two_ices | DKS
4.7K posts



GM Guys !
I just got my first Noble @DeadKingSociety
If you think the Art is dope wait to see how great is the community!
Thanks guys for your warm welcome
#solana #SolanaNFTs #NFTcollections

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two_ices | DKS retweetledi

i can't stop thinking about the drift protocol hack.
not because of the $280m. we've seen big numbers before. i can't stop thinking about how it happened. and what it says about everything we're building.
on april 1st, while people were posting jokes, an attacker drained $280 million from drift protocol in minutes. the team had to literally tweet "this is not an april fools joke."
but this didn't start on april 1st. it started on march 23rd.
that's when the attacker created four durable nonce accounts. two tied to drift's own security council multisig members. two controlled by the attacker. quietly. no alarms. no flags.
on march 27th, drift migrated their security council due to a routine member change. by march 30th, the attacker had already compromised a signer on the new multisig too.
then on april 1st, they executed.
a test transaction first. then one minute later, two pre-signed transactions fired four slots apart. admin takeover. withdrawal limits removed. a malicious asset introduced. every vault drained. jlp. sol. btc. usdc. over 15 tokens gone.
the entire thing took minutes.
this wasn't a bug. this wasn't a smart contract exploit. this wasn't a flash loan or an oracle manipulation. drift's own report confirms it (you can check @DriftProtocol's latest to confirm). no compromised seed phrases. no code vulnerability.
this was social engineering.
the attacker got 2 out of 5 multisig signers to approve transactions they didn't fully understand. used durable nonces to pre-sign them. then waited. patiently. for over a week.
two signatures out of five. that was the security standing between users and $280 million.
two out of five.
i keep coming back to that number because this is the part that should make everyone uncomfortable. not the hack itself. the architecture that made it possible.
we've seen this before. we've seen this so many times.
bybit. $1.4 billion. the attacker compromised the signing infrastructure and tricked signers into authorizing malicious transactions. same concept. social engineering. not code.
ronin bridge. $625 million. compromised validator keys. same story.
cetus protocol. $223 million. different method but same result. hundreds of millions gone.
in 2025 alone, $3.4 billion was stolen in crypto. and the pattern is almost always the same. not brilliant code exploits. not zero-day vulnerabilities. someone was tricked. a key was exposed. a human made a mistake.
only 19% of hacked protocols even used multi-sig wallets. and the ones that did, like drift, got beaten anyway. because the weakest link was never the code. it was always the person holding the key.
now here's what makes me angry.
i've seen people dunking on solana over this. blaming svm. questioning the entire chain. the same thing happened after bybit when people started questioning evm and ethereum's security model.
this is not a solana problem. this is not an ethereum problem. this is not chain-specific at all.
drift's own report says it clearly. the programs and smart contracts worked exactly as designed. the chain did what it was supposed to do. a human was tricked into signing something they shouldn't have. that can happen on any chain. any protocol. any ecosystem.
pointing fingers at solana is a deflection. and it's net negative for the entire space because it distracts from the real conversation we need to have.
which brings me to circle.
nine days before the drift hack, circle froze 16 business wallets overnight. legitimate companies. crypto exchanges. forex platforms. payment processors. no criminal charges. a sealed civil lawsuit that nobody could even read. no advance warning. businesses woke up and couldn't process payments, couldn't settle trades, couldn't serve their customers.
zachxbt called it "potentially the single most incompetent freeze" he'd seen in over five years of investigations. one of the frozen wallets wasn't even a business. it was a dfinity bridge contract used by thousands of users who had nothing to do with the case.
then nine days later, $280 million is being drained from drift in real time. the attacker is converting stolen tokens through jupiter, bridging them to ethereum, moving funds through circle's own cross-chain transfer protocol.
and the freeze didn't come fast enough.
so circle can shut down 16 legitimate businesses overnight for a civil case. but a quarter billion being actively stolen through their own infrastructure? different speed.
i'm not saying circle is the villain here. i'm saying the system is broken in ways that should concern everyone.
now think about who's actually affected by drift.
it's not just traders. protocols are built on top of drift. neobanks integrate with defi infrastructure. real customers with no idea what a multisig even is woke up and saw they couldn't access their money. some platforms said user funds are safe. but nobody could withdraw.
your money is "safe" but you can't touch it. think about what that feels like for someone who just wanted a better savings rate.
i know what it feels like on a smaller scale. i lost $5,000 to social engineering. it's nothing compared to $280 million. but the feeling is the same. that moment when you realize the funds are gone and there's nothing you can do. it doesn't scale with the dollar amount. it's the same pit in your stomach whether it's $5k or $280m.
and here's the question i keep circling back to.
we say defi is the future. we say we're going to onboard the next billion users. we say this technology will replace traditional finance and bank the unbanked and give people financial sovereignty.
but how do we onboard millions of people into a system where a social engineering attack can drain a quarter billion dollars in minutes? where 2 out of 5 signatures is considered security for $280m? where the attacker sets up wallets two weeks early, runs a test transaction, and nobody notices? where circle can freeze legitimate businesses overnight but can't stop a live heist fast enough? where the same attack, the same playbook, the same human error keeps happening year after year after year?
ronin. bybit. cetus. now drift. same cause. different name. different chain. same result.
defi doesn't have a code problem. it has a people problem. and we keep solving for the code.
i haven't interacted with a protocol in a while. i like money. but i love safety more. and right now this space is asking me to choose between the two.
security can't keep being the last conversation. it can't keep being the thing we talk about after the hack and forget about before the next one. it has to be the first priority. not the last.
because right now we're not ready for the next billion users. we're barely keeping the ones we have safe.
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If we can solve this, crypto will go to infinity.
chainyoda@chainyoda
Is there a way to earn more than 5% yield without risking 100% of the principal?
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@TurntUpDylan Zero revenue, launch a token on future promises… where have I seen this before? Like times infinity lol
Crypto needs to become more tradfi than it would like to admit but whatever
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Sounds like Kalshi and Polymarket are both raising at $20B. Yet they have completely opposite business models.
Kalshi up from $11B and Polymarket up from $9B.
2025 numbers:
- Kalshi: $260M revenue, $23.8B volume
- Polymarket: $0 revenue, $21.5B volume
Kalshi: no token, 1-2% fees, 90% sports betting
Polymarket: token coming, zero fees (for now), politics + crypto
Kalshi is a business. Polymarket is a bet on future monetization.
Kalshi prints money today. Polymarket is deferring revenue to capture market share and cash out on their token.
This is a great case study in how markets price different paths to the same outcome:
Immediate cash flow vs. deferred monetization
Regulated gambling vs. prediction market narrative
Traditional rev model vs. crypto economics
Kalshi is proving the model works right now. Polymarket is asking you to believe in what happens when they flip the switch.

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@TurntUpDylan Keeps the unlocks from totally sending the chart into the netherworld
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$300m in buy backs
25% of circulating supply bought
But the chart still looks like this.
Sellers are undefeated.

Pump.fun Ecosystem@PumpfunEco
In the last 24 hours, pump fun purchased $1,444,291 worth of $PUMP, which equals 100% of the previous day’s revenue This brings its total purchases to $297,829,062 to date
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two_ices | DKS retweetledi

Reinventing yourself publicly is one of the hardest things you can do.
The more you attach your identity to a product, a cycle, a narrative, the more you box yourself in. You become its slave.
CT amplifies everything. It’s a small playground.
You can switch lunch tables, but everyone still sees you in the cafeteria.
Once a meme coiner, always a meme coiner.
Once a shitposter, always a shitposter.
Once an NFT founder, always an NFT founder.
Try something new and you’re a grifter.
Change your mind and you’re a traitor.
To be fair, sometimes the label fits. There’s no shortage of grifters and traitors. Skepticism is warranted.
But CT turns opinions into identity.
And that identity becomes a prison.
The more publicly you declare who you are, the harder it becomes to evolve without social penalty.
Changing your mind doesn’t look like growth. If you aren't helping grow someone else's bag, it looks like betrayal and weakness.
People prefer consistency over being right because consistency protects status and prevents pain.
Money shifts the calculus a bit. Print enough and amnesia kicks in. Doors reopen. But if you win while others lose, forgiveness gets expensive.
At the end of the day, you can’t grow if you let a small playground define you forever.
Don’t volunteer to be the main character unless the upside is worth the scrutiny.
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@TurntUpDylan I agree and would add I think we’re on our way to anger and will fully reach it when BTC bottoms out
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I rarely post about this.
But the timeline lately screams one thing:
We’ve officially entered the anger phase.
Torches & pitchforks out
Solana OGs catching hate
Flagship products eating FUD
KOLs turning into trenchers, trenchers turning into KOLs
L1s throwing out haymakers
Politics somehow got even weirder
Memecoins branded casino slop by the top
Maybe this is not a bad thing.
😡😡💢😡💢💢😡

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@martypartymusic Interesting thoughts… wonder if it also supports the liquidity logic that you can cash out / transact with IBIT shares with less friction than having to via DEXes on chain. Also, might be a way to avoid the gas fee issue later down the road if BTC hits $1mm per coin
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Thesis: Whales aren't dumping native $BTC for cash; they're swapping it for $IBIT shares, which removes $BTC from circulation (bullish supply dynamic) and places it under ETF custody.
There is a notable shift among some large holders toward transferring their native BTC into IBIT shares via in-kind creations (depositing actual Bitcoin directly for ETF shares without selling). This started accelerating after U.S. regulators approved in-kind transactions for spot Bitcoin ETFs in mid-2025. Reports from late 2025 indicate BlackRock processed billions in such conversions around $3 billion by October 2025 allowing whales to gain ETF exposure while retaining economic upside, often for benefits like:
- Tax deferral (avoiding immediate capital gains by not selling BTC outright).
- Easier integration into traditional portfolios or custody.
- Access to regulated, institutional-grade infrastructure.
This is more of a migration of existing holdings into ETF wrappers rather than an outright "exit" from Bitcoin exposure.
This is a solid narritive - thoughts? @TheOtherParker_ @david_eng_mba @saylor
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@TurntUpDylan Liquidation hunting month… crypto market turns out to be quite illiquid after all; market makers have pretty enormous power it turns out bc it doesn’t take a lot of capital to move a market 30% in a week relative to tradfi markets
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@CamYeCamYe Your starting quarterback suffered a season ending injury on the second play of regulation, the backup can’t throw, you’re rank 27th in run offense and your opponent has the top run defense in the league
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two_ices | DKS retweetledi

@TurntUpDylan You should start sharing a side by side screenshot of your caloric intake and its components too
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@TurntUpDylan Once you hit your 40s, 43 specifically, the body just doesn’t do what it used to. Speaking from experience. My 30s were awesome
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