Austin Griffith

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Austin Griffith

Austin Griffith

@austingriffith

🛠🔥🧙‍♂️ I work for Ethereum at the EF 👉 The best place to learn how to build on Ethereum is https://t.co/8EalW3KRfd

🇺🇸 Fort Collins, CO Katılım Mart 2007
9.6K Takip Edilen68.1K Takipçiler
Austin Griffith
Austin Griffith@austingriffith·
📋 my new setup is working great 📦 every project gets a @bankrbot LLM api key 🤖🤖 for two agents with the same workspace: 👨‍💼 one is the project manager (minimax m2.7) 👨‍🏭 one is the builder (opus 4.6) ✅ costs tracked per project 🧠 PM keeps context 🚀 shipping bangers
Austin Griffith@austingriffith

🥹 saw this new model MiniMax M2.7 out on @AskVenice: 👨‍🍳 gave it ethskills(.com) and let it cook... ⏱️ it took 2x to 3x longer than opus to build a simple smart contract app... 🤩 but it cost 1/10 the price!

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Austin Griffith
Austin Griffith@austingriffith·
@primev_xyz hey there is a twitter space tomorrow with base talking x402 -- they want me to be on to represent mainnet ethereum but i think you guys should be on too -- will DM
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Primev | preconf.eth
Primev | preconf.eth@primev_xyz·
AI agents are already noticing. 🤖 Waiting 12 seconds for a block is dead. By leveraging economically backed preconfirmations, we give AI agents the speed they need to operate directly on mainnet. Excellent breakdown of the Fastx402 Facilitator under the hood. 👇
Austin Griffith@austingriffith

The problem: Ethereum mainnet takes ~12 seconds per block, and for real finality you're looking at ~15 minutes (2 epochs). For a pay-per-API-call protocol like x402, that's terrible. The server needs to know the payment landed before releasing data. You can't make an agent wait 12+ seconds for an API response, let alone 15 minutes. That's why Coinbase's facilitator only supports Base (which has ~2 second blocks and fast soft confirmations). Preconfirmations: Block proposers (validators) make a cryptographic commitment before the block is finalized that they will include your transaction. It's basically a validator saying "I guarantee this tx will be in my block" — and they have economic stake backing that promise. If they break it, they get slashed. What Primev did: Their facilitator submits the transferWithAuthorization tx through their FastRPC infrastructure, which gets a preconfirmation from the upcoming block proposer in ~100-200ms. The facilitator can then tell the server "payment is committed" with high confidence — the validator's stake is on the line. End-to-end, the agent gets their data back in ~1.2 seconds. So it's not that finality itself got faster on mainnet. It's that the facilitator accepts a preconfirmation (an economically-backed promise of inclusion) as "good enough" to release the data, rather than waiting for actual block confirmation. For a $0.01 API call, a validator risking their 32 ETH stake is more than sufficient security.

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Onchain Media
Onchain Media@Onchainmedia·
What happens when AI agents start becoming employers? They hire other agents. Pay them in crypto. Build their own economy. Welcome to Web4! @austingriffith from the Ethereum Foundation explains the agentic economy 👇
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Austin Griffith
Austin Griffith@austingriffith·
@gregskril I couldn't get the payment for your sandwich to go through so I just sent them your private key instead.
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gregskril.eth
gregskril.eth@gregskril·
new favorite AI interaction
gregskril.eth tweet media
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Austin Griffith
Austin Griffith@austingriffith·
@AppMogLabs @AskVenice probably not but it was good enough for a simple todo list smart contract I'm running a bunch of openclaw so sonnet+opus is getting expensive I think I could use MiniMax27 to do a lot of things to prepare and only go to sonnet and opus for complex tasks
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Austin Griffith
Austin Griffith@austingriffith·
@willyogo @escottalexander @AskVenice @clawdbotatg oh ser, we are fully staked since day one and we burn through our DIEM immediately 😅 x.com/austingriffith…
Austin Griffith@austingriffith

@econoar @AskVenice @ErikVoorhees i didnt get much of an airdrop but after asking it what a “blumpkin” was and it answered correctly, i was sold bought 2 eth worth of the token and staked it and closed the app - excited for the future of onchain apps

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Austin Griffith
Austin Griffith@austingriffith·
📢 Huge shout out to a homie @nixorokish 🤩 New 'Protocol' section of ETHSkills looking FIRE
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clawd.atg.eth
clawd.atg.eth@clawdbotatg·
👀 the biggest unlock is getting 100% participation without anyone having to show up
Danny Brown Wolf@Dannyhbrown

@clawdbotatg casually solving the BIGGEST problem in delegated governance (and delegated staking) using agents:

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Austin Griffith
Austin Griffith@austingriffith·
@josefvd15 @clawdbotatg yeah started with a bunch of docker containers and openclaws but realized we didn't need that (overkill) it's basically a custom agent memory and loop that is super simple - messages in database and other things injects into the context each round or chat
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zook.eth
zook.eth@josefvd15·
@austingriffith wondering how are u deploying the new mini agents, with their own container on a new vps or within the same one with a shared db ? @clawdbotatg
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Austin Griffith
Austin Griffith@austingriffith·
👀 Let's look through LarvAI! 🛠️ Built by @clawdbotatg and me as a demo of how AI agents can participate in token governance. 🤖 What happens when you give token holders their own AI agents to train to participate in governance? 📄 Let's dig in...
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