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The 0 to 1 Guide for MEV
By: 0xmebius This is a quick and dirty guide to MEV meant to get you up to speed on the latest in the space, nothing more, nothing less. The guide is sorted so that each subsequent topic builds upon previous knowledge, and increases in complexity as topics advance. Obviously skip things you already know. The guide is also nested depending on the level of depth you wish to explore for each particular topic. Each nested child topic represents a further niche concept in the parent topic. Most ge...

The Guide to DeFi Governance
By: Ratan Kaliani, Annamira O’Toole & Shivam Patel In the spirit of decentralization, DeFi (decentralized finance) protocols have been empowering their communities to guide the future of these protocols through on-chain governance. However, the ecosystem of DeFi governance and token delegation can often be hard to navigate. Here at Blockchain at Berkeley (B@B), we’ve learned a lot from running our delegation program for 4 protocols (Uniswap, Compound, Aave, Fei) over the past year . This guid...

A Mathematical Introduction to Lattice Cryptography: The Quantum Security Solution
Author: Elson LiuBackgroundQuantum computing continues to develop at a staggering pace. With traditional cryptographic schemes—like RSA and Elliptic Curve Cryptography (ECC)—going bust in the dooming presence of advanced quantum algorithms (i.e. Shor’s algorithm), cryptographers are in urgent need of a quantum resistant solution. One of the most promising candidates is lattice-based cryptography. In this article, we’ll introduce the fundamental concepts of lattice-based cryptography and discu...

The 0 to 1 Guide for MEV
By: 0xmebius This is a quick and dirty guide to MEV meant to get you up to speed on the latest in the space, nothing more, nothing less. The guide is sorted so that each subsequent topic builds upon previous knowledge, and increases in complexity as topics advance. Obviously skip things you already know. The guide is also nested depending on the level of depth you wish to explore for each particular topic. Each nested child topic represents a further niche concept in the parent topic. Most ge...

The Guide to DeFi Governance
By: Ratan Kaliani, Annamira O’Toole & Shivam Patel In the spirit of decentralization, DeFi (decentralized finance) protocols have been empowering their communities to guide the future of these protocols through on-chain governance. However, the ecosystem of DeFi governance and token delegation can often be hard to navigate. Here at Blockchain at Berkeley (B@B), we’ve learned a lot from running our delegation program for 4 protocols (Uniswap, Compound, Aave, Fei) over the past year . This guid...

A Mathematical Introduction to Lattice Cryptography: The Quantum Security Solution
Author: Elson LiuBackgroundQuantum computing continues to develop at a staggering pace. With traditional cryptographic schemes—like RSA and Elliptic Curve Cryptography (ECC)—going bust in the dooming presence of advanced quantum algorithms (i.e. Shor’s algorithm), cryptographers are in urgent need of a quantum resistant solution. One of the most promising candidates is lattice-based cryptography. In this article, we’ll introduce the fundamental concepts of lattice-based cryptography and discu...
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By: Ratan Kaliani, Darya Kaviani, & Emma Guo
Blockchain at Berkeley Grants is motivated by one core objective—to bridge the gap between students’ unbridled potential and the resources they need to manifest their vision. Our mission is to foster student-driven blockchain innovation through early-stage funding to trailblazing startups, novel projects, and transformative research.
As students in one of the most innovative academic institutions in the world, we have witnessed firsthand the unmatched entrepreneurial spirit that our fellow classmates embody. Who better to enable the next generation of builders than their own peers? Put succinctly:
The future of high-impact, student-targeted funding is students empowering students.
The first wave of B@B Grants will be powered by BitDAO’s EduDAO, which funds university blockchain ecosystems. Student startups, open-source projects, and research are all eligible for grants during our first wave of funding. The application for our grants program can be found at blockchain.berkeley.edu/grants!
Eliminating the most prominent entry-level obstacles to innovation arms student creators with the agency to translate their vision into reality:
Financial Barriers: Financial barriers should never hinder the proliferation of groundbreaking ideas. Early-stage funding gives students the financial stability to create freely.
Connections: The blockchain industry is driven by ideology—one of inclusivity and open contribution. We aim to leverage our position in the blockchain ecosystem to help more deeply integrate selected projects into the blockchain community.
Community: By cultivating a collective of like-minded student innovators, we will provide grant recipients with a collaborative community conducive to each team’s growth.
The structure of Blockchain at Berkeley Grants draws inspiration from successful DAO grant programs and early-stage ecosystem funds that have been seen across DeFi protocols over the past year. Our grant program will be led by executive board members within Blockchain at Berkeley, with members of B@B serving on the committee to lead strategic, logistical, and financial operations. A team of Blockchain at Berkeley alumni will serve as reviewers to help evaluate applications.
Leads
Darya Kaviani—Co-President of Blockchain at Berkeley
Ratan Kaliani—Co-President of Blockchain at Berkeley
Emma Guo—Head of External at Blockchain at Berkeley
Sehyun Chung—Co-Head of Education at Blockchain at Berkeley
Reviewers
Jonathan Allen—Managing Partner @ Mirana Ventures
Nadir Akhtar—Blockchain Security Engineer @ Coinbase
Dev Ojha—Engineer for Osmosis, Co-Founder of SikkaTech
Justine Humenansky—Strategy @ RabbitHole
Medha Kothari—Research Partner @ Variant Fund
Max Fang—Co-Founder of Blockchain at Berkeley
Dmitriy Berenzon—Research Partner @ 1kx
Internal Committee
Fannie Barskhian, Lizzie Lau, Sena Gul Hazir, Shervin Beyk, Siddhant Satapathy, & Rishabh Krishnan
B@B Grants will have two waves annually, open to all students regardless of institution or academic level. We offer both dilutive and non-dilutive grants. Our 2022 waves will be launched in January and August. At the start of each application cycle, we will accept submissions from students working on:
Research Projects
Open-Source Contributions
Early-Stage Startups
Miscellaneous student-driven blockchain initiatives
Wave 1 will include $200K worth of dilutive grants and $50K worth of non-dilutive grants. Non-dilutive grants can range from $1K to $5K, while dilutive grant sizes are larger and dependent upon our evaluation of the project. Accepted projects will enter discussions with the B@B Grants team to finalize equity allocation (for dilutive grants) and funding amount. We look forward to seeing your applications!
For those that have any questions, please feel free to reach out via email at grants@blockchain.berkeley.edu!
Blockchain at Berkeley (B@B) is one of the leading student-run blockchain university organizations in the world, with 90+ active members split across Consulting, Education and Research departments. Since 2016, Blockchain at Berkeley has been focused on educating the wider community about blockchain, facilitating innovative research and discussions, governing top DeFi protocols, and crafting industry-leading PoC’s with top blockchain and Fortune 500 companies. Blockchain at Berkeley alumni have gone on to create Dekrypt Capital, she256, and SF Blockchain Week as well as startups of their own, including Opyn, Evmos, Osmosis, and more.
By: Ratan Kaliani, Darya Kaviani, & Emma Guo
Blockchain at Berkeley Grants is motivated by one core objective—to bridge the gap between students’ unbridled potential and the resources they need to manifest their vision. Our mission is to foster student-driven blockchain innovation through early-stage funding to trailblazing startups, novel projects, and transformative research.
As students in one of the most innovative academic institutions in the world, we have witnessed firsthand the unmatched entrepreneurial spirit that our fellow classmates embody. Who better to enable the next generation of builders than their own peers? Put succinctly:
The future of high-impact, student-targeted funding is students empowering students.
The first wave of B@B Grants will be powered by BitDAO’s EduDAO, which funds university blockchain ecosystems. Student startups, open-source projects, and research are all eligible for grants during our first wave of funding. The application for our grants program can be found at blockchain.berkeley.edu/grants!
Eliminating the most prominent entry-level obstacles to innovation arms student creators with the agency to translate their vision into reality:
Financial Barriers: Financial barriers should never hinder the proliferation of groundbreaking ideas. Early-stage funding gives students the financial stability to create freely.
Connections: The blockchain industry is driven by ideology—one of inclusivity and open contribution. We aim to leverage our position in the blockchain ecosystem to help more deeply integrate selected projects into the blockchain community.
Community: By cultivating a collective of like-minded student innovators, we will provide grant recipients with a collaborative community conducive to each team’s growth.
The structure of Blockchain at Berkeley Grants draws inspiration from successful DAO grant programs and early-stage ecosystem funds that have been seen across DeFi protocols over the past year. Our grant program will be led by executive board members within Blockchain at Berkeley, with members of B@B serving on the committee to lead strategic, logistical, and financial operations. A team of Blockchain at Berkeley alumni will serve as reviewers to help evaluate applications.
Leads
Darya Kaviani—Co-President of Blockchain at Berkeley
Ratan Kaliani—Co-President of Blockchain at Berkeley
Emma Guo—Head of External at Blockchain at Berkeley
Sehyun Chung—Co-Head of Education at Blockchain at Berkeley
Reviewers
Jonathan Allen—Managing Partner @ Mirana Ventures
Nadir Akhtar—Blockchain Security Engineer @ Coinbase
Dev Ojha—Engineer for Osmosis, Co-Founder of SikkaTech
Justine Humenansky—Strategy @ RabbitHole
Medha Kothari—Research Partner @ Variant Fund
Max Fang—Co-Founder of Blockchain at Berkeley
Dmitriy Berenzon—Research Partner @ 1kx
Internal Committee
Fannie Barskhian, Lizzie Lau, Sena Gul Hazir, Shervin Beyk, Siddhant Satapathy, & Rishabh Krishnan
B@B Grants will have two waves annually, open to all students regardless of institution or academic level. We offer both dilutive and non-dilutive grants. Our 2022 waves will be launched in January and August. At the start of each application cycle, we will accept submissions from students working on:
Research Projects
Open-Source Contributions
Early-Stage Startups
Miscellaneous student-driven blockchain initiatives
Wave 1 will include $200K worth of dilutive grants and $50K worth of non-dilutive grants. Non-dilutive grants can range from $1K to $5K, while dilutive grant sizes are larger and dependent upon our evaluation of the project. Accepted projects will enter discussions with the B@B Grants team to finalize equity allocation (for dilutive grants) and funding amount. We look forward to seeing your applications!
For those that have any questions, please feel free to reach out via email at grants@blockchain.berkeley.edu!
Blockchain at Berkeley (B@B) is one of the leading student-run blockchain university organizations in the world, with 90+ active members split across Consulting, Education and Research departments. Since 2016, Blockchain at Berkeley has been focused on educating the wider community about blockchain, facilitating innovative research and discussions, governing top DeFi protocols, and crafting industry-leading PoC’s with top blockchain and Fortune 500 companies. Blockchain at Berkeley alumni have gone on to create Dekrypt Capital, she256, and SF Blockchain Week as well as startups of their own, including Opyn, Evmos, Osmosis, and more.
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