
Stateless Ethereum Book Release
A comprehensive guide that explains protocol upgrades on the path to a Stateless Ethereum.
The Stateless Ethereum Book.
Succinct introduces OP Succinct Lite.
The EF seeks a Social Media Manager.
Reth team outlines what's next after Fusaka.
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StatelessEth released "The Stateless Ethereum Book," a comprehensive guide that discusses protocol upgrades on the path to a Stateless Ethereum. The book explores the technical, operational, and strategic elements involved in transitioning Ethereum to a stateless model, including explainers on trees and data encoding, BLOCKHASH state, gas cost remodeling, and state conversion. In a stateless model for Ethereum, nodes are not required to store the complete state of the chain for transaction processing. Instead, each block is equipped with all necessary information, provided in the form of proofs, allowing for independent validation without access to the entire chain's history. The method significantly reduces the storage and computational demands for nodes. The book will be updated on an ongoing basis.
Succinct Labs introduced OP Succinct Lite, a simplified iteration of OP Succinct that facilitates the adoption of Zero-Knowledge Proofs on OP Stack rollups without fully transitioning to ZK rollup specifications. Launched in September 2024, OP Succinct merged Kona—a Rust-based implementation of the OP Stack's state transition function—and the SP1 zkVM, allowing any OP Stack chain to upgrade from an optimistic to a ZK rollup. The "Lite" version targets improvements in the dispute resolution module, providing lightweight, cost-efficient dispute resolution, and faster finality times. OP Succinct Lite lowers the barrier to integrating ZK proofs, designed to operate without interfering with key components such as sequencers or batch processors.
The Ethereum Foundation (EF) is looking to hire a Social Media Manager to help manage the EF’s social media accounts, which include accounts representing the broader Ethereum ecosystem. The roles involve collaborating with EF leadership, tracking significant developments within the Ethereum ecosystem, and organizing complex campaigns with multiple contributors. Qualifications for the role require excellent writing skills, a deep engagement with the Ethereum ecosystem, familiarity with X, Farcaster, and Lens, and experience managing high-profile social media accounts. EF positions are fully remote, welcoming candidates from any location.

Paradigm’s Reth team outlined its views for Ethereum's forthcoming Fusaka upgrade, anticipated for late 2025. The team suggested a consistent schedule of 1-2 hard forks annually to maintain competitiveness and advocated for separating the processes of shipping, scoping, and research to facilitate timely and effective upgrades. Beyond Fusaka, the team emphasizes the importance of remaining focused on scaling both Layer 1 and Layer 2.
Built on Ethereum merch store
Moonwell introduces virtual accounts
Staking issuance discourse
Obol begins governance
Lowering costs to prove Ethereum blocks
dDocs weekly update
Milei supports Devconnect in Argentina
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EF Open Intents Framework
A modular framework designed to standardize intents and enhance the cross-chain user experience on Ethereum.
EF Open Intents Framework.
Bitwise donates $100k to Ethereum development.
The SEC dismisses its dealer rule.
Privacy Pools initiates its ZK Circuit Ceremony.
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The Ethereum Foundation launched the Open Intents Framework, a modular stack designed to standardize intents and enhance the cross-chain user experience on Ethereum. Intents are signed constraints that allow users to outsource their orders to a network of independent fillers. Intents enable fast and frictionless asset transfers, enabling a unified experience across chains. The framework provides developers with modular components like solving and settlement, enabling them to build custom intent-based applications. Key features of the Open Intents Framework include a suite of composable smart contracts, a production-ready implementation of ERC-7683, and an open-source solver application. The framework is a community-driven effort supported by over 30 teams, including Arbitrum, Optimism, Scroll, Polygon, ZKsync, Gnosis, and Namechain.
Bitwise donated $100,000 to the Protocol Guild and the Proposer Builder Separation (PBS) Foundation, marking its first annual contribution for 2024. The donation follows a commitment made last year by both VanEck and Bitwise to allocate 10% of their profits from their Ethereum ETFs to support Ethereum development over the next decade. The Bitwise ETHW ETF was launched on the NYSE Arca in July 2024, offering investors a way to invest in Ethereum without having to own the asset directly. The fund currently holds more than 100,000 Ether. The Protocol Guild is a collective comprised of over 150 Ethereum core contributors.
The SEC voluntarily withdrew its appeal against a lawsuit concerning the dealer rule, initially brought by the Crypto Freedom Alliance of Texas and the Blockchain Association. A Texas court had previously sided with the Blockchain Association in November, which argued that the rule unfairly targeted entities in the DeFi markets. Introduced last year, the dealer rule aimed to extend broker regulatory requirements to DeFi protocols. However, the rule was deemed unenforceable by the court. The SEC's decision to step back today represents a significant victory for DeFi, following a series of challenges under the previous administration.

Privacy Pools, a tool designed to facilitate anonymous transfers, initiated its ZK circuit ceremony. The ceremony is open for 9 days and invites participants to contribute signatures to the protocol’s trusted setup, To participate, individuals must have a GitHub account. Privacy Pools enables users to deposit ETH into a smart contract and withdraw it later using a zero-knowledge proof, which keeps the deposit and withdrawal addresses unlinked. Privacy Pools offers configurable privacy sets, allowing users to avoid association with known bad addresses during withdrawals.
Fluent raises $8m
Superfluid unveils $SUP token
Binance U.S. restores USD services
Superchain Interop on devnet
Ohara Base app creation tool
SEC acknowledges staking for ETFs
Introducing Y crypto app
KAITO claim goes live tomorrow
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LI.FI Introduces LI.FI 2.0
An upgrade that integrates an intents protocol and supports interop token standards.
LI.FI introduces LI.FI 2.0.
Abstract post-mortem on Cardex incident.
Applications open for OP Onchain Builders.
Coinbase releases cbBTC proof of reserves
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LI.FI, a bridge aggregation protocol, introduced LI.FI 2.0, an upgrade that enhances its liquidity aggregation by integrating an intents protocol and supporting any interop token standard. LI.FI 2.0 incorporates Catalyst, an intents protocol that streamlines order execution across various virtual machines through an open marketplace of solvers. LI.FI also developed Pioneer, an in-house solver capable of supporting any chain, regardless of the virtual machine used. The upgrade will facilitate permissionless participation and incorporate Glacis to assist interop token standards, enabling smooth asset transfers across different chains without compromising liquidity.
Abstract, a consumer-oriented rollup built on ZKsync's ZK Stack, released a post-mortem regarding a breach involving a private key leak at Cardex, a gaming app featured on the Abstract Portal, resulting in over $400k in user funds being compromised. The issue stemmed from Cardex exposing the private key on their website front end. Using a single session signer shared across all users, an attacker managed to siphon ETH from approximately 9,000 wallets. Notably, ERC-20s and NFTs remained unaffected due to their exclusion from the session keys' permissions. Abstract is advising all users to revoke any open session keys via a dedicated portal and is currently working with security teams on fund recovery efforts.
Applications are now open for the Optimism Onchain Builders retroactive funding round. The round features 8 million OP tokens in retroactive grants to builders who have launched contracts on specified OP Stack chains. The initiative seeks to reward projects that enhance cross-chain asset transfers through interop and grow the Superchain. To qualify, smart contracts must have engaged with at least 420 qualified addresses, maintained active contract operations for a minimum of 10 days, and at least 1,000 transactions over the past 180 days. Rewards will be awarded on a monthly basis from now until July 2025.
Beam Call #1 progress
Family supports World Chain
Aave hits $30b TVL across Ethereum & L2s.
Devcon SEA Scholars recap
Coinbase releases cbBTC proof of reserves
Holesky validators must update clients
EigenLayer Rewards v2 are live
Grayscale introduces Pyth Trust
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