
kremertom
@kremertom
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction
We are indeed currently in the process of large changes to EF leadership structure, which has been ongoing for close to a year. Some of this has already been executed on and made public, and some is still in progress.
What we're trying to achieve is primarily the following goals:
* Improve level of technical expertise within EF leadership
* Improve two-way communications and ties between EF leadership and the ecosystem actors, old and new, that it is our role to support: users (individual and institutional), app devs, wallets, L2s
* Bring in fresh talent, improve execution ability and speed
* Become more actively supportive of app builders, and make sure important values and inalienable rights (esp privacy, open source, censorship resistance) are a reality for users including at the app layer
* Continue to increase our use of decentralized and privacy tech and the Ethereum chain, including for payments and treasury management
... 50 replies
267 recasts
1030 reactions
8 replies
64 recasts
176 reactions
22 replies
61 recasts
239 reactions
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction
80 replies
384 recasts
1278 reactions
14 replies
145 recasts
431 reactions
0 reply
1 recast
1 reaction
0 reply
1 recast
1 reaction
1 reply
1 recast
1 reaction
1 reply
1 recast
1 reaction
1 reply
1 recast
1 reaction
1 reply
1 recast
1 reaction
0 reply
1 recast
1 reaction
0 reply
1 recast
1 reaction

NETWORK STATE NEWS
I've thought about starting Network State News on Farcaster.
We'd start with $1000 in prizes each day for content broadly related to startup societies and network states. For example, "generate a 60 second vertical video review of the top 10 startup societies", where the grand prize winner gets $500 and five runner ups get $100 each. But we'd also issue prizes for open source code, for book reviews, for politics and history, and for breaking news.
It'd be social-native, because content would come fundamentally as public casts on an open social protocol rather than posts on a closed website. It'd be AI-native, because everyone would use AI tools like Claude, Midjourney, Runway, and Suno to compose every post. And of course it'd be crypto-native, because every post would be digitally signed, all payments would be in crypto, and everyone here would know how to cite blockchain evidence.
Most of all, it'd be an experiment in decentralized global citizen journalism. Should we do it? 28 replies
47 recasts
248 reactions
1 reply
0 recast
0 reaction
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction
1 reply
0 recast
0 reaction