Episode Description
The biggest DeFi hack of 2026 wasn't a code exploit. It was a six-month North Korean social engineering campaign that ended with $285M drained from Drift protocol in 12 minutes. Circle had six hours to freeze $232M in USDC moving through its own bridge.
Should stablecoin issuers be liable? Is a 2-of-5 multisig really decentralized?
Austin Campbell (NYU Stern, Zero Knowledge Consulting), Ram Ahluwalia (Lumida), and Chris Perkins (CoinFund) confront the liability question, Chris's proposal for licensed "neoprivateers," and why US regulators wasted four years not building the framework we need now.
This clip is from a longer conversation on DeFi security, Iran's crypto war machine, and the token fundamentals crisis. Full episode here: https://youtube.com/live/SKcuC5kqQ7k We go live every Monday at 4:30 PM ET — subscribe to catch it live.
Bitcoin’s application layer, Citrea, launched its mainnet, expanding Bitcoin’s utility to privacy, lending, BTC yields, and more.
Citrea enables:
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cBTC: The first trust-minimized Bitcoin on a fully programmable platform.
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ctUSD: A native stablecoin for Bitcoin, allowing for unified liquidity.
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Bitcoin Capital Markets bringing demand, and utility to the Bitcoin Network.
Explore the Citrea Ecosystem.
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