
t1
732 posts

t1
@t1protocol
Building TEE-enabled real-time proving for rollups, to unify Ethereum. Backed by @a16zcrypto CSX. Join our community today: https://t.co/zh2zkETXLb



Ken Griffin had a negative take on tokenization yesterday, his point being that securities trading is already efficient I understand Ken's take, but it misses the point that tokenization's primary use case is not trading. Tokenization's main use case is to facilitate better formation of capital, specifically lending When you know what assets are worth at all times, and you can draw significant liquidity on demand against them, and issue new assets programmatically, what you have is just a better organized lending capital market that has larger bandwidth. Framework routinely does things in crypto lending markets that would be considered impossible elsewhere, and are only made possible through tokenization. Tokenization can squeeze 50-100% efficiency gains out of existing capital markets just by organizing them better. The thesis does not need to be more complicated than that and does not involve securities trading or internet capital markets. Thank you Ken G


Yild is a non-custodial, automated cross-chain vault (strategy execution) protocol built on t1's real-time proving infrastructure. Yild lets developers deploy verifiable, on-chain–enforced strategies that execute across chains without trust assumptions.

How does a TEE-enabled perpDEX work?

How does a TEE-enabled perpDEX work?


Our long term approach is defense in depth. Start with TEEs to make cross chain execution work at low cost. Then add lightweight proof of stake with re execution and TEE level consensus. Finally, use periodic zero knowledge proofs to cap economic risk. Layered integrity reduces cost without sacrificing security.

















