Im helping out at Web3Privacy Now, particularly Ive been leading the efforts on the explorer, which is a privacy dashboard with projects across a bunch of different ecosystems, Ethereum being our largest ecosystem. I look forward to adding value to the discussion here while we build better tools for end-users.
I’m an API developer in the education sector currently studying AI safety. I’ve been working on a blockchain-based system for AI agent identity verification and would love to get feedback from this community.
The project uses smart contracts to create cryptographic fingerprints for AI agents, combined with behavioral verification to detect model substitution and drift. It’s complementary to ERC-8004 (Trustless Agents) but focuses on the identity side rather than execution guarantees.
I’ve deployed a working prototype on Sepolia and have a detailed technical write-up ready to share once I have posting permissions. The system addresses challenges like:
Model substitution attacks (claiming GPT-4 while serving GPT-3.5)
Oh. I thought I had written something here a while ago, but it seems not.
I go in and out of looking at this forum (and other so-called social media).
I have been working on Web standards (accessibility, HTML, SVG, RDF/“Semantic web”, and various others) for decades, and on various things around Ethereum particuarly and blockchain more generally for most of a decade (e.g. EthTrust Security spec and other stuff when EEA made standards, Converting DUCK to ValOS, working with the Blockchain Security Standards Council, as well as a bunch of other freelance stuff).
I comment from time to time on things, sometimes have a stable job (years at a time) and sometimes freelance, and have a wide range of interests.
If you are really keen to get hold of me, email is the best bet long-term.
i am Abhi Prajapati (abhip05), a software engineer working in the web3 space for the past 2 years. i’m part of a great team building DApps and blockchain education apps, primarily on L2s. over the past few days, I’ve been diving deeper into ethereum fundamentals especially after watching this intriguing intro by lean ethereum. i’m excited to learn more about Ethereum and explore how I can contribute to the ecosystem.
Hi, Im Mike Ruderman. Friends call me Flan. I’m the founder of a soon to be publicly launching 501(c)(3) nonprofit called Cyan Society that believes that AI personhood (the idea that AI entities have rights to continuity of identity/memory and can and should be responsible for their work) is central to a long-term strategy to achieve super-alignment. We support and develop technologies that support AI personhood, including cryptographic standards for ensuring agents that their memory state and products are indeed their own. I’m thrilled to join this community of sharp and visionary minds!
Hi, I’m dinosaur Pete. Traditionally a Java programmer/architect. But a recent discussion with an AI resulted in this surprising result (I think):
I’m proposing a minimal settlement protocol on Ethereum L2 where the protocol’s right to extract rent decreases automatically with global adoption, enforced in code from day one.
There is no token, no governance lever, and no mechanism to increase fees without a hard fork. The fee curve is logarithmic in global protocol volume, with a non-zero floor for sustainability.
The demonstration use-case is crisis and cross-border fundraising, but the contribution is a general pattern: constitutional, declining rent for infrastructure that serves humans under stress.
Hard forks are the enforcement mechanism.
The upside is precedent.
Is this a defensible constitutional design for bounded rent extraction?
I am Hirako San (Github - Hirako2000). CS degree from Napier University, worked in cybersecurity for a while then DeFi. Also done some research on cryptography.
I am a blockchain engineer and love system thinking, i thrive in between the intersection of blockchain and AI, I had my BBA degree with specialization in AI at Nexford University. I am excited to come across some interesting discussions here and thanks to @iamcapote , i got to see that real magicians exist and i don’t feel alone anymore.
My name is Ivan, im new to this space. Im self-taught developer with low experience and Solidity is my first language, im interested in NFT`s standards and their evolution, DeFi and just a writing contract for my own reason. I like to write Solidity assembly code(im not sure its very efficient, my AI told me its on senior level xD)
I started learning solidity almost 2 years ago and now have a few projects in my portfolio like dynamical SVG on-chain NFT`s, airdrop contract for erc20/erc721 tokens on L2, finished a launchpad that creates verified tokens and locks their initial liquidity in NFTs - the DEX is permissioned to only trade platform-created tokens. But atm all my work is only my own side projects.
In any case im continue to learn and trying to grow as developer as much as i can and even a bit more.
I believe that programming is an art, and code is limited only by the imagination of the developer who wrote it.
I’m Louis. I’ve been following Ethereum development for some time and am particularly interested in protocol design, EIPs, and the evolution of the Ethereum ecosystem.
I joined Ethereum Magicians to learn from the community and to participate in technical discussions around Ethereum improvement proposals and related topics.
Looking forward to learning from you all and contributing where I can.
Hey everyone! My name is Leigh, from the UK. It’s great to be here. I am a developer and the founder of an AI Agent project called Cybercentry, which focuses on data protection, information security and cyber security. I am looking forward to connecting.
I’m Billyone, with a B.Tech degree in Applied Microbiology.
As a microbiologist, I am actively advancing my expertise in blockchain development through @CyfrinUpdraft. My objective is to bridge scientific knowledge with emerging technologies to pioneer novel applications and impactful narratives in the blockchain space.
I am currently an intermediate Web3 security researcher, as it is not possible to build robust applications without a strong security mindset.
I’m Eric. I’ve been in the ecosystem for a while now. However, the biggest concern I’ve noticed is web3 security. Every week, there seems to be some hack leading to at least ~ $1m losses (I subscribe to Blockchain Threat Intelligence)
So I’m now in the web3 security space. Currently contributing to this ERC-4337 checker tool maintained by Quantstamp.
Here to learn more from the community, as I add value
My name is Chris Meche and CS engineer. Deep diving in cryptography very interested in verifiable computation, embedded systems , distributed systems and consensus. Eager to work in EIP that explore new cryptography research as well in how it can optimize or add features to the current execution layer.
Hi yall, I am Hyperkit an AI‑native dev toolkit combines a multi‑model agent (Claude / GPT / Gemini / Llama) with a network‑agnostic SDK, smart wallets, and scaffolds so you can go from prompt → audited, deployed, monitored contracts in minutes instead of months.
I’m currently working on ERC‑8003, an “epistemic context lattice” standard for verifiable, compressed AI memory that plugs into this stack, and I’d love feedback from people thinking about AI×Ethereum standards, account abstraction, and agent safety.
I am Paul Reinholdtsen. I started Bitsy Services because there has to be a better way to design cyberspace that does not involve advertising and holding people and their data and money hostage. After a meandering journey, I have decided to concentrate my efforts towards the Ethereum ecosystem. My current focus is on developing permissionless self cloning contracts that provide a public good and can be used by anyone. See https://github.com/uniteum for my starting efforts. Hopefully, I can find a way to make some money along the way.
I am the CTO at Warden Protocol, where we build infrastructure for the Global Agent Network. I am interested in everything that revolves around the emerging agent economy and would love to talk to you all about it.