
A hidden threat to ENS: Uncovering and solving a major governance risk
Special thanks to Avsa, Spence, Guiriba, Zeugh and Danimim for discussion and review throughout the whole process.“Security is always excessive until it’s not enough.” — Robbie SinclairIt's widely recognized that ENS is vital as the backbone of decentralized identity and enhanced UX on Ethereum. It's one of the most impactful and sustainable organizations while also strongly funding public goods.Given ENS's critical role in the ecosystem, ensuring its security and stability is ...

End-to-End Anticapture: The DAOs You're In Might Be at Risk
Governance Security needs to become a trend before governance attacks do.Governance attacks are happening—way too oftenWe’re watching governance attacks happen right in front of us—more often than anyone would like to admit. The worst part? Measures are usually reactionary. Emergency patches. Quick fixes. Or, worse, centralized responses to prevent entire treasuries from being drained. In some cases, the DAOs just vanish. https://x.com/CryptoChiefNews/status/1892574424127160388DAOs built grea...

Anatomy and antidote for Compound War
Authors: alextnetto.eth, guiriba.eth, 0xneves.eth, zeugh.eth, danimim.ethTimelineMay 6 - Unexpected proposalHumpy and the Golden Boys presented a proposal to invest 5% of Compound's tokens in a strategy called goldCOMP, submitting it directly on-chain and then posting it in the forum. It works like a wrapped COMP: the tokens are deposited in a contract and return goldCOMP. The proposal aimed to get 92K COMP from Compound to provide the initial liquidity for goldCOMP. The COMP provided by...
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A hidden threat to ENS: Uncovering and solving a major governance risk
Special thanks to Avsa, Spence, Guiriba, Zeugh and Danimim for discussion and review throughout the whole process.“Security is always excessive until it’s not enough.” — Robbie SinclairIt's widely recognized that ENS is vital as the backbone of decentralized identity and enhanced UX on Ethereum. It's one of the most impactful and sustainable organizations while also strongly funding public goods.Given ENS's critical role in the ecosystem, ensuring its security and stability is ...

End-to-End Anticapture: The DAOs You're In Might Be at Risk
Governance Security needs to become a trend before governance attacks do.Governance attacks are happening—way too oftenWe’re watching governance attacks happen right in front of us—more often than anyone would like to admit. The worst part? Measures are usually reactionary. Emergency patches. Quick fixes. Or, worse, centralized responses to prevent entire treasuries from being drained. In some cases, the DAOs just vanish. https://x.com/CryptoChiefNews/status/1892574424127160388DAOs built grea...

Anatomy and antidote for Compound War
Authors: alextnetto.eth, guiriba.eth, 0xneves.eth, zeugh.eth, danimim.ethTimelineMay 6 - Unexpected proposalHumpy and the Golden Boys presented a proposal to invest 5% of Compound's tokens in a strategy called goldCOMP, submitting it directly on-chain and then posting it in the forum. It works like a wrapped COMP: the tokens are deposited in a contract and return goldCOMP. The proposal aimed to get 92K COMP from Compound to provide the initial liquidity for goldCOMP. The COMP provided by...
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We hit up Curitiba for the “Blockchain Weekend” at the end of September and jumped into three great events. We dove into governance, grants, and reputation, plus we ran an interesting ENS Workshop. It was the perfect opportunity to share insights with the enthusiastic web3 community in Curitiba. Here's a glimpse of how it all went down:

On Friday night, we got the chance to speak at an event hosted by the Brazilian ambassadors of the Stellar network. We started things off by giving a simple overview of blockchain. Since it was an onboarding event, and some people were new to the tech, we wanted to make sure everyone was on the same page.
Later on, we dove back into governance and introduced Trustful as a great use case. Trustful is all about collecting data to build trust and reputation in our privacy-driven world. The product helps to create a database within an ecosystem, tracking everything a “wallet” has achieved—like how much it has contributed, engaged, and added value. Therefore, each DAO or ecosystem can decide how they are going to use that information.
Right now, we’re deploying a version of Trustful on Stellar, and we got to show off a bit of how it works in real-time.


The next day, we headed back to the same bar from Friday—yep, we can totally run a workshop on Ethereum and its services in a pub! The goal of the Blockchain Weekend was to deliver quality blockchain content in laid-back settings, so we could connect more with the participants—and have fun doing what we love.
So, back to the workshop; it was a sunny Saturday, and Alex and Lucas were all set to lead the ENS session. They started from scratch, covering everything from an introduction to Ethereum concepts, its addresses, and comparisons between DNS and ENS, all the way to contract architecture and buying an ENS domain on the testnet.
We’d already presented this in other cities, and it was awesome to bring it to Curitiba. During the happy hour after the presentation, we exchanged more project ideas with the participants.


To wrap up the weekend on a high note, we headed to a board game shop on Sunday! It might sound a bit odd, but governance and grants have a lot in common with board games. You need strategies, coordination, and communication because things can fall apart if someone isn't on the same page.
In a partnership between Trustful (by Blockful) and the Cartographers Syndicate, we hosted this event to cover a few grants-related topics. Alex and Novak did a brilliant overview of how governance works within DAOs with various examples and introduced what grants are all about.
The downside of grants is that, without a standard model, each ecosystem creates its grant opportunities in its own way, which can be confusing and often frustrating for applicants. But that's the problem Cartographers aim to solve. Dani explained how the group seeks to improve this funding system by bringing together experts to collaborate, share ideas, and promote innovation, creating records, encouraging research, and testing new methods.
With that in mind, we also organized a group activity to brainstorm solutions for the biggest challenges in the grant system. And here's the kicker: the winning team walked away with an extra 20 USD in their wallet.

Pretty cool for a Sunday afternoon, don't you think?
We were really happy to spend these days in Curitiba and to hang out with everyone who participated in the events. We exchanged a lot of ideas—and even had some open-source contributions to the ENS project, which is incredibly valuable for the entire community. We're very grateful for that!
Thank you to everyone who joined us these days, and we hope to be part of more events soon!
We hit up Curitiba for the “Blockchain Weekend” at the end of September and jumped into three great events. We dove into governance, grants, and reputation, plus we ran an interesting ENS Workshop. It was the perfect opportunity to share insights with the enthusiastic web3 community in Curitiba. Here's a glimpse of how it all went down:

On Friday night, we got the chance to speak at an event hosted by the Brazilian ambassadors of the Stellar network. We started things off by giving a simple overview of blockchain. Since it was an onboarding event, and some people were new to the tech, we wanted to make sure everyone was on the same page.
Later on, we dove back into governance and introduced Trustful as a great use case. Trustful is all about collecting data to build trust and reputation in our privacy-driven world. The product helps to create a database within an ecosystem, tracking everything a “wallet” has achieved—like how much it has contributed, engaged, and added value. Therefore, each DAO or ecosystem can decide how they are going to use that information.
Right now, we’re deploying a version of Trustful on Stellar, and we got to show off a bit of how it works in real-time.


The next day, we headed back to the same bar from Friday—yep, we can totally run a workshop on Ethereum and its services in a pub! The goal of the Blockchain Weekend was to deliver quality blockchain content in laid-back settings, so we could connect more with the participants—and have fun doing what we love.
So, back to the workshop; it was a sunny Saturday, and Alex and Lucas were all set to lead the ENS session. They started from scratch, covering everything from an introduction to Ethereum concepts, its addresses, and comparisons between DNS and ENS, all the way to contract architecture and buying an ENS domain on the testnet.
We’d already presented this in other cities, and it was awesome to bring it to Curitiba. During the happy hour after the presentation, we exchanged more project ideas with the participants.


To wrap up the weekend on a high note, we headed to a board game shop on Sunday! It might sound a bit odd, but governance and grants have a lot in common with board games. You need strategies, coordination, and communication because things can fall apart if someone isn't on the same page.
In a partnership between Trustful (by Blockful) and the Cartographers Syndicate, we hosted this event to cover a few grants-related topics. Alex and Novak did a brilliant overview of how governance works within DAOs with various examples and introduced what grants are all about.
The downside of grants is that, without a standard model, each ecosystem creates its grant opportunities in its own way, which can be confusing and often frustrating for applicants. But that's the problem Cartographers aim to solve. Dani explained how the group seeks to improve this funding system by bringing together experts to collaborate, share ideas, and promote innovation, creating records, encouraging research, and testing new methods.
With that in mind, we also organized a group activity to brainstorm solutions for the biggest challenges in the grant system. And here's the kicker: the winning team walked away with an extra 20 USD in their wallet.

Pretty cool for a Sunday afternoon, don't you think?
We were really happy to spend these days in Curitiba and to hang out with everyone who participated in the events. We exchanged a lot of ideas—and even had some open-source contributions to the ENS project, which is incredibly valuable for the entire community. We're very grateful for that!
Thank you to everyone who joined us these days, and we hope to be part of more events soon!
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