no not like that

Joined February 2021
Photos and videos
Pinned Tweet
*hits blunt* ok how bout this one
1
justsome retweeted
25 Oct 2022
Replying to @gakonst
i think more efficient exploit markets is a more likely outcome than more efficient disclosure processes
1
15
justsome retweeted
anyway the the real way to support "undercollateralized" stablecoins is to collateralize them with the productive capacity of businesses. you want to take out a $100 loan? you must accept the coin for $500 of your goods and services. this is how mutual credit works
1
1
5
justsome retweeted
Replying to @_Dave__White_
@transmissions11 attempts at a truly modern and gas efficient erc1155 would come in handy. Let’s do this
1
1
6
justsome retweeted
2 Dec 2021
3
4
122
justsome retweeted
24 Aug 2021
An absolute bomb of a research post just dropped by @fradamt & al ethresear.ch/t/committee-dri… notes.ethereum.org/@frankdfr…

3
27
83
justsome retweeted
15 Apr 2021
3
10
46
justsome retweeted
Replying to @QwQiao
gonna become the building block of convertible/contingent convertible bonds
1
16
justsome retweeted
20 Mar 2021
So, multi-tx flash loans are possible after all
10
13
141
justsome retweeted
Replying to @edmundedgar
I love it when the toll booth operator charges me $100 to take the highway to work, because that means they’re providing me $100 of value. That’s what I call a win-win
1
2
justsome retweeted
24 Feb 2021
you: eip1559 is perfectly incentive compatible me, an intellectual:
6
18
141
justsome retweeted
Replying to @edmundedgar
I am currently thinking about „poor mans sharding“. Deploy 32 chains - us reality.io as oracle that governs bridges. Eth staking only, no arbitration.

1
3
justsome retweeted
15 Feb 2021
Software engineering rule: every little design flaw that you think isn't very important will strongly backfire at some point and cause you months or years of refactoring.
4
5
40
justsome retweeted
I don't know who needs to hear this but, Solidity developers are rejecting audits because they are no longer high quality
14
28
232
Under explored area of L2s: you are never transacting with the actual deposited assets within the L2, always a synthetic derivative. Does that derivative necessarily need to be fully collateralized?
1
E.g. an L2 with free txs, on this L2 is an AMM that mirrors L1 uniswap. When a user buys a token, the operator commits to buying that order - fee. If the operator doesn't deposit the assets on L1 by the next state update, you can submit fraud proof. Robinhood on the blockchain.
1
How The Miners Became Bankers
Flash bundles ( some contracts) let miners offer "atomic", secured MEV-bonds within a block. Miner deposits ETH as collateral. Investors deposit ETH into a given miner's lending pool. Anyone can borrow from this pool for 1 block when unlocked in that block by said miner.
Flash bundles ( some contracts) let miners offer "atomic", secured MEV-bonds within a block. Miner deposits ETH as collateral. Investors deposit ETH into a given miner's lending pool. Anyone can borrow from this pool for 1 block when unlocked in that block by said miner.
1
2
If in subsequent blocks the principal interest is not paid back into the pool, anyone can trigger liquidation: the miner's collateral is sent proportionately to bond holders. Pool is locked, while loan is outstanding. Miners compete on yield offered collat. ratio/default risk