

OP Kona rollup node release.
ChainLink introduces State Pricing.
Lido discloses a CSM vulnerability.
Privacy Pools supports wstETH.
OP Labs released Kona Node, a Rust-based rollup node implementation for the OP Stack. It handles L2 derivation, execution integration, networking, and syncing. Based on Rust, it offers memory safety and a minimal resource footprint. Its modular design makes it suitable as both a library and a standalone node application. Kona Node supports multiple fault-proof backends, including FPVM, SP1, and Risc0, and includes built-in fault-proof capabilities for enhanced security. Kona serves as a spec-compliant, efficient, and customizable alternative to the original Go-based op-node. Kona Node adds to the client diversity on the OP Stack.
Chainlink
OP Kona rollup node release.
ChainLink introduces State Pricing.
Lido discloses a CSM vulnerability.
Privacy Pools supports wstETH.
OP Labs released Kona Node, a Rust-based rollup node implementation for the OP Stack. It handles L2 derivation, execution integration, networking, and syncing. Based on Rust, it offers memory safety and a minimal resource footprint. Its modular design makes it suitable as both a library and a standalone node application. Kona Node supports multiple fault-proof backends, including FPVM, SP1, and Risc0, and includes built-in fault-proof capabilities for enhanced security. Kona serves as a spec-compliant, efficient, and customizable alternative to the original Go-based op-node. Kona Node adds to the client diversity on the OP Stack.
Chainlink
Lido Finance disclosed and patched a vulnerability in its Community Staking Module (CSM) affecting validator withdrawal verification. On June 26, 2025, a whitehat researcher reported the issue via Lido’s Immunefi bug bounty. The bug stemmed from the Historical Withdrawal Proof method in the CSVerifier contract, which lacked proper validation for user-supplied historical block roots. Following the Pectra upgrade, which introduced EIP-7685, attackers could exploited the bug to inject false data, potentially forging fake withdrawals for validators with balances under 32 ETH. However, the vulnerability was never exploited. Lido mitigated the risk by rotating to a new CSVerifier contract that removed the vulnerable method. A permanent fix is scheduled with the launch of CSM v2 in September 2025.
Privacy Pools, an onchain privacy protocol, now supports wstETH and WBTC deposits as part of its multi-asset expansion strategy. Users can now deposit a minimum of 0.1 wstETH or 0.002 WBTC to privatize their holdings. Privacy Pools enables users to their withdraw funds to an unlinked address, provided they pass a compliance check. The protocol also supports EIP-7702 for batching approve and deposit transactions for ERC-20s.
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Disclaimer: Content is for informational purposes only, not endorsement or investment advice. The accuracy of information is not guaranteed.
Lido Finance disclosed and patched a vulnerability in its Community Staking Module (CSM) affecting validator withdrawal verification. On June 26, 2025, a whitehat researcher reported the issue via Lido’s Immunefi bug bounty. The bug stemmed from the Historical Withdrawal Proof method in the CSVerifier contract, which lacked proper validation for user-supplied historical block roots. Following the Pectra upgrade, which introduced EIP-7685, attackers could exploited the bug to inject false data, potentially forging fake withdrawals for validators with balances under 32 ETH. However, the vulnerability was never exploited. Lido mitigated the risk by rotating to a new CSVerifier contract that removed the vulnerable method. A permanent fix is scheduled with the launch of CSM v2 in September 2025.
Privacy Pools, an onchain privacy protocol, now supports wstETH and WBTC deposits as part of its multi-asset expansion strategy. Users can now deposit a minimum of 0.1 wstETH or 0.002 WBTC to privatize their holdings. Privacy Pools enables users to their withdraw funds to an unlinked address, provided they pass a compliance check. The protocol also supports EIP-7702 for batching approve and deposit transactions for ERC-20s.
ethdevnews weekly #0
Week in EF research
Blob technical analysis
SharpLink Gaming buys 14,697 ETH
Ethresearch: LMD Ghost
solx 0.1.1 release
Etherscan shows Safe signers
Symbiotic Slashing Insurance Vaults
dSheets supports contract functions
Privy integrates Base Sub Accounts
MetaMask UX updates
DaveCraige.eth donates 3 ETH to Storm
Tom Lee on Project Crypto
SEC to host crypto roundtables
Kugler resigns from Fed board
Disclaimer: Content is for informational purposes only, not endorsement or investment advice. The accuracy of information is not guaranteed.
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ETH Daily - 1st August 📰 -OP Kona rollup node 🔴 -Chainlink State Pricing 💰 -Lido discloses CSM bug 🔎 -Privacy Pools x wstETH 🌊 https://ethdaily.io/753
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In the latest post by @ethdaily.eth, highlights include the release of OP Kona's rollup node for enhanced L2 operations, ChainLink's new State Pricing method to improve pricing for tokenized RWAs on DEXs, and Lido's disclosure of a vulnerability in its Community Staking Module which was quickly patched. Additionally, Privacy Pools has unveiled support for wstETH and WBTC deposits as part of its new features. Dive into the detailed blog post for more on these developments!