> Saylor promotes tokenization and ETH Defi at the BItcoin 2026 conference
> First ever sale of MSTR BTC is 32 BTC a month later
> Incredibly small amount in proportion to total holding
> ETH Validators require 32 ETH
Coincidence, or a subtle hint at something?
Huge milestone for Cashu.
After 3 years of work, we finally have unruggable mints.
I'm testing the first on-chain Cashu mint running inside a Trusted Execution Environment (TEE), where the mint keys are generated entirely within the enclave and remain unknown to the operator.
That means the operator cannot inflate the ecash supply and cannot access the Bitcoin reserves backing it.
We've moved from trusting operators to relying on hardware-enforced cryptographic guarantees.
There's still work to do, but the path forward is clear. This is an incredibly exciting step toward trust-minimized ecash.
Number 3 in our wallet series: macadamia Wallet.
A fully native iOS wallet for Cashu with a sleek design.
The real standout is the macadamia extension, which lets you send Bitcoin directly via iMessage.
Huge progress update. We will soon have Cashu Ecash mints in secure enclaves that the mint operator can't steal the Bitcoin from, not can they inflate or manipulate the Ecash supply.
The operator has no access to the private keys of the mint. This is amazing news for users and operators alike.
It allows us to build tools for communities that allow them to run mints without being afraid of malicious actors, internally or externally, such as security threats from hackers.
We're building this for the Bitcoin community first but we're planning to expand this also for local currency communities outside of the crypto space that exist in pockets all around the world. Especially the local currency tech stack is old and antiquated. We're going to give them the most advanced ecash protocol they could ever dream of. For free!
Lots of moving parts here: servers, libraries, backend, wallets, and protocol extensions. Incredible work by the entire Cashu team.
Silent Payments Explained Simply
A major privacy issue for Bitcoin is address reuse. If you reuse a Bitcoin address, anyone with that address can see your transaction history and balances.
The solution was to generate a new bitcoin address for each transaction.
Silent Payments allow you to reuse a single static payment address, that generates a new on-chain bitcoin address every single time you receive.
Bitcoin self-custody is only half the equation. The other half is making sure your loved ones can actually access it when you're gone. Otherwise, what's the point?
There's DIY or 1:1 support options to get your estate plan in place.
Or, if you simply want to know where you stand, get the free inheritance checklist.
https://t.co/ondDQMT0xE
I built https://t.co/aze96ycVGS to solve a problem I see facing content creators.
Getting tips should be simple, free, and more censorship-resistant.
Most creators just need a simple tipping page where viewers can easily send money as appreciation for their work with minimal friction on both ends.
Keith Ammon helped deregulate blockchain technology in New Hampshire.
He is leading the charge to make New Hampshire more nuclear friendly.
He's exactly the type of man New Hampshire needs: principled, effective, smart.
Some Libertarians just can't stand seeing others win.
Stoked about the first ever self hosted AI tutorial I'm working on.
-Install LM studio
-Learn to choose the best model for your hardware and use case
-Learn terminology: parameters, quantization, context window, tokens
-Integrate your local model into your browser as a plugin
-Connect to your local AI model from any device in your network
-Connect to your model from anywhere on earth
If you want to see this and more sovereignty/freedom tech tutorials, make sure you subscribe to Sovereign Sessions, launching August 1st!
👇👇👇
https://t.co/aRXjkrnTi7