Monero community, we need your help.
After deep discussions with the Cuprate contributors, we've identified an avenue to stress-test Cuprate's consensus rules (the code that decides which transactions are valid) and catch bugs before they can cause network splits, especially around the FCMP++ upgrade.
Our CCS proposal to build the initial consensus fuzzing infrastructure would give Cuprate its first automated tests that go beyond parsing and actually hammer the validation logic itself.
By generating valid transactions and feeding them to both Cuprate and monerod, any disagreement between the two surfaces a consensus bug.
This initiative would help identify drifts between clients early on (when it's easier to spot and fix those issues), helping to make sure that Cuprate's implementation is correct as it's being developed.
The same harness can then be extended to cover FCMP++ once it lands upstream!
If Monero's development is close to your heart, please support our proposal below 👇
Enable merchant mode in your Moneroju to test this and many more f*ckin' cool features for the future of real p2p digital cash payments: https://t.co/6eDsQkuebC
In reality, there is no one else in the world---there is only you.
What you do is not the most important thing.
The key is to be aware of your every thought and intention, ensuring all your choices are made actively, not by being pushed by others, emotions, or the surrounding environment.
See all things arise, and realize all things are empty. Awaken to non-self.
Don't count on loyalty from miners, just as you shouldn't expect exchanges to pump the market. Everyone acts rationally in their own self-interest. This principle is fundamental to both game theory and decentralization.
Now, imagine that same chat where there's no ID, or everyone's ID is the exact same generic placeholder, making it impossible for anyone to tell which messages came from the same person. If you make two posts, there's no way to link them or identify you as the common source.
A lot of people confuse anonymous with pseudonymous (or "non-real-name"), and this distinction is key to understanding the difference between Bitcoin (#BTC) and Monero (#XMR).
If you're in a chat and everyone has a consistent ID—even if it's not their real name—and people can see that ID to link all your messages together, that's pseudonymous. While they don't know your true identity, they know it's you consistently posting.
🕵️♂️ Monero Is Finally Coming to Unstoppable
It’s been long overdue. But it’s almost here.
In our next wallet update, Unstoppable will offer native support for Monero.
Here is why it took a while:
Until now, Monero integration into mobile wallets meant jumping through hoops - using bulky C++ wrappers or Flutter-specific hacks.
There were no Swift or Kotlin libraries. No clean SDKs for mobile devs. Just pain.
So we're building what was missing.
We're launching the first Monero SDKs for iOS (Swift) and Android (Kotlin) — built on top of the secure monero_c core. This means native mobile apps can finally integrate Monero cleanly and safely without reinventing the wheel.
⚡ A future update will unlock decentralized and anonymous swaps between Monero, Bitcoin, and other major chains. This will enable private sovereign storage and trading within one app.
Privacy is not optional. It’s foundational.
Stay sovereign. Stay private. Stay Unstoppable.
Money is just a tool — it can be used by good people and bad people alike, that’s all. Besides, “good” and “bad” are relative concepts. A bad person can sometimes do good things, and a good person can sometimes do bad things.
#Monero#XMR