@AdrianoFeria@yugalabs Sure the goal is to accrue value but the tech side of things are easier said then done. Many have failed before them, and at this point w rollups and such theres not much of an argument for reinventing the wheel other than βmore moneyβ
@dabit3 Itβs all trade offs. You could but then you get into decisions about how decentralized does the base layer have to be. If the txn cost at rollup level vs your desire for the most trustless base layer are outweighed for the desire for predictably cheaper txns, then yea, you might
@dabit3@CelestiaOrg Yes it will but the dynamics will be different. Almost all users are still on L1, where eventually L1 likely will be used by rollups, bots, and ultra high value txns, and users will be at the L2β& even L3βrollup level. Still early in even delivering L2 & migrating users there tho
@garypalmerjr@BrantlyMillegan Putting aside how anyone feels about his beliefs, he did way more for the space than 99.9% of people on crypto twitter. Most of the people here still wouldnβt have an ENS name if it wasnβt for him, and thatβs just the public facing stuff he did.
@AnthonyLeeZhang@pbrody@jwolpert have been working on @baselineproto for years and doing interesting work for their clients. Microsoft uses this system for royalties, for example. Theyβre way ahead of their competition and βgotβ Ethereum and utility in public smart contracts for a while now
@Swagtimus Ser 10 gb block sizes would AMAZING. Think of all those empty blocks and how secure the 3 datacenters will be who run the network. To think, people debating for years whether they should increase block size to 2 mb lol
@brendan_opensea @scott_lew_is Centralization risks (insiders going rogue or bugs), client diversity issues, fractionalized stETH vs fully backed decentralized options like rETH, and the fact that Lido has a less decentralized tech stack over options like @Rocket_Pool
@scott_lew_is I question the financial incentives of the people who believe it is. Lido is far from decentralized, until recently has threatened client diversity, and issues fractionalized derivative ETH. All the shortcuts to claim first mover at expense of base layer security
@RAC Do both, but make some songs maximally accessible. Being permissionless is partly why Ethereum succeeds. People will still desire the NFT bc they are a fan. You make royalties via those trades. Everyone wins. Bottlenecking IP stunts creativity and distribution of the original