Joined April 2026
9 Photos and videos
HASH #𐤊 retweeted
Replying to @HashonKas
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Before I wrap up this "What is #HASH?" series and actually start doing the work, I wanted to talk about the thing that started all of this: the name. Funny enough, the name came long before the mission. Last year, during a rare lull in work, I found myself with something I don't get much of these days: time. Time to think. Time to walk. Time to let ideas bounce around my head without immediately needing to do something with them. I knew I wanted to create something. I just didn't know what. The problem was I had no concept, no mission, no roadmap. Just the feeling that there was something worth building. So I worked backwards and started with the name. For weeks I turned over every #Kaspa related idea I could think of. Technical terms. Protocol jargon. Community references. Inside jokes. Anything that might have enough gravity to pull a bigger idea in behind it. Nothing stuck. Part of the problem is that I'm not a developer, a cryptographer, or someone who spends their evenings staring at screens full of code. I'm a writer. A commentator. So eventually I stopped thinking about the protocol and started thinking about the people behind it. And once you're thinking about the people behind Kaspa, it's pretty hard not to end up thinking about Yonatan. Now, anyone who follows Kaspa knows he isn't particularly interested in personality cults or hero worship. That's one of the things I respect about him. So I wasn't looking to name something after the man. But his handle kept rattling around in my head: HashDag. And then it hit me. HASH. Simple. Clean. Memorable. At that point I still had no clue what HASH would become. The name had arrived before the idea. But there was something about it that refused to leave, so I let it sit. And over time it mutated. There were plenty of terrible ideas along the way. Half-baked schemes. Concepts that sounded brilliant at 2am and ridiculous by breakfast. But eventually the pieces started falling into place. I realized the thing didn't need was another project (at least not from me). It needed more visibility. More participation. More people willing to carry the signal. As I started building around that idea, I kept coming back to the name. And the more I looked at it, the more it seemed to connect everything. - To hash is to mine and secure the network. - To hash things out is to collaborate, discuss, and work together. - Hashtags are how ideas spread and something becomes viral. HASH is a nod to HashDag and the developers building the protocol. It's a nod to miners securing it. It's a nod to marketers trying to make it visible. There isn't one meaning. There are dozens. And then the final piece arrived: HASH-athons. I love a good play on words, and that was the moment it all clicked. Community-driven marketing events built around action instead of discussion. That's when the name stopped being a name and became an identity. Because that's ultimately what I want HASH to represent. Not a project. Not a company. Not a brand. A mindset. A reminder that every one of us can contribute through mining, marketing, conversation, creativity, and action. The NFTs are almost ready, and they'll mark the beginning of Phase One. I'll start sharing more of the collection, the artwork, the whitepaper, and the finer details soon. But after that comes the part I'm most excited about. The reason HASH exists in the first place. The action. The noise. The proof of work. The chance to show what a coordinated Kaspa community can actually do when it decides to move together. Are you ready? #on𐤊
Hashrate (mine it). Hashtag (market it). HashDag (build it). Hashing it out (talk about it). Many meanings. One mission. #HASH on $KAS
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Hashrate (mine it). Hashtag (market it). HashDag (build it). Hashing it out (talk about it). Many meanings. One mission. #HASH on $KAS
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HASH #𐤊 retweeted
Do you want #Kaspa #marketing at the top universities of the world? #KUDOS is organizing it. The brightest minds coding with #Kaspa! This can be reality at the end of this month! If you support this initiative, go to the $KAS Discord and give it a like: discord.com/channels/5991532…
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HASH #𐤊 retweeted
Many people say they want #Kaspa $KAS to go to the Imperial College London. Yesterday we filed a proposal for funding, and overnight it has reached the needed threshold. This means today there is a new formal vote to fund this event. Go vote here: discord.com/channels/5991532…

Do you want #Kaspa #marketing at the top universities of the world? #KUDOS is organizing it. The brightest minds coding with #Kaspa! This can be reality at the end of this month! If you support this initiative, go to the $KAS Discord and give it a like: discord.com/channels/5991532…
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HASH #𐤊 retweeted
Take 35 seconds and vote on discord: Establish a major #Kaspa presence at the Imperial College London AI Agent Hackathon, one of Europe's largest university-led AI and developer events. **The Goal:** Bring $KAS directly to builders, researchers, founders, and students at leading global blockchain and AI hubs, securing a Gold Sponsorship slot at the event. Click link to vote!
Many people say they want #Kaspa $KAS to go to the Imperial College London. Yesterday we filed a proposal for funding, and overnight it has reached the needed threshold. This means today there is a new formal vote to fund this event. Go vote here: discord.com/channels/5991532…
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HASH #𐤊 retweeted
Another week, another sticker, another reminder to study #kaspa. Slapped this one up at the local football field. Now every player, coach, group of friends or patent, young or old, is getting the message and asking the question... "what is $kas?"
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HASH #𐤊 retweeted
Milano Business lounge @HashonKas
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HASH #𐤊 retweeted
"So I've minted a #HASH NFT. You happy Gonzo? Now what?" Happy to help. A few people have asked how the rewards system will actually work, so here's the high-level overview. At the base level, every NFT holder gains access to the HASH ecosystem. From day one, that means eligibility for weekly giveaways simply by marketing #Kaspa in your day-to-day life. Put up a sticker. Leave a poster. Draw some chalk art. Start a conversation. Snap a photo and submit proof through the channels we'll be launching soon. Then, every week, a winner will be selected. No complicated scoring systems. No gatekeeping. Just proof that you're out there making noise. Then come the monthly competitions, with larger rewards. These will be larger campaigns focused on creativity and content. Poster design contests. Sticker packs. Infographics. Short-form videos. Educational content. Maybe a stunt or two. And then, my favourite, the seasonal "Hash-athons". The flagship events. Think hackathon energy, but for marketing. Several times per year, the community will be given a shared objective and a fixed date. The challenge is simple: generate as much visibility for Kaspa as possible. Maybe it's projection art. Maybe it's banners. Maybe it's a coordinated stunt across multiple cities. Maybe it's something none of us have thought of yet. The goal is simple: make Kaspa impossible to ignore. So, these will carry the largest rewards and will require greater participation thresholds. NFT holdings will act as the access mechanism for different reward tiers. One NFT gets you through the door and into the weekly giveaways, community activities, and smaller opportunities. Higher-tier competitions, larger rewards, Hashathons, and major campaigns will require greater participation in the ecosystem through additional NFT holdings. The bigger the mission, the bigger the reward, the more skin in the game. But that's only half of the picture. Once Covenants arrive, HASH will begin rolling out marketing bounties. These will function like open contracts for visibility. A reward is posted. A goal is set. The $KAS is locked. Maybe it's placing 500 stickers across New York. Maybe it's getting Kaspa mentioned on local television. Maybe it's something much bigger. Complete the objective. Submit proof. Claim the bounty. Simple. Most importantly, none of this requires a full mint before it begins. If we mint out, great. We go bigger. If we don't, we start with what we have. The first NFT minted is enough to begin. The giveaways start. The missions start. The momentum starts. And between the giveaways, competitions, Hashathons, and future bounty system, there should be no shortage of opportunities to earn $KAS while helping put #Kaspa in front of the world. I'm just finishing setting up all the channels. Making some launch content. And polishing the NFT's. Stay tuned on for a timeline on launch. But currently targeting before June 19! Watch this space.
Put in the proof of work. Create visibility. Generate attention. Make noise. Every sticker. Every poster. Every campaign. Every conversation. And earn $KAS. #on𐤊
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Put in the proof of work. Create visibility. Generate attention. Make noise. Every sticker. Every poster. Every campaign. Every conversation. And earn $KAS. #on𐤊
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"... because Kaspa is a grass-roots movement, that responsibility does not belong to a marketing department, or a single leadership team. It belongs to the community. That also means the community has a different role to play." #Kaspa. Powered by community.
That's a really good question, but it's hard to answer in a single tweet because our mission is quite extensive, and it requires a lot of background knowledge to really understand what sets Kaspa apart. Currently, a lot of people see Kaspa as “Bitcoin’s crazy little brother” that improves time-to-finality by leveraging the benefits of DAG-based consensus protocols without accepting their traditional drawbacks, such as decreased decentralization or a limited validator set. This perception is somewhat accurate, but it falls short of conveying the full picture, because Kaspa’s vision extends far beyond just trying to be a better Bitcoin. Anyone willing to study Kaspa and its broader vision will discover similarities to nearly all major existing DLT designs: from Bitcoin, to Ethereum, to Solana, Sui, Celestia, and beyond. My personal view is that “research” in the DLT space is approaching a point of convergence. We increasingly understand how to push distributed systems close to the limits of what physics permits. The frontier is no longer only about raw throughput or faster finality. The attention is shifting toward game theory, incentives, sequencing, MEV, alignment, and how to build systems where the economic incentives of users, builders, miners, validators, applications, and infrastructure providers do not work against each other. That is why debates like based rollups versus arbitrary sequencing, shared sequencing, MEV mitigation, proposer-builder separation, and execution-layer incentives matter so much. These are not niche technical details. They determine whether a network can remain neutral, decentralized, and aligned while scaling to global usage. And this is where I think Kaspa is pushing the boundaries in a very important way. Kaspa is not merely trying to be “fast.” The goal is to build an L1 where speed, decentralization, security, and incentives are aligned at the base layer. A system that does not scale by hiding complexity behind trusted committees, privileged sequencers, centralized validator sets, or opaque coordination mechanisms, but instead tries to preserve the spirit of proof-of-work while extending what an L1 can realistically do. Because Kaspa arrived later than many other major projects, it does not carry the same degree of technological debt. It can absorb lessons from Bitcoin, Ethereum, rollups, modular blockchains, high-throughput monolithic chains, DAG research, MEV research, and the broader history of decentralized systems, and combine those lessons into something more optimal. To me, that is what Kaspa is building: not just a faster blockchain, but a more incentive-aligned decentralized infrastructure layer. But this also creates a different challenge. Kaspa’s biggest problem today is not its technology. It is the lack of centralized coordination around communicating the vision. And because Kaspa is a grass-roots movement, that responsibility does not belong to a marketing department, or a single leadership team. It belongs to the community. That also means the community has a different role to play. There will always be holders who are mainly interested in price, and that is completely fine. But there also need to be people who are here because they want to use the technology to build a different future. People who care about the architecture, the incentives, the open questions, the trade-offs, and the long-term trajectory of decentralized infrastructure. I am one of those people. I am not interested in DLTs merely as a way to generate wealth. I am interested in them because I believe they can change the trajectory of humanity as a whole. For that reason, I want to use this opportunity to announce a regular community hangout where we discuss the current state of development, the open questions, and where we can align our vision together. The first session will be on Tuesday, June 9th, 2026. We will talk about the vProgs framework, how the codebase works, what sets Kaspa apart, where we improve on existing solutions, and what still needs to be done. The goal is for this to become a regular, possibly bi-weekly, event where we as a community come together to discuss the future and understand the technology. Eventually, we can invite people from other projects as well, but the main focus at the beginning will be explaining and communicating how things work under the hood. There is still a lot of work to be done, and I do not want to waste precious time. So the first sessions may feel a little improvised, but we can improve as we go. The important thing is that we start. So mark the date: Tuesday, June 9th, 2026.
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HASH #𐤊 retweeted
tried one
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HASH #𐤊 retweeted
Replying to @realvijayk
Just wait til I start putting them all to work. $kas #hashonkas
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HASH #𐤊 retweeted
Alright. Time to talk about the #HASH NFTs. Let’s start with the numbers: - Supply = 5,555 - Mint price = 287 $KAS That creates a meaningful pool. And that’s the point. The funds don’t sit idle. They flow into the HASH engine: community mission rewards, content creation competitions, marketing materials, giveaways, and real-world distribution (stickers, posters, infographics) anything that pushes #Kaspa into physical reality. But more importantly, the funds flow right back to Kaspians. The ones doing the work. Running missions. Creating content. Putting in “proof of work.” This isn’t abstract ecosystem funding. It’s $KAS directed toward people generating visibility. This is community marketing, funded through community participation, and returned into community action. -- Now for the part I’ve been keeping quiet for a while: The collection is created by the same artist behind the @YonatoshiNFT's from @KaspaCom. With approval from @AbiKaspa and @cryptosione, some of the original DNA and base traits are being reused and evolved into something completely new. [Important disclaimer though: despite the blessing, this collection is not officially affiliated with KaspaCom.] But why build on Yonatoshi? Well, firstly because I love that lo-fi pixel art style. I’m a 90’s kid. I can’t shake it. But mostly because the collection already captured something real about Kaspa culture. Yonatoshi was built around hackers, devs, builders … the cypherpunk backbone of the ecosystem. HASH picks up where that story leaves off. This time, the focus shifts from builders behind the screen to the people carrying the signal outward. The marketers. The organizers. The loud ones. The people willing to push #Kaspa into public view instead of waiting for someone else to do it. Same universe. Different mission. Think the prequals to the originals. Cheers to Frasier. Better Call Saul to Breaking Bad. -- Mechanically, the NFTs act as your membership card into HASH. Holding one NFT grants access to the community, eligibility for missions, content competitions, giveaways, and reward campaigns. But missions will be separated into tiers depending on scale and impact. It is still in development, but in essence, smaller missions may only require holding one NFT and larger campaigns with bigger rewards may require holding more. The bigger the mission, the bigger the reward, the more passes you need. The goal is to create a sustainable marketing engine where the community funds, fuels, and benefits from the growth of the movement itself. I’ll break down the actual mission structure, verification systems, reward tiers, and more in my next post. And P.s. If NFT’s just aren’t your thing, or you’re one of those who would never taint the DAG with “spam” but still want to support the initiative because you like what you see, you can just send 287 $KAS to the donation wallet here: kas.coffee/hash.

Limited 5,555 supply. 287 $KAS/mint. #HASH NFT's will be your proof of participation in #Kaspa’s guerrilla marketing engine. Put in the work ... and earn $KAS. #on𐤊
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Limited 5,555 supply. 287 $KAS/mint. #HASH NFT's will be your proof of participation in #Kaspa’s guerrilla marketing engine. Put in the work ... and earn $KAS. #on𐤊
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HASH #𐤊 retweeted
Well, that was easy. #kaspa $kas #hashonkas
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Really looking forward to seeing this $KAS guerrilla marketing campaign roll out. Grassroots conviction is where this community shines, and @Dr_Gonzo_K is the right guy to be leading the charge. I’ll be painting Canada teal with @HashonKas 👊
#HASH is more than just a community initiative ... it's an identity. And NFTs will act as your membership card. Mint. Participate. Push #kaspa forward. #on𐤊
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HASH #𐤊 retweeted
The time has come for me to share what I’ve been working on ... Introducing #HASH. A grassroots, guerrilla marketing engine for #Kaspa, built with one goal: break out of the echo chamber and push Kaspa into the real world where it can’t be ignored. I've spent a lot of time the past couple years doing my part to spread the message, build awareness, and be a voice in the $Kas community. But there is still a gap between what Kaspa is and what the world sees. And I'm tired of sitting on the internet sidelines. That ends here. I want to take Kaspa to the streets. Over the coming weeks I’ll break down everything: what HASH is, how it works, how I plan to fund it, and how you can get involved. Stay tuned.
Coming soon ... #on𐤊
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HASH #𐤊 retweeted
What is HASH? #HASH isn’t a project, or a tool. It’s a mission. An identity. A movement. It started as a thought experiment, and in many ways it still is. I had an idea and decided to see if I could make it real. Instead of wasting energy arguing with maxis, trolls, or people who haven’t done the homework, I want to channel that effort into something tangible. Something visible. Something that actually moves things forward, by coordinating action and giving people a reason to move together. I want to be clear: there’s no team behind this initiative. Right now, it’s just me. Someone who got tired of sitting on the sidelines and decided to try and start something. For context, I’m not some full-time operator, builder or anon mastermind. Outside of the twitterverse, believe it or not, I am not an angry muppet. I’m a regular 9–5er working a full-time job, and a father to two kids under 4. Most of my time is already spoken for, and whatever’s left I split between things I enjoy ... photography, guitar, football, writing ... and $KAS. #Hash isn’t some polished, fast-moving rollout. It’s something I’m building and working on when I can, because I want to see it exist. That also means it will take time. Saying that, this isn't just a passion project ... it's something I truly believe can be meaningful and impactful. I’ve seen people asking for timelines and more info. I hear you. It’s coming. There’s more happening behind the scenes than it might look, including conversations with some great builders, especially with covenants on the horizon. I’ll share more as it develops. But I’m not rushing this. But here’s the key: #HASH isn’t me, and it isn’t you. It’s us. #Kaspa has no leader, and that’s one of its greatest strengths. The same applies here. No permission needed, no one to wait for ... just a shared belief and the willingness to act on it. Right now, most efforts are small, sporadic, disconnected. Hash is about changing that. More coordination. More consistency. More global presence. We can hold Kaspa in silence, or we can hold it and be noisy. I’m choosing noise, but not the kind that stays trapped on CT. Real-world, visible, repeatable signal that compounds over time. Because if we want adoption, if we want attention, we can’t sit around waiting for Binance or a Saylor-type figure to show up and do the marketing for us. And we don’t need them. We already have the tech, the research, the builders, and most importantly ... the community. That’s the lever we can actually pull. And based on the response to my last post so far, it’s clear people want to get involved, cause a bit of chaos, and do something that actually moves the needle. That’s what this is about. I can spark and coordinate, but this only works if we all participate. Next, I’ll start getting more into the plan and how I intend to encourage and incentivize that participation in writing Kaspa on the walls.
We are #Kaspa. We are #Hash. #on𐤊
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HASH #𐤊 retweeted
Let’s get one thing straight: Marketing isn’t free. Not even guerrilla marketing. The raw, in-the-streets, make-it-happen kind, still comes with costs. Designing content. Printing materials. Moving them. Coordinating people. Running campaigns that actually get seen. It all requires resources. And more than anything, it requires time. Time to think, to create, to organize, to go out and execute. It’s easy to say “we should do more.” It’s a different thing entirely to actually do it consistently. We all get fired up in moments … make a big push, make some noise … but it often fades. Momentum drops, attention drifts, and we’re back to doomscrolling X feeds. If this is going to work, it can’t rely on bursts. It needs to sustain interest. Hash’s goal is simple: take #Kaspa out of the echo chamber and make it impossible to ignore in the real world. But to do that at scale, this can’t rely on a few people chipping in when they feel like it. It needs structure. It needs coordination. And it needs incentives. Because people value their time. And they should. It’s one thing to ask people to work for their bags. It’s another to give them a real opportunity to be rewarded for the effort they put in. #HASH is designed around that idea. At its core, there will be community missions: clear, actionable campaigns that anyone can take part in. Complete the objective, submit the proof, and earn $KAS. Some will be solo. Others will require a team (I’ve been referring to these as “Hash-a-thons” ... more on those later). Some missions will be simple and local: saturating a city with stickers, placing posters in high-traffic areas, showing up at universities, festivals, conferences. Others will scale: projection art, coordinated activations, bigger moments designed to cut through and grab attention. And the rewards scale with the effort, the creativity, and the impact. To make this all work though, there needs to be a fund that supports creating content through competitions (posters, videos, infographics, sticker packs), producing and distributing materials, and distributing the rewards that turn passive supporters into active participants. Because this only works if people actually show up. And they’re far more likely to when their time is respected. That’s the engine. As for how that fund gets built, I’ll break that down in my next post ...
Market #Kaspa. Earn $Kas. #on𐤊
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