MarAzuki.eth
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MarAzuki.eth
@MarAzuki_eth
🍵 @matchamente DIY matcha ceremony ⛩️@SpanishZuki Spanish speakers international Azuki community 🍃@GRDNCaretakers proud member.
The Garden Katılım Mayıs 2009
1.3K Takip Edilen4.6K Takipçiler
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We’re excited to announce a new strategic partnership with the @animecoin Foundation in collaboration with @Azuki, with GameSquare named agency of record under a $2.5M agreement.
This deal expands our Web3 strategy, adds Animecoin into our treasury alongside our targeted $250M treasury of Ethereum, and brings together anime, gaming, and blockchain culture.
In collaboration with Animecoin and Azuki, we’ll launch new gaming + anime merchandise, grow global awareness for Animecoin, and create immersive fan experiences.

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Azuki Illustration by Kinu Nishimura

Retro Anime@retro_anime
Street Fighter Illustration by Kinu Nishimura
Eesti
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MarAzuki.eth retweetledi

The best way to build an L2 is to lean into the L1's offerings (security, censorship resistance, proofs, data avail...) more, and reduce your logic to just being a sequencer and a prover (if based, just a prover) over the core execution.
This is the combination of trust minimization and efficiency that the 2010s enterprise blockchain crew wanted, but was never able to achieve. Now, with Ethereum L2s, you can achieve it. And we've already seen successful examples of the L1's features protecting users' rights if something on the L2 goes wrong.
chaskin.eth@jchaskin22
Unironically, I think most alt-L1s will become L2s @Celo showed the playbook: – Halved inflation from 2% to 1% – Reduced block times from 5s to 1s – Eliminated 300k+ lines of legacy code – Fully integrated into Ethereum’s ecosystem, the largest dev community in crypto – Carbon emission's cut in half (if you're into that) It’s just a better model
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Gm fam!
In this space, NDAs are often a part of the game. They protect ideas, privacy, and strategy.
But there’s a downside.
When things go south, and things often do, influencers and team members can find themselves silenced by NDAs. They can’t talk about the issues they see, even though they have a responsibility to their audience.
They end up either walking away quietly, or staying silent while the project spirals. This is a big issue, and it’s not new.
Just look at the story of Theranos. They used NDAs to impose silence and fear on their team, making it impossible for employees to speak up about faulty tests, manipulations, and the growing problems. Eventually, the truth came out, and the company collapsed.
We need to learn from this. If you're working with a project and asked to sign an NDA, here’s a reality check:
Make sure you protect yourself. Either avoid signing an NDA that locks you out of sharing the truth, or ensure there’s a clause that allows you to speak up if things go south.
Your community and your audience deserve transparency, and you owe it to them to remain ethical, even when it gets tough.
Protect your integrity, protect your audience, and protect the space from more “bad blood.”

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