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Ledger Multisig $10 Fee Per TX

Built on the open-source Safe protocol, Ledger Multisig charges a fee for users to sign transactions using Ledger hardware devices with Clear Signing.

Gm frENS. We meet again on yet another Friday. Have a great weekend!

Quick Take

  • Ledger Multisig charges a fee per tx.

  • MegaETH introduces MEGA token.

  • L2BEAT verifies Polygon zkProver integrity.

  • Nethermind and Besu interop on BALs.



Ledger Multisig $10 Fee Per TX

Ledger, a hardware wallet provider, is facing backlash over fees for its new Ledger Multisig product. Built on the open-source Safe protocol, Ledger Multisig enables users to sign transactions for Safe-based multisig wallets using Ledger hardware devices with Clear Signing, which verifies transaction details directly on the device. Initially marketed as a free feature, Ledger later clarified that it charges $10 per standard transfer for ETH sends and non-token actions like governance and 5 basis points on the value for ERC-20 token transfers, on top of network gas fees. Users can avoid the fees by using Safe’s native web app, which features software-based transaction simulations.

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MegaETH Introduces MEGA Token

MegaETH, an Ethereum Layer-2 network featuring 10 ms block times and a 100,000 TPS architecture, introduced $MEGA, its native token used to power Sequencer Rotation and Proximity Markets. Sequencer Rotation ensures that only one sequencer is active at a time, rotating globally to follow active regions. Operators can stake $MEGA to compete for the active slot, which is selected based on stake size, performance history, and infrastructure quality. Proximity Markets allow apps and market participants to lock $MEGA and bid for sequencer-adjacent colocation space to access minimal latency and faster transaction confirmations. MegaETH is currently in a public testnet phase.

L2BEAT Verifies Polygon zkProver

L2BEAT announced that it has successfully reproduced Polygon’s zkProver verifier keys, which are used to validate zero-knowledge proofs. Anyone can independently regenerate and confirm that the onchain verifier matches the published setup. The L2BEAT team verified that the regenerated keys match the deployed verifier contract, including hash and ABI consistency. The process strengthens the cryptographic integrity of Polygon’s ZK system, ensuring that proofs cannot be forged due to incorrect verifier keys.

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