Redwan

1.4K posts

Redwan banner
Redwan

Redwan

@RedoudouM

Ξxecutive Director @entethalliance | ex @ChainSafeth @ca_cib @safran | Ξthereum & Ξnterprises, Economic mobility, P.Bourdieu, 🧀 , 🍎, Madrecuishe. 🇫🇷 in 🗽

New York, NY Katılım Eylül 2011
1.6K Takip Edilen1.8K Takipçiler
Redwan
Redwan@RedoudouM·
Institutions are building on Ethereum The 180 Ethereum protocol engineerings are delivering the technical roadmap. Issues are closed, test being done, Glamsterdam on its way. Those are the signals I look for and everything is ✅. @ECHInstitute and @EntEthAlliance are working on communicating more on that process to help institutions dissociate from the noise. forkcast.org/calls/acdc/178
English
0
0
2
328
Thomas (Tom) Lee (not drummer) FundstratDirect.com
Agree with @RyanSAdams that a deep bench of leaders and developers are ready to ensure $ETH remains the future settlement layer of finance and AI - to me, much of bearish sentiment reflects the disdain and despair seen at the nadir of crypto winter (finger pointing at the lows) Blockchain is arguably the only way agentic AI interacts in commerce. And blockchain vastly improves the profit profile of the financial system $ETH @BitMNR $BMNR
RYAN SΞAN ADAMS - rsa.eth 🦄@RyanSAdams

I strongly agree with this. And right now I think the best positioned candidate is @fundstrat and @BitMNR.

English
137
287
1.5K
220.7K
DBCrypto
DBCrypto@DBCrypt0·
At least 8 senior people have left the Ethereum Foundation in 2026 5 of them just in May Co-ED Tomasz Stańczak lasted 11 months. Dankrad Feist left for a Stripe-backed competing L1. They also unstaked $48.9M in ETH in April Don’t care what you say, that ain’t normal 🤨
English
46
18
272
41.8K
Redwan
Redwan@RedoudouM·
A few high-profile departures at the Ethereum Foundation have triggered a lot of fear and speculation. Ethereum was never built around a handful of individuals. Ethereum is collective project. Today, ~180 protocol engineers across client teams and ecosystem orgs are actively shipping, testing, auditing, closing issues, and advancing the roadmap. Just check the latest ACD forkcast.org/calls/acdc/178 The signal isn’t the optics: it’s the output. Last week at the @EntEthAlliance welcomed @ECHInstitute and I can not be more excited to work with @poojaranjan19 to demystify Ethereum development process. And the people leaving? They’ll likely become strong ambassadors for Ethereum’s ethos wherever they go next which can strengthen the ecosystem even further. forkcast.org
banteg@banteg

situation: all three ef protocol leads have left

English
1
4
64
8.5K
Redwan retweetledi
Vault Summit
Vault Summit@Vault__Summit·
As institutional and onchain financial systems converge, standards and interoperability become increasingly important. Vault Summit NYC takes place in association with @EntEthAlliance, helping coordinate Ethereum’s move into production. June 5, New York · nyc.vaultsummit.xyz
Vault Summit tweet media
English
0
1
5
470
Ascend
Ascend@AscendFi·
Standards come before the markets they enable come fully alive
English
2
1
11
208
Chris Barrett
Chris Barrett@ChrisBarrett·
DTCC 🤝 Chainlink DTCC’s Collateral AppChain will leverage the Chainlink Runtime Environment and Chainlink data standard to advance 24/7 collateral management. Near real-time collateral management across financial markets and blockchains. dtcc.com/news/2026/may/…
English
10
39
347
6.1K
Redwan
Redwan@RedoudouM·
@marilyn100x how FOCIL can be enforced? Im doing repo on mainnet what does it take for me to benefit from FOCIL?
English
0
0
1
25
marilyn100x.eth
marilyn100x.eth@marilyn100x·
0/ Ethereum cannot guarantee your transaction gets included in a block. Builders can see it, front-run it, and exclude it, all without breaking any protocol rule. FOCIL changes the enforcement layer at the consensus layer. It turns optional inclusion into a real obligation🧵
marilyn100x.eth@marilyn100x

Ethereum Part 11: FOCIL & Encrypted Mempools Builders can censor transactions and public mempools expose them to front-running before inclusion. > ePBS decentralizes building. > FOCIL enforces inclusion at consensus level. > Encrypted mempools blind the ordering. Watch now👇

English
16
12
120
5.2K
Redwan
Redwan@RedoudouM·
@lex_node @insider0x does it mean that only direct issuance will be trustable path for any tokenized securities? Would be curious to hear the perspective from a security attorney.
English
0
0
0
1K
_gabrielShapir0
_gabrielShapir0@lex_node·
I am surprised more people are not paying attention to this update from Anthropic on its stock policy. This seems like a potential bombshell. There is an active secondary market purportedly in Anthropic stock or derivatives including on fairly reputable (or at least well-known) platforms like Forge. Anthropic is calling them out *specifically*, by name, and essentially *saying* 100% of these are illegal. Some may be frauds (people selling Anthropic stock or interests in Anthropic stock that they don't truly own), but more likely many are legit attempts at transferring Anthropic equity (directly, as SPV shares, or as some type of 'beneficial interest' or future, etc.) Anthropic appears to be saying it will treat all these transfers as void. I don't have access to their terms, but it's very interesting to think what this could mean. Do the 'first purported sellers' in the chain potentially have an opportunity to do a double-dip? Does the first seller and all downstream buyers get the entire entitlement nuked? Anthropic is threatening that--are they just bluffing? If they're not bluffing, what litigation is likely to ensue? This can get into really esoteric areas of corporate law that depend on exactly how the transfer restrictions are drafted as well as the language around how violations of transfer restrictions are treated--for example, if they are merely voidABLE then downstream buyers can assert various equitable claims/defenses, but if they are VOID ab initio then in some jurisdictions that forecloses equitable defenses.
_gabrielShapir0 tweet media_gabrielShapir0 tweet media
English
143
148
1.6K
1.7M
Redwan
Redwan@RedoudouM·
@Jeremybtc maybe if any of them had visited a small vineyard in france or corsica and popped some 20€ bottle they would have been able to tell the difference.
English
0
0
0
147
Jeremy
Jeremy@Jeremybtc·
For nearly a decade the most trusted wine dealer in America was counterfeiting bottles in his kitchen sink and selling them to BILLIONAIRES for $50,000 each. > Rudy Kurniawan showed up on the fine wine scene in the early 2000s. A young Indonesian wearing Hermès, spending $1 MILLION a month at auction. > Nobody questioned where the money came from. The wine he poured was too good for that. > Kurniawan hosted private dinners for BILLIONAIRE collectors and opened impossibly rare Burgundy, the kind that trades for $50,000 a bottle. > Attenders were seduced and started buying privately. > His two auctions in 2006 made $35 MILLION combined. The largest single consignor wine sale in history. > Between dinners, the same man was at his kitchen sink mixing cheap Napa wine with old Burgundy. > Pouring the blend into empty bottles, printing fake labels on his laptop, dusting them to look aged and sealing them with authentic French wax. > The fraud was uncovered not by investigators but by Laurent Ponsot, a fourth generation French vintner who noticed his family's bottles being sold from vintages his family never produced. > When the FBI raided Kurniawan's home they found old bottles soaking in the sink, 30 to 50 open bottles with funnels and re-corkers on the counter and wax still dripping off freshly sealed bottles in the next room. > A 2013 conviction landed him 10 years in prison. > The court ordered him to repay $28.4 MILLION and forfeit another $20 MILLION. The government has only recovered about $2 MILLION. > Up to 10,000 of his fake bottles are still sitting in private cellars around the world, completely undetected. > Released in November 2020 after seven years, he was deported to Indonesia in April 2021. > Today he is reportedly making fake wines again as a party trick at exclusive Singapore dinners. BILLIONAIRES pay him to taste his fakes against the originals. > Most of them prefer the fakes. The rarest wines in the world were being made at a kitchen sink. The billionaires who paid for them never noticed the difference. They still don't.
English
214
756
5.8K
605.7K
Redwan
Redwan@RedoudouM·
@anishmoonka did he also stop to drink a bottle of whiskey per day ? Because maybe that's a good place to start.
English
0
0
0
217
Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
Winston Churchill fought his depression with bricks. He'd lay them for hours at his country home in Kent. He joined the bricklayers' union. And in 1921 he wrote about why it worked. It took psychology another 75 years to catch up. He called his depression the "Black Dog." It followed him for decades. His method for fighting it back was as basic as it sounds: laying brick after brick, hour after hour. Churchill spelled out his theory in a long essay for The Strand Magazine. People who think for a living, he wrote, can't fix a tired brain just by resting it. They have to use a different part of themselves. The part that moves the eyes and the hands. Woodworking, chemistry, bookbinding, bricklaying, painting. Anything that drags the body into a problem the mind can't solve by itself. Modern psychology now calls this behavioral activation. It's one of the most-studied depression treatments out there. Depression sets a behavior trap. You feel bad, so you stop doing things, and doing less means less to feel good about. Feeling worse makes you do even less. The loop tightens until you can't breathe inside it. Behavioral activation breaks the loop from the action side. You schedule the activity first, even when every part of you doesn't want to. Doing it produces small rewards: a wall gets straighter, a painting fills in, a messy room gets clean. Those small rewards slowly rewire the brain. Action comes first, and the feeling follows. Researchers at the University of Washington put this to the test in 2006. They studied 241 adults with major depression and compared three treatments: behavioral activation, regular talk therapy, and antidepressants. For the people who were most severely depressed, behavioral activation matched the drugs. It beat the talk therapy. A 2014 review of more than 1,500 patients across 26 trials backed up the result. Physical work like bricklaying does something extra on top of this. It crowds out rumination, the looping bad thoughts that grind people down during the worst stretches of depression. Bricklaying needs both hands and gives feedback brick by brick: each one is straight or crooked. After an hour you can see exactly how much wall you built. No room left for the mental chewing. The line George Mack used in his post, "depression hates a moving target," is good poetry. The science behind it is sharper. Depression hates a brain that has somewhere else to be.
George Mack@george__mack

Winston Churchill used to lay 200 bricks per day to keep his mind busy when feeling down. Depression hates a moving target.

English
855
11.6K
56.3K
6.9M
Redwan
Redwan@RedoudouM·
Policy signal, without the noise. Launching the new @EntEthAlliance Policy Friday tracker in beta: entethalliance.github.io/ops-policy-fri… a live feed tracking regulatory moves from official agencies shaping institutional @ethereum . Scans, filters, stores outputs from global agencies (SEC, MAS, OCC, TREAS, ECB, CSRC...) Feedbacks welcome
Redwan tweet mediaRedwan tweet media
English
0
0
1
116
Redwan retweetledi
Dan McAteer
Dan McAteer@daniel_mac8·
Anthropic allows OpenClaw usage again. From @openclaw docs.
Dan McAteer tweet media
English
211
157
2K
1.3M
Kei
Kei@keikreutler·
The Protocol Institute launches today. I've spent the past three years contributing to its predecessor, Summer of Protocols, and I'll keep my Memory Research Group work going under the new institute's banner. I'm really excited to see where it heads from here.
Kei tweet media
English
5
15
116
13.2K
Redwan
Redwan@RedoudouM·
@CoachDanGo could this just be improved data collection and quality.
English
0
0
1
434
Dan Go
Dan Go@CoachDanGo·
Over the past 34 years the average Chinese man became, on average, 3 inches taller than his grandfather. But entire population can't rewrite its DNA in 35 years. So what made them grow so fast? The answer might surprise you.
Dan Go tweet media
English
338
612
5.4K
3.4M
Redwan
Redwan@RedoudouM·
@Brlggs Not everyone wants privacy. Also some solutions exists.
English
1
0
0
8
Pichu.base.eth
Pichu.base.eth@Brlggs·
@RedoudouM There is no privacy. All tx are transparent Why is this so hard to understand?
English
1
0
0
31
Redwan
Redwan@RedoudouM·
Why we do not have this already ?
Redwan tweet mediaRedwan tweet media
English
1
0
1
221