New proposals — Updates via Telegram
ENS DAO Dashboard — Available for public review
Submit your updates! — project updates wanted!
ENS Labs: July Updates, 10 Years, ETHGlobal NYC
Community: ERC 4361, ERC-7996, Immutable Frontends
Meta-Gov: Governance Security Updates
Ecosystem: Builder and Service Provider Updates
Public Goods: Funding Vyper
Refer to the official ENS DAO Calendar for meeting links and times. Any other sources are not guaranteed to be accurate. Access the ENS Calendar here.
The ENS DAO Term 6 Dashboard is a comprehensive guide to ENS DAO’s governance and activities. It includes key resources such as the ENS DAO Constitution, meeting schedules via the ENS DAO Calendar, and updates through the bi-weekly ENS DAO Newsletter.
The dashboard outlines proposal processes, thresholds for social and executable proposals, governance environments, working group schedules, and details on Requests for Proposal (RFPs) for compensated tasks. It aims to enhance transparency, understanding, and participation within the ENS ecosystem.
Discover how the ENS DAO works and how you can to become involved. View the official guide to ENS governance, proposals, and participation. Whether you’re new or experienced, everything you need to start is here.
→ Visit ENS DAO Basics: basics.ensdao.org
Anticapture’s analysis reveals how vulnerable the DAO is to governance capture. Using 30+ signals—from voting concentration to Council delegate overlap—it explains the logic behind the Security Council and surfaces key risks to decentralization.
→ View the dashboard: Anticapture
Awesome ENS is a curated GitHub repo collecting key ENS tools, dapps, docs, and community resources. It’s useful for anyone building with or learning about ENS—perfect starting point for devs, researchers, and DAO contributors.
Proposals are how changes are made to the DAO’s status quo. They can be submitted by anyone meeting the required $ENS thresholds and are voted on by delegates based on their token holdings. If a proposal reaches quorum and passes, it is ratified and implemented.
For detailed governance information, refer to the Governance Documentation.
Proposal Thresholds:
10k ENS: Required for a social proposal — an agreement of the DAO on matters that cannot be enforced onchain.
100k ENS: Required for an executable proposal — involves smart contract operations executed by DAO-controlled accounts.
The Proposal Bulletin summarizes Term 6 proposals—both onchain (executable) and offchain (social)—from January 2025 to December 2025. It covers key actions like ETH-to-USDC conversions, endowment expansions, service provider funding, and governance process improvements.
The bulletin aims to enhance transparency and keep stakeholders informed about DAO decisions Details of current proposals will be provided.
View and vote on executable proposals → ENS DAO proposals
To shape the future of ENS, become a delegate: delegate your tokens (even to yourself), post your intro on the forum, add delegate records to your ENS name, and set it as your Primary ENS. Manage your profile at delegate.ens.domains
ENS DAO members are weighing token incentives to boost .eth registrations, integrations, and awareness. Ideas include rewarding smart contracts using ENS names to improve UX and curb scams, reflecting a push to leverage its $1B treasury for ecosystem growth.
Join the discussion → Propogating Use Cases, Registrations, and Exposure
L2 primary names are live at the protocol level, with a demo walkthrough available. VIEM and WAGMI integrations launch next week, and Base will migrate existing records to its new reverse registrar. ENS Node support is shipping, alongside an API concept for cross-chain primary name lookups.
CoinDesk marked Ethereum’s 10th anniversary with reflections from industry leaders, featuring ENS founder and lead developer Nick Johnson. In the reel, Johnson recounted a decade of building Ethereum public goods, from the DAO hack era to future milestones.
Mely.eth participated in YAP Global’s X Space, “Ethereum Turns 10: Time To Build The Narrative Layer,” exploring Ethereum’s cultural and storytelling future.
Playback → Ethereum Turns 10
ENS launched the ENSv2 Hub: a central resource for the next evolution of ENS. It features roadmaps, specs, product previews & updates about the new registry, smart contracts, Namechain & more — all built openly for the next billion users.
→ Visit: ENSv2 Hub
ENS is running a short survey to understand how developers are building with ENS and where support can improve. Your input helps shape the future of docs, tooling, and features across the protocol.
→ Take the survey: enslabs.notion.site
ENS finalized core ENSv2 contracts & SDK, launched the ENSv2 Hub, dSheets integration, and two new apps. Renewals overtook registrations as revenue driver. Growth in social, ecosystem & ICANN presence. Team expanded to 31 as ENSv2 gears up for launch.
→ View the full report: ENS Labs Quarterly Report - Q2 2025
ENS generated $3.77m in Q2 2025, down from $4.94M in Q1 2025
$2.61m came from registration revenue
$499k from premium name sales
$669k from DeFi returns
June 2025 closed with $1.43M in total revenue
→ View the full report: ENS Revenue Report - Q2 2025
ENS Labs, the non-profit organization responsible for the core software development of the Ethereum Name Service (ENS) is searching for professionals to fill the following roles:
Integrations Engineer (Web3)
Technical Writer
Frontend Developer
→ Explore open roles: Careers at ENS Labs
ENS announced $10,000 in prizes for ETHGlobal New York participants. The initiative encourages developers to integrate ENS’s decentralized naming—human-readable addresses for wallets, websites, and more—into their apps for seamless Web3 user experiences.
Sign up → ETHGlobal NY 2025
ENS has been announced as a sponsor for ETHRome 2025, highlighting its role as the backbone of human-readable identity in Web3. The partnership underscores ENS’s mission to make Ethereum addresses simple, secure, and memorable for the global developer community.
Gregskril.eth will speak about ENS at the World of Apps event during Ethereum NYC on August 14. The gathering will showcase live app demos from key ecosystem players, blending Ethereum’s tech with cultural experiences.
Commons is a recurring space hosted bi-weekly for deep technical dives into ENS and open-source projects. It offers builders and protocol thinkers a place to explore new infra, review edge cases, and unpack real-world integration challenges—live and in public.
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In this week’s Commons, we explored ENSIP-19’s L2 reverse resolution, the first ENS contracts on L2, and the new .eth registrar controller with a referral field—paving the way for DAO referral programs, multi-chain identity (Namechain), and L2-native ENS integrations.
→ Listen back: L2 Primary Names on Base
Ghadi is updating the ENS Seal framework to reflect ENSIP-19, which enables chain-specific reverse record lookups. Apps should query on the active chain, prioritize context-specific names, and validate ownership. Reach out to @justghadi.eth to share feedback or suggestions.
Five Bullet Friday is a concise, fact-grounded digest of five key ENS DAO developments, curated for builders and delegates. Edited by the ENS DAO Newsletter lead since 2022, it aims to keep the community aligned and informed while respecting readers’ time.
→ ENS DAO: Five Bullet Friday
Are you integrating ENS into your stack, experimenting at the protocol level, or have a unique use you’d like to share? Consider submitting it for inclusion in the Newsletter. Share updates on projects, events, achievements, or community changes for inclusion.
→ Submit your segment: Project submissions
OpenSea recently offered a two-day Voyage quest where users earned 50 XP by connecting their ENS name to their profile. Once linked, their profile URL displayed the .eth name, making ENS integration quick and visible across the platform.
Crypto journalist Laura Shin reminded followers to extend their ENS domain registrations, responding to ENS Giant’s call for influencers to promote .eth adoption. The push aligns with growing efforts to make ENS names a standard for secure crypto transactions.
My.box gifted the ENS community free .eth.box subdomains, enabling users to turn their .eth names into live websites with no fees or extra setup. The service keeps ENS records unchanged, offering a quick and seamless way to activate a personal web presence.
Base marked the first anniversary of Basenames, reminding users to renew their names within the 90-day grace period. Adding context, @dr3a.eth highlighted how ENS namespaces like Basenames can generate recurring revenue, boost brand visibility, and enhance wallet security.
Dev Tools Guild expressed gratitude to ENS for providing human-readable names for their smart contract infrastructure, improving usability and security.
ENS DAO’s ETH holdings have risen every year since 2019, reaching over $13M in 2025 alongside $101M in ETH investments. Gregskril.eth noted that every wei is visible onchain, underscoring the DAO’s commitment to transparency in its growing treasury.
Brantly.eth announced a public MCP server for the Ethereum identity stack, supporting ENS, EFP, SIWE, and more. The tool lets LLMs query docs, APIs, and onchain data, enhancing AI integration.
Review the new feature → ETHID MCP
The Unruggable Labs team unveiled EthStars, a decentralized ENS protocol that boosts social signals like EFP to validate onchain identity via a web-of-trust method.
Check out the beta → ETHStars
Namespace released an article exploring the benefits of ENS Subnames for communities, from DAOs to NFT collections and influencers. The piece highlights use cases across Web3 and beyond.
Read it → Unified Identity for Your Community
Raffy.eth, a developer at ENS Labs, submitted their first Ethereum Improvement Proposal, ERC-7996: Contract Feature Detection. While described as a minor change, they’re seeking community support to help move it forward.
Read more on Ethereum Magicians → ERC-7996
Brantly.eth announced the finalization of EIP-4361, Sign-In with Ethereum. Originally abandoned midway, the standard was revived by EthIDKit and EFP, who carried it over the finish line. The team now plans to expand SIWE adoption.
Learn more → ERC-4361
DeGov.AI unveiled a new community-focused ENS governance tool powered by AI agents. The platform lets users explore proposals, delegates, and voting power, making it easier to track and engage with ENS DAO decision-making.
Try it → ens.degov.ai
Builder Kenneth Mak publicly shared his adoption of ENS by importing eth.community as his onchain identity. He’s exploring public minting of subnames via Namespace, signaling strong support for ENS in community identity solutions.
Eth.community, a platform for showcasing ENS-linked onchain identities, has introduced a feature allowing users to chat via their own .eth names. Simply visit your profile page and hit “chat about this page” to start.
Explore → eth.community
Gregskril.eth shared how a personal MCP server project has proven unexpectedly useful, including for testing a new ENS contract without a UI. The tool streamlines encoding multicall operations.
Try it → Ethereum MCP Server
Alex Urbelis, General Counsel and CISO of ENS Labs, has joined the Virtue community to help shape the next generation of ethical hackers and thinkers. A renowned cybersecurity expert, Urbelis brings extensive legal and security expertise to the initiative.
At Protocol Berg, Áron Soos demonstrated deploying a live website using the Swarm network, ENS, and eth.limo, showing the path from concept to decentralized front-end.
Watch → watch.protocol.berlin
NounsDAO and Protocol Labs revealed winners of their hackathon focused on resilient, decentralized frontends. Projects—ANouns, Nouniverse, and NounVerse—are fully hosted on IPFS, resolved with ENS, and push forward decentralized Nounish infrastructure.
Slobo.eth imagined a 2030 where social media posts display a lock icon revealing the signing organization or person. While not eliminating misinformation, it reliably verifies authorship—ideally using an Ethereum address with a .eth domain.
Jake flags multiple naming systems causing confusion. cap.eth says Basenames build on ENS as an identity primitive; Jesse Pollak confirms but notes more protocol work needed for true interoperability.
Meta-Governance – @5pence.eth
Ecosystem – @slobo.eth
Public Goods – @simona_pop
DAO Secretary - @limes
The responsibilities of the Lead Stewards & Secretary are set out in Rule 9.8 and Rule 9.9 of the Working Group Rules.
VotingPower.xyz visualizes ENS DAO’s delegate landscape, showing top delegates, shifts in voting power, and activity trends. It helps token holders monitor influence, assess delegate performance, and make informed delegation choices to strengthen governance.
→ View distributions: Votingpower.xyz
SafeNotes is a public dashboard for viewing real-time ENS DAO treasury activity. It tracks outgoing payments from ENS Safe wallets—showing amounts, recipients, categories, and descriptions. Great for transparency and transaction review.
→ Review DAO Transactions: SafeNotes
ENS Ledger offers a dynamic Sankey chart tool to visualize DAO fund movements in ETH, stablecoins, and $ENS. Explore flows, click nodes for WG breakdowns, and view financial statements for any counterparty.
→ Track fund flows: ENS Ledger
The ENS Steakhouse dashboard is an interactive data portal on Dune Analytics that gives the ENS community transparent, real-time insights into ENS’s finances. It shows key metrics like revenues, expenses, treasury assets, and endowment performance.
→ View Dashboard: Dune Analytics
Limes.eth released the Q2 2025 Working Group spending summary:
Ecosystem: $202,766
Meta-Governance: $217,000
Public Goods: $264,495
→ Full report: ENS Working Group Spending Summaries
The vote to select recepients of the Service Provider Stream, as established by EP 4.7, has now concluded. Builders are entrusted with improving the ENS system, as chosen by delegates. Become familiar with each Service Provider by visiting their builder profle:
Working Group | Time | Schedule | Location |
|---|---|---|---|
![]() Meta-Governance | 2pm UTC | Tuesday | |
![]() Ecosystem | 3pm UTC | Thursday | |
![]() Public Goods | 4pm UTC | Thursday |
The Meta-Governance Working Group provides governance oversight and support for working group operations through DAO tooling and governance initiatives.
With $115M in assets and 9.8 years of runway, the ENS DAO has achieved 3.54% APY and $4.92M in revenue through DeFi. Capital efficiency is up, but net income is tightening. Explore trends, financials, and future plans in the full report.
Review report → Kpk H1 2025 Review for the ENS Endowment
Did you know? $ENS holders can delegate their voting power to trusted delegates to shape the future of the ENS protocol. Use ENS Agora to explore and track governance activity.
→ Learn how to manage delegation: Guide Here.
The committee sent formal questions to Josh’s team based on DAO and prior input, with Urbelis reviewing legal aspects. Follow-ups are scheduled, aiming for a detailed, well-formatted DAO report. The process is expected to take 2–3 months given high info standards.
Blockful.eth outlined security-focused governance upgrades and delegation incentives on Anticapture. The tool aims to improve resilience and defense against governance capture.
The Ecosystem Working Group strengthens the ENS Protocol by facilitating developer relations, identifying and funding high-potential projects that enhance ENS, and supporting ENS-aligned initiatives.
The Ecosystem Working Group is awarding retroactive grants to technically oriented projects that advance the ENS protocol. Grants are reviewed on a rolling basis and presented during weekly ecosystem calls. Apply via the forum.
ENS Ecosystem Stewards awarded 1ETH grants to MyTiers (crypto subs), POAP Privacy (anonymous minting), and Orbiter (ENS-Base linking via custom resolver). Additionally, z80.eth received a 3-year extension for their ongoing developer contributions.
Kara launched a personal brand website template for si3 DAO members, built on a custom CMS that lets users edit templates and publish on their ENS name. Through the Grow3dge program, they focus on product design, education, edtech, media, and marketing, with a structured 10-week module.
JustaName’s latest release includes infra optimization and three key updates:
Admin Dashboard – Workspace-level ENS analytics, name resolution counts, claimed subnames, and community-level data.
Allowed Domains – API key security via domain restrictions, enabling direct frontend integration.
Records for Offchain Subnames – Resolves offchain subnames by returning keys and linked data in the first request.
@jthor proposed DService Text Records, enabling lists of URLs in ENS names with dynamic updates. The ENSIP PR addresses UX risks where dApps depend on centralized indexers or single endpoints—if shut down, apps fail. This approach avoids redeployments while improving resilience.
The Public Goods Working Group supports the Ethereum ecosystem by identifying and funding open-source development.
The ENS Builder Grants platform supports public goods projects in Ethereum and Web3. With 22 ETH granted across 19 projects, it offers milestone-based funding reviewed by Public Goods Working Group stewards.
→ Apply here: builder.ensgrants.xyz
Public Goods steward @Sov and NounsDAO discussed funding decentralized frontends using ENS + IPFS to ensure governance UIs stay online after grants end. Hackathon winners, Filecoin/IPFS persistence, and sustainable public goods funding were key themes.
→ Listen: Immutable Frontends with NounsDAO
The Public Goods WG is funding research to strengthen ENS’s role in ICANN, enabling in-person engagement and partnerships like .locker with Orange Domains. ENS remains the only Web3 player avoiding DNS name collisions, with deeper ICANN involvement planned ahead of November’s meeting.
The European Decentralisation Institute, backed by the Ethereum Foundation, works with the EU to advance decentralized identity across borders. It promotes privacy-by-design, interoperability, and policy engagement, with Thomas and Cap aiming to help position ENS as a core identity layer.
The ENS Public Goods WG granted $50K USDC to Vyper, matched by the Ethereum Foundation, to strengthen Ethereum’s language diversity, improve compiler security and performance, and support broader adoption of this key smart contract language.
WomenInBiz, with 2,500 members across 14 Spanish-speaking countries, is hosting the 2nd Latina Blockchain Hackathon featuring tracks on blockchain adoption, AI agents, and AI products. They aim to use ENS as core infrastructure and seek ENS grants.
ENS DAO offers several resources for understanding and participating in its ecosystem:
ENS DAO Basics: Learn about the ENS DAO, including voting and governance.
Support Docs: Guidance on registration, renewals, and development aspects.
Governance Docs: Insights into governance structure.
ENS Agora: Governance hub for proposal review and voting.
ENS Repository: The ENS Protocol’s main GitHub repository.
Note: Posts older than 4 weeks are archival—browse cautiously, as links may be outdated or compromised.
Thank you for reading! Goodbye. 👋

Everything happening in the ENS DAO — in five bullet points.
Eth.limo released their Q2 2025 update.
Steakhouse released their monthly accounting report.
The vote to transfer the .locker TLD to Orange Domains LLC is live.
The Public Goods Working Group funded the Vyper programming language.
Fireeyes is exploring incentive programs with the community.
That's all, thanks for reading! 👋

New editions — Bi-weekly on Tuesdays
Previous editions — Archived on the Forum
New proposals — Updates via Telegram
ENS DAO Dashboard — Available for public review
Submit your updates! — project updates wanted!
ENS Labs: Baseapp Activation, Case Studies, ETHAccra Recap
Community: .locker TLD Transfer, Remilio.eth, Virgil Griffith Update
Meta-Gov: Endowment H1 Report, Lighthouse Labs Org Standard, Anticapture Updates
Ecosystem: EIP-7828 Resolver, Builder Highlights, Service Provider Updates
Public Goods: OS Builder Highlights, Firefly Wallet, Urbe Napoli
Refer to the official ENS DAO Calendar for meeting links and times. Any other sources are not guaranteed to be accurate. Access the ENS Calendar here.
The ENS DAO Term 6 Dashboard is a comprehensive guide to ENS DAO’s governance and activities. It includes key resources such as the ENS DAO Constitution, meeting schedules via the ENS DAO Calendar, and updates through the bi-weekly ENS DAO Newsletter.
The dashboard outlines proposal processes, thresholds for social and executable proposals, governance environments, working group schedules, and details on Requests for Proposal (RFPs) for compensated tasks. It aims to enhance transparency, understanding, and participation within the ENS ecosystem.
Discover how the ENS DAO works and how you can to become involved. View the official guide to ENS governance, proposals, and participation. Whether you’re new or experienced, everything you need to start is here.
→ Visit ENS DAO Basics: basics.ensdao.org
Anticapture’s analysis reveals how vulnerable the DAO is to governance capture. Using 30+ signals—from voting concentration to Council delegate overlap—it explains the logic behind the Security Council and surfaces key risks to decentralization.
→ View the dashboard: Anticapture
Awesome ENS is a curated GitHub repo collecting key ENS tools, dapps, docs, and community resources. It’s useful for anyone building with or learning about ENS—perfect starting point for devs, researchers, and DAO contributors.
Proposals are how changes are made to the DAO’s status quo. They can be submitted by anyone meeting the required $ENS thresholds and are voted on by delegates based on their token holdings. If a proposal reaches quorum and passes, it is ratified and implemented.
For detailed governance information, refer to the Governance Documentation.
Proposal Thresholds:
10k ENS: Required for a social proposal — an agreement of the DAO on matters that cannot be enforced onchain.
100k ENS: Required for an executable proposal — involves smart contract operations executed by DAO-controlled accounts.
The Proposal Bulletin summarizes Term 6 proposals—both onchain (executable) and offchain (social)—from January 2025 to December 2025. It covers key actions like ETH-to-USDC conversions, endowment expansions, service provider funding, and governance process improvements.
The bulletin aims to enhance transparency and keep stakeholders informed about DAO decisions Details of current proposals will be provided
[EP 6.15] [Social] Enhancing ENS Governance with Tally’s Enterprise Support
[EP 6.16] [Executable] Enable L2 Reverse Registrars and new .eth registrar controller
To view past proposals, visit Agora.
To shape the future of ENS, become a delegate: delegate your tokens (even to yourself), post your intro on the forum, add delegate records to your ENS name, and set it as your Primary ENS. Manage your profile at delegate.ens.domains
Orange Domains has submitted a proposal to manage the .locker TLD within ENS. Backed by ICANN accreditation and cross-chain infra (BTC, ETH, Solana), the plan enables seamless DNS-to-ENS integration, unlocking Web3 utility for millions of Web2 domain users.
View Proposal → Transfer .locker TLD to Organge Domains LLC
0xbeary proposes migrating ENSNode V2 to Squid SDK for faster sync, multichain support, and long-term scalability. Benchmarks show 26x speed gains over Ponder. With 200+ networks supported and modular, decentralized design, Squid aligns with ENS’s future demands.
View Proposal → Migrate ENSNode V2 to Squid SDK
ENS Labs was active at ethCC and ETHGlobal, hosting talks and workshops. L2 Primary Name support is now live. ENSv2 development continues, and the growth team has begun releasing case studies for enterprise adoption.
ENS launched the ENSv2 Hub: a central resource for the next evolution of ENS. It features roadmaps, specs, product previews & updates about the new registry, smart contracts, Namechain & more — all built openly for the next billion users.
→ Visit: ENSv2 Hub
ENS is running a short survey to understand how developers are building with ENS and where support can improve. Your input helps shape the future of docs, tooling, and features across the protocol.
→ Take the survey: enslabs.notion.site
ENS highlights their case study on PayPal and Venmo’s ENS integration.
Built into crypto flows, ENS simplifies transactions—replacing 0x addresses with human-readable .eth names, boosting trust and usability.
Read the Case Study → Paypal x ENS
ENS powers all usernames on the Base App, with over 750,000 .base.eth handles registered. This integration showcases the practical use of ENS for cross-platform, onchain identity.
Read the Case Study → Base x ENS
GoDaddy now supports ENS, letting users link .com, .org, and .xyz domains directly to crypto wallets—no .eth needed. Features include one-click wallet records, gasless DNSSEC, and seamless fusion of Web2 domains with onchain identity.
Read the Case Study → GoDaddy x ENS
ENS finalized core ENSv2 contracts & SDK, launched the ENSv2 Hub, dSheets integration, and two new apps. Renewals overtook registrations as revenue driver. Growth in social, ecosystem & ICANN presence. Team expanded to 31 as ENSv2 gears up for launch.
→ View the full report: ENS Labs Quarterly Report - Q2 2025
ENS generated $3.77m in Q2 2025, down from $4.94M in Q1 2025
$2.61m came from registration revenue
$499k from premium name sales
$669k from DeFi returns
June 2025 closed with $1.43M in total revenue
→ View the full report: ENS Revenue Report - Q2 2025
ENS Labs, the non-profit organization responsible for the core software development of the Ethereum Name Service (ENS) is searching for professionals to fill the following roles:
Integrations Engineer (Web3)
Technical Writer
Frontend Developer
→ Explore open roles: Careers at ENS Labs
Last Wednesday, Ses.eth, DevRel Lead at ENS Labs, led a hands-on workshop at ETHAccra: ENS Under the Hood: Naming, Identity & Interoperability.
Builders explored ENS architecture, digital identity, and cross-platform use cases. ENS Labs proudly sponsored ETHAccra as a Gold Sponsor.
Consensys’ new report frames Ethereum as the foundation for digital trust. Members of ENS Labs wesd.eth and mely.eth highlight how ENS supports verifiability, identity, and coordination—positioning ENS as the context layer for Ethereum’s trust machine.
Read the Report → Ethereum is Trustware
Matoken.eth, Core Developer at ENS Labs, will take the stage at EDCON2025 in Osaka to share insights on data analytics. Don’t miss his talk this September!
Full schedule here → edcon.io
ENS Labs COO, Katherine.eth, acknowledged Base App’s recent launch and its integration of ENS-based onchain identity via Basenames. She applauds Base for adopting a decentralized “everything app” stack with ENS at its core—marking a milestone for the onchain identity movement.
Ses.eth used their ENS name to claim 100 test $PYUSD on Sepolia via Google Cloud’s Web3 Portal.
Testnets like Sepolia and test-ETH now integrated. The future of dev-friendly infra is here.
Check out the faucet → Google Cloud
@Cryptotarzan19 announced the launch of .booe.eth, a custom ENS suffix for the Book of Ethereum community. It’s more than a name—it’s a cultural marker, a coordination tool, and a discoverable identity for every booeliever.
Check out the website → Book of ETH
YAP Global is hosting a Space on July 30th (4PM GMT / 12PM ET) to explore why Ethereum—despite its dev talent—struggles with messaging. Panel includes reps from ENS (mely.eth), Status, and YAP Global, moderated by The Block’s Zack Abrams.
July 30 at 12PM ET → Ethereum Turns 10
This draft ENSIP introduces a syntax like alice.eth@optimism to make ENS names chain-aware. It extends ENS resolution to both EVM and non-EVM chains using multi-coin support, checksummed identifiers, and a proposed onchain chain registry.
Review the Spec → EIP-7818 Resolver
Danch.quixote proposes splitting 5L+ ENS domains into 5–7L and 8L+ tiers based on price sensitivity and user behavior. 5–7L domains show higher price sensitivity and shorter registration durations, while 8L+ domains are linked to nickname use and long-term value expectations.
Join the Discussion → Pricing Policy Research
Are you integrating ENS into your stack, experimenting at the protocol level, or have a unique use you’d like to share? Consider submitting it for inclusion in the Newsletter. Share updates on projects, events, achievements, or community changes for inclusion.
→ Submit your segment: Project submissions
Forever Culture Fund has acquired the ENS domain remilio.eth via a private OTC deal. Framing it as a “permanent mark onchain,” the domain is now held in the group’s cultural vault—signifying symbolic preservation. “Remilio Forever,” they declare.
Baseapp is building the everything app—ENS integrated from day one. Move money, own your identity, access markets, and chat with friends—all on shared, open rails.
Re: Baseapp; .eth profiles now show the ENS icon, while FID profiles show farcaster.ethsubdomains. This signals a key integration by Farcaster. ENS is positioned to become the identity layer for SocialFi.
ensgoat.eth has launched a Wallet Prepunk Lookup tool. Enter any 0x address or ENS to instantly view its verified historical Prepunk domains.
Try it now → verify.prepunk.club
Rotki now fully supports EFP, developed by Brantly.eth. All EFP activity is automatically decoded and added to transaction history on Rotki—use Rotki daily to stay ahead.
Namik, CEO of megaETH—a real-time blockchain using extreme node specialization to remove gas limits and unlock continuous compute—has officially acquired mega.eth.
The name reflects the protocol’s ambition to build at Ethereum’s outer edge.
DAO Service Provider, JustaName, is inviting builders, devs, and explorers to test a fresh ENS onboarding flow—no clunky UX, no friction.
Smooth, contextual identity from the start. Tired of broken flows? Jump in and help shape what’s next.
Fill out the form → Google Forms
Internet artist schl0ms used a non-zero-width character to mimic threadguy.eth—a classic ENS spoofing tactic.
@gregskril.eth from ENS Labs urges devs: Always normalize ENS names! Use normalize()from libraries like viem to prevent spoofing.
@0xRaini announced a new deal: @DB3045 and the team at Hume—pioneers in onchain music—have officially secured Hume.eth.
Astrodavid.eth, DevX at Bonadocs and former Consensys Fellow, released a new tutorial videoshowing how to integrate ENS offchain subnames using Namespace
Brantly.eth highlights the composable nature of Ethereum’s identity stack:
ENS for usernames
Sign in with Ethereum for Authentication
EFP for social graph
ECP is live on Base via Interface—post, reply, react onchain.
Brantly.eth shared an update: Virgil Griffith is officially out of home confinement and now on probation (18–36 months).
While travel and work in crypto are still restricted, he’s free to live his life—and grateful to be moving on.
Talent Protocol has launched Creator Score—a new onchain reputation system that rewards impactful creators. ENS is deeply embedded, and EFP is part of the stack.
ETH.LIMO CEO Ben Gibbs testified under legal obligation in the Tornado Cash case, defending the principles of decentralized tech and web3 freedoms.
He reaffirmed ETH LIMO’s commitment to privacy and stated clear opposition to the government’s case.
@z0r0zzz just deployed zENS—send ETH to ens.zamm.eth and it auto-swaps half to ENS, adds ETH/ENS liquidity on Univ3, and deposits into a zAMM LP. No calldata. Slippage protection via selfbalance() + sstore4/:z.
View the Repository → sstore4
Validatory.eth reflects on giving BTC to a young Vitalik.eth during the original Ethereum fundraiser. From believing in Vitalik’s vision to supporting Ethereum since the genesis block—an OG still building for the future.
Devtoolsguild gave a shoutout to ENS for powering their smart contract infrastructure with human-readable names.
Explore their contracts → Devtoolsguild
Meta-Governance – @5pence.eth
Ecosystem – @slobo.eth
Public Goods – @simona_pop
DAO Secretary - @limes
The responsibilities of the Lead Stewards & Secretary are set out in Rule 9.8 and Rule 9.9 of the Working Group Rules.
SafeNotes is a public dashboard for viewing real-time ENS DAO treasury activity. It tracks outgoing payments from ENS Safe wallets—showing amounts, recipients, categories, and descriptions. Great for transparency and transaction review.
→ Review DAO Transactions: SafeNotes
ENS Ledger offers a dynamic Sankey chart tool to visualize DAO fund movements in ETH, stablecoins, and $ENS. Explore flows, click nodes for WG breakdowns, and view financial statements for any counterparty.
→ Track fund flows: ENS Ledger
The ENS Steakhouse dashboard is an interactive data portal on Dune Analytics that gives the ENS community transparent, real-time insights into ENS’s finances. It shows key metrics like revenues, expenses, treasury assets, and endowment performance.
→ View Dashboard: Dune Analytics
Limes.eth released the Q1 2025 Working Group spending summary:
Ecosystem: $268,520
Meta-Governance: $210,400
Public Goods: $110,030 + 14.9 ETH
→ Full report: ENS Working Group Spending Summaries
The vote to select recepients of the Service Provider Stream, as established by EP 4.7, has now concluded. Builders are entrusted with improving the ENS system, as chosen by delegates. Become familiar with each Service Provider by visiting their builder profle:
Working Group | Time | Schedule | Location |
|---|---|---|---|
![]() Meta-Governance | 2pm UTC | Tuesday |
The Meta-Governance Working Group provides governance oversight and support for working group operations through DAO tooling and governance initiatives.
With $115M in assets and 9.8 years of runway, the ENS DAO has achieved 3.54% APY and $4.92M in revenue through DeFi. Capital efficiency is up, but net income is tightening. Explore trends, financials, and future plans in the full report.
Review report → Kpk H1 2025 Review for the ENS Endowment
Did you know? $ENS holders can delegate their voting power to trusted delegates to shape the future of the ENS protocol. Use ENS Agora to explore and track governance activity.
→ Learn how to manage delegation: Guide Here.
Spencer Graham proposes using Hats Protocol to bring DAO roles fully onchain. Ideas include onchain elections, role-based permissions, and improved multisig control for Working Groups. Hats enables programmable orgs while preserving decentralization.
Join the Discussion → Opportunities to level up DAO Operations
Initial talks with the OpenBox team are underway to clarify positioning. A Google Form has been launched to collect questions from DAO members and the broader community.
Field your question → Google Form
Blockful is advancing ENS governance and security, including a beta for delegation notifications. The non-ENS treasury now exceeds delegated supply, reinforcing the need for a Security Council. Redundant frontends like Tally, Snapshot, and Blockful boost resilience.
View Governance Dashboard → Anticapture
Lighthouse’s first ENS-external meeting drew 10 participants. Regulatory concerns are rising, with public data publishing emerging as a key use case.
Review proposal → Making ENS the Standard for Organizational Identity
The Ecosystem Working Group strengthens the ENS Protocol by facilitating developer relations, identifying and funding high-potential projects that enhance ENS, and supporting ENS-aligned initiatives.
The Ecosystem Working Group is awarding retroactive grants to technically oriented projects that advance the ENS protocol. Grants are reviewed on a rolling basis and presented during weekly ecosystem calls. Apply via the forum.
ENS Ecosystem Stewards awarded 1ETH grants to MyTiers (crypto subs), POAP Privacy (anonymous minting), and Orbiter (ENS-Base linking via custom resolver). Additionally, z80.eth received a 3-year extension for their ongoing developer contributions.
YODL is building a payment protocol and app store for mini-apps tied to ENS. It supports global QR payments, wallet-agnostic links, and ENS-based webhooks. Now active in countries like Switzerland, Brazil, and Vietnam, YODL envisions ENS as the DNS for payments.
YODLpay website → yodl.me
ENScribe now integrates with the Open Labels Initiative. A new button on contract pages links directly to attestation data hosted on the Open Labels site, helping surface more context and transparency around contracts in the ENS ecosystem.
Read more → Open Labels Initiative
Namespace shipped a component library and subname wizard, migrated to Google Cloud, and launched a Raycast extension. Docs got a full revamp with AI features. Over 500 applied to join; 65k subnames minted via their SDK, now powering over 65k content hash records.
View the Report → Namespace Q2 Report
The Identity Foundation secured $500k in SPP2 funding and delivered on all quarterly KPIs. They expanded the Ethereum Identity Kit and EFP with new features and 14 integrations. At EthCC, they presented the Ethereum identity stack and finalized EIP-4361 efforts.
View the Report → EIF Q2 Report
Unruggable and JustaName are collaborating on AI tooling for ENS. A new ENSIP proposes a “root context” record—like an index.html—for agents to discover info about ENS names. One prototype uses an MCP server, and a live demo showcased this ENS context in action.
View the Repository → ENSIP Ideas
The Public Goods Working Group supports the Ethereum ecosystem by identifying and funding open-source development.
The ENS Builder Grants platform supports public goods projects in Ethereum and Web3. With 22 ETH granted across 19 projects, it offers milestone-based funding reviewed by Public Goods Working Group stewards.
→ Apply here: builder.ensgrants.xyz
Firefly hardware wallet is nearing launch, offering a quest, transaction data visibility, mod support (like GPS-based signing), and dev-friendly customization. It skips secure enclave for faster dev, supports address books, and shows domains during signing.
Join the Telegram Group → Sparkles Chat
Fadhil led a two-month pilot program across 7 African countries, supporting onboarding via DevFest events, hackathons, and conferences. The initiative tackled DAOs, tokenization, and policy awareness. A Notion hub and reports provide access to the full journey.
Notion Hub → Africa Pilot
@ndeto.eth shared updates on EIP-7828, a standard enabling ENS to resolve addresses across chains using coin types. A working resolver and registry model enhance L2 interoperability, UX, and decentralization. Built atop ERC-7828, the system treats ENS as core infra.
View the presentation → 7828 Resolver
Urbe’s five-day bootcamp in Napoli brought 12 learners into Web3 with support from Base. Future programs will feature beginner-friendly and AI-guided content. Despite declining engagement since 2022, the team remains focused on Italy’s potential as a Web3 hub.
ENS DAO offers several resources for understanding and participating in its ecosystem:
ENS DAO Basics: Learn about the ENS DAO, including voting and governance.
Support Docs: Guidance on registration, renewals, and development aspects.
Governance Docs: Insights into governance structure.
ENS Agora: Governance hub for proposal review and voting.
ENS Repository: The ENS Protocol’s main GitHub repository.
Note: Posts older than 4 weeks are archival—browse cautiously, as links may be outdated or compromised.
Thank you for reading! Goodbye. 👋
![]() Ecosystem | 3pm UTC | Thursday |
![]() Public Goods | 4pm UTC | Thursday |
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