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bartek.eth
Ethereum. Defi. L2s. @_token_flow @l2beat
Segundo a Canton, a blockchain detém 95% de participação de mercado nas RWAs "representadas". 382 bilhões de dólares em ativos. Desculpe, só um ativo, Recomprar Aggrements no Broadridge DLR. Nem vou tentar explicar o que é Canton (banco de dados glorificado), por que presumivelmente há muitos RWAs lá (você pode cunhar qualquer quantidade, e sinceramente me surpreende que seja tão pouco) e o que são essas RWAs "representadas" (pense - inúteis). Basta dizer que essa métrica é tão inútil e confusa quanto possível
Se é isso que queremos dizer com "revolução RWA", então acho que não é para isso que me inscrevi trabalhando nesse espaço. Podemos fazer melhor.

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O teste de walkaway agora é visível como um ícone para todos os rollups do Stage1. Isso deveria ser um requisito, ou seja, todos os sistemas que falharem nesse teste serão rebaixados para o Estágio 0? Dê sua opinião no fórum

L2BEAT 💗19 de dez. de 2025
Em uma nova postagem no fórum, propomos atualizar os requisitos da Fase 1 introduzindo um novo "teste de saída do Conselho de Segurança" que tenta responder à pergunta:
Os usuários podem sair na presença de operadores maliciosos, mesmo que o Conselho de Segurança desapareça?

1,45K
>token majoritariamente inútil
nesse caso, isso se traduz em potencialmente inseguro a ponto de ser explorado maliciosamente com base no Axelar. Isso afeta todos que possuem tokens Axelar omnichain

Jeff Dorman16 de dez. de 2025
I'm in the minority on the Axelar / $AXL "tokenholder's have no rights" debate, but I don't think this is a big deal.
Companies finance themselves with different parts of the capital stack, and some are more senior than others.
Secured debt > unsecured senior debt > sub debt > preferred shares > equity > tokens
There are hundreds of examples of one class of investors getting harmed at the expense of others.
In bankruptcy, debt holders win at expense of equities.
In LBOs, equity holders win at expense of debt holders
In take-unders, debt wins at expense of equity holders
In strategic acquisitions, usually both debt and equity holders do well (but not always).
Tokens are often bottom of the cap stack. It doesn't mean they aren't valuable, and it doesn't mean you need "protections" per se. We are simply learning that when you acquire a semi-worthless company with a mostly worthless token, you don't get a magic payout as a token holder. The equity wins at the expense of the token.
We've yet to see an acquisition of a good company where token holders get nothing. I'd imagine if an acquisition happened of a good, growing, successful business with a token that has proven valuable, then there would be some compensation for token holders.
There are lots of assets that do well in good times, but not in bad times. Stocks are great investments when a company is doing well, but they are awful investments when a company is not doing well.
Tokens have little to no value in M&A... ok. Adjust accordingly. Just like equities have little to no value in bankruptcy even if the company was funded via equity.
On the flip side, an equity value can literally go to $0 as dictated by a judge in a bankruptcy, whereas tokens can retain some magical "hopium" social value even if the underlying company goes away (i.e. $FTT still trades) because you can't actually legally kill a token.
So we're leaning that tokens can have tremendous value in a company that is growing and using cash flows to pay down the tokens (i.e. $BNB, $HYPE, $LEO, $OKB, $PUMP), and do horribly when a company struggles and becomes a forced seller to another entity.
You don't need rules and regulations to recognize that. Back good management teams and good projects and this isn't an issue.
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