Get Your Locked SOL Back: 200+ Accounts Cleaned Up Today for 0.48 SOL
🚀 My Solana Account Cleanup Tool: 200+ Accounts Closed Today!I built a tool to help clean up unused Solana accounts, and today we hit a milestone: over 200 unused accounts closed with 0.48 SOL total volume reclaimed!Why This MattersGet Your SOL Back: Reclaim locked funds from unused token accountsNetwork Optimization: Reduce blockchain state bloatBetter Performance: Help validators run more efficientlyHow It WorksVisit claimyoursols.app:Connect your walletScan for closeable accountsClose unu...
Get Your Locked SOL Back: 200+ Accounts Cleaned Up Today for 0.48 SOL
🚀 My Solana Account Cleanup Tool: 200+ Accounts Closed Today!I built a tool to help clean up unused Solana accounts, and today we hit a milestone: over 200 unused accounts closed with 0.48 SOL total volume reclaimed!Why This MattersGet Your SOL Back: Reclaim locked funds from unused token accountsNetwork Optimization: Reduce blockchain state bloatBetter Performance: Help validators run more efficientlyHow It WorksVisit claimyoursols.app:Connect your walletScan for closeable accountsClose unu...
How do some dApps pretend to have verified contracts when they don't?
Recently, I started interacting with many DApps for DeFi, airdrops, or NFT exchanges. I noticed that most of the time, DApps are marked as "contract verified", but in many cases, only the proxy contract is verified—not the implementation. What does that actually mean? And is the contract truly verified in such cases? Let’s break it down below. let's start with some context: The concept of upgradable smart contracts on Ethereum began emerging around 2017, with more formal and secure patte...
How do some dApps pretend to have verified contracts when they don't?
Recently, I started interacting with many DApps for DeFi, airdrops, or NFT exchanges. I noticed that most of the time, DApps are marked as "contract verified", but in many cases, only the proxy contract is verified—not the implementation. What does that actually mean? And is the contract truly verified in such cases? Let’s break it down below. let's start with some context: The concept of upgradable smart contracts on Ethereum began emerging around 2017, with more formal and secure patte...
How do some dApps pretend to have verified contracts when they don't?
Recently, I started interacting with many DApps for DeFi, airdrops, or NFT exchanges. I noticed that most of the time, DApps are marked as "contract verified", but in many cases, only the proxy contract is verified—not the implementation. What does that actually mean? And is the contract truly verified in such cases? Let’s break it down below. let's start with some context: The concept of upgradable smart contracts on Ethereum began emerging around 2017, with more formal and secure patte...
How do some dApps pretend to have verified contracts when they don't?
Recently, I started interacting with many DApps for DeFi, airdrops, or NFT exchanges. I noticed that most of the time, DApps are marked as "contract verified", but in many cases, only the proxy contract is verified—not the implementation. What does that actually mean? And is the contract truly verified in such cases? Let’s break it down below. let's start with some context: The concept of upgradable smart contracts on Ethereum began emerging around 2017, with more formal and secure patte...