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irontraveler39
Next 3-4 years every single piece of Ethereum will be changed > Quantum resistance > Privacy > Sub ms finalization Ethereum Institutional is new organization working for institutional adoption Today Tom Lee buys more 42,197 $ETH while Saylor selling 3,588 $BTC Zero doubts about Ethereum future guys
Two weeks ago, Ethereum researchers met in Berlin to continue charting the protocol's long-term trajectory, following along discussions with client teams in Svalbard in April. The updated strawmap is at strawmap.org, and I attached a picture of it to this post. My own high-level takeaways: * "Lean Ethereum" is not a single one-shot upgrade, it is a collection of improvements that will come online to the Ethereum network over the course of three or four years. But make no mistake, this IS the third major iteration of Ethereum in the same way that the Merge was the second. Almost every major piece of the protocol will be replaced: - Verification through recursive STARKs, rather than direct re-execution. Recursive STARKs become an enshrined first-class core component of the protocol - Replacing everything quantum-vulnerable with quantum-safe alternatives - Consensus: decoupled available chain and finality, one or two-round finality. Theoretically optimal security properties, simpler than today, and faster than today - Multidimensional gas - State: not just tree structure, but what *types* of state are available - Changes to client architecture ... At the same time, simplification, cleanup and future-proofing. And this will all be done in a way that minimizes disruption to existing application. We've done this before (the Merge), we can do it again. * H-star (aka Hegota) is probably Ethereum's last thematically "pre-Lean" fork. Starting from I-star, most of everything we do will have a very strong "Lean" feel to it in one way or another. * Privacy is no longer an afterthought, it is a first class goal. When designing Frames, the mempool, additions to the state tree, we explicitly ask the question "okay, how do quantum-safe, intermediary-free privacy protocol transactions go through this, and what is the overhead?" * Formal verification of everything for security. * FV also makes us much more comfortable with canonicalization (having pieces of the protocol that are directly defined as a piece of bytecode expressed in some language). evm-asm is being written in part to become a canonical proof system for the EVM. * Quantum safety has shifted up a LOT in priority. This adds a lot of work (eg. finalizing a quantum-safe blobs design has become urgent; this work has already been ongoing for months) * Probably the single most disruptive part of the plan is the changes to state. There is growing consensus around leaving present-day-style "dynamic state" mostly unchanged, but scaling it only a medium amount, and adding new types of state that are more scalability-friendly (eg. no need for builders to sync/store all of it) but more restrictive, and that will scale a large amount. eg. possible Ethereum in 2030: 2 TB of present-day-style (dynamic) state, and 100 TB of new-style (scalable but restrictive) state This "new-style" state would work very well for ERC20s, NFTs, many defi use cases, but not eg. highly "central" objects like Uniswap contracts, or onchain order books, or other complex things (which are crucial for Ethereum but which only take up a small percentage of state) Hence, it will not be *necessary* to rewrite any apps, but it will be *very cost-effective* to eg. rewrite an ERC20 token into a newer design that uses a new type of UTXO storage that is currently being explored, so that it will have >10x lower txfees. Design of these new state types (current ideas: keyed nonces, ring buffers, UTXOs, statically accessible state, temp state) is an area where we will need a lot of feedback from application developers (incl. privacy-friendly application developers) and probably several rounds of rethinking and iteration. * In the context of a much larger total state size, we need to figure out the incentive issues around who stores this state and what motivates them to. Even saying "each node stores 1%" is not good enough - why do they store that 1% and why are they willing to serve it? This is being elevated as a first-class research area. * Ethereum will need to have a "VM" other than EVM in one form or another - at the very least, we need something like leanISA for recursive STARKs - and the gains are large in exposing it to users so that we support programmable privacy and better scalability. Right now, the most likely contenders are leanISA and RISC-V. My own ideal is that in this world, we adjust the protocol so that the EVM becomes a high-level-language compiler-level feature, and the protocol only "sees" RISC-V / leanISA directly. But this is still far away. * Gas limit increases, blob increases and slot time decreases will happen many times over the next ~5 years. We expect a large gas limit increase with Glasterdam. Each step of increased scale or decreased slot time is a matter of getting to the point where it is safe to do it, which comes from a combination of client optimization and protocol changes. Ethereum is CROPS. Ethereum is scaling. Ethereum is reinventing itself. Onward.
Tom Buckley retweeted
iowahawkblog
Yeah, "freedom" blah blah blah whatever. If someone wants to play metric kicky ball in the privacy of their own own home, I guess that's their business. But when you start doing that disgusting stuff in public now it's MY business
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Chrispy retweeted
SchroederFFarm
Replying to @MrsErikaKirk
x.com/jodychasetn/status/207… Now you want privacy Ms emotional asset? This little stunt you and Stacy thought was a good idea so you could raise more money was the most disturbing…what is wrong with you?!?? Narcissistic sociopaths do this 💩!
👀 Baron Coleman says he's spent 15,000–20,000 hours in broadcasting, and he refuses to believe Erika Kirk wasn't mic'd up in the video she released of herself crying over Charlie Kirk's casket. "I find it impossible to believe that a camera picked up those soft whispers when she's facing away."
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🗣 retweeted
goobydont
kirkified for privacy son or yassified for privacy daughter
at Anthrocon
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Vizallati - 40% off🔥 retweeted
Negao_Pauzudox
Chudai DISPONÍVEL EM : ONNOW: Onnowplay.com/matheussilvvva… PRIVACY: service.topshare.com.br/link… JUST: Justfor.fans/MatheusSilvvva
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jim34050
Replying to @MrsErikaKirk
You ask for “continued privacy?” 🤣🤣
Won’t Work retweeted
horizenglobal
The projects most committed to privacy should be the most transparent about how they operate. Our B-2 Token Transparency Filing covers governance, treasury wallets, market structure, and entity funding, all publicly verifiable. The $ZEN @Blockworks B2 filing is live → blockworks.com/token-transpa…
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JR 🔞📍VIX retweeted
VipLaranjinha
Chudai COMPLETO NO PRIVACY: 🥵 service.topshare.com.br/link…
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Sexy Sluts,Scat and Pee retweeted
PeeEmma_videos
Hot curvy women… in total privacy 🔒 fuckfreegirls.com
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direumatteul
Replying to @wedrick126807
Privacy should be the default.
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Yannick_Sven
Replying to @inclusivetwts
Should this really limit you? uko status privacy kuna watu karibu sabini wanadhani sina vitu za post mamae
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zeeuii2
Replying to @ThuMinh6542
Please do not exposure their locations 🙏🏻🙏🏻 for their privacy and safety
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kormoeth
Good evening CT 🌙 One thing I've been thinking about lately is how the next generation of Web3 will be defined. For years, the conversation has focused on faster transactions, lower fees, and bigger incentives. Those things matter. But I believe the next phase will be driven by something deeper: Security. Privacy. Trust. That's why two projects continue to stand out to me. @quipnetwork is preparing for a future where quantum computing changes the security landscape, building infrastructure designed to protect digital assets against tomorrow's challenges. At the same time, @TheARCTERMINAL is exploring how AI can become a personal intelligence layer helping users organize information, preserve context, and maintain ownership of their data instead of giving it away. Different visions. One shared philosophy. Build technology that empowers users rather than extracting from them. The strongest Web3 ecosystems won't just be the fastest. They'll be the ones people trust with their assets, their data, and their digital lives. That's the future I'm excited to watch.
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knowledgeable_black_man 🇸🇱🇬🇭🇨🇬🇨🇱🇦🇷🇭🇹 retweeted
blaculascream
Adults are pretty selfish. I can listen to all the dirty music I want in the privacy of my home I'm not playing "put it in your 👄" at the bowling alley. 😭😭😭 They take over children's spaces immediately now even advocate that they shouldn't exist.
Replying to @batbglobal
Yea, it’s always existed. Even back during the hokum Blues era. But there was at least effort to keep adult stuff in adult spaces. Too much is breaking into the last holdouts of family friendly spaces and the age blending of modern social media ain’t helping.
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Caasal22rj retweeted
dutravitprivacy
Estou sorteando uma noite comigo lá no meu PRIVACY, resultado sai hoje até as 00h00 😈💦👉🏾 beacons.ai/vividutra
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Marie retweeted
freddienew
I had intended to put out this series of posts on @bitcoinpolicyuk’s Privacy Toolkit on a more regular basis, but I hope you’ll realise that I’ve been rather distracted on quite a relevant subject this week. I was intending to review the section on VPNs, and if you’ve been paying attention to what’s been happening in the UK, you will know that VPNs are right in the cross hairs of the government and Parliament right now. Since the Censorship/Personal Data Mining Act (aka the Online Safety Act) has proved to be an abject failure in either of its aims – preventing access to pornography and collecting data on anyone who tried – the government is now taking aim at the very tools which have been responsible for this failure, namely VPNs What is a VPN? Short for Virtual Private Network, it is quite simply a service that creates a secure tunnel between your device and the internet, hiding your IP address and routing your traffic through a remote server. Why should you use one? As you can choose the geographical location of that remote server, you are easily able to circumvent geoblocking as in the case of adult material accessed by people from the UK. Additionally, they should as a matter of good practice always be used when connecting to public wifi, to prevent bad actors from intercepting or viewing your traffic, and they improve your privacy even at home, by reducing the ability of your ISP to log the websites you visit (and then sell that data). What’s been happening in the UK? Quite a lot - @leicesterliz let us all know to expect VPN sanctions soon (details as yet undisclosed) and lawmakers are already tabling amendments to legislation that if enacted would require all VPN providers to age verify aka ID all their customers to ensure that children don’t get hold of one (see relevant posts in the thread); effectively banning kids from using one and requiring providers to identify you before you get one - something many providers do not do. Details in thread. What can I do? I strongly suggest that if you don’t already have one, you research, download and install a VPN on all your devices today, while you still can. I personally favour @mullvadnet, but there are many good alternatives – h/t to @roxananasoi for the very interesting comparison table that is linked below. What if the government do ‘ban’ them or age gate access? In short, don’t panic. Anyone is now able to code their own rudimentary VPN, as I did with my @openclaw agent as demonstrated in the thread. If you are able to go to the next level, you can even run one on your own router at home, so that all your family’s traffic is automatically protected – post from @ben_dewaal in the thread. What does all this mean? I am very much afraid that what we are seeing at the moment are symptoms of a system that is losing control of its ability to control what its populace thinks and says, and is lashing out like a wounded animal in response. Governments across the world do not, bluntly, want a highly-informed, articulate and intelligent population, as such populations are harder to control and to coerce. Thus the global attempts to fetter access to the internet, to platforms that support free speech and open dialogue, to monitor, track and analyse the behaviour of every single one of us This may seem like a dark time, but I have never been more confident that they will not win. Those of us who believe, like @halfin, that the computer can be a tool to liberate and protect people, rather than to control them, are many. We are motivated, and we will not give in. And neither should you.
Privacy, and our basic freedoms, are under attack from all sides. Incredibly, the so-called 'liberal democracies' are now leading these attacks; arresting their own citizens for posting online, rolling out facial recognition cameras, and moving to ban VPNs. "What can men do against such reckless hate?" And are we losing this battle? Absolutely not. There's still time to fight back, and we have much in our arsenal. We at @bitcoinpolicyuk have put together a 'Privacy Toolkit', that should let anyone, whatever their skill level, take a few small steps towards improving their privacy and their freedom, and making themselves just a little bit harder for governments to track and to oppress. This isn't comprehensive, and we'll continue to update it as time goes by. We hope it's useful to everyone and serves as a handy guide to help us all push back against government overreach, wherever we find it. Link in the thread and comments welcome! 👇
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🇧🇷Sir.Pigvollent | ONLYFANS | PRIVACY | DARKFANS retweeted
sirpigvollent
Bom dia, aceita café forte pra acordar animado junto comigo?😈 vem pro privacy tomar café cmg, link nos comentários
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🇧🇷Sir.Pigvollent | ONLYFANS | PRIVACY | DARKFANS retweeted
sirpigvollent
Academia me deixa tesudo 🥵 boa noite, já conferiu o Privacy hoje?! Link na descrição.
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