
Introducing Fimio
Hey there, everyone!This is Omoju, and today, I am excited to introduce Fimio to you. Fimio has raised $2.19 million seed round led by Neo, with Redpoint Ventures, Protocol Labs, The House Fund, also contributing, and some dream angels like Nat Friedman and more. At Fimio, we focus on creating trust enhancing developer tools for Web3.Why We’re Building FimioThere are two things that drive me: lowering the barriers to the production of technical work, and increasing access to capital for all p...

Fimio API Alpha 0.0.1 with Data Supported by Spice AI
This week we were thrilled to announce the release of our Malicious Smart Contract API alpha, designed to enable fraud detection and smart contract reputation management within web3 applications. 🎉 Our API is simple to use, yet incredibly powerful, providing developers with a checkpoint to ensure the safety and validity of their smart contracts on Ethereum. We’re also thrilled to share that one of the key ways our API can be so powerful is due to our proud partnership with Spice AI to suppor...

Adventures into D&D and Web3: Exploring Data Ownership and Portability
Call to AdventureBecause nerds are rarely nerdy for only one thing, along with everything else I really really like Dungeons & Dragons (D&D). D&D is a tabletop role-playing game where players create their own characters and embark on adventures in a world co-crafted with a game master. While the game began as a pen-and-paper affair, much of the content (e.g. lore, settings, monsters, spells, etc.) is now digital with platforms like D&D Beyond or Roll20 servicing this online audience. How does...
Bringing trust to the trustless web



Introducing Fimio
Hey there, everyone!This is Omoju, and today, I am excited to introduce Fimio to you. Fimio has raised $2.19 million seed round led by Neo, with Redpoint Ventures, Protocol Labs, The House Fund, also contributing, and some dream angels like Nat Friedman and more. At Fimio, we focus on creating trust enhancing developer tools for Web3.Why We’re Building FimioThere are two things that drive me: lowering the barriers to the production of technical work, and increasing access to capital for all p...

Fimio API Alpha 0.0.1 with Data Supported by Spice AI
This week we were thrilled to announce the release of our Malicious Smart Contract API alpha, designed to enable fraud detection and smart contract reputation management within web3 applications. 🎉 Our API is simple to use, yet incredibly powerful, providing developers with a checkpoint to ensure the safety and validity of their smart contracts on Ethereum. We’re also thrilled to share that one of the key ways our API can be so powerful is due to our proud partnership with Spice AI to suppor...

Adventures into D&D and Web3: Exploring Data Ownership and Portability
Call to AdventureBecause nerds are rarely nerdy for only one thing, along with everything else I really really like Dungeons & Dragons (D&D). D&D is a tabletop role-playing game where players create their own characters and embark on adventures in a world co-crafted with a game master. While the game began as a pen-and-paper affair, much of the content (e.g. lore, settings, monsters, spells, etc.) is now digital with platforms like D&D Beyond or Roll20 servicing this online audience. How does...
Bringing trust to the trustless web
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Reinvigorating! That's the word for my EthDenver experience. Maybe it was the thin mountain air. Perhaps it was the cool clime that made every moment outside feel like a new morning. But more likely it was the energy of the event itself. A packed conference hall is a thrilling reminder of how big, diverse, and passionate the web3 community is--and EthDenver is only a slice of it! Elbow-to-elbow with strangers, conversations uncountable with the same. Always trying to remember who's doing what, who knows who, and why you should know them too. It makes sense that the venue was a rodeo. It felt like it. Fast-paced, exhilarating, the slight smell of manure in the air.
Yet what stuck with me were the simple things. The small experiences like: congratulating a speaker on giving a great talk; that minor eureka moment you have when you completely understand what a project hopes to achieve; high-fiving colleagues you've only ever seen through a laptop camera; exploring an unknown city with long-known friends (shoutout to my best friend Victor at Osmosis); getting help from peers on things you might not understand (my loudest shoutout to the marketing council at Protocol Labs!).
Conference-scale events like EthDenver are important. They are the center everyone is drawn into and the center out of which numerous different smaller events emerge. The little coincidences, the chance meetings, the friends-of-a-friend... all the things that lead to brilliant collaborations you couldn't have previously imagined. These would not occur if enough people were not in the same space at the same time. But while it might be the big things that bring us together, I believe it's the small things that keep us going. Reinvigorated and ready to build out the future web3 promises. Yep, that's most definitely the word.
In case you missed it, you can see our Day 1, Day 2, Day 3, and Day 4 recaps here.
Reinvigorating! That's the word for my EthDenver experience. Maybe it was the thin mountain air. Perhaps it was the cool clime that made every moment outside feel like a new morning. But more likely it was the energy of the event itself. A packed conference hall is a thrilling reminder of how big, diverse, and passionate the web3 community is--and EthDenver is only a slice of it! Elbow-to-elbow with strangers, conversations uncountable with the same. Always trying to remember who's doing what, who knows who, and why you should know them too. It makes sense that the venue was a rodeo. It felt like it. Fast-paced, exhilarating, the slight smell of manure in the air.
Yet what stuck with me were the simple things. The small experiences like: congratulating a speaker on giving a great talk; that minor eureka moment you have when you completely understand what a project hopes to achieve; high-fiving colleagues you've only ever seen through a laptop camera; exploring an unknown city with long-known friends (shoutout to my best friend Victor at Osmosis); getting help from peers on things you might not understand (my loudest shoutout to the marketing council at Protocol Labs!).
Conference-scale events like EthDenver are important. They are the center everyone is drawn into and the center out of which numerous different smaller events emerge. The little coincidences, the chance meetings, the friends-of-a-friend... all the things that lead to brilliant collaborations you couldn't have previously imagined. These would not occur if enough people were not in the same space at the same time. But while it might be the big things that bring us together, I believe it's the small things that keep us going. Reinvigorated and ready to build out the future web3 promises. Yep, that's most definitely the word.
In case you missed it, you can see our Day 1, Day 2, Day 3, and Day 4 recaps here.
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