The Protocol: Reinvent Ethererum, and Just Don't Break Bitcoin

11/25/2024 04:43
The Protocol: Reinvent Ethererum, and Just Don't Break Bitcoin

In founding editor Bradley Keoun's last issue of The Protocol, CoinDesk's weekly newsletter devoted to blockchain technology, we're covering Trump's DOGE whistle and the slew of announcements from the big Ethereum conference Devcon in Bangkok.

In founding editor Bradley Keoun's last issue of The Protocol, CoinDesk's weekly newsletter devoted to blockchain technology, we're covering Trump's DOGE whistle and the slew of announcements from the big Ethereum conference Devcon in Bangkok.

Updated Nov 13, 2024, 7:33 p.m. Published Nov 13, 2024, 7:31 p.m.

Will Foxley opens OP_NEXT (Danny Nelson)

Will Foxley opens OP_NEXT (Danny Nelson)

Loyal readers of The Protocol will recall that we launched this newsletter on April 26, 2023, to cover technological developments across the blockchain industry, after winding down its predecessor, Valid Points, which was focused exclusively on Ethereum. (In case you're interested in that history, we wrote here about how we turned $15,000 into $70,000 running an Ethereum validator.) We started covering Bitcoin technology in the newsletter along with Solana and Cosmos and Sui and everything else. Over time, the format evolved, and got a bit longer — as I increasingly geeked out over blockchain tech and found myself incrementally incompetent at leaving cool stuff out. I say that with utmost earnestness, because as the main author of The Protocol, I also got more and more snarky and cynical and jaded about the various news developments, especially regarding the money end of the business, while simultaneously getting more and more wowed by all of the developers and entrepreneurs in this space coming out with hundreds of fascinating projects and updates every week, as duly highlighted in the Protocol Village column. We launched an accompanying podcast that got really good until it was, er, paused indefinitely earlier this year due to the lack of a sponsor and departure of our producer.

ANYWAY, TO BURY THE LEDE: I am set to leave CoinDesk at the end of this week to explore some new ideas and start a new chapter, so I will be relinquishing my steely grip on The Protocol. At least in the short term, CoinDesk Deputy Editor-in-Chief Marc Hochstein is set to take the reins. I want to thank YOU, the readers of this newsletter, for tuning in over the past 19 months — that's 19/12*7 = 11 years in crypto time — and for being so loyal and voracious that our open rate regularly ticked north of 50%, which is pretty phenomenal for pretty much any newsletter of any ilk. It has truly been a pleasure connecting with you all and serving as your sherpa on our collective weekly journey through the reliably massive amount of information there is to digest in this rich and complex space. I'm not totally sure what's next for me; for a while I'll be in "Stealth," as a lot of the cool kids seem to stick at the top of their LinkedIn profiles. Best of luck to everyone!

IN THIS ISSUE:

  • Proposal by Ethereum Foundation's Justin Drake for dramatic overhaul of blockchain's consensus layer draws standing-room-only crowd in Bangkok.
  • Trump's DOGE whistle.
  • Niche Bitcoin developer conference in Boston spurs discussions of what-if.
  • Top picks from the past week's Protocol Village column: Espresso, STXN, Avara/Family, Tether, NEAR Foundation.
  • $143.5M of blockchain project fundraisings.

Network News

Justin Drake introduces his proposed Beam Chain upgrade roadmap

Justin Drake introduces his proposed Beam Chain upgrade roadmap (Ethereum Devcon/YouTube)

BEAMING IN FROM BANGKOK: At Ethereum's Devcon conference in Bangkok on Tuesday, Ethereum Foundation researcher Justin Drake revealed his proposal for a major redesign of Ethereum's consensus layer called "Beam Chain." Beam Chain is "a proposed redesign of the consensus layer that incorporates all of the latest and greatest ideas from the Ethereum roadmap," Drake said in a speech at Bangkok's Queen Sirikit National Convention Centre. Drake's Beam Chain vision organizes a series of "big ticket" upgrades to Ethereum's consensus layer into a single package. The changes include adjustments to Ethereum's block production apparatus, as well as how it handles staking and zero-knowledge cryptography. Drake's presentation was highly anticipated—coming after months of speculation online and in crypto forums that the influential Ethereum researcher, who was instrumental to the 2022 Merge upgrade, was working on something major. Drake delivered his remarks to a packed convention hall, with onlookers spilling out into the hallway outside of the event's main stage. SEPARATELY, CoinDesk reported last week that the dollar value of the Ethereum Foundation's treasury shrank 39% over 2.5 years to $970 million.

DOGE WHISTLE! A frenzied narrative that boosted dogecoin (DOGE) prices over 500% turned to reality — as President-elect Donald Trump announced Tuesday that it had picked Vivek Ramaswamy and technology entrepreneur Elon Musk to lead a new Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) that seeks to make government spending and administration more efficient. Musk, a big supporter of Trump's campaign, had been tweeting about the Department of Government Efficiency since early August. (This DOGE is not to be confused with D.O.G.E., a months-old and completely separate memecoin that went viral last week.) Even the New York Times's coverage of Trump's announcement flicked at the sly reference to DOGE. Musk, who owns the social media platform X, tweeted out what appears to be a cartoon promoting the new Department of Government Efficiency, featuring the face of a smiling dog.

mapping out a way of adding covenants to the blockchain without needing a soft fork

Figure from just-published paper by prominent Bitcoin researchers mapping out a way of adding covenants to the blockchain without needing a soft fork. (Heilman, Kolobov, Levy, Poelstra)

A group of top Bitcoin developers collaborating across multiple teams claimed a breakthrough on the oldest and largest blockchain, outlining a way of adding a type of programming known as "covenants" that could unlock crucial functionality such as new wallet and vault features and more efficient layer-2 protocols. Importantly, the technique would not require changes to Bitcoin's main underlying code, a notoriously fraught process where consensus is typically seen as the threshold required to greenlight major upgrades known as a "soft fork." The announcement was detailed on Thursday in a research paper titled, "ColliderScript: Covenants in Bitcoin via 160-bit hash collisions." The team was led by Ethan Heilman, who separately is one of the authors of a proposed technique known as OP_CAT that could increase Bitcoin's programmability. However, that effort would require changes to the Bitcoin software, as would a separate proposal for covenants known as OP_CTV, proposed by the developer Jeremy Rubin. Other authors of the new research paper include Victor Kobolov and Avihu Levy of the StarkWare project and Andrew Poelstra, a longtime Bitcoin developer who currently serves as head of research at Blockstream.

Linea, the rollup blockchain built by Ethereum development firm Consensys, is on the brink of releasing its "LINEA" token, the company told CoinDesk's Sam Kessler. Consensys was founded by Joe Lubin, one of the co-founders of Ethereum, and is today best-known as the company behind MetaMask, the most popular Ethereum wallet. The Linea network was released last year and represents Consensys' attempt to compete with a growing fray of layer-2 networks — blockchains that help scale Ethereum by offering users an extra lane for transacting more quickly and cheaply.

Roman Sterlingov, 36, a Russian-Swedish national who was convicted of four U.S. federal charges related to running the no-longer-operational bitcoin mixing service Bitcoin Fog, was sentenced to 12 years and six months, the Justice Department said in a press release. Also, "Sterlingov was sentenced to pay a forfeiture money judgment in the amount of $395.6 million, and forfeiture of seized cryptocurrencies and monetary assets valued at approximately $1.76 million. In addition, Sterlingov was ordered to forfeit his interest in the Bitcoin Fog wallet, totaling approximately 1,345 BTC and currently valued at more than $103 million," the government said.


'Just Don't Break' Bitcoin: Devs Debate Upgrading Tech Behind Top Crypto

Will Foxley opens OP_NEXT (Danny Nelson)

Will Foxley opens OP_NEXT (Danny Nelson)

FUN FACT: Will Foxley, shown here opening OP_NEXT as the conference emcee, was a co-author of the Valid Points newsletter, the predecessor of The Protocol. (Danny Nelson/CoinDesk)

BOSTON –– Most of the world focuses on bitcoin (BTC)’s zipping price. Not so for the 100-odd bitcoiners who gathered at Fidelity Investments’ headquarters over the weekend.

They were preoccupied with helping the original cryptocurrency conquer the world – and meantime avoid getting wrecked.

“This is about getting bitcoin to the next billion people,” said Will Foxley, emcee of OP_NEXT, what he claimed was the first bitcoin scaling conference in five years.

OP_NEXT is the newest anomaly on crypto’s overstuffed conference circuit. It's got none of the retail-friendly bravado of Bitcoin Nashville. It lacks the corporate booths that dot ETH Denver. Few of its speakers shilled their crypto-business ventures, as nearly everyone did at Solana’s rebooted Breakpoint.

Instead, dozens of hoodie-wearing coder boys (and a handful of women) debated improvements that might make bitcoin more useful, usable, and even resilient against faraway problems that could one day upend the world’s most valuable cryptocurrency.

CLICK HERE FOR THE FULL STORY BY COINDESK'S DANNY NELSON


Money Center

Fundraisings

Akave COO Daniel Leon, CEO Stefaan Vervaet and CTO Angelo Schalley
  • Akave COO Daniel Leon, CEO Stefaan Vervaet and CTO Angelo Schalley. (Akave)
  • PROTOCOL VILLAGE EXCLUSIVE:Akave, a data storage chain on Filecoin, has secured $3.45 million in pre-seed funding from Protocol Labs, Blockchange VC, Lightshift and Blockchain Builders Fund, "to advance decentralized data lakes, empowering enterprises, AI companies and DePIN builders with tools to move beyond the cloud, enabling on-chain data lakes to manage large datasets," according to the team: "Akave’s architecture ensures secure, transparent and efficient approach to data exchange. Akave’s Yucca Testnet, now open to early testers, enables exploration of on-chain data management."
  • Others (Details in Protocol Village): Zero Gravity Labs ($40M), StakeStone ($22M), Notabene ($14.5M), LAK3 ($12.4M), Mocaverse ($10M), Cytonic ($8.3M), Pharos ($8M), Brevis ($7.5M), TAC ($6.5M), Pond ($7.5M), Eidon ($3.5M).

Deals and grants

Ankr CEO Chandler Song

Ankr CEO Chandler Song (Ankr)

Data and Tokens

Regulatory and Policy


Protocol Village

Top picks of the past week from our Protocol Village column, highlighting key blockchain tech upgrades and news.

Espresso's system architecture

Schematic illustrating Espresso's system architecture (Espresso)

  • Espresso, a closely watched blockchain project to coordinate cross-chain transactions and interactions, shared Monday that its main product, known as the confirmation layer, has gone live. According to the team, the confirmation layer will be a critical piece of infrastructure for composability among rollups, allowing for two networks to read and trust each other's blocks of transaction data. Specific benefits of Espresso's new confirmation layer could include faster bridging of assets between networks, decentralizing a key component of layer-2 blockchains known as the "sequencer," and providing a way for networks to stash reams of transactional data at a low cost, according to the project documentation.
  • Ethereum is getting a new dimension: time. Smart Transactions (STXN), a new project from Vlad Zamfir, who pioneered Ethereum's proof-of-stake blockchain system, released on Wednesday a platform that will enable applications to execute transactions based on future events. The new platform, called the “Ethereum time machine,” extends the blockchain's programming capabilities by allowing smart contracts to execute transactions based on uncertain or not-guaranteed future events. “For example, a user could stipulate that a trade execute at a specified day and time conditional on a set of prerequisites,” the STXN team wrote in a press release shared with CoinDesk. “These prerequisites could be absolute, such as the dollar value of a particular asset, or relative – for instance, whether one asset is worth more than another. The potential permutations are almost unlimited, greatly increasing the dynamism of the largest blockchain for developers.”
  • Avara, the parent company behind Aave Labs and Lens, has launched Family Wallet, describing it as "a secure, user-friendly crypto wallet for everyone," according to the team: "It offers features like in-app messaging, NFT support, DeFi integration and advanced security." The release comes roughly a year after Aave Companies bought Los Feliz Engineering, the development team behind Family, and rebranded as Avara.
  • Tether, issuer of the world's most popular stablecoin, USDT, has "launched its WDK Wallet Development Kit by Tether, an open-source, modular software development kit designed to empower businesses and developers to seamlessly integrate non-custodial wallets and user experiences for USDT and bitcoin in any app, website and device," according to the team: "WDK by Tether offers a fully self-custodial toolkit that enables developers to build advanced mobile, desktop and web wallet experiences. Designed to support both human users and embrace new digital beings like AI agents, robots and autonomous systems."
  • NEAR Foundation has launched Alpha for User-Owned AI with NEAR AI Assistant and Research Hub, according to the team: "The AI Assistant provides users with a personalized, user-owned AI, capable of Web2 and Web3 interactions, from blockchain transactions to e-commerce. The hub fosters community-driven AI, enabling monetizable research. Additionally, NEAR Intents — a new blockchain transaction type — allow actions and data to flow seamlessly between AI agents and services. This positions NEAR Protocol as a leader in user-centric AI innovation, advancing privacy-preserving, user-owned AI on blockchain."
NEAR founder Ilia Polosukhin

NEAR founder Ilia Polosukhin making the announcement on Sunday in Bangkok at NEAR's side event, Redacted (NEAR)


Calendar

Bradley Keoun

Bradley Keoun is CoinDesk's managing editor of tech & protocols, where he oversees a team of reporters covering blockchain technology, and previously ran the global crypto markets team. A two-time Loeb Awards finalist, he previously was chief global finance and economic correspondent for TheStreet and before that worked as an editor and reporter for Bloomberg News in New York and Mexico City, reporting on Wall Street, emerging markets and the energy industry. He started out as a police-beat reporter for the Gainesville Sun in Florida and later worked as a general-assignment reporter for the Chicago Tribune. Originally from Fort Wayne, Indiana, he double-majored in electrical engineering and classical studies as an undergraduate at Duke University and later obtained a master's in journalism from the University of Florida. He is currently based in Austin, Texas, and in his spare time plays guitar, sings in a choir and hikes in the Texas Hill Country. He owns less than $1,000 each of several cryptocurrencies.

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Bradley Keoun

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