source: CoinDesk: Bitcoin, Ethereum, Crypto News and Price Data
2025. Aug. 06. 17:34
Welcome to The Protocol, CoinDesk's weekly wrap-up of the most important stories in cryptocurrency tech development. I'm Margaux Nijkerk, CoinDesk’s Tech & Protocols reporter.
In this issue:
Solana’s Seeker Phone Fixes Saga’s Flaws With Usability UpgradeBase Says Sequencer Failure Caused Block Production Halt of 33 MinutesSolana's Jito Proposes Routing 100% of Block Engine Fees to DAO TreasuryCardano Community Approves $70M Core Dev Budget, Boosting ADA ProspectsUnknown block type "divider", specify a component for it in the `components.types` optionSOLANA SEEKER PHONE BEGINS SHIPPING: The Solana Seeker phone is not your average smartphone, nor does it want to be. Building on the lessons of its predecessor, the Saga, Solana Mobile’s newest device reimagines what a crypto-native phone can be. Smaller, lighter and boasting a longer-lasting battery than its predecessor, the Seeker aims to improve on the user experience while doubling down on mobile-first crypto usability. Out of the box, it’s clear who this device is for: active Solana users who regularly transact on-chain, with the design focusing on everything crypto-first. With 150,000 phones pre-ordered from over 50 countries and at a price point of $500 the Seeker wants to bring Solana ecosystem participants the ability to transact on the go in a matter of seconds. If you’re someone who frequently uses Solana, the Seeker might feel like it was built specifically for you. However, this phone is not intended for the casual crypto user. “If you're somebody who transacts at least once a week, frankly, then you might not be a full on power user, but you're at least a regular enough user that Seeker makes sense,” Emmett Hollyer, the general manager at Solana Mobile, told CoinDesk in an interview. Read CoinDesk’s full review of the phone here. — Margaux Nijkerk Read more.
POST-MORTEM ON BASE’S BLOCK PRODUCTION HALT : Block production on Coinbase’s (COIN) Base network halted for 33 minutes early Tuesday following a sequencer failover that didn’t recover as expected, developers said in a post-mortem report. The outage began at 06:07 UTC on Aug. 5, when the active sequencer fell behind due to congestion from on-chain activity. While Base’s Conductor module — a core component of the OP Stack designed to maintain uptime — correctly attempted to shift leadership to a standby sequencer, the new instance had not been fully provisioned and was unable to produce blocks. Since it couldn’t automatically switch again, production stalled until engineers manually fixed the issue. The network was fully recovered by 06:40, according to the report. To avoid reorganization risks — that is, when a blockchain temporarily rewrites history by replacing confirmed blocks with alternative ones — the team paused Conductor and coordinated a controlled leadership transition. This process contributed to the length of the outage. The outage highlighted a key operational risk in layer-2 rollup networks that rely on centralized sequencers to order and submit transactions. These systems remain dependent on rapid failover mechanisms and complete provisioning, and a single-point gap in this chain can lead to full network stalls. — Shaurya Malwa Read more.
NEW JITO PROPOSAL FOR REROUTING BLOCK ENGINE FEES: Jito Labs put forward a new governance proposal, called JIP-24, aimed at decentralizing the network further by routing all its Block Engine and Block Assembly Marketplace (BAM) fees directly to the Jito DAO treasury. If approved, the DAO would assume control over protocol revenue streams, directing them to the network's JTO tokenholders. This, in turn, would reduce Jito Labs' influence over the network of the same name, with a DAO subgroup taking on a greater role in development. Jito Labs hopes the change will ultimately boost the Jito token's value. Currently, rewards from Jito’s Block Engine are split evenly — 3% to Jito Labs and 3% to the DAO. JIP-24 would eliminate the split, sending the full 6% of fees, along with all future BAM-related revenue, to the DAO treasury permanently. “This proposal reflects the commitment of the Jito ecosystem to ensure that protocol fees accrue directly to the token holders as optimally as possible and cements the DAO as central to the technical and economic governance of the Jito Network,” the Jito Labs team wrote in their proposal. — Margaux Nijkerk Read more.
CARDANO CORE DEVS GET $70M BUDGET : Cardano’s core development team, Input Output Global (IOG), secured approval for a $71 million treasury allocation to fund 12 months of network upgrades following a drawn-out governance vote that drew concerns around transparency, accountability and cost. The proposal passed with 74% in favor and authorizes the disbursement of 96 million ADA, or roughly 13% of the protocol’s treasury, to IOG. Payments will be milestone-based and overseen by Intersect, a member-driven governance body. Smart contracts and an independent committee will add additional oversight, IOG said. Key deliverables include Hydra, a layer-2 scaling product for faster and cheaper transactions, and Project Acropolis, which aims to re-architect the Cardano node for greater modularity and ease of developer onboarding. The team also plans to reduce memory usage and improve operational costs for validators. Such implementations can eventually lead to increased developer activity and new use cases on the Cardano network, contributing to demand for ADA, the network’s gas token. — Shaurya Malwa Read more.
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