AI is offensive as it brings rapid technological advancement. Blockchain & DeFi are defensive and will empower ppl. | ex. sc lead @Memeland, dev sup @UniswapFND
@maraoz What a moronic thing to say.
Less than 10% of past year DeFi issues are due to codebase.
It’s mostly bad parameter configuration, collateral blow up and poor opsec.
ERC-7730 allows anyone to submit a JSON descriptor to describe what each fn in the contract is doing, it gets verified by reviewers & auditors so even the protocol owner's github got compromised it won't affect the deployed description
def a better solution than tx simulation
0/ Clear signing is now live.
An open standard to end blind signing, making human-readable transactions default.
This effort brings a major UX and Security upgrade to transaction signing on Ethereum.
ethereum got flooded by fucking mercenaries pretending to be revolutionaries. everyone talks about decentralisation until there's money on the table, then suddenly compliance, surveillance, business opportunities, and extraction become pragmatic. most of this ecosystem does not give a shit about freedom. they care about pumps, fees, and turning users into fucking exit liquidity. cypherpunk was never about making founders rich. it was about making tyranny obsolete. the grifters will cash out. the cowards will comply. cypherpunks will outlast all of them. principles compound harder than capital. you don't have to believe me. you won't. because you'll be gone while i'm still here.
setting up Hermes agent in a vps with docker is like 10x faster than OpenClaw for me
I have migrated my skills and workflow like SEO analysis and everything is working smoothly so far
I guess Im finally free from the browser automation nightmare lol
🚨 Blockaid's exploit detection system identified an on-going admin-key compromise exploit on @wasabi_protocol across Ethereum and Base. The Wasabi: Deployer EOA was used to grant ADMIN_ROLE to an attacker helper contract, which then UUPS-upgraded the perp vaults and LongPool to a malicious implementation that drained balances.
@PatrickAlphaC I think this is just parts of the industry not taking security serious enough, and for protocols they need to make a better balance of security vs autonomy so integrators have a more secure setup by-default
@deep_poharkar - get paid for doing technical test
- don't have to worry about downloading fishy codebase
- get to contribute to open source project
- know the result within days
this is the dream hiring flow😭
a protocol that allows illiquid collateral for an enormous loan + a team full of politically connected insiders + users aping for points/airdrops = a recipe for disaster
this isn't about building an open and fair finance but a fragility stack to bankrupt your users
For people who do not understand how bad the situation is, their most liquid pool is on ETH which has $2.8M. When this gets liquidated, selling this stake on that pool today gets you $2.8M (basically the whole pool).
@Dolomite_io has no way to liquidate this and come out as whole from this situation. The stablecoins that were borrowed belonged to people who people who deposited on Dolomite for earning yield. When they go to withdraw it, they will not be able to do so.
@CoreyCaplan3 is the founder of @Dolomite_io and the CTO of @worldlibertyfi. He has not commented so far but he seems to be in the right position to suggest this Dolomite rug. It is at the expense of depositors on Dolomite.
the amount of efforts put into this social eng attack is insane, that's why every dev in this space should have utmost standard when someone sends you links/codes
- treat unfamiliar repo as unsafe
- establish a security review SOP
- sandbox every snippet/scripts asked to be run
@enjojoyy I think there is not really good resources focusing on that - to me it's more about onboarding new partners into the ecosystem and making tutorials/guides/IRL events
I am looking to transition to a DevRel as a smart contract eng too so would love to learn more on the GTM side!