
Sanctum app is now live, only on Seeker ☁️ Meet Albus, your companion in @sanctumso. Earn yield, stack xp, and Seekers unlock exclusives soon. Available on the Solana dApp Store!
Jaden@Business
2.4K posts

@lsbyitz
Hodl 允许一切发生 有时激昂,有时低首,非常善于等候 接下来努力,成为一个话唠。

Sanctum app is now live, only on Seeker ☁️ Meet Albus, your companion in @sanctumso. Earn yield, stack xp, and Seekers unlock exclusives soon. Available on the Solana dApp Store!










There have recently been some discussions on the ongoing role of L2s in the Ethereum ecosystem, especially in the face of two facts: * L2s' progress to stage 2 (and, secondarily, on interop) has been far slower and more difficult than originally expected * L1 itself is scaling, fees are very low, and gaslimits are projected to increase greatly in 2026 Both of these facts, for their own separate reasons, mean that the original vision of L2s and their role in Ethereum no longer makes sense, and we need a new path. First, let us recap the original vision. Ethereum needs to scale. The definition of "Ethereum scaling" is the existence of large quantities of block space that is backed by the full faith and credit of Ethereum - that is, block space where, if you do things (including with ETH) inside that block space, your activities are guaranteed to be valid, uncensored, unreverted, untouched, as long as Ethereum itself functions. If you create a 10000 TPS EVM where its connection to L1 is mediated by a multisig bridge, then you are not scaling Ethereum. This vision no longer makes sense. L1 does not need L2s to be "branded shards", because L1 is itself scaling. And L2s are not able or willing to satisfy the properties that a true "branded shard" would require. I've even seen at least one explicitly saying that they may never want to go beyond stage 1, not just for technical reasons around ZK-EVM safety, but also because their customers' regulatory needs require them to have ultimate control. This may be doing the right thing for your customers. But it should be obvious that if you are doing this, then you are not "scaling Ethereum" in the sense meant by the rollup-centric roadmap. But that's fine! it's fine because Ethereum itself is now scaling directly on L1, with large planned increases to its gas limit this year and the years ahead. We should stop thinking about L2s as literally being "branded shards" of Ethereum, with the social status and responsibilities that this entails. Instead, we can think of L2s as being a full spectrum, which includes both chains backed by the full faith and credit of Ethereum with various unique properties (eg. not just EVM), as well as a whole array of options at different levels of connection to Ethereum, that each person (or bot) is free to care about or not care about depending on their needs. What would I do today if I were an L2? * Identify a value add other than "scaling". Examples: (i) non-EVM specialized features/VMs around privacy, (ii) efficiency specialized around a particular application, (iii) truly extreme levels of scaling that even a greatly expanded L1 will not do, (iv) a totally different design for non-financial applications, eg. social, identity, AI, (v) ultra-low-latency and other sequencing properties, (vi) maybe built-in oracles or decentralized dispute resolution or other "non-computationally-verifiable" features * Be stage 1 at the minimum (otherwise you really are just a separate L1 with a bridge, and you should just call yourself that) if you're doing things with ETH or other ethereum-issued assets * Support maximum interoperability with Ethereum, though this will differ for each one (eg. what if you're not EVM, or even not financial?) From Ethereum's side, over the past few months I've become more convinced of the value of the native rollup precompile, particuarly once we have enshrined ZK-EVM proofs that we need anyway to scale L1. This is a precompile that verifies a ZK-EVM proof, and it's "part of Ethereum", so (i) it auto-upgrades along with Ethereum, and (ii) if the precompile has a bug, Ethereum will hard-fork to fix the bug. The native rollup precompile would make full, security-council-free, EVM verification accessible. We should spend much more time working out how to design it in such a way that if your L2 is "EVM plus other stuff", then the native rollup precompile would verify the EVM, and you only have to bring your own prover for the "other stuff" (eg. Stylus). This might involve a canonical way of exposing a lookup table between contract call inputs and outputs, and letting you provide your own values to the lookup table (that you would prove separately). This would make it easy to have safe, strong, trustless interoperability with Ethereum. It also enables synchronous composability (see: ethresear.ch/t/combining-pr… and ethresear.ch/t/synchronous-… ). And from there, it's each L2's choice exactly what they want to build. Don't just "extend L1", figure out something new to add. This of course means that some will add things that are trust-dependent, or backdoored, or otherwise insecure; this is unavoidable in a permissionless ecosystem where developers have freedom. Our job should make to make it clear to users what guarantees they have, and to build up the strongest Ethereum that we can.



ERC-8004 is now live on mainnet. 5 months ago, we wrote the specs for the Trustless Agents standard. Since then, over 10k agents registered on testnet. Today, we’re releasing it on Ethereum Mainnet. Welcome to the 8004 Genesis Month. Here’s everything you need to know 👇


🎙️Solar收音台:随着 @solanamobile 上周TGE,认真交互手机的小伙伴都领到了价值不菲的 $SKR 空投,$SKR 亮眼的表现成为上周最热点的讨论话题。明晚Seeker团队成员空降中文区,开放麦自由提问。快跟Seeker团队成员近距离交流,了解Seeker的未来规划,抢占先机! 🗓️1月29日 周四11pm UTC+8 🧑🏫主持人:一千万是只猫 @RXu107 嘉宾 Emmett @m_it - General Manager of @solana Mobile; @FEIlXIE - SEEKER中文社区长; @0xScottlai - @monsterblockhk 创办人; @skyL2023 - Solana-volunteersDAO社区发起人; @cr0ath YouTuber小鱼·币币机

CATHIE WOOD: THE WORST IS LIKELY OVER FOR BITCOIN Cathie just laid it out pretty clearly and says the last 2–3 months were basically the aftershock from the Oct 10 flash crash -- a Binance software glitch that forced ~$28B of deleveraging across crypto. Bitcoin took the hardest hit because it’s the most liquid asset. That unwind is mostly done & now the debate has shifted to the 4-year cycle. Are we still in the downside phase? Cathie’s answer: probably not. She sees $BTC likely basing in the ~$80K–$90K range, then moving higher once that consolidation does its job. Institutions aren’t questioning if #Bitcoin belongs anymore -- they’re figuring out how to size it as a new asset class with low correlation. The forced selling looks behind us. What comes next is positioning. 👀