Lei Yang
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
It's a very hard question to answer.
So I'll break that part.
I think the Kelp DAO hack itself is more like a validation to my belief that centralized cross-chain transfers, at some point, they're going to break.
It's just a matter of time.
So I'm very happy that my conjecture was validated.
Well, but it's really, really bad event.
So yeah, it was really unfortunate.
Then I think, yeah, I think the Arbitron freeze, I think it caught me a little bit off guard because first I was not really tracking the movement, the flow of the dirty money.
So I was a bit surprised that it flew to, it went to Arbitron.
I mean, I can, I totally understand
why or how the team or the governance body made that decision.
Because, I mean, everyone is supposedly living in some force-solving countries and I think they are subject to the law and order of the set countries.
So I think sometimes there's no option but to do certain things.
But I do think the beauty of blockchain, the beauty of decentralization is this notion of
yes, like code is what we trust in ultimately, right?
Code is the ultimate specification of how say smart contracts or say on-chain finance should behave.
So I think there is some beauty in that.
And in terms of whether MegaEth will go to stage two, I don't think we should make any promise as advised by our general counsel.
But I would say personally, I find it a really promising, a really inspiring end game for us or for any layer two, I would say.
And I would even go as far as saying if you are building a layer two on Ethereum, if you do not want to be