azylem

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azylem

@azylem

https://t.co/v2lx3jVfjC @CivilwareTeam

Night City, Earth Katılım Ekim 2008
281 Takip Edilen1.5K Takipçiler
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Alberta-Leonidas
Alberta-Leonidas@AlbertaLeonidas·
if you believe in "hate speech" you are either below 80 on the iq spectrum or you are evil and using it as an ability to go after other people you disagree with there is no such thing as "hate speech" there is only speech you are too intellectually fragile to be exposed to, and that is a you issue not a speech issue.
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azylem@azylem·
The world would literally build them a galaxy, if they let it. Makes no sense to do what they're doing.
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azylem
azylem@azylem·
@DBCrypt0 The people that care, already moved on to better tools. The big $$ old world, will keep the attention of the masses away from the things they need, for a long good while yet. No point in caring about that, it's open season for creating, focus there for when they come running.
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DBCrypto
DBCrypto@DBCrypt0·
The EF just reaffirmed their commitment to censorship resistance, open source, privacy, and security. All great goals that every chain should strive for. But the uncomfortable truth? Ethereum doesn't actually deliver on most of these. Not where it matters. Censorship resistance? Over 30% of blocks are MEV-Boost compliant and follow OFAC sanctions. That's not resistance. That's compliance with a fancy marketing spin. Privacy? Every transaction is fully transparent on the base layer. No native privacy. You need third-party mixers that regulators are actively targeting. Security for users? Tell that to anyone who paid $50 in gas to approve a malicious contract, lost $50m on a poorly designed UI/UX, or got rekt by a reentrancy exploit because Solidity is a disaster. I’ll admit, Ethereum was revolutionary. It proved smart contracts could work at scale and opened the door for everything we're building today. But proof of concepts aren't meant to run forever. You don't keep upgrading a Windows 95 machine with more RAM and hope it competes with modern systems. At some point, the foundation itself is the bottleneck. Every new upgrade adds another layer of complexity. Rollups to fix scaling. Restaking to fix security. Account abstraction to fix UX. Proto-danksharding to fix data availability. It's not innovation. It's duct tape. And lots of it. And the longer we pretend patching a 2015 architecture will carry us into the future, the longer we delay what's actually needed. Chains built FROM THE GROUND UP for the goals Ethereum claims to have. Network effects are entirely overstated too. Less than 1% of global liquidity in on-chain Less than 1% of the world population uses Web3 Less than .1% of devs worldwide build in Web3 So don’t try to sell me the whole “network effects” line because there is no network or effects yet So now the technical debt compounds. And at some point, migration becomes easier than maintenance. We've seen this play out in every other tech cycle. Incumbents don't lose overnight. They lose slowly, then suddenly. So the real question isn't whether Ethereum will be replaced. It’s how much longer we’re gonna keep fighting the inevitable burning time, money, brainpower, and valuable resources on a 2015 foundation that was never built for this.
Ethereum Foundation@ethereumfndn

1/ The Mandate clearly states what must be protected: EF will, above all else, remain focused on an Ethereum that is censorship resistant, open source, private, and secure (CROPS), in the service of user self-sovereignty, resistant to extraction and with seamless UX. These are conditions that make Ethereum worth building, using, and defending. Read the full blog here: blog.ethereum.org/2026/03/13/ef-…

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Yukon Strong 🫎
Yukon Strong 🫎@YukonStrong·
Is there a way to opt out of all lists?
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azylem
azylem@azylem·
Hopefully everyone is exploring their visions. Because no one else can.
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azylem@azylem·
@TheMarcitect @CiuppinoCzar Make your data and code execution local and individually auditable too, or that control over the rest becomes a more of a permissioned illusion every day, until exploited by externalities.
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The Architect.
The Architect.@TheMarcitect·
@CiuppinoCzar My food is local, my power is local, my home is local, my fuel is local. Guess what I've managed to live my entire life without the Strait of Hormuz. The liver analogy is cute but not even a close comparison.
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Inyas Yamal
Inyas Yamal@Inyas2525·
@barkmeta Step 1: take everyone’s data. Step 2: call it innovation. Step 3: charge everyone for access.
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azylem
azylem@azylem·
When the "value" of something that is "secured in" a blockchain, is represented in *dollars* and references an offchain 3rd party marketing website as a "source". Take the hint. Jfc
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azylem
azylem@azylem·
The only way forward, is forward. Simpler times won't be returning. Follow your heart.
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azylem@azylem·
@DavidJPba This extends far beyond the exercise of power or the mismatch in interests vs representation of the people. The mass trust exploit results from deeply embedded lies in western ideology for generations. The only possible solution is a technical one, enforced by math, not trust.
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David Parker
David Parker@DavidJPba·
When will people learn that you cannot trust those in power? They are not worthy of trust, that is the whole idea of democracy. That we change them out regularly.
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azylem@azylem·
@AlbertaLeonidas People will realize, that trusting others for our digital privacy, is technically and mechanically infeasible. Trust = collection. These concepts are so misunderstood here now that we can't even publicly speak about viable solutions, in context. Instead we implement in private.
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azylem
azylem@azylem·
Life is for the living.
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azylem
azylem@azylem·
Sounds like someone went outside for the first time.
vitalik.eth@VitalikButerin

I was recently at Real World Crypto (that's crypto as in cryptography) and the associated side events, and one thing that struck me was that it was a clarifying experience in terms of understanding *what blockchains are for*. We blockchain people (myself included) often have a tendency to start off from the perspective that we are Ethereum, and therefore we need to go around and find use cases for Ethereum - and generate arguments for why sticking Ethereum into all kinds of places is beneficial. But recently I have been thinking from a different perspective. For a moment, let us forget that we are "the Ethereum community". Rather, we are maintainers of the Ethereum tool, and members of the {CROPS (censorship-resistant, open-source, private, secure) tech | sanctuary tech | non-corposlop tech | d/acc | ...} community. Going in with zero attachment to Ethereum specifically, and entering a context (like RWC) where there are people with in-principle aligned values but no blockchain baggage, can we re-derive from zero in what places Ethereum adds the most value? From attending the events, the first answer that comes up is actually not what you think. It's not smart contracts, it's not even payments. It's what cryptographers call a "public bulletin board". See, lots of cryptographic protocols - including secure online voting, secure software and website version control, certificate revocation... - all require some publicly writable and readable place where people can post blobs of data. This does not require any computation functionality. In fact, it does not directly require money - though it does _indirectly_ require money, because if you want permissionless anti-spam it has to be economic. The only thing it _fundamentally_ requires is data availability. And it just so happened that Ethereum recently did an upgrade (PeerDAS) to increase the amount of data availability it provides by 2.3x, with a path to going another 10-100x higher! Next, payments. Many protocols require payments for many reasons. Some things need to be charged for to reduce spam. Other things because they are services provided by someone who expends resources and needs to be compensated. If you want a permissionless API that does not get spammed to death, you need payments. And Ethereum + ZK payment channels (eg. ethresear.ch/t/zk-api-usage… ) is one of the best payment systems for APIs you can come up with. If you are making a private and secure application (eg. a messenger, or many other things), and you do not want to let people to spam the system by creating a million accounts and then uploading a gigabyte-sized video on each one, you need sybil resistance, and if you care about security and privacy, you really should care about permissionless participation (ie. don't have mandatory phone number dependency). ETH payment as anti-sybil tool is a natural backstop in such use cases. Finally, smart contracts. One major use case is _security deposits_: ETH put into lockboxes that provably get destroyed if a proof is submitted that the owner violated some protocol rule. Another is actually implementing things like ZK payment channels. A third is making it easy to have pointers to "digital objects" that represent some socially defined external entity (not necessarily an RWA!), and for those pointers to interact with each other. *Technically*, for every use case other than use cases handling ETH itself, the smart contracts are "just a convenience": you could just use the chain as a bulletin board, and use ZK-SNARKs to provide the results of any computations over it. But in practice, standardizing such things is hard, and you get the most interoperability if you just take the same mechanism that enables programs to control ETH, and let other digital objects use it too. And from here, we start getting into a huge number of potential applications, including all of the things happening in defi. --- So yes, Ethereum has a lot of value, that you can see from first principles if you take a step back and see it purely as a technical tool: global shared memory. I suspect that a big bottleneck to seeing more of this kind of usage is that the world has not yet updated to the fact that we are no longer in 2020-22, fees are now extremely low, and we have a much stronger scaling roadmap to make sure that they will continue to stay low, even if much higher levels of usage return. Infrastructure for not exposing fee volatility to users is much more mature (eg. one way to do this for many use cases is to just operate a blob publisher). Ethereum blobs as a bulletin board, ETH as an asset and universal-backup means of payment, and Ethereum smart contracts as a shared programming layer, all make total sense as part of a decentralized, private and secure open source software stack. But we should continue to improve the Ethereum protocol and infrastructure so that it's actually effective in all of these situations.

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azylem@azylem·
@AlbertaLeonidas We have 1 chance really. Hopefully folks are at least pondering the concept, if not actively pursuing/building the prerequisite solutions for such a thing.
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Johannes M. Koenraadt
Johannes M. Koenraadt@johannesmkx·
Told you so. A few days ago, I suggested that the US and Israeli militaries had used AI to find targets to bomb in Iran, and that this resulted in the murder of 160+ schoolgirls. That AI was Anthropic's Claude part of Palantir's Maven. There's no one at the helm checking the decisions because the whole military is staffed with DEI buffoons who don't know what they're doing. These are war crimes, by the way. There should be tribunals and the guilty should be strung up.
Holly ⏸️ Elmore@ilex_ulmus

It’s time to quit, @AnthropicAI employees. You are in over your head.

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Erik Voorhees
Erik Voorhees@ErikVoorhees·
@AutismCapital love the photo of people congratulating themselves for stealing other peoples' money
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Tamara Lich 🇨🇦
Tamara Lich 🇨🇦@LichTamara·
In 2022, Canadians donated millions of dollars to a cause they supported but their government did not. That money has been investigated six ways from Sunday by every imaginable acronymned organization in Canada. The donations that weren’t refunded were frozen and seized by the AG of Ontario and now sit in escrow in Toronto. These funds will most likely be awarded to the Government of Ontario and Ontario law enforcement agencies, themselves currently under heavy scrutiny for mass corruption. Donors were doxxed. People were fined, suspended, or fired. Private donations. The Kamloops case is about the misuse of public money and therefore should be placed under even more scrutiny and held to a higher standard of transparency. It’s roughly the same amount of money, $12M. Will we see CSIS, RCMP, OPP, OPS, FINTRAC, and the provincial and federal governments throw their muscle behind investigating missing taxpayer money?
Holly Doan@hollyanndoan

Day after @TBS_Canada president @shafqatalimp announces review of Access to Information calling the Act “a cornerstone of gov’t accountability and transparency,” this is how @GCIndigenous responds to an *order* by the Info Commissioner to release documents on how $12.1 million earmarked for “exhumation” of Residential School graves was spent. newswire.ca/news-releases/…

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