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en su mayoría estoy de acuerdo con esto. con la salvedad de que usar celestia para DA (leer ancho de banda) no implicará que tengan que apostar por TIA, pero podría resultar en ahorros significativos de costos y beneficios de interoperabilidad con el tiempo
de la misma manera que usar aws o azure no implica que tengan que apostar por AMZN o MSFT
el actual impulso corporativo hacia cadenas independientes no es realmente una señal de que los rollups no sean el objetivo final en mi opinión, sino más bien una señal de que las bases actuales para ellos no son lo suficientemente buenas
por ejemplo, en el caso de ethereum: da no está escalando ni cerca de lo suficientemente rápido para sus ambiciones (y hay un riesgo de plataforma aquí debido a desafíos técnicos y preguntas abiertas), la lentitud en la finalización es un problema, los juegos de alineación maxi (por ejemplo, puente canónico = rollup) son una distracción en el mejor de los casos (y en su mayoría restan valor a la construcción de un gran producto), todos los rollups (aparte de facet) son actualizables por administradores... podría seguir
de hecho, argumentaría que las bases que hemos construido son en gran medida ortogonales a lo que realmente se necesita
entre paréntesis, AWS obtiene la mayor parte de su dinero del largo tail de negocios, y los efectos de red de interoperabilidad con las bases adecuadas son un potencial cambio de juego para las capas base aquí
pero aún tenemos mucho trabajo por hacer. la buena noticia, sin embargo, es que creo que veremos bastante pronto si la tesis de computación en la nube de celestia es direccionalmente correcta o no (es decir, en los próximos 3 - 12 meses)
para elaborar un poco, creo que el éxito de celestia está ligado a su capacidad para apartarse y permitir que otros creen y capturen valor -- ni siquiera deberías necesitar saber que está ahí. simplemente debería existir para proporcionar a las empresas y sus usuarios una mejor experiencia de producto en cadena (alto rendimiento + verificabilidad del usuario final — si se desea)
la propuesta aquí es que puedes emitir y liquidar donde sea que estén tus usuarios y ahorrar dinero mientras lo haces. no hay juegos de alineación que navegar. simplemente puedes concentrarte en construir un producto 10 veces mejor sobre una base maximamente simple
también es importante tener en cuenta que en los primeros días de aws / computación en la nube, el consenso de wall st era que esta era una apuesta loca por hacer. incluso personas conectadas como larry ellison no podían entenderlo



13 ago, 21:11
This isn't a 1 off. This is the start of a massive trend of real businesses building their own L1 blockchains. We're in talks with tons of other companies (including some major fortune 500s) who are considering launching their own L1s.
Years ago, enterprise blockchains failed and have been a 3rd rail for a long time. So why now? Why are mature businesses starting to build blockchains again?
And why are they building L1s above anything else?
There are two major reasons enterprise blockchains are coming back:
1/ Stablecoins are maturing: The finance teams we talk to are not afraid or unfamiliar with stablecoins anymore. Thanks to the Circle IPO and coming regulation, they see stablecoins as a powerful and safe technology that can help them cut costs, streamline operations, and earn more on their cash reserves or customer deposits. Most big companies are putting in place infrastructure to hold and move stablecoins. The U.S., Japan, and many other countries are pushing forward stablecoin regulations, and the dust is settling in our favor.
2/ Payments, not provenance: In the previous wave of enterprise blockchain hype most of the use cases were around provenance (aka tracking the origin and lifecycle of some multi-company process, like tracking raw materials across a supply chain or tracking the usage of donor capital). This was always a weird use case that could technically be done with a database. The problem was trust.
Now, the corporations we're talking to are looking at payments as their first use case, almost no matter what industry they're in. Most B2B and B2C payments providers and networks charge merchants and businesses high margins, take days to settle, and have real settlement risk. These problems are much worse as soon as you go cross-border or need to deal with FX. So for multinational corporations (especially marketplaces like Airbnb), in-house blockchain-based payment solutions could lead to billions in savings and better experiences for customers, employees, and gig workers.
And why are they building L1s, not L2s, or contracts?
1/ L1s are battle-tested and familiar to technical decision makers: L1s as a technology platform are well-understood and familiar after 10+ years of development. Ethereum, Bitcoin, Solana, Sui, Aptos -- every blockchain that people who don't work in the industry know about is an L1 (base maybe being the exception). Cosmos tech alone supports 200+ chains and $70b of assets across almost every vertical, and Hyperliquid, the biggest breakout of the last year, cemented this. (Plus the most successful enterprise blockchains like Canton are L1s).
L2s are exciting but they are still nascent and poorly understood by comparison. (Try explaining the difference between a stage 1 and stage 2 rollup or what a validating bridge is to the CTO of a consumer marketplace business). Decision makers who operate mature businesses usually don't want to take risks on emerging new platforms. They're already taking a big enough risk by getting into crypto, so they need to do it in the way that is most legible to their stakeholders.
2/ Minimizing platform risk: Most of these companies don't want to bet on ETH or SOL or TIA or anything else. They just want to bet on themselves. Building an L1 is the best way to do that. Remember, big companies usually use multiple cloud providers to avoid platform risk from AWS or Microsoft. And you can bet they see Ethereum or Solana as much riskier than those partners.
3/ Control and connectivity: Open, transparent L1s give these companies a great balance of control (so they can own their own platform) and connectivity (so they can plug into and interoperate with the broader crypto-corporate landscape as it evolves). Interop between L2s and other chains like Solana relies on 3rd parties, and often struggles from finality issues due to fraud / Zk proving windows and Ethereum's slow finality. L1s don't have this issue. Settlement happens instantly and deterministically, so interop can function the same way. That is a killer feature when combined with the ability to have your own walled garden where you implement any necessary KYC/AML and application specific logic.
Very excited for the next wave of the internet of blockchains
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