Former makerdao contributor, banker, consultant, entrepreneur, mentor/adviser. Active blockchain developer building and architecting the future of DeFi.
@badcryptobitch So easy to set up great self contained security an ultimate model flexibility to keep my token costs down. Easy to create custom skills - using it extensively for research and other tasks @NousResearch Hermes are doing a fantastic job .
As a former banker building in blockchain/RWAs, Iโm watching stablecoin L1s closely.
With Tempo and @arc, the space is moving toward purpose built rails for payments, settlement, and compliant RWAs.
My assessment of Arc:
https://t.co/Cxqyjj56eZ
#RWA#Stablecoins#USDC
@NexusDataLabs@tokenterminal Non-USD stablecoins are only ~0.4% of the $300B market, while USD dominates traditional FX (89%).
Canadaโs regulated CAD stablecoins (CADD, QCAD, CADC) are trying to close that gap under the new framework.
Just published my assessment: https://t.co/OFgWL6Gmku
Thoughts? ๐จ๐ฆ
Would love your thoughts, especially from payments, treasury & fintech people:
Have you used any Canadian stablecoins yet? What changes would help them compete while staying safe?
Open to discussion ๐จ๐ฆ
#Stablecoins#DeFi#CanadianFintech#RWA#Payments
After years in traditional banking + now building in DeFi/blockchain, Iโve been watching Canadaโs regulated CAD stablecoins closely.
We now have three solid ones: CADD, QCAD & CADC all 1:1 backed & provincially regulated. Real progress.
But will they actually gain traction
In my new post I break down their strengths and the real challenges ahead: โ Yield limits โ Settlement constraints โ Upcoming federal Stablecoin Framework
Full analysis here: https://t.co/OFgWL6Gmku
I sent this message to everyone at Ardan this morning.
Good Morning everyone. I want to share this and share some thoughts for all of you to consider for this year.
We all need to come to recognize that if your job is to just write code, you will be out of a job in the next year or two. The AI coding agents have reached a level of being very good at writing the code you ask it to write.
Notice I said "ask it to write."
I need everyone to start focusing on their engineering skills:
- Being able to identify what needs to be built and why.
- Breaking that down into chunks of work and that be verified and tested.
- Knowing how to ask for the code you need written and when you need it.
- Maintaining a mental model of what is being built and coded.
- Code reviews by yourself and the AI coding agents.
This requires you to have a strong foundation in project structure and architecture. Everything I teach in my Software Design class. Without strong project structure, architecture, and design philosophy, these projects will be a mess. Really no different from what happens today without the AI Coding agent. You just get to the mess faster.
So now is the time to strengthen these skills and leverage the videos I have. Leverage my existence here and reach out and ask questions.
This year you MUST improve these engineering skills to stay employed.
You must find an AI coding agent you like and start using it. You must invest in that tooling just like you invest in your laptop.
Sourcegraph AMP I think is the best backend dev tooling out there. They have a free version with ads that don't get in your way. This is just 1 of many tools. Try and few and pick one. If you watch my live coding show (especially the last 2 shows) you can see how I use AMP effectively.
Some of you can't use this tooling with your clients. But they do have internal models that some tools can use. Push to get access and start using it. Ask your clients what the rules are for using these tools and start using them.
Please reach out if you need help getting started or have questions.
-- Bill
@ShaziGoalie Not just the tech scene the big corporates implicit in this as well - especially where visa is conditional on maintaining their job - slave labour
@SebVentures My interpretation is rating agency key concern is lack of decentralization in the DAO and centralized governance. Kind of ironic Given DEFI= supposed to be โdecentralized financeโ and not a centralized endgame
@hasufl@SkyEcosystem@SPGlobal Letโs take investment grade collateral and use incorruptible defi to make it sub investment grade - significant improvement required.. by the protocol to address identified issues..
@Tablesalt13 International students should be conning for and education only - and should leave after - if the want pr they can apply on their merits after - leave all employment for legal residents ..
I think this is shortsighted - a prudent tradfi institution will understand that the chain they use and its decentralization will be assessed for counterparty risk, capital required and that institutions credit rating these ancillary costs should be factored into their decisions
I said yesterday it's not obvious to me that TradFi institutions will choose "the most decentralized L1" as they move their businesses onchain.
A common response was "then why not use AWS/SQL."
This is cute, but it wrongly casts decentralization as a binary rather than a spectrum. Public blockchains have many advantages over traditional databases: they are more accessible, interoperable, reliable, secure, etc.
But many of these advantages require only sufficient decentralization โ not maximum decentralization.
Yes, if a chain depends on a single data center, it won't be nearly as reliable (it won't have as good uptime) as a decentralized chain. It also won't be as resilient to risks like censorship, deplatforming, security exploits, etc. More decentralization is better in many ways.
But more decentralization is generally more expensive, practically by design. Some users will spare no expense to get the most benefit possible. If you're a dissident opposing an authoritarian regime who needs to secure your personal wealth, you should be willing to pay for maximum decentralization. There are many such cases. My point is that TradFi institutions offering centralized onchain products are not such cases.
TradFi institutions aren't looking to spend extra or wait extra minutes on every transaction day-in and day-out to get more security against nation-state-level attacks. If something goes really wrong onchain, the risk to the TradFi institution isn't "the whole business fails," it's "we have to process the transaction using an alternate method" or "we have to decommission and reissue a stolen asset" or some other cost that may not outweigh using a more expensive chain.
TradFi institutions also donโt care about the core property that decentralized public blockchains uniquely enable โ self-sovereign ownership of digital assets. When the blockchain itself is the sole source of truth regarding who owns what, maximum decentralization is paramount. But TradFi institutions offering centralized products arenโt using chains for that purpose, since they rely on offchain legal systems to determine ownership.
For these users, sufficient decentralization is the right tradeoff โ just enough to get the benefits of a public blockchain on any given day, but no more expensive than necessary in cost and speed. Arguing that TradFi institutions will choose "the most decentralized L1" puts ideology over practicality, something the vast majority of for-profit businesses will not do.
Two notes:
(1) Many people took this as a criticism of Ethereum, and, well, sort of! But the best counterargument is also Ethereum's own L2 roadmap, which (if it works) offers an appealing tradeoff for TradFi institutions of low cost and high speed with an escape hatch in case of crisis. I think there's a good shot that institutions decide to offer centralized products on ETH L2s. The challenge for competing chains looking to win this business is to have more attractive infrastructure, liquidity, developer interest, interoperable products, exclusive offerings, regulatory moats, etc. โ which explains why you see them acting the way they are now.
(2) Maximum decentralization is much more important for developers of crypto-native protocols. The TradFi institution offering the centralized product onchain typically retains the ability to resolve issues offchain, since their customers expect (and regulations often require) them to act as trusted third parties who keep their products working as expected. In that case, the risk of using an insecure chain is lower; the product survives even if the chain fails. But the crypto-native protocol has risk commensurate with the chain; since the protocol depends on the chain as the sole source of truth, if the chain fails, the protocol (and products built on it) fail too. This explains why you see so many developers continuing to build on Ethereum, despite all the turbulence in the ecosystem over the last year.
Temporary foreign workers are just WAGE SUPPRESSION
the libertarian right will say you are the "woke right"
for not allowing borderless labour
but what they fail to account for IS THE INDUCEMENT FOR TAKING A LOWER WAGE IS CITIZENSHIP
HIGHER PROFITS AT TAXPAYER'S EXPENSE!
Annual budgets are no longer required, it seems. Which is probably just as well, since a) no one can make any sense of budgets any more, so violently have finance ministers tortured the presentation of the numbers, b) budget forecasts are almost instantly obsolete, especially with regard to spending, revised upward to the tune of tens of billions within six months, c) budgets are supposed to provide context for analyzing the more detailed figures in the estimates, but no longer serve even that function since they generally come in after the estimates, and in any case are on a different accounting system, d) budgets are less and less about the budget and more and more serve as a platform for ramming through every other item on the government's agenda.