Trendaavat aiheet
#
Bonk Eco continues to show strength amid $USELESS rally
#
Pump.fun to raise $1B token sale, traders speculating on airdrop
#
Boop.Fun leading the way with a new launchpad on Solana.

Shane Mac
Building @XMTP_. Co-founder @GoSquaredAway.
If you want a reason for using ai on decentralized messaging protocol with key based identity not personal info this might be it

Chief Nerd24.7. klo 15.20
Listen carefully to what Sam Altman says here before you use ChatGPT…
“If you go talk to ChatGPT about your most sensitive stuff and then there's a lawsuit, we could be required to produce that … It makes sense to … really want the privacy clarity before you use it a lot.”
576
Many people have been asking me about how we designed the XMTP Identity system to be fundamentally different from others in the space.
With our latest update, we completely changed how XMTP ID works, making it solely a passkey to provide global interoperability.
Let's breakdown how XMTP is the most open, unopinionated, and interoperable standard for everyone...
Messaging Isn’t an App. It’s a Protocol.
Think of XMTP like SMTP was for email.
Except this time:
It’s encrypted
It’s decentralized
It’s unowned
It’s yours
This isn’t another messaging app. XMTP is the foundation every app can build on.
One Identity. Any Network.
At the heart of XMTP ID is a passkey.
That means you can bind any owned identity — ENS, Farcaster, Solana, Lens, Nostr, Mastodon, Bluesky, or even a traditional email address — to your XMTP ID.
Once linked, you can message any other bound identity across any network.
Want to message someone’s ENS from your Farcaster handle?
Want your email to reach someone’s .sol address — privately, securely?
Now you can.
One key. All networks.
What Makes XMTP Different
🟦 XMTP ID is not a global ID.
You don’t need to register a new name. XMTP lets your existing identity speak.
🟦 It’s unopinionated by design.
XMTP doesn’t force a naming system. It works with what you already own.
🟦 It’s private by default.
End-to-end encrypted. No central servers. Quantum-resistant encryption for the future.
🟦 It’s a protocol, not a platform.
No lock-in. No rent-seeking middlemen. Just a simple primitive any developer can integrate.
Why This Matters
Identity on the internet is finally composable.
With XMTP ID, you can:
Reach any owned identity across networks
Create secure, private communication between communities
🟦 Build apps where the inbox is portable and user-owned
🟦 Protect attention through programmable messaging and paywalls
have completely changed how XMTP ID works, making it Enable true interoperability across the decentralized internet
This Is the New Layer of the Internet
We believe private communication is a human right.
We believe the messaging layer of the internet should not be owned by any company.
We believe one open protocol — simple, flexible, and secure — can connect the world.
That’s what we’re building.
One key to reach them all.
One protocol to rebuild private communication for the world.
Join us. We are @xmtp_
1,97K
Making investing as simple as a message on @xmtp_

Mamo 守24.7. klo 21.56
Chat with Mamo inside the new @baseapp!
Ask Mamo to deposit, withdraw, check your balance, and find out the best rates.
Give it a try! 💬 🌱
1,16K
Decentralized messaging > Centralized messaging

drew coffman 𝕚𝕤 𝕠𝕟𝕝𝕚𝕟𝕖 🟢24.7. klo 02.11
catch me in the @baseapp
1,73K
“Eventually the team stumbled on the idea of linking money with email”
I wonder when people will realize that we are simply linking money to messaging…

Startup Archive22.7. klo 19.50
Peter Thiel tells the founding story of PayPal
“When you start one of these companies, it’s typically not the case that you get the whole idea fully formed instantaneously,” Thiel begins. “There was this incredible internet boom going on in Silicon Valley in the late 1990s. It felt like there was this open frontier or gold rush, and one of the natural things to look at was finance.”
At the time, Thiel was very interested in the idea of creating new forms of money.
“There’s always something super mysterious, powerful, and important about money,” He explains. “And we had this general idea to do something with security, money, and payments very early on in the founding of the company. Then you iterate a lot on how to get the idea out.”
Thiel continues:
“The critical question for any consumer internet product is not what the idea is, but ‘how do you get distribution?’ There had been a lot of internet payments companies that had already started and failed by 1998… They would’ve worked if everybody used them, but you could never get the first person to start. So the challenge was how to make it go viral and how to get something to work where it’s good for the first person, the 10th person, and the 100th person. Once you have millions of people, you have a network and network effects. That was sort of the chicken and egg problem we wanted to solve.”
Eventually the team stumbled on the idea of linking money with email:
“There were already 300 million people in 1999 that had email accounts. So if you could send money to an email address… you didn’t need both counterparts to a transaction to be part of the PayPal network. Only the sender could be part of it, and then the recipient would sign up as they took money out. We started with the 24 people in our office, and they sent money to friends and other people. Then we gave these referral bonuses of $10 if you got someone to sign up, and it just grew exponentially. It grew about 7-10% compounding daily… We had 1,000 people in mid-November of 1999. By the end of December it was 12,000. By February 3, 2000, it was 100,000. By mid-April 2000, it was up to a million.”
The other critical component of PayPal’s success was starting with customers who had an intense need and minimal downside risk:
“One of the natural places that it started was on the eBay auction site where you had small dollar transactions of maybe $40 as the typical amount. If you send a check across the country, that’s a 10 day delay. It’s slow, and most people aren’t set up to process credit cards.”
Thiel reflects on what it felt like to go from 1,000 users to 1 million in just a few months:
“[It felt like] you were at the forefront of some sort of revolutionary thing. It’s incredibly exciting and incredibly scary. It was like ‘we’re going to take over the world’ or ‘we’re all going to die’ and you move between those two several times a day.”
Fraud was a major challenge the company had to solve — especially because making a product hard to defraud is usually at odds with making it easy to use. Thiel had an interesting perspective of operating in strange regulatory zone with this new form of moving money:
“I often thought of it at the time that we were in a race between technology and politics. The politicians didn’t like us, but if we got the PayPal network to be big enough, it would sort of overwhelm the regulators and they’d have to accept it as a fait accompli… One of the execs at PayPal said we needed to hire a whole bunch of lawyers to tell us what we can or can’t do, and we said no we’re not going to hire them. They’ll just tell us what we can’t do. We have to just go ahead and not hire the lawyers and just do it.”
Video source: @RubinReport (2018)
694
Shane Mac kirjasi uudelleen
The @baseapp is an everything app.
It’s like an app store with social and financial primitives.
I think, as an L2, having a mainstream super app is a clever idea for onchain onboarding.
It also combines @farcaster_xyz, @zora, and @xmtp_ for the social part smoothly.
Base builders should have mini-apps for their projects to get distribution on the Base App.
Kudos to @jessepollak and the entire team 🟦🤝
1,92K
Love seeing more real world use cases built on XMTP

6804C622.7. klo 00.54
It’s a great time to fly ✈️
The Flyte AI Team has been working on a clean process to message in @baseapp via @xmtp_ to get users onboarded and on the next Flyte!
UX and being bug free is really important to us.
This will be a big one so don’t miss it!
#ProjectUpdates @virtuals_io @coinbase @CoinbaseDev @base $FLYTE

944
Johtavat
Rankkaus
Suosikit
Ketjussa trendaava
Trendaa X:ssä
Viimeisimmät suosituimmat rahoitukset
Merkittävin