risk while the swap is active. When the state machine finishes, the collateral is released. A shared vault concentrates risk. PACT scopes risk to the transaction. Different architecture….. #DeFi done right.

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Pact Swap Labs
Pact Swap Labs@Pact_Swap·
Routing cross-chain volume? Pact has the stack you need. Native BTC support without wrapped tokens, affiliate APIs that monetize every swap, and no bridge liability sitting on your balance sheet. Pact is built for routing efficiently.
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Cryptof (🪙,🕸)
Cryptof (🪙,🕸)@Cryptof__·
@CoinwebOfficial's reactive smart contracts are fundamentally different from standard smart contracts on EVM chains. Normal smart contracts execute once when called and then stop. Coinweb's reactive contracts run continuously, monitoring events across multiple blockchains indefinitely. Why this matters for @Pact_Swap: - A reactive contract can watch a Bitcoin address for a deposit, then trigger an Ethereum payout — all autonomously - The contracts maintain their own gas balance in $CWEB and keep themselves active by sending a transaction to themselves every block - They can execute across UTXO chains (Bitcoin, Litecoin, Dogecoin) and account-based chains (Ethereum, BNB, TRON, Polygon) simultaneously - If a connected L1 undergoes a chain reorganization, Coinweb's state automatically unwinds and recomputes This is the infrastructure layer that makes bridgeless cross-chain trading possible. $CWEB
Cryptof (🪙,🕸)@Cryptof__

@Pact_Swap is an order-book-based DEX, not an AMM. That’s a deliberate design choice by @CoinwebOfficial. Market makers, LPs, and arbitrageurs interact with the PACT smart contracts directly, posting orders backed by $CWEB collateral. What this means for the fee and collateral structure: • Every swap pays 0.1% in $CWEB protocol fees, accumulated in an on-chain treasury • Market makers lock $CWEB (typically 2x overcollateralized) to guarantee their side of each trade • If a market maker doesn’t deliver, the collateral is seized automatically — no governance vote, no dispute process, just contract logic • The front-end filters out swap vaults with insufficient collateral, so users only interact with properly backed orders The entire enforcement layer runs on @CoinwebOfficial’s reactive smart contracts. $CWEB $PACT

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Jeremy (🪙 🕸)Cartel + 🪐 retweetledi
Barend van den Berg
Barend van den Berg@barendvdberg·
THORChain paused trading after a $ 10M+ exploit hit across Bitcoin, Ethereum, BNB Chain, and Base. That is the risk with pooled vault architecture. One shared pool becomes one shared target. @Pact_Swap takes a different route. No pooled vault sitting in the middle. No bridge custody. No validator set deciding what happened. Swaps execute through native L1 transactions on Bitcoin, Litecoin, Dogecoin, Ethereum, BNB Chain, Polygon, and TRON. Coinweb’s PACT model is built for short and medium-term cross-chain state machines with defined value at risk. The value at risk is not a giant protocol-wide pool. It is the known value of the specific transaction being protected. For a swap like 1 ETH > BTC, the risk is scoped to that trade, not every other swap in the system. Collateral only needs to cover that defined risk while the swap is active. When the state machine finishes, the collateral is released. A shared vault concentrates risk. PACT scopes risk to the transaction. Different architecture….. #DeFi done right.
Barend van den Berg@barendvdberg

Native Bitcoin on @Pact_Swap is where cross-chain stops hiding behind wrappers. BTC does not need to become a synthetic asset before it can move through DeFi. It does not need bridge custody. It does not need a validator committee to explain what Bitcoin already confirmed. Bitcoin transaction on one side. Native transaction on the other side. PACT handles fulfillment vs failure. That is the whole point. Keep Bitcoin native, make the swap enforceable.

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B 🪙🕸
B 🪙🕸@CBCrypto111·
Most cross-chain DEXs add another consensus layer (validators, relayers, multisigs, bridges). That extra layer often becomes the weakest security link. Pact Swap @Pact_Swap powered by Coinweb @CoinwebOfficial takes a fundamentally different path 👇 • Swaps are enforced purely by smart contracts observing native L1 events, no external validator network • Coinweb provides a deterministic execution layer that builds on existing blockchain consensus rather than replacing it • Settlement is just native transactions on each chain, no bridges, no wrapped tokens, no additional consensus This “consensusless” architecture matters: ✅ Security parity with L1s: The only validators are Bitcoin $BTC, Ethereum $ETH, $BNB, Tron, etc. Removing intermediary consensus eliminates common bridge attack surfaces. ✅ Atomic outcomes without trust: PACT smart contracts adjudicate swaps and slash collateral if obligations aren’t met, so swaps complete or the innocent party is compensated. ✅ Lower complexity & cost: No validator infrastructure, no liquidity silos, just-in-time collateral and native transfers dramatically reduce overhead. ✅ True interoperability: Because Coinweb doesn’t impose compatibility or new consensus, Pact Swap can coordinate swaps across heterogeneous chains while preserving each chain’s sovereignty. In short: Most cross-chain DEXs extend consensus. Pact Swap inherits it. That shift compresses risk, simplifies architecture, and brings cross-chain trading closer to the security model of single-chain DeFi. Cross-chain shouldn’t weaken trust assumptions, it should preserve them.
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Cryptof (🪙,🕸)
Cryptof (🪙,🕸)@Cryptof__·
@Pact_Swap is an order-book-based DEX, not an AMM. That’s a deliberate design choice by @CoinwebOfficial. Market makers, LPs, and arbitrageurs interact with the PACT smart contracts directly, posting orders backed by $CWEB collateral. What this means for the fee and collateral structure: • Every swap pays 0.1% in $CWEB protocol fees, accumulated in an on-chain treasury • Market makers lock $CWEB (typically 2x overcollateralized) to guarantee their side of each trade • If a market maker doesn’t deliver, the collateral is seized automatically — no governance vote, no dispute process, just contract logic • The front-end filters out swap vaults with insufficient collateral, so users only interact with properly backed orders The entire enforcement layer runs on @CoinwebOfficial’s reactive smart contracts. $CWEB $PACT
Cryptof (🪙,🕸)@Cryptof__

One thing that separates @Pact_Swap from most cross-chain DEXs: it handles UTXO-based chains natively. Bitcoin, Litecoin, and Dogecoin aren’t account-based like Ethereum — they use a fundamentally different transaction model, which is why most interoperability protocols force them into wrapped versions. How @CoinwebOfficial solves this: • Reactive smart contracts can monitor both UTXO and account-based chains from the same execution layer • A single PACT contract can observe a Bitcoin deposit, validate an Ethereum payment, and release collateral — all from one logic layer • The contracts run in a WASM-based execution environment, making them chain-agnostic by design • Coinweb’s state automatically recomputes if any connected chain goes through a reorganization This is why you can swap native BTC for native ETH on Pact Swap without either asset ever being wrapped. $CWEB

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