
toccata live on testnet 10
Kaspa
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@kaspaunchained
nakamoto consensus unchained. digital money traveling at internet speed. non-representative community account.

toccata live on testnet 10

The Toccata hardfork stack is now ready, and we’re entering the final stage before mainnet activation: a full hardfork activation on Testnet-10. The scheduled activation point is: May 18, 2026, 16:00 UTC DAA Score: 467_579_632 Everyone is welcome to join and mine on testnet, so we can verify the transition works fine before mainnet activation. I wrote detailed instructions for joining as a testnet miner (Link in reply)


Toccata consensus feature freeze is finally here after a heroic last-mile push by kas core devs. Aiming to reset TN12 tonight, or tomorrow at the latest. Genesis update: + 0x6b617370612d746573746e6574 // kaspa-testnet - 12, 2 // TN12, Launch 2 + 0x544f4343415441 // TOCCATA + 12, 3 // TN12, Launch 3



I’m following #Kaspa because it truly follows the Nakamoto path. Its blend of visionary research and solid engineering is a rare find in the crypto space. Godspeed.

📢 Big News for Kaspians 𐤊 Our integration work with Kaspa has been accelerating. So far, we have completed the dev work: + address generation, + public key export, and + transaction parsing design. Moving forward, we're partnering with Kaspium Wallet to enable true self-custody and cold storage of your Kaspa assets through PSKT protocol support 🤝 The long-awaited transaction parsing feature has been set as one of our key milestones. With Keystone’s 4-inch screen, blind signing becomes a thing of the past! Exciting developments and challenges lie ahead, and we'll keep you posted every step of the way. Share this with your Kaspa friends and let them know that Keystone support is coming 🙌

“Tangem if it was fully open source” Built with Covenants — enabling: • Spending limits • Whitelists • Time locks • Recovery • And more Security shouldn’t be complicated. Frost Card Cold storage, re-engineered. ❄️ #Kaspa only. Target release May 31/2026

Today we're concluding a research grant extended to @eliottmea, who picked up a very challenging topic to work on: how to build an effective oracle? Over the course of the grant, our talented young researcher put his discoveries in two documents: the first, A Mathematically Rigorous Framework for Cross-Exchange Price Discovery, proposes a framework for aggregating prices across multiple exchanges into a single manipulation-resistant feed, anchored by a decentralized arbitrage network, and the second, Incentive Compatibility in a Discriminatory Limit-Order Auction, takes a mechanism design lens — asking whether it's possible to construct an auction where honest price reporting simply becomes the rational thing to do. Read here: github.com/elimmea/oracle At @Kaspa_KEF, we believe investing in #Kaspa means investing in faithful talents who are dedicated in #Kaspa. We're proud to have supported @eliottmea in this work, and we look forward to seeing more promising research proposals!






Bitcoin isn’t just Internet Money It might actually be a new kind of power - like a digital weapon or shield that countries can use to protect themselves online. In a Age of AI Agents - we're going to need an effective digital shield! The author of a new paper: "Beyond Money, Hedge, and Energy: Evaluating Bitcoin as Power Projection Technology" evaluates Jason Lowery's 2023 "SOFTWAR" theory that said Bitcoin should be understood as a way to project physical power into cyberspace. Normally, computers run on “rules” and software. But Bitcoin works differently. It uses huge amounts of real electricity and energy to secure its network. That means attacking Bitcoin isn’t just about hacking code - you would have to spend massive amounts of real-world energy and money to overpower it. The paper tests whether that theory was right by looking at what happened between 2023 and 2026. Here’s what actually happened: 1) The United States created a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve (basically treating Bitcoin like a national resource, similar to oil). 2) Countries like Bhutan secretly mined Bitcoin using hydroelectric power. 3) Over 145 public companies added Bitcoin to their balance sheets. 4) Huge investment funds (like BlackRock’s Bitcoin ETF) bought tens of billions of dollars worth. 5) Global Bitcoin mining power (called “hash rate”) hit record highs - even while the price dropped. That’s important. The price of Bitcoin fell about 46% during this time. But governments and big institutions were buying more of it anyway. According to the paper, that suggests they may see Bitcoin as something strategic - not just an investment. The paper says older ways of thinking about Bitcoin don’t explain this behavior: It’s not just money. It’s not just a speculative investment. It’s not just bad for the environment. It’s not just a tech experiment. Instead, the author says Bitcoin may be more like digital territory protected by energy. If you control energy and computing power, you help protect the network. Countries might compete for that power the same way they compete for oil, weapons, or technology. The paper checked nine predictions made in 2023 about what would happen if Bitcoin really was a “power projection technology.” Five of those predictions already came true. One partly happened. Three haven’t happened yet.

a few unrelated observations/notes 1. @manyfest_ recently made me realize that beyond the obvious point that covenants on Kaspa can serve as first class state machines, they also have 2 significant properties: • they are lightweight: on chain we store commitments to rules/state, and txns provide the witnesses for changes (transient cost vs persistent contract storage/rent) • they can be entered atomically (multiple parties can create and enter into the covenant in one txn) the last two properties seem to have significant potential in the agentic era. agents can define custom rules and agreements between them without deploying a contract (compare this to eth/sol contract/program). covenants are a fast, lightweight tool for such agent-to-agent rule systems. 2. Kaspa is reentering the GPU era. Kaspa r&d is already experimenting with several GPU workstations for zk proving. 3. @coderofstuff_ is doing fantastic work advancing dk in parallel to covpp work (and making sure the content of my long-overdue, unshared post gets shared nonetheless) x.com/i/status/20278…



Dagknight technical progress As would be mentioned in a still unshared post by @michaelsuttonil, the dagknight effort is split into v0 devnet, v1 testnet and v2 mainnet candidate. I’ve been testing the current v0-based implementation in a small devnet with the help of some testers who run nodes and miners with me. The DK work can be thought of as split into two parts: (1) implementing the actual protocol and (2) wiring it up and using it. The testing and development over the last month has been focused on (2). Obviously, DK is a consensus change for selecting parents. What’s not so obvious is that such a change affects DAA, coinbase, IBD, pruning and a lot more. Each of these areas is very sensitive and requires proper understanding to wire correctly. An important consideration and difference from GD is that DK does not focus on maximizing a property like blue work. So to maintain topological properties of blue work, an independent (free) GD implementation is kept running specifically for maintaining blue work. This allows us to keep using the property for topology. Coloring and blue score use the megachain induced by DK. The wiring around DK as of this posting is in a working state, but still needs to be reviewed. Next efforts will be focused on protocol specific components, particularly Tie-Breaking and incremental UMC. Attached are some captures from the internal devnet. The dense DAG image is what happens when things related to DAA or other similar consensus parameter causes a node to insist on their POV. The video is a recent snippet of the KGI running on the devnet showing (perhaps not obviously) DK at work. The current “dagknight” branch is now posted on the main repo. A topic in the Public R&D has been opened for Dagknight development.

