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Upgrades vs. Ossification, Relay Policy Clash, and Expanding Institutional On‑Ramps
06 September 2025
8 minutes read
Blockware Blockware
Citadel Dispatch Citadel Dispatch
TFTC TFTC
6 sources
Soft‑fork and node‑relay debates dominated technical talk, while banks and policymakers moved toward clearer institutional on‑ramps. Highlights include Nasdaq’s new approval rule, U.S. Bank’s custody relaunch, Japan’s potential tax shift, privacy wallet updates, NPUB Cash’s UX gains, and treasury‑company mechanics driving sustained BTC demand.

Key Developments

  • Nasdaq tightens listing oversight for share-for-crypto deals. Certain companies must now obtain shareholder approval before issuing new shares to purchase crypto; failure to comply can trigger trading suspension or delisting 32 31 30 . Hosts noted this could shape the playbook for “bitcoin treasury companies,” with MicroStrategy cited as the largest corporate bitcoin treasury today and discussion that stricter approvals might entrench its lead by raising hurdles for competitors 29 28 .

    Source: Simply Bitcoin — Hosts

  • U.S. Bank resumes institutional bitcoin custody using NYDIG as sub‑custodian, framing the restart as enabled by greater regulatory clarity and complementing ETF‑era services 26 25 24 . Hosts added that large banks are moving to “meet customer demand,” even if some executives remain publicly skeptical 23 .

    Source: Simply Bitcoin — Hosts

  • Developer protections and market structure under the Clarity Act. Capitol Gains highlighted draft language to protect non‑custodial software developers from unlicensed money transmission liability (18 U.S.C. §1960), and noted material differences between House and Senate approaches to defining securities vs. commodities (decentralization “maturity” test vs. rights‑conferred test) 52 91 51 50 .

    Source: Bitcoin Magazine — Capitol Gains (hosts)

  • SBA guidance on debanking remediation. Following a White House executive order, the SBA instructed lenders to identify prior debanking practices and make reasonable efforts to reinstate affected customers 54 53 .

    Source: Bitcoin Magazine — Capitol Gains (hosts)

  • State‑level risk for miners. A Wisconsin bill offering tax exemptions to data centers explicitly excludes crypto mining facilities, creating a discriminatory carve‑out against bitcoin miners 45 43 .

    Source: Bitcoin Magazine — Capitol Gains (hosts)

  • Tokenized SEC‑registered shares launch on public chains; opportunity flagged to settle such assets over Bitcoin L2s so fees/gas accrue in BTC rather than “walled gardens” 39 37 .

    Source: Bitcoin Magazine — Capitol Gains (hosts)

  • Tornado Cash case watch. The government may seek a retrial on hung counts (money‑laundering and sanctions violations); appellate steps on the money‑transmission conviction are also in view 41 .

    Source: Bitcoin Magazine — Capitol Gains (hosts)

  • Release watch — Bitcoin Knots v29.1 (2025‑09‑03) was announced for users tracking Knots builds 33 .

    Source: TFTC — Rabbit Hole Recap (#373)

  • Ecosystem event — Mining Disrupt (Dallas) billed as the largest bitcoin mining expo, with manufacturers and mining leaders participating 84 .

    Source: Simply Bitcoin — Hosts

Technical Insights

  • Soft‑fork debate: what a new opcode set could unlock — and the risks. Janusz explained that soft forks are backward‑compatible changes to Bitcoin that could extend Script functionality while maintaining chain compatibility 97 83 . Bitcoin Script’s deliberate limits help avoid certain attack surfaces (e.g., malicious MEV), but constrain complex on‑chain contracts today 82 81 . Proposed changes like CTV could simplify user vaults and reduce interactivity for some L2 protocols 96 95 , while OP_CAT/native proof verification could let L2 state be verified via on‑chain contracts instead of federated assumptions 94 . Programmatic slashing via CTV is discussed for “bitcoin staking” schemes securing certain L2s, with fees/revenue dynamics for stakers and miners if L2s post data to L1 93 80 79 . Speakers cautioned about unintended consequences (e.g., MEV surfaces, miner centralization) and the growing difficulty of social consensus as institutions enter; timing any upgrade before ossification is a central strategic question 78 77 .

    Source: Bitcoin Magazine — “Can Bitcoin Succeed Without Another Soft Fork? w/ Janusz” (Janusz)

  • Mempool relay policy vs. consensus: what’s actually in dispute. TFTC outlined that the current fight is over node relay policy (mempool rules), not consensus rules — i.e., what your node relays mostly affects you and fee‑estimation quality 47 . Core maintainers worry that valid but historically non‑standard transactions (e.g., very large inscriptions/OP_RETURNs and sub‑1 sat/vB fees) are increasingly sent directly to miners, degrading the open mempool’s visibility and introducing competitive/centralization risks if broad relay is bypassed 46 44 . Hosts emphasized the value of an open public mempool as an anti‑permission feature and noted user options like blocks‑only mode or switching implementations/configs via tools like Start9 38 40 .

    Source: TFTC — Rabbit Hole Recap (#373) — Marty Bent & Matt Odell

  • Protocol posture from Bitcoin Asia: data carriage is unavoidable; focus on useful upgrades. Eric Wall reviewed that arbitrary data can be encoded into the chain in ways that are impractical to ban short of banning addresses/keys, and that fees/mempool pressure receded sharply (less than 1 sat/vB seen) after the surge from ordinals/BRC‑20s 99 71 98 . He argued the real risk is an “ossification camp” winning the narrative; energy spent fighting “spam” should be redirected to constructive protocol work 69 68 67 .

    Source: Bitcoin Magazine — Eric Wall

  • Privacy and wallet tooling updates. Wasabi Wallet 2.7 shipped a stabilization release and improved coordinator UX; updates now distribute via Nostr relays, Tor is bundled, and running a coordinator is significantly simpler, including prune/blocks‑only operation modes 92 36 . Sparrow Wallet was highlighted for robust PGP signature verification and strong personal‑node integration; users were warned that Sparrow is desktop‑only and to avoid fake mobile apps 35 .

    Source: TFTC — Rabbit Hole Recap (#373)

  • NPUB Cash and Cashu: instant Lightning addresses via Nostr, with safer custody options. NPUB Cash gives any Nostr npub a Lightning address without signup by using Nostr keys for auth; sats can be sent immediately and redeemed later 20 19 . In the base model the mint is the primary custodian while NPUB Cash temporarily holds bearer proofs; “pay‑to‑public‑key” can lock tokens so the service itself cannot spend them 90 18 . The NPUB X (v2) design stores mint quotes rather than pre‑minting fixed denominations so wallets control denomination/coin‑selection; a planned batch‑mint API will redeem many small receipts in one call 89 17 16 15 . NPUB Cash can be self‑hosted (Docker + DB) and already supports multiple mints; ecosystem work includes mint discovery/auditing via Nostr (NIP‑87) and aggregators like Cache Kom, plus POS demos and a BTCPay plugin to use Cashu as the Lightning backend 14 88 13 12 9 8 . Bolt12 client support exists; broader utility depends on mint/LN backend upgrades 11 10 .

    Source: Citadel Dispatch — Matt Odell & Egge

Market & Adoption

  • How institutions are getting exposure — and why treasury companies matter. Bitwise sees most allocators starting at ~1% and laddering to 2–5%, implying roughly $1.5T in additional BTC demand over a decade on a $100T institutional base 27 . ETF inflows remain strong as another on‑ramp 34 . Joe Burnett explained that many institutions are constrained from owning spot bitcoin directly and instead buy securities (equities/fixed income), making “bitcoin treasury companies” a bridge product; those companies use long‑duration credit (convertible notes, preferred equity) to avoid forced liquidations while acquiring more BTC 7 6 5 4 .

    Source: Blockware — Joe Burnett; TFTC — Rabbit Hole Recap (#373)

  • Feedback loop: equity issuance → more BTC. When treasury companies trade at a premium, they issue shares and buy more bitcoin, turning speculative equity flows into BTC demand; potential inclusion of such firms in major indices/ETFs can amplify this via passive flows 3 2 1 .

    Source: Blockware — Joe Burnett

  • Japan signals. Meta Planet, described as Japan’s premier bitcoin treasury company, helped normalize BTC as an investable asset; it was 2024’s top‑performing stock before retracing ~50% 62 61 60 . Its president is accepting payment in bitcoin for some condo units 59 . High capital‑gains tax (~55%) is cited as suppressing direct adoption; officials are reportedly weighing a cut toward ~20% and a spot bitcoin ETF in response to market demand 58 57 . Grassroots education and Lightning payments (e.g., Tokyo Bitcoin Base, a local food truck) illustrate peer‑to‑peer usage 56 55 .

    Source: Bitcoin Magazine — Capitol Gains (hosts)

  • Banks “meeting the market.” U.S. Bank’s custody relaunch with NYDIG is positioned as a full‑service institutional solution alongside ETFs; even vocal skeptics acknowledge servicing client demand 26 25 24 23 .

    Source: Simply Bitcoin — Hosts

  • Network snapshot. RHR reported block height 913,191 with an estimated +5.4% difficulty adjustment; average block time ~9m29s; a relatively small mempool was observed by the referenced dashboard 49 48 . Separately, Eric Wall noted a period of very low on‑chain fees (often <1 sat/vB) 71 98 .

    Sources: TFTC — Rabbit Hole Recap (#373); Bitcoin Magazine — Eric Wall

  • Custodial concentration and “economic node” influence. Speakers warned that ETFs, wrapped/custodial BTC and large institutional treasuries concentrate economic power in entities whose business models may prefer custodial pathways and resist upgrades that improve self‑custody usability 76 75 74 73 .

    Source: Bitcoin Magazine — “Can Bitcoin Succeed Without Another Soft Fork? w/ Janusz” (Janusz)

Notable Perspectives

  • What is bitcoin's core innovation? It is the creation of a digital bearer asset. Now, what does that mean? So we talk about peer to peer transfers. A peer to peer transaction is where I give you something, you take it and you walk away. We don't need a third party to monitor that. I don't give that same thing to somebody else. So if I took a gold bar and I handed it to you, Danny, you took it from me, you turned around and you walked away. You have absolute assurance that that gold bar which you're holding in your hand is with you. And there is no way that I can give that same gold bar to somebody else. Why is that? Because the laws of physics prevent that gold bar from existing in more than one place at the same time. Unless you're some kind of magician or I'm some kind of magician, let's put that aside. But, you know, it's the laws of physics that prevent that from happening, right? That's the physical world. And that's why we can have peer. We can. Throughout history, peer to peer transactions were possible. Now, if I sent you a photograph over email or WhatsApp, right, I could turn around and send that same photo to a thousand other people and they would have identical copies of that. Why? Because the photo is just informational. It is just zeros and ones. And information by nature is infinitely replicable at virtually no cost. And so the only way to ensure that I don't send that same photo that I sent you to a thousand other people is by having a trusted third party monitoring my WhatsApp or my email and confirming to you that, yes, Vijay has not sent that to anybody else. Right. And that's how it has been for decades, like whatever, since we had online digital information and so on. What Satoshi solved was that he enabled you and I to transact digitally, with you in Australia and me in London, as if we were physically present. It's as if I gave you a gold bar and you took it and you took it from me and you turned around, walked away. You can do the same thing digitally right now. That is a paradigm shifting invention. It has implications in the realms of economics, politics, philosophy and everything else.
    www.youtube.com

    Source: What Bitcoin Did — Vijay Selvam

    “There’s one property … a little bit more important … and that is the absolute scarcity.” 64 63

  • The cause of the fourth turning, the whole concept is manipulated money that gets worse and worse and worse, or cause of inflation, doesn't exist in a free market. And so. So what your. Your question about the fourth turning? If bitcoin stays decentralized and secure, that will never happen again, ever.
    www.youtube.com

    Source: Simply Bitcoin — Jeff Booth (quoted)

  • Can you please move on with your lives and do something that improves the bitcoin protocol? That's all I had.
    www.youtube.com

    Source: Bitcoin Magazine — Eric Wall

  • “The idea that you’re able to just run a node on a cheap computer and see what the transaction queue looks like is not a given … people should appreciate that we have a relatively open transaction queue for Bitcoin.” 38

    Source: TFTC — Matt Odell

  • “All the banks are trying to get into Bitcoin … they’re embracing this industry … if we get regulatory clarity, they can come into bitcoin in bulk.” 23

    Source: Simply Bitcoin — Hosts

  • “Pro‑filter: spam reduction significant; miner centralization minimal. Anti‑filter: spam reduction negligible; miner centralization substantial … quantify both.” 42

    Source: TFTC — Marty Bent (reading Neil’s framing)

  • “There is no spam on the bitcoin blockchain today. We lost.” 70

    Source: Bitcoin Magazine — Eric Wall

Emerging Themes

  • Upgrades vs. ossification: Multiple shows stress the narrowing window for protocol changes (CTV, OP_CAT) amid institutional entry and coordination challenges; others argue to stop “fighting spam” and focus on pragmatic improvements 78 77 69 68 67 . Source: Bitcoin Magazine — Janusz; Eric Wall.

  • Node relay policy matters: The mempool/relay dispute is about policy, not consensus, yet has real centralization and fee‑estimation implications if miners receive large classes of transactions out‑of‑band 47 46 44 . Source: TFTC — RHR.

  • Institutional on‑ramps are multiplying: ETFs, bank custody (U.S. Bank/NYDIG), treasury companies and potential index inclusion collectively broaden access; many institutions still can’t buy spot BTC directly, sustaining demand for compliant wrappers 34 26 25 7 . Sources: Simply Bitcoin; Blockware.

  • Custody, risk and UX: Shows reinforced self‑custody best practices (wallet verification, coordinator trust assumptions) while highlighting exchange/counterparty risks and the role of proofs‑of‑reserves and vaults 35 86 85 96 . Sources: TFTC; Simply Bitcoin; Bitcoin Magazine — Janusz.

  • Policy clarity trendlines: The Clarity Act’s developer protections and SBA’s debanking remediation signal movement toward clearer rules and operational fairness, while state‑level bills can still disadvantage miners 52 54 45 . Source: Bitcoin Magazine — Capitol Gains.

  • Tokenization and rails selection: Galaxy’s tokenized shares spurred discussion about migrating settlement to Bitcoin L2s so fees accrue in BTC, not alternative “walled gardens” 39 37 . Source: Bitcoin Magazine — Capitol Gains.

  • AI and scarcity narrative crossover: A mainstream AI voice framed bitcoin as the only provably scarce digital asset, reinforcing the “digital gold” thesis under accelerating technological change 22 21 . Source: Simply Bitcoin.

Qwen3‑Max (1T) debuts; Kimi K2 ships; Baseten raises $150M; on‑device and RL advances accelerate
06 September 2025
7 minutes read
AI High Signal AI High Signal
1 sources
Qwen3‑Max passes 1T parameters and Kimi K2 ships weights as inference and on‑device stacks advance; funding and chips signal a maturing infrastructure layer while new RL and post‑training methods deliver faster gains per token. Policy shifts and licensing changes may reshape access and evaluation practices.

Top Stories — why it matters: frontier capability, cost, and scale are shifting fast

  • Qwen3‑Max (Preview) passes the 1T‑parameter mark

    “Scaling works — and the official release will surprise you even more.” 83

  • Kimi K2‑0905 ships weights; pushes cheaper coding and longer context

  • Baseten raises $150M to scale inference for the AI app layer

    • Baseten closed a $150M Series D led by BOND (Jay Simons joining the board) with participation from Conviction, CapitalG, 01 Advisors, IVP, Spark Capital, Greylock, Scribble, BoxGroup, and Premji Invest; customers include Abridge, Bland, Clay, Gamma, Mirage, OpenEvidence, Sourcegraph, WRITER, and Zed Industries 118 117 92 91 90 . The founder’s framing underscores secular cost declines and rising usage:

    “I think the token price goes down and inference should get cheaper over time. And that really just means there is going to be more inference.” “Every time we lower prices or optimize models to make it cheaper, four months later customers are spending more anyway.” “Inference prices will go down, but if the world is run by AI in 10 years, there is going to be a lot of inference. It better be cheap.”
    x.com

  • On‑device embeddings get a lift (smaller, faster, multilingual)

    • Google DeepMind’s EmbeddingGemma targets on‑device use and tops MTEB for models under 500M parameters; supported by Hugging Face Text Embeddings Inference v1.8.1. Practitioners highlight small models’ importance for context management 136 135 134 .
  • Macro view: compute scaling likely to slow

    • Epoch’s analysts forecast fast diffusion now and broad cognitive automation by ~2035, but expect near‑term slowdowns in compute scaling due to investor uncertainty, overinvestment risk, and rising lead times; full transcript and episode links available 68 67 66 65 27 .

Research & Innovation — why it matters: new methods are squeezing more capability from less compute

  • Agentic RL for reasoning: rStar2‑Agent (14B) reaches frontier‑level math in 510 steps

    • Microsoft Research trained a 14B model with tool‑augmented RL (Python environment), reporting Pass@1 scores of AIME24 80.6, AIME25 69.8, HMMT25 52.7—meeting or exceeding larger models—and efficient reasoning with fewer tokens. The system scales output length in stages, filters/curates rollouts (GRPO‑RoC), and runs a dedicated code service handling ~45K concurrent tool calls at ~0.3s latency 35 34 32 33 31 30 29 28 .
  • Unifying post‑training: SFT and RL under one objective; Hybrid Post‑Training (HPT)

  • Vision‑language data at scale: FineVision

  • On‑device RAG plumbing: sqlite‑vec

    • A small vector DB extension for SQLite (C, no deps; MIT/Apache‑2.0) reports 1M×128‑dim queries in 17ms, 500k×960‑dim in 41ms, supports matryoshka slicing, 32× storage reduction via binary quantization, and runs locally/WASM—paired in examples with EmbeddingGemma and Ollama for offline personalization 98 97 96 95 94 93 .
  • Scheduling for prefill/decode architectures: ByteDance’s HeteroScale

  • Self‑supervised vision backbone: Meta’s DINOv3

    • A 6.7B ViT trained on >1.7B Instagram images introduces a loss to preserve patch‑level diversity; Meta reports stronger embeddings for segmentation/depth. Weights/code ship under a license allowing commercial use but forbidding military applications 45 44 43 42 .
  • Reality check on coding benchmarks: LiveCodeBench Pro

Products & Launches — why it matters: users get immediate utility from new features and workflows

Industry Moves — why it matters: capital and strategy determine who ships at scale

  • OpenAI plans custom AI accelerators with Broadcom

    • Reports indicate mass production of an in‑house “XPU” co‑designed with Broadcom, targeting training/deployment (e.g., GPT‑5); shipping is slated for 2026 with a reported ~$10B order commitment 64 63 62 .
  • Cohere Labs leadership

    • Marzieh announced she’s stepping into the role of Head of Cohere Labs; peers called her a strong fit and encouraged following the team’s work 116 113 .
  • Inference operations and customers

    • Baseten’s $150M raise (see Top Stories) reinforces demand for managed inference; the company lists customers across healthcare, dev tools, and productivity 117 92 .
  • Enterprise AI adoption: Devin as a data analyst

  • Vector DB in production: Qdrant case study

Policy & Regulation — why it matters: access rules and licenses shape competition and research

  • Anthropic’s regional restrictions and data policy update

    • A blog update says the company now prohibits organizations controlled from restricted jurisdictions (e.g., China). Community posts question whether the move is safety‑driven or protectionist and note fast progress by Chinese open‑weight labs (DeepSeek, Qwen). Anthropic’s consumer terms also shifted to explicit opt‑in for training, with opted‑in data retained up to five years 132 131 130 128 129 .
  • Dataset licensing tightens: NVIDIA’s Nemotron‑CC‑v2

    • A widely shared thread highlights the “NVIDIA Data Agreement for Model Training,” which reportedly forbids use in open‑source projects, composing with other data, or even releasing benchmarks without permission 6 5 .
  • Litigation watch (reported): Anthropic settlement

Quick Takes — why it matters: fast signals for your radar

  • SWE‑rebench (fresh GitHub PR tasks, no leakage): snapshot results are lower than SWE‑Bench Verified because issues are newer and unverified—helpful reality check for agentic coding claims 101 100 .
  • FutureX leaderboard: Grok4 tops GPT‑5‑pro, ChatGPT‑Agent, Gemini Deep Think; open research agents (e.g., MiroMind 72B) perform strongly; full board posted 115 114 .
  • App store signal: 3 of the top 4 U.S. Productivity apps are AIs; Perplexity hit #4 within two weeks of an iOS redesign 106 105 .
  • AMD ROCm quality concerns: posts tally 200+ PyTorch tests skipped exclusively on ROCm and 200+ disabled; net +110 disabled since June, including attention/transformer ops; AMD team reportedly prioritizing fixes 146 .
  • GPT‑5 Pro coding: multiple practitioners report it reliably solves complex coding tasks after longer think time, though some note RLHF‑style small‑model errors on “real work.” Diversify models in orchestration/evals 49 36 20 .
  • Qwen updates: OpenRouter lists Qwen3‑Max‑Preview with no “thinking” mode 69 ; a user notes “Qwen 3 Max has no ‘thinking’, interesting” 99 .
  • Stealth long‑context: Sonoma Sky/Dusk Alpha (via AnyCoder/OpenRouter) advertise 2M‑token context 9 8 7 .
  • Math OCR for reasoning data: Marker/Surya report SoTA on olmocr, beating MathPix in an internal lab eval; examples show GPT‑5 symbol errors that Marker avoided 23 22 21 .
  • GPU performance deep dive: Modular’s Blackwell matmul Part 2 covers shared‑memory access and swizzling for throughput 13 12 .
  • Weights & Biases: tracing/instrumentation upgrades “especially useful for RL” are coming to Weave 24 .
  • OpenAI jobs platform: posts say an AI‑powered hiring product is targeted for mid‑2026, with plans to certify “AI fluency” 145 .
Agency, Strategy, and Security: Back Pain Mechanics, Sea Power, Free Speech, Home Security, Drone Wars, and Fiscal Risks
06 September 2025
8 minutes read
All-In Podcast All-In Podcast
Hoover Institution Hoover Institution
Tim Ferriss Tim Ferriss
6 sources
Five high-yield conversations distilled by theme: coaching back-pain mechanics and prevention-first home security; WWII sea power lessons and today’s drone wars; and free speech, fiscal risk, and biosecurity. Each episode includes key insights, quotes, and an embedded must-listen clip.

We grouped this week’s episodes into three themes so you can jump straight to what matters: personal agency (health and home security), grand strategy (sea control and modern drone warfare), and speech/governance (free expression, fiscal risk, and biosecurity).

Theme 1: Personal Agency — Your Body and Your Home

Episode: Is Your Back Pain Physical or Mental? (Peter Attia MD with Stuart McGill, Ph.D.)

Episode Overview

Host Peter Attia speaks with spine biomechanist Stuart McGill about the interplay of psychology and biomechanics in chronic lower‑back pain, emphasizing mechanism‑based diagnosis over imaging and coaching patients to control provocation moments that trigger pain 100 99 98 97 .

Key Insights

  • Imaging can’t reveal the mechanism of pain; a targeted physical evaluation can, often by asking the patient to demonstrate the provoking movement 97 91 .
  • Instrumented assessment (muscle EMG + 3D spine motion) can expose subtle triggers (e.g., a mid‑movement “clunk” causing sciatic irritation) that are fixable with coaching 96 93 .
  • Teaching patients to maintain muscle tone through the danger range can stop recurrent acute episodes; one coached case eliminated the “clunk” immediately and prevented future events 95 87 .
  • In a two‑year follow‑up of patients subcategorized by pain mechanism and given targeted prescriptions (including a “virtual surgery” pathway), 95% reported they avoided surgery and were glad they did 94 90 .

Recommendations & Resources

  • Ask patients to reproduce the exact movement that provokes pain; observe carefully for mechanical triggers 91 .
  • Use EMG and a 3D spine motion monitor when available to map the mechanism objectively 96 .
  • Coach to sustain appropriate muscle tone through the provocative arc to prevent shear/clunk events 95 .
  • Implement a structured, mechanism‑based program with compliance checks and follow‑up; consider a “virtual surgery” pathway before operative decisions 90 94 .

Notable Quotes

“If I’m crazy, I don’t deserve to live.” 89

“They stole my career from me, giving me that book, how to live with my back pain.” 88

Must‑Listen Clip

  • Watch the live instrumentation → provocation → coaching loop that solves a recurrent sciatic “clunk.” You’ll hear the setup, the measured finding, and the coaching that prevents the event on repeat.
    • Why it matters: It shows the full arc from mechanism discovery to immediate, teachable intervention that can eliminate acute flares 86 85 .

Episode: The Squatter In His Closet Changed How He Protects His Family (Tim Ferriss)

Episode Overview

A home‑tour shock turns into a practical playbook for prevention‑first security: choose where (and how) you live, harden your privacy, and favor defensive tools with margin for error, trained under stress 59 58 56 .

Key Insights

  • Prioritize prevention and privacy: carefully choose residence; treat privacy/doxxing risk as central to physical security 56 48 .
  • Tactics: purchase via an entity; never ship to your home; use a UPS/mailbox; red‑team your own discoverability 55 54 47 .
  • Controlled‑access buildings add layered security (fobs/front desk/elevator controls) 53 .
  • Digital behavior can undermine physical security (real‑time posts, family exposure) more than weak locks 52 .
  • For non‑lethal defense, spray offers range and forgiveness; tasers demand practice—train under elevated heart rate to simulate stress 51 50 49 44 .

Recommendations & Resources

  • Consider high‑rise/controlled‑access living if you have public exposure 53 .
  • Route all deliveries to a mailbox/UPS store; never to home 55 .
  • Conduct a friend‑led “stalker” red‑team on your online footprint 47 .
  • Carry pepper/bear spray for greater range; only adopt tools you’ll train with under duress 51 49 .

Notable Quotes

“All it takes is one crazy one.” 46

“Security is often overrated compared to digital security, frankly.” 45

Must‑Listen Clip

  • The prevention‑first playbook: location choice, privacy hygiene, entity ownership, mailbox strategy, and red‑teaming your footprint.
    • What you’ll learn: Low‑friction changes that materially reduce risk before you ever need a tool.

Theme 2: Geopolitics & Strategy — From Sea Control to Drone Wars

Episode: Sarah Paine – How Hitler almost starved Britain (Dwarkesh Patel)

Episode Overview

Sarah Paine (U.S. Naval War College) explains how maritime powers win by commanding seas, then prosecuting peripheral theaters; she traces the Battle of the Atlantic’s turning points—cryptanalysis, convoy doctrine, air cover, and new ASW tech—and applies those lessons to modern narrow‑seas dynamics 84 82 81 83 .

Key Insights

  • Maritime playbook: blockade first; expect continental commerce‑raiding; counter with convoys 82 81 .
  • Intelligence as tonnage: Enigma captures enabled evasive routing and may have saved up to 2 million tons of shipping 80 .
  • Tech/doctrine/production together closed the air‑cover gap (radar, hedgehogs, escort carriers, destroyer escorts), culminating in 41 U‑boats lost in May ’43 79 75 78 .
  • Peripheral operations, sequenced well, relieve the main front and overextend the adversary 77 76 .
  • Outcomes were a “package of many things”—remove any pillar (crypto, tech, alliances) and the battle looks different 74 .

Recommendations & Resources

  • Read more deeply, weigh evidence across sources (don’t rely on monocausal stories) 71 .
  • Study Mahan’s prerequisites for maritime power (moat, internal transport, reliable sea egress, coastal population, stable pro‑navy government) 72 .

Notable Quotes

But his idea is there's only one thing worse than fighting with allies, and that's fighting without them, because they'll be toast. You need these complementary capabilities, different locations, and coordinating it, to gang up on your continental problem.
www.youtube.com

“The United States adds hedgehogs… [they] deliver an elliptical spray of depth charges.” 75

Must‑Listen Clip

  • The Atlantic turning point: cryptanalysis enables evasive routing, while radar/hedgehogs/escort carriers flip the U‑boat war (including the devastating May ’43 losses).
    • Why it’s valuable: A compact case study of how intelligence, technology, doctrine, and production interact to decide campaigns 80 79 78 .

Episode: Goodfellows — Drones, Dictators & Debt: India Flirts, Ukraine Fights, Trump Takes on The Fed (Hoover Institution)

Episode Overview

Bill Whalen moderates Neil Ferguson, John Cochrane, and H.R. McMaster on India’s hedging between powers, Ukraine’s shift to drone‑centric warfare, sanctions leakage and Chinese support to Russia, U.S. industrial policy (Intel stake), and renewed questions about Fed independence and executive power 43 42 34 38 37 .

Key Insights

  • India’s “fear of abandonment” vs. “fear of entrapment” explains hedging with Russia/China; long‑term interests still point toward market democracies 41 35 .
  • The battlefield has “shape‑shifted” into a drone war; extended‑range FPV and swarms expand no‑man’s land and can favor Ukraine’s tech strengths over manpower 40 39 34 .
  • Sanctions bite less than expected; Europe’s third‑country exports and Chinese support bolster Russia’s war economy 33 32 .
  • Government equity stakes (e.g., 10% in Intel) invite historical skepticism: public capital seldom fixes what private capital could not 38 24 23 .
  • Fed “independence” is conditional; broader executive expansion (tariffs, agency scope) heightens separation‑of‑powers concerns 36 31 37 .

Recommendations & Resources

  • Accelerate rapid acquisition for drones/counter‑drones (edge compute, mesh comms; one operator controlling 30–40 drones) 30 22 .
  • Deep dives: Lupfer’s The Dynamics of Doctrine; Conrad Crane’s Bombs, Cities and Civilians; Mark Kloadfelder’s Beneficial Bombing; Frank Decoder’s forthcoming book on CCP wartime strategy 29 28 27 .

Notable Quotes

“It’s more and more a drone war.” 26

“It’s not about territory. Putin wants to make sure that Ukraine is not viable as an independent state.” 25

Must‑Listen Clip

  • Ferguson on how the war “shape‑shifted” into drones and why that improves Ukraine’s odds of holding out.
    • What you’ll learn: Operational implications of FPV/swarms and the procurement/industrial policies they demand 34 .

Theme 3: Speech, Governance & Economics — Free Expression, Fiscal Reality, Biosecurity

Episode: Destruction of Freedom of Speech and Death by Suicidal Empathy (Gad Saad)

Episode Overview

Gad Saad argues that freedom of speech must be treated as a deontological (absolute) value and warns that “suicidal empathy” misapplied to the wrong targets yields harmful policies; he cites UK arrests for offensive speech as evidence of eroding norms 67 65 68 .

Key Insights

  • Free speech as a principle: not contingent on feelings or content; either upheld for all or not at all 65 .
  • “Suicidal empathy” misdirects compassion (e.g., 137th chances for felons, blanket assimilation assumptions) with damaging downstream effects 64 60 .
  • Criminalizing rude/offensive speech (UK examples) signals a broader free‑speech problem 68 63 .
  • The cost of liberty includes protecting abhorrent speech (e.g., Holocaust denial) 66 .

Recommendations & Resources

  • Book: Suicidal Empathy (forthcoming) — promises deeper case studies and argumentation 69 .

Notable Quotes

“Freedom of speech is deontological, meaning you can’t say, yes, I believe in freedom of speech, but not if it hurts someone’s feelings.” 62

“Arguing that Ms. 13 gang members deserve more empathy than American vets is suicidal empathy.” 61

Must‑Listen Clip

  • Saad’s ethical framing of free speech (deontological vs. consequentialist) and why content‑based carve‑outs are corrosive.
    • What you’ll learn: How ethical frameworks shape policy stances on speech and their real‑world implications.

Episode: Senator Rand Paul — Tariffs, Debt, China, and a Warning for America (All‑In Podcast)

Episode Overview

Sen. Rand Paul (physician by training) covers deficits, tariffs as taxes, Social Security reform, trade’s mutual benefits, executive emergency powers, alleged COVID‑origin cover‑ups and risky gain‑of‑function work, Fed interest payments to banks, and systemic fragility 21 20 19 17 12 .

Key Insights

  • Tariffs are taxes and a relatively small revenue stream (≈$100–150B annually) versus multi‑trillion borrowing; emergency‑power use to set them raises separation‑of‑powers concerns 15 14 1 18 .
  • Social Security: favors gradual retirement‑age increases (e.g., +3 months/year to ~70) plus means‑testing rather than large upfront tax hikes 13 6 .
  • Trade is generally mutually beneficial; “we got richer and so did they,” challenging “we were ripped off” narratives 3 16 .
  • COVID origins & biosecurity: alleges a public/private messaging split by officials, calls for independent, conflict‑free review of gain‑of‑function (including classified programs) 17 4 .
  • Fed mechanics: notes large interest paid to banks (and some foreign banks) and warns the financial system operates on confidence (fractional reserve), amplifying crisis risk 12 11 .

Recommendations & Resources

  • Book: Steven Pinker’s Enlightenment Now; data tools: HumanProgress.org; Cato’s Steve Lincecombe’s work on long‑run income trends 9 8 7 .
  • Policy: reform emergency‑powers (sunset unless affirmed); create an independent commission to review gain‑of‑function research (civilian and classified) 5 4 .

Notable Quotes

“Every voluntary trade ever made in humanity… is mutually beneficial or it doesn’t occur.” 3

“I like to say that I’m part of the Leave Me Alone coalition… really, I’m part of the Leave Me the Hell Alone coalition.” 2

“There’s never been a more extraordinary coverup… [they said] in public the opposite of what they were saying in private.” 17

Must‑Listen Clip

  • The “house of cards” explainer: how fractional reserve and confidence interact with rising interest costs and Fed policy.
    • What you’ll learn: A concise risk map of how debt, banking mechanics, and policy shocks can cascade 10 12 .
Grain demand realignment, Brazil’s beef momentum, and early‑season risk management
06 September 2025
8 minutes read
农业致富经 Agriculture And Farming 农业致富经 Agriculture And Farming
Canal Rural Canal Rural
No-Till Farmer No-Till Farmer
10 sources
Prices diverged as corn held technical support while soybeans faced a China demand gap; Brazil’s beef exports set records as energy softened. This brief adds proven on‑farm practices, regional policy/logistics shifts, input market signals, and a seasonal outlook for U.S. and Brazil.

Market Movers

  • Corn (U.S.) — prices eased week over week but held key technical support. Futures finished down about 28¢ for the week, yet closed above the 50‑day moving average for a second straight week; resistance sits near 4.25–4.34 with potential pullbacks toward 4.07 if tests occur 74 73 32 . New‑crop export sales topped roughly 83 million bu in the latest daily flashes, and current price levels remain stimulative for exports, ethanol production, and feed demand 40 29 .

  • Soybeans (U.S. and Brazil) — the China demand gap is widening U.S. basis and pressuring cash, while Brazil’s near‑term exports accelerate. U.S. new‑crop soybean export book is among the weakest of the past decade, with some Northern Plains locations reporting cash bids under $9 and select facilities going no‑bid without Pacific Northwest pull; unknown‑destination new‑crop sales total about 133 million bu 41 36 42 28 . Brazil’s shipper association ANEC projects September soybean exports at 6.75 M t, up ~30.8% y/y 55 .

  • Wheat (U.S.) — futures revisited contract‑low areas despite solid demand claims. Analysts cite persistent, large fund shorts and note U.S. wheat is the “cheapest in the world,” even as global production increases from key exporters weigh on price 27 38 39 .

  • Beef (Brazil) — exports set a new August record (>268,000 t). U.S. tariff impacts were largely offset by higher shipments to China (+~50% y/y in August) and gains in Russia; Jan–Aug volumes rose from ~1.59 M t (2024) to ~1.83 M t (2025), with full‑year exports trending toward ~3 M t 22 5 56 .

  • Energy (global) — crude softened as inventories rose and supply expectations firmed. Brent futures fell to the lowest since Aug 20 on U.S. stock builds and OPEC+ supply signals; earlier in the week, flat crude prices were also down ~$2.50/bbl while refined product cracks stayed supported by outages 1 60 96 95 .

  • FX/trade (Brazil) — August trade surplus reached US$6.1B, aiding the real; the dollar slipped under R$5.45 amid calmer global flows, though political risk keeps volatility elevated 59 10 .

Innovation Spotlight

  • Short‑stature corn systems (U.S.) — Pression Smart Corn reduced plant height about one‑third, improving standability (shortened below the ear with protective leaf sheaths) and enabling late‑season access for fungicide/insecticide and fertility. Groundbreaker growers averaged ~39k plants/acre vs 34–35k conventional, with narrow rows beneficial but not mandatory; deployment totals ~85,000 acres across six states with expansion targeted toward ~250,000 acres next season 78 77 92 76 75 89 .

  • Early fungal detection network (U.S.) — a chlorophyll‑fluorescence sensor grid covering ~50,000 acres alerted growers an average 4.5 weeks before visible white mold symptoms, providing action lead time to protect yield 64 .

  • No‑till + cover‑crop compaction management (U.S./global) — a smartphone‑linked penetrometer system benchmarks rooting resistance; fields under ~200 psi are “ideal.” Users report no‑till with specific covers “mellows” soil; the tool is in 32 countries with real‑time mapping via free app and phone mounts 66 45 65 .

  • National cattle traceability pilot (Brazil) — 50 ranches are trialing ear‑button chip IDs with handheld readers to capture birth‑to‑slaughter data (723 head already enrolled at one pilot). A unified national database is due by 2026, ID rollout during 2027–2029, and full coverage of ~240M head by 2032, supporting sanitary certification, market access, and value addition 30 54 53 .

  • Forage & resilience (Brazil, semi‑arid) — Embrapa’s new andropogon cultivar BRS Sarandi plus gliricidia and palm forage were highlighted as drought‑adapted options for Northeastern livestock systems 63 .

Regional Developments

  • United States

    • Weather: historically cold early September brought localized frosts into the northern Plains; models indicate renewed cold fronts with risk around mid‑September. Eastern Corn Belt drought persists with below‑normal precipitation outlook into late September; soybean finishing rainfall remains limited 49 84 48 46 .
    • Logistics: Mississippi River stages at St. Louis/Memphis are trending down; light‑loading barges raises freight costs during peak harvest, stressing the supply chain 71 72 .
    • Policy: a federal court vacated part of the H‑2A job‑function wage rule; EPA withdrew stricter meat/poultry wastewater revisions; a narrowed WOTUS proposal aligned with Sackett is headed for public comment 83 82 69 .
  • Black Sea

    • Market risk: reports point to a worsening situation, sustaining uncertainty around regional grain flows 94 .
  • Japan–U.S. trade

    • Agreement details: Japan committed to an additional US$8B/yr in U.S. agricultural purchases; Japan imported about 512M bu of U.S. corn in MY 24/25 and was the No. 2 corn buyer behind Mexico 91 90 .
  • Brazil

    • Poultry access: the EU officially recognized Brazil as free of avian influenza, enabling resumption of chicken exports to EU member states 51 .
    • Producer finance: federal MP provides R$12B in credit to up to 100k producers in calamity‑hit municipalities; small (≤R$250k @6%), medium (≤R$1.5M @8%), others (≤R$3M @10%) with up to 9‑year term and 1‑year grace 52 .
    • Sustainability/credit enablement: São Paulo aims to validate ~200k CAR records (150k already), with completion targeted by 2026; CAR validation improves compliance and credit access 50 18 .
    • Corn outlook (Mato Grosso): IMEA’s first 25/26 estimate pegs production at 51.7 M t (−~7% y/y) on ~7.39 M ha (+~2%), with yield at ~116.6 sc/ha (−>8%); some northeast areas are shifting from sesame toward corn/sorghum 14 61 62 13 .
    • Corn ethanol: a R$2.5B plant announced for Rondonópolis will produce ~900M L/yr plus feed and energy, creating up to ~2,000 construction jobs and ~350 permanent, adding ~R$60M/yr to local revenue 12 11 .
    • EU–Mercosur: the accord advanced to final stages (signature sought by year‑end), with EU ratification rules noted; stakeholders caution that reciprocal agricultural market openings will require careful management 26 25 24 23 .
    • Planting window (Center‑West): sanitary fallow ends Sept 6 in MT, but forecasters advise delaying major soybean planting until late Sept/early Oct as soil moisture is <20%, rains are spotty through mid‑Sept, and soil/air temps remain hot; more reliable 100–200 mm totals are expected from late Sept into October 4 3 .

Best Practices (Actionable)

  • Soybean harvest timing & drying (U.S.)

    • Start slightly early (~14% moisture) and accept elevator docks if hauling direct; this typically nets better than waiting for ~9% due to shrink and harvest losses at overly dry moisture. For on‑farm storage, use automatic bin‑fan controls to bin at ~17% and ambient‑air dry to ~13% in ~3 weeks, reducing losses and avoiding dockage later 93 .
  • Corn planting date risk (U.S.)

    • PTI research identified “planting corn too early” (late Mar/early Apr) as a top money‑loser; conditions must be “about perfect.” Trials show planting a bit later avoids yield penalties, improving risk‑reward 44 43 .
  • Storage & logistics (U.S.)

    • Avoid ground‑piling soybeans; plan corn bagging where bin/commercial space is tight. Anticipate longer marketing windows for soy when exports are weak and crush demand is steady but not immediately large 35 79 .
  • Poultry: broilers (Brazil/global)

    • Critical first week: target ~5.5× initial chick weight by day 7. Monitor temperature, water/feeder height, feed availability and litter cleanliness; minimize noise and crowding. Climatized, phone‑controlled houses reduce labor needs and improve consistency on 86–90k‑bird sites 20 19 21 68 .
    • Fire safety: ensure robust electrical inspection/response protocols; a litter‑ignition incident was contained only by immediate action 67 .
  • Turkeys (China)

    • Don’t feed broiler rations to turkeys. From 3–6 months, growth requires higher protein and adequate Ca/P for skeletal development; practitioners upgraded broiler feed by adding calcium (e.g., shell meal), dicalcium phosphate (~+1.5%), and ~+6% protein meal, and used garlic periodically to support gut health and intake; results showed improved growth and reduced fighting after management changes 9 8 7 .
  • Grain‑bin safety (U.S.)

  • Biologicals (application essentials)

    • Target the pest location (e.g., apply under leaves for whitefly). Maintain RH >60% and avoid midday UV, which kills many fungal/ bacterial agents; use airflow/turbulence to deposit on leaf undersides when required 58 17 16 57 .
  • Soil compaction benchmarking

    • Use a field penetrometer; sustained resistance under ~200 psi indicates favorable rooting and trafficability targets 66 .

Input Markets

  • Biofuels & vegoil demand (U.S.) — biodiesel/renewable diesel imports plunged (biodiesel −94% y/y to ~2,000 bpd; renewable diesel −85% to ~5,000 bpd) after 45Z changes that restrict credits to domestically produced fuels; historically, credits are bid into feedstock prices, and policy‑driven shifts have already impacted soybean oil volatility 87 86 80 85 .

  • Energy — petroleum prices eased on U.S. inventory builds and supply expectations, supporting potential relief in farm fuel costs 1 .

  • Equipment — producers continue to face high machinery costs; examples cited include X9 combines and other large equipment roughly doubling since 2020, with 150‑hp tractors reaching ~US$250k 99 .

  • Fertilizer & machinery costs under tariffs (U.S.) — industry reports linked tariff policy to higher fertilizer and machinery prices, squeezing farm margins 98 97 .

  • Bio‑fertilizers/biostimulants — commercial offerings (e.g., seaweed/lithothamnion blends; balanced macro‑/micronutrient formulations) are promoted for root vigor and metabolic support; confirm registration and provenance when purchasing, and follow label conditions ( 2 15 ).

Forward Outlook

  • U.S. harvest logistics & risk — expect periodic frost threats across the northern Plains and continued Eastern Corn Belt dryness through late September; anticipate light‑loading on the Lower Mississippi if Ohio River contributions remain weak, adding freight costs and timing risk 49 47 70 .

  • USDA reports — September crop readings may not meaningfully pull headline corn yield off August levels given limited mature samples; later reports will integrate more ear weight and harvest data 31 .

  • Soy demand — absence of early‑season Chinese buys keeps U.S. basis weak, particularly in the Northern Plains/PNW corridor; ANEC sees strong September Brazil shipments, maintaining export competition near term 42 55 .

  • Biofuels policy timeline (U.S.) — EPA is expected to finalize 2026–2028 RVOs by Oct 31; the proposal expands biomass‑based diesel volumes by ~67% from 2025 levels. Treasury guidance for 45Z (with a North America feedstock ring‑fence and removal of ILUC penalty) would unlock stalled crush/renewable diesel investments 37 34 33 .

  • Brazil planting & weather — in Mato Grosso and adjacent Center‑West, consider delaying soybean planting until late September–early October to leverage the onset of 100–200 mm rains and avoid high soil temperatures; earlier (11–20 Sept) showers are expected to be light/spotty 3 .

  • Trade frameworks — EU–Mercosur approval steps continue (signature targeted by year‑end); Japanese commitments add near‑term U.S. export potential. Monitor U.S.–China negotiations, as retaliatory tariffs and purchasing directives continue to reshape soybean flows 25 91 6 .

  • Protein markets — Brazil’s beef exports remain on record pace despite U.S. tariffs, with China absorbing more product; U.S. cattle prices have corrected from contract highs and may see seasonal supply increases into Sept/Oct 22 88 .

Relay Policy, Covenants, and Client Updates Define Bitcoin’s Near-Term Path
06 September 2025
8 minutes read
Citadel Dispatch Citadel Dispatch
TFTC TFTC
Bitcoin Magazine Bitcoin Magazine
12 sources
Relay-policy disputes, covenant proposals (CTV/OP_CAT), and new client releases dominate this cycle alongside Lightning router economics, emerging ecash overlays, and an incident affecting the Blockstream app. We map the technical stakes, infrastructure health, and philosophical debates shaping Bitcoin’s near-term path.

Protocol Development

  • Mempool relay policy vs consensus rules. Current disputes are about node policy (transaction relay/mempool) rather than consensus validity. Core maintainers argue that certain consensus‑valid but historically non‑standard transactions (e.g., very large OP_RETURN/inscriptions and sub‑1 sat/vB) are being mined via out‑of‑band paths, introducing centralization risk (reduced visibility, poorer fee estimation for nodes) if default relay does not account for this 17 16 15 . Alternative implementations that relax filters aim to relay a broader set of transactions at the cost of accepting some centralization and estimation trade‑offs 13 .

  • OP_RETURN defaults context. Gloria Zhao reiterated that the recent OP_RETURN defaults discussion “has absolutely nothing to do with wanting arbitrary data stuffed in the chain,” pointing to the PR commentary for details 95 94 .

  • Arbitrary data can’t be reliably banned by policy alone. A conference talk summarized BitMEX Research’s view that encodings can embed arbitrary data (even image payloads) into standard structures like keys; preventing it would imply forbidding normal primitives, which is not feasible within Bitcoin’s current design 41 .

  • Covenants and soft‑fork pathfinding. A soft fork is a backward‑compatible rule change that lets non‑upgrading nodes stay on the same chain 39 . Script is intentionally limited (no native future‑spend constraints or in‑script proof verification within block limits), constraining on‑chain programmability 38 37 . CheckTemplateVerify (CTV) is discussed for simpler vaults and safety rails (future‑spend restrictions), and for reducing interactivity in constructions like ARC 36 35 . Additional proposals such as OP_CAT and state‑carrying covenants could enable on‑chain verification of L2 state rather than relying on federations, but may introduce new risks (e.g., MEV‑like dynamics that could pressure miner centralization) 34 31 . Speakers noted social consensus is the bottleneck; delaying decisions increases ossification risk 32 27 .

  • Inscriptions/fee market observations. On‑chain JPEG inscriptions rose from ~88M (May) to ~105M four months later (~20% increase), primarily using Taproot inscriptions 107 . One estimate attributed ~1% excess fees vs. normal transactions and roughly ~1.5% of combined fee+reward (estimated from reward only) to this activity; persistently higher fees encourage miner investment in hashpower 103 84 .

  • Governance primacy of validating nodes. Several reminders from prior conflicts: economic nodes enforce consensus; miners can’t unilaterally change protocol; market forces decided the block‑size dispute 106 104 .

Bitcoin is owned by humanity, the protocol developers are stewards, and need consensus from users to change it materially. bitcoin is about money, spam has no place in the timechain. what defaults the bitcoin core project puts in the reference client matter in this.
x.com

Lightning & Layer‑2 Progress

  • LN router economics: automation is trending but naive “safe, high‑fee” strategies cut volume and lower total revenue. More sophisticated fee automation is needed for better router yield 102 . Technical significance: smarter dynamic pricing could improve network liquidity and forwarding reliability.

  • User‑level Lightning. Fees are typically very small and settlement is near‑instant, but users must pre‑provision channels/liquidity to have a usable spending limit 49 . Multiple payment layers (e.g., Lightning) extend Bitcoin’s transactional throughput, with popular mobile implementations such as Wallet of Satoshi and Phoenix 48 .

  • Overlay protocols and trade‑offs (ARK/“arkade_os”). Summary from discussion: arkade behaves like an overlay‑mempool system; unilateral exits exist but their cost‑effectiveness depends on vTXO size; VM state transitions rely on cooperating servers. Zero‑conf‑like swaps reduce latency but introduce reliance on the operator batching users; if servers don’t cooperate, users may face double‑spend/collusion risks akin to statechains 99 100 98 101 . Impact: faster UX at the expense of stronger trust/minimization.

  • L2 status and requirements. One talk asserted only two Bitcoin L2s are in production today: Lightning and Spark 28 . Trust‑minimized L2s need data posted to Bitcoin (data availability), preserving miner fees while allowing off‑chain sequencing/business models 29 . CTV could lower interactivity in some L2s and enable on‑chain slashing for Bitcoin staking scripts (today emulated via committees, which can collude to avoid slashing) 35 33 . Caution: more expressive opcodes like OP_CAT may also enable MEV‑like vectors and miner centralization pressures 31 .

  • Ecash overlays (Nostr + Cashu). NPUB Cash turns any Nostr npub into a Lightning address; the service originally held bearer Cashew tokens server‑side (next‑in‑line custodian while the mint is ultimate custodian) 4 3 . Security enhancements lock tokens to user pubkeys so the server cannot spend them 2 . The experimental NPUBX design stores mint quotes (secrets) instead of pre‑minted tokens so clients redeem directly, further reducing server custody 1 . Significance: federation/ecash overlays can improve UX and privacy but introduce operator/mint trust; multi‑mint and key‑lock features mitigate some risks.

  • UX signals. A Spiral podcast highlighted the importance of simple addresses/UX and a community shift toward sats as the everyday unit—helpful for small payments and mental accounting 93 .

Infrastructure Updates

  • Node software releases and choices.

    • Bitcoin Knots v29.1.knots20250903 released. Users are urged to verify downloads; tag: v29.1.knots20250903 97 96 88 87 . The last 21.x Knots (v21.2.knots20210629) has known security issues; version numbering moved from “0.x” to “x” by dropping the leading zero 85 86 .
    • Wasabi Wallet v2.7: stabilization update, improved node integration, “smarter” coordinators, UI refresh, and bug fixes. Update notifications and verification are now distributed via Nostr relays to reduce reliance on centralized channels; best practice remains PGP verification 22 21 . Sparrow is desktop‑only; beware fake mobile apps—install from sparrowwallet.com and verify signatures 20 . Node platforms like Start9 make it easy to select Core vs Knots and adjust configs; operators can also run Core in blocks‑only mode (no mempool) for reliability preferences 18 19 .
  • Client incident: Blockstream app/Jade reports. Multiple users reported wallet login/loading failures across platforms, sometimes with on‑chain accounts visible while Lightning accounts failed to load; app warnings cited “network issues,” and one user could not restore to a fresh device during the incident. Logs showed repeated empty UTXO results; users noted lack of timely public status updates 71 70 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 . Technical takeaway: avoid single‑vendor dependencies for critical access; ensure alternate wallet paths and backups work under service degradation.

  • Mining and physical infra. A “Hash Hut: Texas Edition” test video circulated; one observer praised operators for actively fixing “filters” while others “LARP” 92 91 90 . Impact: ongoing industrialization and operational improvements at mining sites.

  • Network health snapshot. At block height 913,191 with ~57 blocks to the next retarget, an estimated +5.4% difficulty adjustment was cited; average block interval ~9m29s during the sample. One mempool instance showed ~5,975 transactions and ignored sub‑1 sat/vB transactions in that view 26 25 24 23 . Empty blocks were also noted as periodically occurring 79 . Anecdotally, a user reported a 24‑minute confirmation for ~$0.25 in fees, consistent with currently light mempools in some periods 57 .

  • Peer behavior anomaly. An investigation described peers with version timestamps behind by up to ~5,100 minutes (noted on Core v27.1/v27.2), triggering Libbitcoin to drop them. A maintainer acknowledged and said they would fix; full write‑up linked 47 45 46 .

  • Weekly engineering round‑up. Optech Newsletter #370 summarizes consensus‑change discussions, new releases/RCs, and notable infrastructure software changes 69 68 67 .

Developer Discussions

  • Relay policy trade‑offs quantified. A summary framed the impasse: pro‑filter view claims significant spam reduction with minimal miner centralization; anti‑filter view claims negligible spam reduction with substantial centralization from filtering. Better measurement is needed on both effects 12 .

  • Implementation diversity and operator choice. By design, Core developers cannot force upgrades (no auto‑updates), reinforcing that policy defaults affect primarily the node that opts into them 10 17 . Knots is a Core‑derived client that filters non‑monetary transactions by design, changing relay behavior; supporters cite added decentralization choices while critics point to potential harm (e.g., the OP_RETURN episode) 14 59 .

“Core devs cannot force you to do anything. There’s no auto updates.” 10

  • Maintainer credentials. One talk referenced contribution stats to contextualize maintainer trust: Gloria Zhao listed as the 12th most active Core contributor; Luke Dashjr the 15th 40 .

  • OP_RETURN defaults clarification. As noted above, the reposted summary stressed the change was not about inviting arbitrary data 95 94 .

  • Arbitrary data and pragmatism. Another discussion argued that reversing inscriptions/large payloads would require disruptive consensus changes (e.g., removing OP_RETURN or reducing block size), so operational pragmatism and clear local policy choices are emphasized 8 .

Adoption Fundamentals

  • Money properties and supply. Bitcoin implements a digital bearer asset enabling true peer‑to‑peer digital transfers without third‑party coordination; the protocol’s core properties include permissionlessness, censorship resistance, unconfiscatability, and absolute scarcity—anchored in the 21 million cap 83 82 81 . Issuance mechanically halves: at 3.125 BTC/block today, ~3.125% of total supply will be mined this epoch; next epoch’s 1.526 BTC/block implies ~1.526% over that four‑year period 74 . Many advocates prefer sats as the practical unit (100,000,000 sats per BTC) to normalize everyday amounts 58 93 .

  • Non‑price health indicators. Some community members recommend watching hash rate and broadening time horizons rather than focusing on short‑term fiat price volatility 89 .

  • Lightning and grassroots usage. Examples include in‑person Lightning acceptance (e.g., a Tokyo food truck) and social tipping via Nostr “zaps” for content creators, indicating repeated small‑value flows over L2 7 6 5 . Note: practical access for many still funnels through KYC exchange choke points, and developers in privacy contexts have faced legal risk 80 .

  • Institutional infrastructure and “economic nodes.” Large custodial actors (e.g., major ETF issuers/custodians) can sway upgrade debates due to business incentives that may not align with self‑custody UX; this adds a social‑consensus layer to technical decisions 30 .

  • Non‑custodial commerce rails. Payment‑forwarding services that generate invoices and monitor the chain without taking custody (e.g., Blockonomics) reduce third‑party control; funds settle directly to user self‑custody 64 .

  • Custody hygiene and UTXO management. Community guidance remains: not your keys, not your coins; several users cite avoiding losses during exchange failures by withdrawing to self‑custody 44 43 . Others report losses at failed exchanges, reinforcing the risk 42 . When off‑ramps impose low per‑withdrawal caps, users can accumulate many small UTXOs, increasing future consolidation fees; planning periodic consolidation helps 62 61 . Moving coins from exchange to hardware wallets transitions from an IOU to on‑chain ownership with keys held locally (bitcoin “lives” on the chain; wallets secure the keys) 73 72 .

  • Operational literacy for on‑chain verification. Verify transfers via txid and block explorers (e.g., mempool.space). Be wary when counterparties refuse to provide complete recipient addresses/txids; Bitcoin transfers are irreversible 78 77 76 75 63 .

Cultural Evolution

  • Ossification vs iteration. Multiple voices warn that allowing an “ossification camp” to dominate could stall upgrades that improve self‑custodial UX and scaling, while others fear centralization or unintended consequences from new opcodes 32 27 31 .

  • Roles and authority. Reaffirmations that validating nodes, not miners, set the rules; developers are stewards who need user consensus for material changes 106 104 105 .

  • What counts as “spam.” Some argue paid transactions are, by definition, not spam; others still prefer filtering non‑monetary data. The debate currently rides on measurements and policy defaults, not changes to consensus 11 17 .

  • Language and identity. Community reminders note Satoshi used terms like “time‑stamping server” and “Timechain,” not “blockchain,” reflecting Bitcoin’s roots in timestamped proof‑of‑work ledgers 66 65 .

  • Self‑custody as ethos. Across podcasts and community threads, the emphasis remains on open‑source, verifiable clients and hardware, independent funding for protocol work, and minimizing reliance on centralized infrastructure 9 60 .

Trust, Evals, and AI‑Accelerated PM: What to Do Now
05 September 2025
10 minutes read
Perspectives Perspectives
Lenny Rachitsky Lenny Rachitsky
Kevin Weil 🇺🇸 Kevin Weil 🇺🇸
11 sources
A concise field guide for PMs: trust as a moat, distribution and retention as reality checks, the Era of Evals and AI PM, with step‑by‑step discovery, prioritization, and launch tactics, real case lessons, career moves, and a vetted tool stack.

Big Ideas

  • Trust is the moat in the AI era

    • Why it matters: When AI can fake anything, customers ask one question: can they trust what you built? Trust compounds; growth hacks fade 43 6 . Treat accuracy and honesty as core product features; they reduce churn and increase referrals 37 39 .
    • How to apply:
      • Make correctness a top KPI (e.g., event accuracy, reconciliation error rate). Fix trust-breaking bugs first and notify users plainly: what happened and what you fixed 41 40 .
      • Instrument for retention and referral lift after trust-improving fixes 37 .

    And in the AI era, where fakery is free and skepticism is default, trust is no longer just an advantage. It is the moat.
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  • Product is half; distribution is the other half

    • Why it matters: Building without distribution creates “products nobody wants.” Distribution must be designed and tested alongside the product 45 . Retention is the reality check between novelty and true utility 44 .
    • How to apply:
  • The Era of Evals (and the rise of AI PM)

  • Problem space first → metrics that matter

    • Why it matters: Over 80% of new products fail mainly because teams jump to solutions without validating the problem 22 .
    • How to apply:
      • Follow the Lean Product Process: customer → needs → value prop → features → UX 23 .
      • Derive metrics from a clear definition of “solved;” pick inputs that drive the output you care about (e.g., FTUE completion → DAU) 99 87 .
      • Build a metric tree: North Star (e.g., items sold) → first-level metrics (conversion, returns, selection breadth) → drivers (payment conversion, availability, marketing clicks) 24 76 .
  • Strategy-aligned, transparent prioritization beats ad‑hoc requests

    • Why it matters: Without alignment and visibility, roadmaps devolve into noise or ticket queues. You need an intake system, a real strategy with exec buy‑in, and transparent scoring for decisions 114 112 111 .
    • How to apply:
      • Capture requests publicly (e.g., UserVoice/UserEcho) so everyone sees context and votes 113 .
      • Score work (e.g., IDEA/E: Impact, Dissatisfaction, Evidence, Advantage to us, over Effort) and publish why items are promoted, deferred, or denied 111 .
      • Treat choices as “requests that fit the vision vs. those that don’t;” say no often—especially for early-stage products—and prioritize relentlessly 110 84 89 .

Tactical Playbook

  • Discovery that de‑risks building

    • Validate first: confirm the problem is pervasive, urgent, and that users will pay 124 .
    • Talk to customers directly; ask outcome-focused “why” questions; customers are experts in their problems, not your product 71 70 72 . Treat early convos as field research and map gaps between official process and lived reality 135 .
    • Run pre‑launch experiments: landing page + “Buy Now,” explainer video demo, preorders 144 55 54 . Prioritize retention as your truth metric 44 .
    • Make demand measurable: drive repeatable cohorts (e.g., Reddit/X ads) to compute CAC:LTV; avoid over-inferencing from one-off signups 62 61 .
    • Segment and choose where to win: segment customers, compare segment performance (usage, CAC, ARPU) and potential (TAM, competition, ability to serve) 123 .
    • Mine unstructured data for “alpha”: combine 1st/2nd/3rd-party data and behavioral signals to find non-obvious insights 154 153 .
  • AI‑accelerated prototyping (vibe coding) with guardrails

    1. Draft a concise product brief (target customer, top problems, features, data model, UX traits) before generating code 75 .
    2. A/B your prompt: try a one-liner vs. pasting the brief; verify claims (“built drag-and-drop”) actually exist—trust but verify 20 .
    3. Start in Discuss mode to plan; switch to Build to apply scoped changes; use Undo/Versions aggressively; prefer minimal, surgical edits 74 19 17 16 .
    4. Use the inspector to target elements; beware class-level changes propagating globally 18 .
    5. Reverse‑prototype existing UIs from screenshots (e.g., Magic Patterns) 66 .
    6. Staff live sessions as a trio: 1) keyboard, 2) data (synthetic data/schema), 3) QA/UX notes 68 .
    7. Specify persistence early (e.g., local storage/API) to avoid “it doesn’t save” surprises 15 .
    8. Paste exact error messages or screenshots; tools often auto‑diagnose 12 73 .
  • Intake, prioritization, and saying “no” with evidence

  • Making Product Ops a force multiplier (not template police)

    • Clarify mission first: why was ProdOps created (visibility, requirements quality, launch consistency, data standards)? 65 64 63 . Align reporting to the CPO to stay product‑centric 139 .
    • Measure value: faster projects, clearer exec data, more PM time for discovery vs. admin; track impacts like case volume, revenue, churn, and feature adoption 137 121 .
    • Collaboration patterns: let Ops draft; PMs edit; reduce PM admin—“reducing PM admin opens up everything else” 122 . Avoid top‑down “template police”; find an Ops ally who truly understands PM to unblock teams 138 80 .
    • If mandated tools slow you down, implement team‑fit tools and increase stakeholder transparency; report outcomes, not rituals 136 .
  • Metrics and observability you can act on

    • Derive metrics from the defined problem and “solved” state 99 . Use input→output chains (e.g., FTUE completion drives DAU) 87 .
    • Build a metric tree from NSM to drivers to target interventions 24 76 .
    • Search effectiveness: track zero‑shot success (search ends without follow‑ups) and follow‑up search rates 85 .
    • Run monthly/quarterly retros to avoid losing the big picture to short‑term optimization 86 .
    • Better observability = faster learnings—invest in instrumentation early 38 .
  • Releases and launches that keep up with engineering velocity

  • Mobile monetization: pick simplicity to maximize conversion

    • For subscription apps, native IAP (e.g., via RevenueCat) is the safest launch path—higher conversion, simpler refunds, and lower operational overhead than external web paywalls 11 52 51 53 .
    • External links (Stripe) add friction and sync complexity; DMA exceptions increase regional logic without guaranteed savings 10 9 . Match approach to what you sell and test before optimizing fees 8 .

Case Studies & Lessons

  • Trust as growth engine (Crazy Egg)

    • What happened: Heatmaps had to be pixel‑accurate; even small errors killed trust. The team treated accuracy as the business and emailed users plainly when issues occurred 42 41 40 .
    • Outcome: Honesty and reliability improved retention and created loyalty; agencies used the product in client decks—a trust flywheel 7 .
    • Apply it: Define “trust incidents,” set SLOs around accuracy, and make incident comms a first‑class ritual 37 .
  • Fundraising reality for PMs: milestones, cash discipline, and unit economics

    • Lesson: Plan milestones that make the next round “consensus enough” (e.g., from Seed to a $10M Series A); scarcity forces better discipline, while “indigestion” from over‑funding kills companies 81 117 116 . Insist on clear unit economics; avoid extrapolating models from buzzy spaces without proof 115 .
    • Apply it: Tie roadmap to investor‑expectation milestones, model runway to reach them, and publish unit‑economic thresholds for go/no‑go decisions.

  • Rolling‑thunder launches in a rapid release shop

  • Vibe‑coding gotchas (Bolt/V0/Magic Patterns)

    • Observation: A one‑line prompt produced a seemingly complete roadmap UI; claims (e.g., drag‑and‑drop) weren’t always built. Teams needed versions, “minimal change” requests, and clear persistence requirements 20 17 16 15 .
    • Apply it: Use Discuss→Build loops with small diffs; reverse‑prototype from screenshots when modifying existing UIs 66 19 .
  • Early MRR ≠ fundable traction

    • Reality: $500 MRR in two weeks is meaningless to investors without churn and retention data; angels around ~$5k MRR, VCs often at $25–100k MRR 50 49 . Focus fundraising on clear use of funds and strengthen distribution first 60 .
    • Apply it: Reinvest early revenue, diagnose distribution bottlenecks, and use tools to surface high‑fit conversations across Reddit/X/LinkedIn to scale outreach efficiently 56 59 58 .

Career Corner

  • The AI PM advantage

  • Break in (or up) faster

    • Don’t rely on online applications; tap referrals and direct reach‑outs 4 .
    • “Do the job before you get the job”: use the product, talk to customers, bring a prototype to interviews 2 . Vibe‑coded prototypes can help you show—not tell 33 .
    • Tailor your resume/story to the role; speak the company’s language and highlight upstream PMM/PM impact 1 .
    • Reduce hiring risk: show references, make it easy for managers to bet on you 3 34 .
  • Build domain leverage and network early

    • Domain‑expert PMs are in demand (e.g., health tech); leverage backgrounds like neuroscience to enter relevant roles; many openings reported in health‑tech/biotech 120 119 118 . Consider adjacent roles (CSM, ops, BA) to transition internally 69 .
    • In a new org, meet names/faces beyond your dev team early; build informal authority by spotting cross‑team patterns and learning how work really gets done 132 131 133 134 .
  • Compensation and equity hygiene

    • Beware low‑equity/low‑salary deals (e.g., ~1% with a 35% pay cut); insist on fair equity or salary 57 . Equal‑share pre‑funding is a common expectation; dilution later is normal 46 .
    • Use Slicing Pie: track unpaid fair‑market contributions (“bets”) and split equity proportionally: Your Share = Your Bets / Total Bets 48 47 .
    • Sanity‑check founders: verify claimed exits; lack of proof is a red flag 145 .
  • Interview prep signal

    • If you’re targeting CPaaS/SaaS, be ready to discuss metrics and KPIs across ideation, development, launch, and growth; link inputs to outputs with a metric tree 78 77 24 .
  • Work with AI, faster

    • Treat AI as a teammate for drafting, prototyping, and discovery, but keep the human edge—customer understanding and strategy 32 14 . “You have to do everything faster today” 35 .

Tools & Resources

  • Evals 101 for PMs

  • Eval tooling: RAGAS, DeepEval

    • What: Open-source tools PMs are exploring for AI evaluation 129 .
    • Why: Standardize quality bars for LLM features before shipping.
  • AI prototyping & reverse‑prototyping

    • What: Magic Patterns (screenshot→UI), V0/Bolt for vibe‑coding 66 21 .
    • Why: Jump to live prototypes quickly; modify existing UIs from screenshots 66 .
    • Tip: Use hyphens for bullets in PRDs to avoid ingestion issues 13 .
  • Roadmap/KR alignment

  • Feedback & request portals

    • What: UserVoice/UserEcho; internal ideas portals for voting/commenting 113 141 .
    • Why: Transparency, prioritization at scale, and less siloed request sprawl 113 .
  • Mobile subscriptions

    • What: RevenueCat + native IAP 11 .
    • Why: Higher conversion and easy refunds vs. external web paywalls 52 51 .
  • AI PM career kit (Aakash Gupta)

  • ChatGPT conversation branching

    • What: Branch conversations to explore directions without losing your original thread; available on web for logged‑in users 126 125 .
    • Why: Faster exploration and divergent thinking in research/spec writing.
  • Warehouse‑native analytics

    • What: If you already have a data warehouse, consider a warehouse‑native analytics tool to cut costs and improve data fidelity vs. standalone analytics 140 .
  • Metric Tree playbooks

“Retention is the ultimate reality check. It’s the difference between building a moment and building a company.” 44

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Upgrades vs. Ossification, Relay Policy Clash, and Expanding Institutional On‑Ramps
06 September 2025
8 minutes read
Blockware Blockware
Citadel Dispatch Citadel Dispatch
TFTC TFTC
6 sources
Soft‑fork and node‑relay debates dominated technical talk, while banks and policymakers moved toward clearer institutional on‑ramps. Highlights include Nasdaq’s new approval rule, U.S. Bank’s custody relaunch, Japan’s potential tax shift, privacy wallet updates, NPUB Cash’s UX gains, and treasury‑company mechanics driving sustained BTC demand.

Key Developments

  • Nasdaq tightens listing oversight for share-for-crypto deals. Certain companies must now obtain shareholder approval before issuing new shares to purchase crypto; failure to comply can trigger trading suspension or delisting 32 31 30 . Hosts noted this could shape the playbook for “bitcoin treasury companies,” with MicroStrategy cited as the largest corporate bitcoin treasury today and discussion that stricter approvals might entrench its lead by raising hurdles for competitors 29 28 .

    Source: Simply Bitcoin — Hosts

  • U.S. Bank resumes institutional bitcoin custody using NYDIG as sub‑custodian, framing the restart as enabled by greater regulatory clarity and complementing ETF‑era services 26 25 24 . Hosts added that large banks are moving to “meet customer demand,” even if some executives remain publicly skeptical 23 .

    Source: Simply Bitcoin — Hosts

  • Developer protections and market structure under the Clarity Act. Capitol Gains highlighted draft language to protect non‑custodial software developers from unlicensed money transmission liability (18 U.S.C. §1960), and noted material differences between House and Senate approaches to defining securities vs. commodities (decentralization “maturity” test vs. rights‑conferred test) 52 91 51 50 .

    Source: Bitcoin Magazine — Capitol Gains (hosts)

  • SBA guidance on debanking remediation. Following a White House executive order, the SBA instructed lenders to identify prior debanking practices and make reasonable efforts to reinstate affected customers 54 53 .

    Source: Bitcoin Magazine — Capitol Gains (hosts)

  • State‑level risk for miners. A Wisconsin bill offering tax exemptions to data centers explicitly excludes crypto mining facilities, creating a discriminatory carve‑out against bitcoin miners 45 43 .

    Source: Bitcoin Magazine — Capitol Gains (hosts)

  • Tokenized SEC‑registered shares launch on public chains; opportunity flagged to settle such assets over Bitcoin L2s so fees/gas accrue in BTC rather than “walled gardens” 39 37 .

    Source: Bitcoin Magazine — Capitol Gains (hosts)

  • Tornado Cash case watch. The government may seek a retrial on hung counts (money‑laundering and sanctions violations); appellate steps on the money‑transmission conviction are also in view 41 .

    Source: Bitcoin Magazine — Capitol Gains (hosts)

  • Release watch — Bitcoin Knots v29.1 (2025‑09‑03) was announced for users tracking Knots builds 33 .

    Source: TFTC — Rabbit Hole Recap (#373)

  • Ecosystem event — Mining Disrupt (Dallas) billed as the largest bitcoin mining expo, with manufacturers and mining leaders participating 84 .

    Source: Simply Bitcoin — Hosts

Technical Insights

  • Soft‑fork debate: what a new opcode set could unlock — and the risks. Janusz explained that soft forks are backward‑compatible changes to Bitcoin that could extend Script functionality while maintaining chain compatibility 97 83 . Bitcoin Script’s deliberate limits help avoid certain attack surfaces (e.g., malicious MEV), but constrain complex on‑chain contracts today 82 81 . Proposed changes like CTV could simplify user vaults and reduce interactivity for some L2 protocols 96 95 , while OP_CAT/native proof verification could let L2 state be verified via on‑chain contracts instead of federated assumptions 94 . Programmatic slashing via CTV is discussed for “bitcoin staking” schemes securing certain L2s, with fees/revenue dynamics for stakers and miners if L2s post data to L1 93 80 79 . Speakers cautioned about unintended consequences (e.g., MEV surfaces, miner centralization) and the growing difficulty of social consensus as institutions enter; timing any upgrade before ossification is a central strategic question 78 77 .

    Source: Bitcoin Magazine — “Can Bitcoin Succeed Without Another Soft Fork? w/ Janusz” (Janusz)

  • Mempool relay policy vs. consensus: what’s actually in dispute. TFTC outlined that the current fight is over node relay policy (mempool rules), not consensus rules — i.e., what your node relays mostly affects you and fee‑estimation quality 47 . Core maintainers worry that valid but historically non‑standard transactions (e.g., very large inscriptions/OP_RETURNs and sub‑1 sat/vB fees) are increasingly sent directly to miners, degrading the open mempool’s visibility and introducing competitive/centralization risks if broad relay is bypassed 46 44 . Hosts emphasized the value of an open public mempool as an anti‑permission feature and noted user options like blocks‑only mode or switching implementations/configs via tools like Start9 38 40 .

    Source: TFTC — Rabbit Hole Recap (#373) — Marty Bent & Matt Odell

  • Protocol posture from Bitcoin Asia: data carriage is unavoidable; focus on useful upgrades. Eric Wall reviewed that arbitrary data can be encoded into the chain in ways that are impractical to ban short of banning addresses/keys, and that fees/mempool pressure receded sharply (less than 1 sat/vB seen) after the surge from ordinals/BRC‑20s 99 71 98 . He argued the real risk is an “ossification camp” winning the narrative; energy spent fighting “spam” should be redirected to constructive protocol work 69 68 67 .

    Source: Bitcoin Magazine — Eric Wall

  • Privacy and wallet tooling updates. Wasabi Wallet 2.7 shipped a stabilization release and improved coordinator UX; updates now distribute via Nostr relays, Tor is bundled, and running a coordinator is significantly simpler, including prune/blocks‑only operation modes 92 36 . Sparrow Wallet was highlighted for robust PGP signature verification and strong personal‑node integration; users were warned that Sparrow is desktop‑only and to avoid fake mobile apps 35 .

    Source: TFTC — Rabbit Hole Recap (#373)

  • NPUB Cash and Cashu: instant Lightning addresses via Nostr, with safer custody options. NPUB Cash gives any Nostr npub a Lightning address without signup by using Nostr keys for auth; sats can be sent immediately and redeemed later 20 19 . In the base model the mint is the primary custodian while NPUB Cash temporarily holds bearer proofs; “pay‑to‑public‑key” can lock tokens so the service itself cannot spend them 90 18 . The NPUB X (v2) design stores mint quotes rather than pre‑minting fixed denominations so wallets control denomination/coin‑selection; a planned batch‑mint API will redeem many small receipts in one call 89 17 16 15 . NPUB Cash can be self‑hosted (Docker + DB) and already supports multiple mints; ecosystem work includes mint discovery/auditing via Nostr (NIP‑87) and aggregators like Cache Kom, plus POS demos and a BTCPay plugin to use Cashu as the Lightning backend 14 88 13 12 9 8 . Bolt12 client support exists; broader utility depends on mint/LN backend upgrades 11 10 .

    Source: Citadel Dispatch — Matt Odell & Egge

Market & Adoption

  • How institutions are getting exposure — and why treasury companies matter. Bitwise sees most allocators starting at ~1% and laddering to 2–5%, implying roughly $1.5T in additional BTC demand over a decade on a $100T institutional base 27 . ETF inflows remain strong as another on‑ramp 34 . Joe Burnett explained that many institutions are constrained from owning spot bitcoin directly and instead buy securities (equities/fixed income), making “bitcoin treasury companies” a bridge product; those companies use long‑duration credit (convertible notes, preferred equity) to avoid forced liquidations while acquiring more BTC 7 6 5 4 .

    Source: Blockware — Joe Burnett; TFTC — Rabbit Hole Recap (#373)

  • Feedback loop: equity issuance → more BTC. When treasury companies trade at a premium, they issue shares and buy more bitcoin, turning speculative equity flows into BTC demand; potential inclusion of such firms in major indices/ETFs can amplify this via passive flows 3 2 1 .

    Source: Blockware — Joe Burnett

  • Japan signals. Meta Planet, described as Japan’s premier bitcoin treasury company, helped normalize BTC as an investable asset; it was 2024’s top‑performing stock before retracing ~50% 62 61 60 . Its president is accepting payment in bitcoin for some condo units 59 . High capital‑gains tax (~55%) is cited as suppressing direct adoption; officials are reportedly weighing a cut toward ~20% and a spot bitcoin ETF in response to market demand 58 57 . Grassroots education and Lightning payments (e.g., Tokyo Bitcoin Base, a local food truck) illustrate peer‑to‑peer usage 56 55 .

    Source: Bitcoin Magazine — Capitol Gains (hosts)

  • Banks “meeting the market.” U.S. Bank’s custody relaunch with NYDIG is positioned as a full‑service institutional solution alongside ETFs; even vocal skeptics acknowledge servicing client demand 26 25 24 23 .

    Source: Simply Bitcoin — Hosts

  • Network snapshot. RHR reported block height 913,191 with an estimated +5.4% difficulty adjustment; average block time ~9m29s; a relatively small mempool was observed by the referenced dashboard 49 48 . Separately, Eric Wall noted a period of very low on‑chain fees (often <1 sat/vB) 71 98 .

    Sources: TFTC — Rabbit Hole Recap (#373); Bitcoin Magazine — Eric Wall

  • Custodial concentration and “economic node” influence. Speakers warned that ETFs, wrapped/custodial BTC and large institutional treasuries concentrate economic power in entities whose business models may prefer custodial pathways and resist upgrades that improve self‑custody usability 76 75 74 73 .

    Source: Bitcoin Magazine — “Can Bitcoin Succeed Without Another Soft Fork? w/ Janusz” (Janusz)

Notable Perspectives

  • What is bitcoin's core innovation? It is the creation of a digital bearer asset. Now, what does that mean? So we talk about peer to peer transfers. A peer to peer transaction is where I give you something, you take it and you walk away. We don't need a third party to monitor that. I don't give that same thing to somebody else. So if I took a gold bar and I handed it to you, Danny, you took it from me, you turned around and you walked away. You have absolute assurance that that gold bar which you're holding in your hand is with you. And there is no way that I can give that same gold bar to somebody else. Why is that? Because the laws of physics prevent that gold bar from existing in more than one place at the same time. Unless you're some kind of magician or I'm some kind of magician, let's put that aside. But, you know, it's the laws of physics that prevent that from happening, right? That's the physical world. And that's why we can have peer. We can. Throughout history, peer to peer transactions were possible. Now, if I sent you a photograph over email or WhatsApp, right, I could turn around and send that same photo to a thousand other people and they would have identical copies of that. Why? Because the photo is just informational. It is just zeros and ones. And information by nature is infinitely replicable at virtually no cost. And so the only way to ensure that I don't send that same photo that I sent you to a thousand other people is by having a trusted third party monitoring my WhatsApp or my email and confirming to you that, yes, Vijay has not sent that to anybody else. Right. And that's how it has been for decades, like whatever, since we had online digital information and so on. What Satoshi solved was that he enabled you and I to transact digitally, with you in Australia and me in London, as if we were physically present. It's as if I gave you a gold bar and you took it and you took it from me and you turned around, walked away. You can do the same thing digitally right now. That is a paradigm shifting invention. It has implications in the realms of economics, politics, philosophy and everything else.
    www.youtube.com

    Source: What Bitcoin Did — Vijay Selvam

    “There’s one property … a little bit more important … and that is the absolute scarcity.” 64 63

  • The cause of the fourth turning, the whole concept is manipulated money that gets worse and worse and worse, or cause of inflation, doesn't exist in a free market. And so. So what your. Your question about the fourth turning? If bitcoin stays decentralized and secure, that will never happen again, ever.
    www.youtube.com

    Source: Simply Bitcoin — Jeff Booth (quoted)

  • Can you please move on with your lives and do something that improves the bitcoin protocol? That's all I had.
    www.youtube.com

    Source: Bitcoin Magazine — Eric Wall

  • “The idea that you’re able to just run a node on a cheap computer and see what the transaction queue looks like is not a given … people should appreciate that we have a relatively open transaction queue for Bitcoin.” 38

    Source: TFTC — Matt Odell

  • “All the banks are trying to get into Bitcoin … they’re embracing this industry … if we get regulatory clarity, they can come into bitcoin in bulk.” 23

    Source: Simply Bitcoin — Hosts

  • “Pro‑filter: spam reduction significant; miner centralization minimal. Anti‑filter: spam reduction negligible; miner centralization substantial … quantify both.” 42

    Source: TFTC — Marty Bent (reading Neil’s framing)

  • “There is no spam on the bitcoin blockchain today. We lost.” 70

    Source: Bitcoin Magazine — Eric Wall

Emerging Themes

  • Upgrades vs. ossification: Multiple shows stress the narrowing window for protocol changes (CTV, OP_CAT) amid institutional entry and coordination challenges; others argue to stop “fighting spam” and focus on pragmatic improvements 78 77 69 68 67 . Source: Bitcoin Magazine — Janusz; Eric Wall.

  • Node relay policy matters: The mempool/relay dispute is about policy, not consensus, yet has real centralization and fee‑estimation implications if miners receive large classes of transactions out‑of‑band 47 46 44 . Source: TFTC — RHR.

  • Institutional on‑ramps are multiplying: ETFs, bank custody (U.S. Bank/NYDIG), treasury companies and potential index inclusion collectively broaden access; many institutions still can’t buy spot BTC directly, sustaining demand for compliant wrappers 34 26 25 7 . Sources: Simply Bitcoin; Blockware.

  • Custody, risk and UX: Shows reinforced self‑custody best practices (wallet verification, coordinator trust assumptions) while highlighting exchange/counterparty risks and the role of proofs‑of‑reserves and vaults 35 86 85 96 . Sources: TFTC; Simply Bitcoin; Bitcoin Magazine — Janusz.

  • Policy clarity trendlines: The Clarity Act’s developer protections and SBA’s debanking remediation signal movement toward clearer rules and operational fairness, while state‑level bills can still disadvantage miners 52 54 45 . Source: Bitcoin Magazine — Capitol Gains.

  • Tokenization and rails selection: Galaxy’s tokenized shares spurred discussion about migrating settlement to Bitcoin L2s so fees accrue in BTC, not alternative “walled gardens” 39 37 . Source: Bitcoin Magazine — Capitol Gains.

  • AI and scarcity narrative crossover: A mainstream AI voice framed bitcoin as the only provably scarce digital asset, reinforcing the “digital gold” thesis under accelerating technological change 22 21 . Source: Simply Bitcoin.

Qwen3‑Max (1T) debuts; Kimi K2 ships; Baseten raises $150M; on‑device and RL advances accelerate
06 September 2025
7 minutes read
AI High Signal AI High Signal
1 sources
Qwen3‑Max passes 1T parameters and Kimi K2 ships weights as inference and on‑device stacks advance; funding and chips signal a maturing infrastructure layer while new RL and post‑training methods deliver faster gains per token. Policy shifts and licensing changes may reshape access and evaluation practices.

Top Stories — why it matters: frontier capability, cost, and scale are shifting fast

  • Qwen3‑Max (Preview) passes the 1T‑parameter mark

    “Scaling works — and the official release will surprise you even more.” 83

  • Kimi K2‑0905 ships weights; pushes cheaper coding and longer context

  • Baseten raises $150M to scale inference for the AI app layer

    • Baseten closed a $150M Series D led by BOND (Jay Simons joining the board) with participation from Conviction, CapitalG, 01 Advisors, IVP, Spark Capital, Greylock, Scribble, BoxGroup, and Premji Invest; customers include Abridge, Bland, Clay, Gamma, Mirage, OpenEvidence, Sourcegraph, WRITER, and Zed Industries 118 117 92 91 90 . The founder’s framing underscores secular cost declines and rising usage:

    “I think the token price goes down and inference should get cheaper over time. And that really just means there is going to be more inference.” “Every time we lower prices or optimize models to make it cheaper, four months later customers are spending more anyway.” “Inference prices will go down, but if the world is run by AI in 10 years, there is going to be a lot of inference. It better be cheap.”
    x.com

  • On‑device embeddings get a lift (smaller, faster, multilingual)

    • Google DeepMind’s EmbeddingGemma targets on‑device use and tops MTEB for models under 500M parameters; supported by Hugging Face Text Embeddings Inference v1.8.1. Practitioners highlight small models’ importance for context management 136 135 134 .
  • Macro view: compute scaling likely to slow

    • Epoch’s analysts forecast fast diffusion now and broad cognitive automation by ~2035, but expect near‑term slowdowns in compute scaling due to investor uncertainty, overinvestment risk, and rising lead times; full transcript and episode links available 68 67 66 65 27 .

Research & Innovation — why it matters: new methods are squeezing more capability from less compute

  • Agentic RL for reasoning: rStar2‑Agent (14B) reaches frontier‑level math in 510 steps

    • Microsoft Research trained a 14B model with tool‑augmented RL (Python environment), reporting Pass@1 scores of AIME24 80.6, AIME25 69.8, HMMT25 52.7—meeting or exceeding larger models—and efficient reasoning with fewer tokens. The system scales output length in stages, filters/curates rollouts (GRPO‑RoC), and runs a dedicated code service handling ~45K concurrent tool calls at ~0.3s latency 35 34 32 33 31 30 29 28 .
  • Unifying post‑training: SFT and RL under one objective; Hybrid Post‑Training (HPT)

  • Vision‑language data at scale: FineVision

  • On‑device RAG plumbing: sqlite‑vec

    • A small vector DB extension for SQLite (C, no deps; MIT/Apache‑2.0) reports 1M×128‑dim queries in 17ms, 500k×960‑dim in 41ms, supports matryoshka slicing, 32× storage reduction via binary quantization, and runs locally/WASM—paired in examples with EmbeddingGemma and Ollama for offline personalization 98 97 96 95 94 93 .
  • Scheduling for prefill/decode architectures: ByteDance’s HeteroScale

  • Self‑supervised vision backbone: Meta’s DINOv3

    • A 6.7B ViT trained on >1.7B Instagram images introduces a loss to preserve patch‑level diversity; Meta reports stronger embeddings for segmentation/depth. Weights/code ship under a license allowing commercial use but forbidding military applications 45 44 43 42 .
  • Reality check on coding benchmarks: LiveCodeBench Pro

Products & Launches — why it matters: users get immediate utility from new features and workflows

Industry Moves — why it matters: capital and strategy determine who ships at scale

  • OpenAI plans custom AI accelerators with Broadcom

    • Reports indicate mass production of an in‑house “XPU” co‑designed with Broadcom, targeting training/deployment (e.g., GPT‑5); shipping is slated for 2026 with a reported ~$10B order commitment 64 63 62 .
  • Cohere Labs leadership

    • Marzieh announced she’s stepping into the role of Head of Cohere Labs; peers called her a strong fit and encouraged following the team’s work 116 113 .
  • Inference operations and customers

    • Baseten’s $150M raise (see Top Stories) reinforces demand for managed inference; the company lists customers across healthcare, dev tools, and productivity 117 92 .
  • Enterprise AI adoption: Devin as a data analyst

  • Vector DB in production: Qdrant case study

Policy & Regulation — why it matters: access rules and licenses shape competition and research

  • Anthropic’s regional restrictions and data policy update

    • A blog update says the company now prohibits organizations controlled from restricted jurisdictions (e.g., China). Community posts question whether the move is safety‑driven or protectionist and note fast progress by Chinese open‑weight labs (DeepSeek, Qwen). Anthropic’s consumer terms also shifted to explicit opt‑in for training, with opted‑in data retained up to five years 132 131 130 128 129 .
  • Dataset licensing tightens: NVIDIA’s Nemotron‑CC‑v2

    • A widely shared thread highlights the “NVIDIA Data Agreement for Model Training,” which reportedly forbids use in open‑source projects, composing with other data, or even releasing benchmarks without permission 6 5 .
  • Litigation watch (reported): Anthropic settlement

Quick Takes — why it matters: fast signals for your radar

  • SWE‑rebench (fresh GitHub PR tasks, no leakage): snapshot results are lower than SWE‑Bench Verified because issues are newer and unverified—helpful reality check for agentic coding claims 101 100 .
  • FutureX leaderboard: Grok4 tops GPT‑5‑pro, ChatGPT‑Agent, Gemini Deep Think; open research agents (e.g., MiroMind 72B) perform strongly; full board posted 115 114 .
  • App store signal: 3 of the top 4 U.S. Productivity apps are AIs; Perplexity hit #4 within two weeks of an iOS redesign 106 105 .
  • AMD ROCm quality concerns: posts tally 200+ PyTorch tests skipped exclusively on ROCm and 200+ disabled; net +110 disabled since June, including attention/transformer ops; AMD team reportedly prioritizing fixes 146 .
  • GPT‑5 Pro coding: multiple practitioners report it reliably solves complex coding tasks after longer think time, though some note RLHF‑style small‑model errors on “real work.” Diversify models in orchestration/evals 49 36 20 .
  • Qwen updates: OpenRouter lists Qwen3‑Max‑Preview with no “thinking” mode 69 ; a user notes “Qwen 3 Max has no ‘thinking’, interesting” 99 .
  • Stealth long‑context: Sonoma Sky/Dusk Alpha (via AnyCoder/OpenRouter) advertise 2M‑token context 9 8 7 .
  • Math OCR for reasoning data: Marker/Surya report SoTA on olmocr, beating MathPix in an internal lab eval; examples show GPT‑5 symbol errors that Marker avoided 23 22 21 .
  • GPU performance deep dive: Modular’s Blackwell matmul Part 2 covers shared‑memory access and swizzling for throughput 13 12 .
  • Weights & Biases: tracing/instrumentation upgrades “especially useful for RL” are coming to Weave 24 .
  • OpenAI jobs platform: posts say an AI‑powered hiring product is targeted for mid‑2026, with plans to certify “AI fluency” 145 .
Agency, Strategy, and Security: Back Pain Mechanics, Sea Power, Free Speech, Home Security, Drone Wars, and Fiscal Risks
06 September 2025
8 minutes read
All-In Podcast All-In Podcast
Hoover Institution Hoover Institution
Tim Ferriss Tim Ferriss
6 sources
Five high-yield conversations distilled by theme: coaching back-pain mechanics and prevention-first home security; WWII sea power lessons and today’s drone wars; and free speech, fiscal risk, and biosecurity. Each episode includes key insights, quotes, and an embedded must-listen clip.

We grouped this week’s episodes into three themes so you can jump straight to what matters: personal agency (health and home security), grand strategy (sea control and modern drone warfare), and speech/governance (free expression, fiscal risk, and biosecurity).

Theme 1: Personal Agency — Your Body and Your Home

Episode: Is Your Back Pain Physical or Mental? (Peter Attia MD with Stuart McGill, Ph.D.)

Episode Overview

Host Peter Attia speaks with spine biomechanist Stuart McGill about the interplay of psychology and biomechanics in chronic lower‑back pain, emphasizing mechanism‑based diagnosis over imaging and coaching patients to control provocation moments that trigger pain 100 99 98 97 .

Key Insights

  • Imaging can’t reveal the mechanism of pain; a targeted physical evaluation can, often by asking the patient to demonstrate the provoking movement 97 91 .
  • Instrumented assessment (muscle EMG + 3D spine motion) can expose subtle triggers (e.g., a mid‑movement “clunk” causing sciatic irritation) that are fixable with coaching 96 93 .
  • Teaching patients to maintain muscle tone through the danger range can stop recurrent acute episodes; one coached case eliminated the “clunk” immediately and prevented future events 95 87 .
  • In a two‑year follow‑up of patients subcategorized by pain mechanism and given targeted prescriptions (including a “virtual surgery” pathway), 95% reported they avoided surgery and were glad they did 94 90 .

Recommendations & Resources

  • Ask patients to reproduce the exact movement that provokes pain; observe carefully for mechanical triggers 91 .
  • Use EMG and a 3D spine motion monitor when available to map the mechanism objectively 96 .
  • Coach to sustain appropriate muscle tone through the provocative arc to prevent shear/clunk events 95 .
  • Implement a structured, mechanism‑based program with compliance checks and follow‑up; consider a “virtual surgery” pathway before operative decisions 90 94 .

Notable Quotes

“If I’m crazy, I don’t deserve to live.” 89

“They stole my career from me, giving me that book, how to live with my back pain.” 88

Must‑Listen Clip

  • Watch the live instrumentation → provocation → coaching loop that solves a recurrent sciatic “clunk.” You’ll hear the setup, the measured finding, and the coaching that prevents the event on repeat.
    • Why it matters: It shows the full arc from mechanism discovery to immediate, teachable intervention that can eliminate acute flares 86 85 .

Episode: The Squatter In His Closet Changed How He Protects His Family (Tim Ferriss)

Episode Overview

A home‑tour shock turns into a practical playbook for prevention‑first security: choose where (and how) you live, harden your privacy, and favor defensive tools with margin for error, trained under stress 59 58 56 .

Key Insights

  • Prioritize prevention and privacy: carefully choose residence; treat privacy/doxxing risk as central to physical security 56 48 .
  • Tactics: purchase via an entity; never ship to your home; use a UPS/mailbox; red‑team your own discoverability 55 54 47 .
  • Controlled‑access buildings add layered security (fobs/front desk/elevator controls) 53 .
  • Digital behavior can undermine physical security (real‑time posts, family exposure) more than weak locks 52 .
  • For non‑lethal defense, spray offers range and forgiveness; tasers demand practice—train under elevated heart rate to simulate stress 51 50 49 44 .

Recommendations & Resources

  • Consider high‑rise/controlled‑access living if you have public exposure 53 .
  • Route all deliveries to a mailbox/UPS store; never to home 55 .
  • Conduct a friend‑led “stalker” red‑team on your online footprint 47 .
  • Carry pepper/bear spray for greater range; only adopt tools you’ll train with under duress 51 49 .

Notable Quotes

“All it takes is one crazy one.” 46

“Security is often overrated compared to digital security, frankly.” 45

Must‑Listen Clip

  • The prevention‑first playbook: location choice, privacy hygiene, entity ownership, mailbox strategy, and red‑teaming your footprint.
    • What you’ll learn: Low‑friction changes that materially reduce risk before you ever need a tool.

Theme 2: Geopolitics & Strategy — From Sea Control to Drone Wars

Episode: Sarah Paine – How Hitler almost starved Britain (Dwarkesh Patel)

Episode Overview

Sarah Paine (U.S. Naval War College) explains how maritime powers win by commanding seas, then prosecuting peripheral theaters; she traces the Battle of the Atlantic’s turning points—cryptanalysis, convoy doctrine, air cover, and new ASW tech—and applies those lessons to modern narrow‑seas dynamics 84 82 81 83 .

Key Insights

  • Maritime playbook: blockade first; expect continental commerce‑raiding; counter with convoys 82 81 .
  • Intelligence as tonnage: Enigma captures enabled evasive routing and may have saved up to 2 million tons of shipping 80 .
  • Tech/doctrine/production together closed the air‑cover gap (radar, hedgehogs, escort carriers, destroyer escorts), culminating in 41 U‑boats lost in May ’43 79 75 78 .
  • Peripheral operations, sequenced well, relieve the main front and overextend the adversary 77 76 .
  • Outcomes were a “package of many things”—remove any pillar (crypto, tech, alliances) and the battle looks different 74 .

Recommendations & Resources

  • Read more deeply, weigh evidence across sources (don’t rely on monocausal stories) 71 .
  • Study Mahan’s prerequisites for maritime power (moat, internal transport, reliable sea egress, coastal population, stable pro‑navy government) 72 .

Notable Quotes

But his idea is there's only one thing worse than fighting with allies, and that's fighting without them, because they'll be toast. You need these complementary capabilities, different locations, and coordinating it, to gang up on your continental problem.
www.youtube.com

“The United States adds hedgehogs… [they] deliver an elliptical spray of depth charges.” 75

Must‑Listen Clip

  • The Atlantic turning point: cryptanalysis enables evasive routing, while radar/hedgehogs/escort carriers flip the U‑boat war (including the devastating May ’43 losses).
    • Why it’s valuable: A compact case study of how intelligence, technology, doctrine, and production interact to decide campaigns 80 79 78 .

Episode: Goodfellows — Drones, Dictators & Debt: India Flirts, Ukraine Fights, Trump Takes on The Fed (Hoover Institution)

Episode Overview

Bill Whalen moderates Neil Ferguson, John Cochrane, and H.R. McMaster on India’s hedging between powers, Ukraine’s shift to drone‑centric warfare, sanctions leakage and Chinese support to Russia, U.S. industrial policy (Intel stake), and renewed questions about Fed independence and executive power 43 42 34 38 37 .

Key Insights

  • India’s “fear of abandonment” vs. “fear of entrapment” explains hedging with Russia/China; long‑term interests still point toward market democracies 41 35 .
  • The battlefield has “shape‑shifted” into a drone war; extended‑range FPV and swarms expand no‑man’s land and can favor Ukraine’s tech strengths over manpower 40 39 34 .
  • Sanctions bite less than expected; Europe’s third‑country exports and Chinese support bolster Russia’s war economy 33 32 .
  • Government equity stakes (e.g., 10% in Intel) invite historical skepticism: public capital seldom fixes what private capital could not 38 24 23 .
  • Fed “independence” is conditional; broader executive expansion (tariffs, agency scope) heightens separation‑of‑powers concerns 36 31 37 .

Recommendations & Resources

  • Accelerate rapid acquisition for drones/counter‑drones (edge compute, mesh comms; one operator controlling 30–40 drones) 30 22 .
  • Deep dives: Lupfer’s The Dynamics of Doctrine; Conrad Crane’s Bombs, Cities and Civilians; Mark Kloadfelder’s Beneficial Bombing; Frank Decoder’s forthcoming book on CCP wartime strategy 29 28 27 .

Notable Quotes

“It’s more and more a drone war.” 26

“It’s not about territory. Putin wants to make sure that Ukraine is not viable as an independent state.” 25

Must‑Listen Clip

  • Ferguson on how the war “shape‑shifted” into drones and why that improves Ukraine’s odds of holding out.
    • What you’ll learn: Operational implications of FPV/swarms and the procurement/industrial policies they demand 34 .

Theme 3: Speech, Governance & Economics — Free Expression, Fiscal Reality, Biosecurity

Episode: Destruction of Freedom of Speech and Death by Suicidal Empathy (Gad Saad)

Episode Overview

Gad Saad argues that freedom of speech must be treated as a deontological (absolute) value and warns that “suicidal empathy” misapplied to the wrong targets yields harmful policies; he cites UK arrests for offensive speech as evidence of eroding norms 67 65 68 .

Key Insights

  • Free speech as a principle: not contingent on feelings or content; either upheld for all or not at all 65 .
  • “Suicidal empathy” misdirects compassion (e.g., 137th chances for felons, blanket assimilation assumptions) with damaging downstream effects 64 60 .
  • Criminalizing rude/offensive speech (UK examples) signals a broader free‑speech problem 68 63 .
  • The cost of liberty includes protecting abhorrent speech (e.g., Holocaust denial) 66 .

Recommendations & Resources

  • Book: Suicidal Empathy (forthcoming) — promises deeper case studies and argumentation 69 .

Notable Quotes

“Freedom of speech is deontological, meaning you can’t say, yes, I believe in freedom of speech, but not if it hurts someone’s feelings.” 62

“Arguing that Ms. 13 gang members deserve more empathy than American vets is suicidal empathy.” 61

Must‑Listen Clip

  • Saad’s ethical framing of free speech (deontological vs. consequentialist) and why content‑based carve‑outs are corrosive.
    • What you’ll learn: How ethical frameworks shape policy stances on speech and their real‑world implications.

Episode: Senator Rand Paul — Tariffs, Debt, China, and a Warning for America (All‑In Podcast)

Episode Overview

Sen. Rand Paul (physician by training) covers deficits, tariffs as taxes, Social Security reform, trade’s mutual benefits, executive emergency powers, alleged COVID‑origin cover‑ups and risky gain‑of‑function work, Fed interest payments to banks, and systemic fragility 21 20 19 17 12 .

Key Insights

  • Tariffs are taxes and a relatively small revenue stream (≈$100–150B annually) versus multi‑trillion borrowing; emergency‑power use to set them raises separation‑of‑powers concerns 15 14 1 18 .
  • Social Security: favors gradual retirement‑age increases (e.g., +3 months/year to ~70) plus means‑testing rather than large upfront tax hikes 13 6 .
  • Trade is generally mutually beneficial; “we got richer and so did they,” challenging “we were ripped off” narratives 3 16 .
  • COVID origins & biosecurity: alleges a public/private messaging split by officials, calls for independent, conflict‑free review of gain‑of‑function (including classified programs) 17 4 .
  • Fed mechanics: notes large interest paid to banks (and some foreign banks) and warns the financial system operates on confidence (fractional reserve), amplifying crisis risk 12 11 .

Recommendations & Resources

  • Book: Steven Pinker’s Enlightenment Now; data tools: HumanProgress.org; Cato’s Steve Lincecombe’s work on long‑run income trends 9 8 7 .
  • Policy: reform emergency‑powers (sunset unless affirmed); create an independent commission to review gain‑of‑function research (civilian and classified) 5 4 .

Notable Quotes

“Every voluntary trade ever made in humanity… is mutually beneficial or it doesn’t occur.” 3

“I like to say that I’m part of the Leave Me Alone coalition… really, I’m part of the Leave Me the Hell Alone coalition.” 2

“There’s never been a more extraordinary coverup… [they said] in public the opposite of what they were saying in private.” 17

Must‑Listen Clip

  • The “house of cards” explainer: how fractional reserve and confidence interact with rising interest costs and Fed policy.
    • What you’ll learn: A concise risk map of how debt, banking mechanics, and policy shocks can cascade 10 12 .
Grain demand realignment, Brazil’s beef momentum, and early‑season risk management
06 September 2025
8 minutes read
农业致富经 Agriculture And Farming 农业致富经 Agriculture And Farming
Canal Rural Canal Rural
No-Till Farmer No-Till Farmer
10 sources
Prices diverged as corn held technical support while soybeans faced a China demand gap; Brazil’s beef exports set records as energy softened. This brief adds proven on‑farm practices, regional policy/logistics shifts, input market signals, and a seasonal outlook for U.S. and Brazil.

Market Movers

  • Corn (U.S.) — prices eased week over week but held key technical support. Futures finished down about 28¢ for the week, yet closed above the 50‑day moving average for a second straight week; resistance sits near 4.25–4.34 with potential pullbacks toward 4.07 if tests occur 74 73 32 . New‑crop export sales topped roughly 83 million bu in the latest daily flashes, and current price levels remain stimulative for exports, ethanol production, and feed demand 40 29 .

  • Soybeans (U.S. and Brazil) — the China demand gap is widening U.S. basis and pressuring cash, while Brazil’s near‑term exports accelerate. U.S. new‑crop soybean export book is among the weakest of the past decade, with some Northern Plains locations reporting cash bids under $9 and select facilities going no‑bid without Pacific Northwest pull; unknown‑destination new‑crop sales total about 133 million bu 41 36 42 28 . Brazil’s shipper association ANEC projects September soybean exports at 6.75 M t, up ~30.8% y/y 55 .

  • Wheat (U.S.) — futures revisited contract‑low areas despite solid demand claims. Analysts cite persistent, large fund shorts and note U.S. wheat is the “cheapest in the world,” even as global production increases from key exporters weigh on price 27 38 39 .

  • Beef (Brazil) — exports set a new August record (>268,000 t). U.S. tariff impacts were largely offset by higher shipments to China (+~50% y/y in August) and gains in Russia; Jan–Aug volumes rose from ~1.59 M t (2024) to ~1.83 M t (2025), with full‑year exports trending toward ~3 M t 22 5 56 .

  • Energy (global) — crude softened as inventories rose and supply expectations firmed. Brent futures fell to the lowest since Aug 20 on U.S. stock builds and OPEC+ supply signals; earlier in the week, flat crude prices were also down ~$2.50/bbl while refined product cracks stayed supported by outages 1 60 96 95 .

  • FX/trade (Brazil) — August trade surplus reached US$6.1B, aiding the real; the dollar slipped under R$5.45 amid calmer global flows, though political risk keeps volatility elevated 59 10 .

Innovation Spotlight

  • Short‑stature corn systems (U.S.) — Pression Smart Corn reduced plant height about one‑third, improving standability (shortened below the ear with protective leaf sheaths) and enabling late‑season access for fungicide/insecticide and fertility. Groundbreaker growers averaged ~39k plants/acre vs 34–35k conventional, with narrow rows beneficial but not mandatory; deployment totals ~85,000 acres across six states with expansion targeted toward ~250,000 acres next season 78 77 92 76 75 89 .

  • Early fungal detection network (U.S.) — a chlorophyll‑fluorescence sensor grid covering ~50,000 acres alerted growers an average 4.5 weeks before visible white mold symptoms, providing action lead time to protect yield 64 .

  • No‑till + cover‑crop compaction management (U.S./global) — a smartphone‑linked penetrometer system benchmarks rooting resistance; fields under ~200 psi are “ideal.” Users report no‑till with specific covers “mellows” soil; the tool is in 32 countries with real‑time mapping via free app and phone mounts 66 45 65 .

  • National cattle traceability pilot (Brazil) — 50 ranches are trialing ear‑button chip IDs with handheld readers to capture birth‑to‑slaughter data (723 head already enrolled at one pilot). A unified national database is due by 2026, ID rollout during 2027–2029, and full coverage of ~240M head by 2032, supporting sanitary certification, market access, and value addition 30 54 53 .

  • Forage & resilience (Brazil, semi‑arid) — Embrapa’s new andropogon cultivar BRS Sarandi plus gliricidia and palm forage were highlighted as drought‑adapted options for Northeastern livestock systems 63 .

Regional Developments

  • United States

    • Weather: historically cold early September brought localized frosts into the northern Plains; models indicate renewed cold fronts with risk around mid‑September. Eastern Corn Belt drought persists with below‑normal precipitation outlook into late September; soybean finishing rainfall remains limited 49 84 48 46 .
    • Logistics: Mississippi River stages at St. Louis/Memphis are trending down; light‑loading barges raises freight costs during peak harvest, stressing the supply chain 71 72 .
    • Policy: a federal court vacated part of the H‑2A job‑function wage rule; EPA withdrew stricter meat/poultry wastewater revisions; a narrowed WOTUS proposal aligned with Sackett is headed for public comment 83 82 69 .
  • Black Sea

    • Market risk: reports point to a worsening situation, sustaining uncertainty around regional grain flows 94 .
  • Japan–U.S. trade

    • Agreement details: Japan committed to an additional US$8B/yr in U.S. agricultural purchases; Japan imported about 512M bu of U.S. corn in MY 24/25 and was the No. 2 corn buyer behind Mexico 91 90 .
  • Brazil

    • Poultry access: the EU officially recognized Brazil as free of avian influenza, enabling resumption of chicken exports to EU member states 51 .
    • Producer finance: federal MP provides R$12B in credit to up to 100k producers in calamity‑hit municipalities; small (≤R$250k @6%), medium (≤R$1.5M @8%), others (≤R$3M @10%) with up to 9‑year term and 1‑year grace 52 .
    • Sustainability/credit enablement: São Paulo aims to validate ~200k CAR records (150k already), with completion targeted by 2026; CAR validation improves compliance and credit access 50 18 .
    • Corn outlook (Mato Grosso): IMEA’s first 25/26 estimate pegs production at 51.7 M t (−~7% y/y) on ~7.39 M ha (+~2%), with yield at ~116.6 sc/ha (−>8%); some northeast areas are shifting from sesame toward corn/sorghum 14 61 62 13 .
    • Corn ethanol: a R$2.5B plant announced for Rondonópolis will produce ~900M L/yr plus feed and energy, creating up to ~2,000 construction jobs and ~350 permanent, adding ~R$60M/yr to local revenue 12 11 .
    • EU–Mercosur: the accord advanced to final stages (signature sought by year‑end), with EU ratification rules noted; stakeholders caution that reciprocal agricultural market openings will require careful management 26 25 24 23 .
    • Planting window (Center‑West): sanitary fallow ends Sept 6 in MT, but forecasters advise delaying major soybean planting until late Sept/early Oct as soil moisture is <20%, rains are spotty through mid‑Sept, and soil/air temps remain hot; more reliable 100–200 mm totals are expected from late Sept into October 4 3 .

Best Practices (Actionable)

  • Soybean harvest timing & drying (U.S.)

    • Start slightly early (~14% moisture) and accept elevator docks if hauling direct; this typically nets better than waiting for ~9% due to shrink and harvest losses at overly dry moisture. For on‑farm storage, use automatic bin‑fan controls to bin at ~17% and ambient‑air dry to ~13% in ~3 weeks, reducing losses and avoiding dockage later 93 .
  • Corn planting date risk (U.S.)

    • PTI research identified “planting corn too early” (late Mar/early Apr) as a top money‑loser; conditions must be “about perfect.” Trials show planting a bit later avoids yield penalties, improving risk‑reward 44 43 .
  • Storage & logistics (U.S.)

    • Avoid ground‑piling soybeans; plan corn bagging where bin/commercial space is tight. Anticipate longer marketing windows for soy when exports are weak and crush demand is steady but not immediately large 35 79 .
  • Poultry: broilers (Brazil/global)

    • Critical first week: target ~5.5× initial chick weight by day 7. Monitor temperature, water/feeder height, feed availability and litter cleanliness; minimize noise and crowding. Climatized, phone‑controlled houses reduce labor needs and improve consistency on 86–90k‑bird sites 20 19 21 68 .
    • Fire safety: ensure robust electrical inspection/response protocols; a litter‑ignition incident was contained only by immediate action 67 .
  • Turkeys (China)

    • Don’t feed broiler rations to turkeys. From 3–6 months, growth requires higher protein and adequate Ca/P for skeletal development; practitioners upgraded broiler feed by adding calcium (e.g., shell meal), dicalcium phosphate (~+1.5%), and ~+6% protein meal, and used garlic periodically to support gut health and intake; results showed improved growth and reduced fighting after management changes 9 8 7 .
  • Grain‑bin safety (U.S.)

  • Biologicals (application essentials)

    • Target the pest location (e.g., apply under leaves for whitefly). Maintain RH >60% and avoid midday UV, which kills many fungal/ bacterial agents; use airflow/turbulence to deposit on leaf undersides when required 58 17 16 57 .
  • Soil compaction benchmarking

    • Use a field penetrometer; sustained resistance under ~200 psi indicates favorable rooting and trafficability targets 66 .

Input Markets

  • Biofuels & vegoil demand (U.S.) — biodiesel/renewable diesel imports plunged (biodiesel −94% y/y to ~2,000 bpd; renewable diesel −85% to ~5,000 bpd) after 45Z changes that restrict credits to domestically produced fuels; historically, credits are bid into feedstock prices, and policy‑driven shifts have already impacted soybean oil volatility 87 86 80 85 .

  • Energy — petroleum prices eased on U.S. inventory builds and supply expectations, supporting potential relief in farm fuel costs 1 .

  • Equipment — producers continue to face high machinery costs; examples cited include X9 combines and other large equipment roughly doubling since 2020, with 150‑hp tractors reaching ~US$250k 99 .

  • Fertilizer & machinery costs under tariffs (U.S.) — industry reports linked tariff policy to higher fertilizer and machinery prices, squeezing farm margins 98 97 .

  • Bio‑fertilizers/biostimulants — commercial offerings (e.g., seaweed/lithothamnion blends; balanced macro‑/micronutrient formulations) are promoted for root vigor and metabolic support; confirm registration and provenance when purchasing, and follow label conditions ( 2 15 ).

Forward Outlook

  • U.S. harvest logistics & risk — expect periodic frost threats across the northern Plains and continued Eastern Corn Belt dryness through late September; anticipate light‑loading on the Lower Mississippi if Ohio River contributions remain weak, adding freight costs and timing risk 49 47 70 .

  • USDA reports — September crop readings may not meaningfully pull headline corn yield off August levels given limited mature samples; later reports will integrate more ear weight and harvest data 31 .

  • Soy demand — absence of early‑season Chinese buys keeps U.S. basis weak, particularly in the Northern Plains/PNW corridor; ANEC sees strong September Brazil shipments, maintaining export competition near term 42 55 .

  • Biofuels policy timeline (U.S.) — EPA is expected to finalize 2026–2028 RVOs by Oct 31; the proposal expands biomass‑based diesel volumes by ~67% from 2025 levels. Treasury guidance for 45Z (with a North America feedstock ring‑fence and removal of ILUC penalty) would unlock stalled crush/renewable diesel investments 37 34 33 .

  • Brazil planting & weather — in Mato Grosso and adjacent Center‑West, consider delaying soybean planting until late September–early October to leverage the onset of 100–200 mm rains and avoid high soil temperatures; earlier (11–20 Sept) showers are expected to be light/spotty 3 .

  • Trade frameworks — EU–Mercosur approval steps continue (signature targeted by year‑end); Japanese commitments add near‑term U.S. export potential. Monitor U.S.–China negotiations, as retaliatory tariffs and purchasing directives continue to reshape soybean flows 25 91 6 .

  • Protein markets — Brazil’s beef exports remain on record pace despite U.S. tariffs, with China absorbing more product; U.S. cattle prices have corrected from contract highs and may see seasonal supply increases into Sept/Oct 22 88 .

Relay Policy, Covenants, and Client Updates Define Bitcoin’s Near-Term Path
06 September 2025
8 minutes read
Citadel Dispatch Citadel Dispatch
TFTC TFTC
Bitcoin Magazine Bitcoin Magazine
12 sources
Relay-policy disputes, covenant proposals (CTV/OP_CAT), and new client releases dominate this cycle alongside Lightning router economics, emerging ecash overlays, and an incident affecting the Blockstream app. We map the technical stakes, infrastructure health, and philosophical debates shaping Bitcoin’s near-term path.

Protocol Development

  • Mempool relay policy vs consensus rules. Current disputes are about node policy (transaction relay/mempool) rather than consensus validity. Core maintainers argue that certain consensus‑valid but historically non‑standard transactions (e.g., very large OP_RETURN/inscriptions and sub‑1 sat/vB) are being mined via out‑of‑band paths, introducing centralization risk (reduced visibility, poorer fee estimation for nodes) if default relay does not account for this 17 16 15 . Alternative implementations that relax filters aim to relay a broader set of transactions at the cost of accepting some centralization and estimation trade‑offs 13 .

  • OP_RETURN defaults context. Gloria Zhao reiterated that the recent OP_RETURN defaults discussion “has absolutely nothing to do with wanting arbitrary data stuffed in the chain,” pointing to the PR commentary for details 95 94 .

  • Arbitrary data can’t be reliably banned by policy alone. A conference talk summarized BitMEX Research’s view that encodings can embed arbitrary data (even image payloads) into standard structures like keys; preventing it would imply forbidding normal primitives, which is not feasible within Bitcoin’s current design 41 .

  • Covenants and soft‑fork pathfinding. A soft fork is a backward‑compatible rule change that lets non‑upgrading nodes stay on the same chain 39 . Script is intentionally limited (no native future‑spend constraints or in‑script proof verification within block limits), constraining on‑chain programmability 38 37 . CheckTemplateVerify (CTV) is discussed for simpler vaults and safety rails (future‑spend restrictions), and for reducing interactivity in constructions like ARC 36 35 . Additional proposals such as OP_CAT and state‑carrying covenants could enable on‑chain verification of L2 state rather than relying on federations, but may introduce new risks (e.g., MEV‑like dynamics that could pressure miner centralization) 34 31 . Speakers noted social consensus is the bottleneck; delaying decisions increases ossification risk 32 27 .

  • Inscriptions/fee market observations. On‑chain JPEG inscriptions rose from ~88M (May) to ~105M four months later (~20% increase), primarily using Taproot inscriptions 107 . One estimate attributed ~1% excess fees vs. normal transactions and roughly ~1.5% of combined fee+reward (estimated from reward only) to this activity; persistently higher fees encourage miner investment in hashpower 103 84 .

  • Governance primacy of validating nodes. Several reminders from prior conflicts: economic nodes enforce consensus; miners can’t unilaterally change protocol; market forces decided the block‑size dispute 106 104 .

Bitcoin is owned by humanity, the protocol developers are stewards, and need consensus from users to change it materially. bitcoin is about money, spam has no place in the timechain. what defaults the bitcoin core project puts in the reference client matter in this.
x.com

Lightning & Layer‑2 Progress

  • LN router economics: automation is trending but naive “safe, high‑fee” strategies cut volume and lower total revenue. More sophisticated fee automation is needed for better router yield 102 . Technical significance: smarter dynamic pricing could improve network liquidity and forwarding reliability.

  • User‑level Lightning. Fees are typically very small and settlement is near‑instant, but users must pre‑provision channels/liquidity to have a usable spending limit 49 . Multiple payment layers (e.g., Lightning) extend Bitcoin’s transactional throughput, with popular mobile implementations such as Wallet of Satoshi and Phoenix 48 .

  • Overlay protocols and trade‑offs (ARK/“arkade_os”). Summary from discussion: arkade behaves like an overlay‑mempool system; unilateral exits exist but their cost‑effectiveness depends on vTXO size; VM state transitions rely on cooperating servers. Zero‑conf‑like swaps reduce latency but introduce reliance on the operator batching users; if servers don’t cooperate, users may face double‑spend/collusion risks akin to statechains 99 100 98 101 . Impact: faster UX at the expense of stronger trust/minimization.

  • L2 status and requirements. One talk asserted only two Bitcoin L2s are in production today: Lightning and Spark 28 . Trust‑minimized L2s need data posted to Bitcoin (data availability), preserving miner fees while allowing off‑chain sequencing/business models 29 . CTV could lower interactivity in some L2s and enable on‑chain slashing for Bitcoin staking scripts (today emulated via committees, which can collude to avoid slashing) 35 33 . Caution: more expressive opcodes like OP_CAT may also enable MEV‑like vectors and miner centralization pressures 31 .

  • Ecash overlays (Nostr + Cashu). NPUB Cash turns any Nostr npub into a Lightning address; the service originally held bearer Cashew tokens server‑side (next‑in‑line custodian while the mint is ultimate custodian) 4 3 . Security enhancements lock tokens to user pubkeys so the server cannot spend them 2 . The experimental NPUBX design stores mint quotes (secrets) instead of pre‑minted tokens so clients redeem directly, further reducing server custody 1 . Significance: federation/ecash overlays can improve UX and privacy but introduce operator/mint trust; multi‑mint and key‑lock features mitigate some risks.

  • UX signals. A Spiral podcast highlighted the importance of simple addresses/UX and a community shift toward sats as the everyday unit—helpful for small payments and mental accounting 93 .

Infrastructure Updates

  • Node software releases and choices.

    • Bitcoin Knots v29.1.knots20250903 released. Users are urged to verify downloads; tag: v29.1.knots20250903 97 96 88 87 . The last 21.x Knots (v21.2.knots20210629) has known security issues; version numbering moved from “0.x” to “x” by dropping the leading zero 85 86 .
    • Wasabi Wallet v2.7: stabilization update, improved node integration, “smarter” coordinators, UI refresh, and bug fixes. Update notifications and verification are now distributed via Nostr relays to reduce reliance on centralized channels; best practice remains PGP verification 22 21 . Sparrow is desktop‑only; beware fake mobile apps—install from sparrowwallet.com and verify signatures 20 . Node platforms like Start9 make it easy to select Core vs Knots and adjust configs; operators can also run Core in blocks‑only mode (no mempool) for reliability preferences 18 19 .
  • Client incident: Blockstream app/Jade reports. Multiple users reported wallet login/loading failures across platforms, sometimes with on‑chain accounts visible while Lightning accounts failed to load; app warnings cited “network issues,” and one user could not restore to a fresh device during the incident. Logs showed repeated empty UTXO results; users noted lack of timely public status updates 71 70 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 . Technical takeaway: avoid single‑vendor dependencies for critical access; ensure alternate wallet paths and backups work under service degradation.

  • Mining and physical infra. A “Hash Hut: Texas Edition” test video circulated; one observer praised operators for actively fixing “filters” while others “LARP” 92 91 90 . Impact: ongoing industrialization and operational improvements at mining sites.

  • Network health snapshot. At block height 913,191 with ~57 blocks to the next retarget, an estimated +5.4% difficulty adjustment was cited; average block interval ~9m29s during the sample. One mempool instance showed ~5,975 transactions and ignored sub‑1 sat/vB transactions in that view 26 25 24 23 . Empty blocks were also noted as periodically occurring 79 . Anecdotally, a user reported a 24‑minute confirmation for ~$0.25 in fees, consistent with currently light mempools in some periods 57 .

  • Peer behavior anomaly. An investigation described peers with version timestamps behind by up to ~5,100 minutes (noted on Core v27.1/v27.2), triggering Libbitcoin to drop them. A maintainer acknowledged and said they would fix; full write‑up linked 47 45 46 .

  • Weekly engineering round‑up. Optech Newsletter #370 summarizes consensus‑change discussions, new releases/RCs, and notable infrastructure software changes 69 68 67 .

Developer Discussions

  • Relay policy trade‑offs quantified. A summary framed the impasse: pro‑filter view claims significant spam reduction with minimal miner centralization; anti‑filter view claims negligible spam reduction with substantial centralization from filtering. Better measurement is needed on both effects 12 .

  • Implementation diversity and operator choice. By design, Core developers cannot force upgrades (no auto‑updates), reinforcing that policy defaults affect primarily the node that opts into them 10 17 . Knots is a Core‑derived client that filters non‑monetary transactions by design, changing relay behavior; supporters cite added decentralization choices while critics point to potential harm (e.g., the OP_RETURN episode) 14 59 .

“Core devs cannot force you to do anything. There’s no auto updates.” 10

  • Maintainer credentials. One talk referenced contribution stats to contextualize maintainer trust: Gloria Zhao listed as the 12th most active Core contributor; Luke Dashjr the 15th 40 .

  • OP_RETURN defaults clarification. As noted above, the reposted summary stressed the change was not about inviting arbitrary data 95 94 .

  • Arbitrary data and pragmatism. Another discussion argued that reversing inscriptions/large payloads would require disruptive consensus changes (e.g., removing OP_RETURN or reducing block size), so operational pragmatism and clear local policy choices are emphasized 8 .

Adoption Fundamentals

  • Money properties and supply. Bitcoin implements a digital bearer asset enabling true peer‑to‑peer digital transfers without third‑party coordination; the protocol’s core properties include permissionlessness, censorship resistance, unconfiscatability, and absolute scarcity—anchored in the 21 million cap 83 82 81 . Issuance mechanically halves: at 3.125 BTC/block today, ~3.125% of total supply will be mined this epoch; next epoch’s 1.526 BTC/block implies ~1.526% over that four‑year period 74 . Many advocates prefer sats as the practical unit (100,000,000 sats per BTC) to normalize everyday amounts 58 93 .

  • Non‑price health indicators. Some community members recommend watching hash rate and broadening time horizons rather than focusing on short‑term fiat price volatility 89 .

  • Lightning and grassroots usage. Examples include in‑person Lightning acceptance (e.g., a Tokyo food truck) and social tipping via Nostr “zaps” for content creators, indicating repeated small‑value flows over L2 7 6 5 . Note: practical access for many still funnels through KYC exchange choke points, and developers in privacy contexts have faced legal risk 80 .

  • Institutional infrastructure and “economic nodes.” Large custodial actors (e.g., major ETF issuers/custodians) can sway upgrade debates due to business incentives that may not align with self‑custody UX; this adds a social‑consensus layer to technical decisions 30 .

  • Non‑custodial commerce rails. Payment‑forwarding services that generate invoices and monitor the chain without taking custody (e.g., Blockonomics) reduce third‑party control; funds settle directly to user self‑custody 64 .

  • Custody hygiene and UTXO management. Community guidance remains: not your keys, not your coins; several users cite avoiding losses during exchange failures by withdrawing to self‑custody 44 43 . Others report losses at failed exchanges, reinforcing the risk 42 . When off‑ramps impose low per‑withdrawal caps, users can accumulate many small UTXOs, increasing future consolidation fees; planning periodic consolidation helps 62 61 . Moving coins from exchange to hardware wallets transitions from an IOU to on‑chain ownership with keys held locally (bitcoin “lives” on the chain; wallets secure the keys) 73 72 .

  • Operational literacy for on‑chain verification. Verify transfers via txid and block explorers (e.g., mempool.space). Be wary when counterparties refuse to provide complete recipient addresses/txids; Bitcoin transfers are irreversible 78 77 76 75 63 .

Cultural Evolution

  • Ossification vs iteration. Multiple voices warn that allowing an “ossification camp” to dominate could stall upgrades that improve self‑custodial UX and scaling, while others fear centralization or unintended consequences from new opcodes 32 27 31 .

  • Roles and authority. Reaffirmations that validating nodes, not miners, set the rules; developers are stewards who need user consensus for material changes 106 104 105 .

  • What counts as “spam.” Some argue paid transactions are, by definition, not spam; others still prefer filtering non‑monetary data. The debate currently rides on measurements and policy defaults, not changes to consensus 11 17 .

  • Language and identity. Community reminders note Satoshi used terms like “time‑stamping server” and “Timechain,” not “blockchain,” reflecting Bitcoin’s roots in timestamped proof‑of‑work ledgers 66 65 .

  • Self‑custody as ethos. Across podcasts and community threads, the emphasis remains on open‑source, verifiable clients and hardware, independent funding for protocol work, and minimizing reliance on centralized infrastructure 9 60 .

Trust, Evals, and AI‑Accelerated PM: What to Do Now
05 September 2025
10 minutes read
Perspectives Perspectives
Lenny Rachitsky Lenny Rachitsky
Kevin Weil 🇺🇸 Kevin Weil 🇺🇸
11 sources
A concise field guide for PMs: trust as a moat, distribution and retention as reality checks, the Era of Evals and AI PM, with step‑by‑step discovery, prioritization, and launch tactics, real case lessons, career moves, and a vetted tool stack.

Big Ideas

  • Trust is the moat in the AI era

    • Why it matters: When AI can fake anything, customers ask one question: can they trust what you built? Trust compounds; growth hacks fade 43 6 . Treat accuracy and honesty as core product features; they reduce churn and increase referrals 37 39 .
    • How to apply:
      • Make correctness a top KPI (e.g., event accuracy, reconciliation error rate). Fix trust-breaking bugs first and notify users plainly: what happened and what you fixed 41 40 .
      • Instrument for retention and referral lift after trust-improving fixes 37 .

    And in the AI era, where fakery is free and skepticism is default, trust is no longer just an advantage. It is the moat.
    x.com

  • Product is half; distribution is the other half

    • Why it matters: Building without distribution creates “products nobody wants.” Distribution must be designed and tested alongside the product 45 . Retention is the reality check between novelty and true utility 44 .
    • How to apply:
  • The Era of Evals (and the rise of AI PM)

  • Problem space first → metrics that matter

    • Why it matters: Over 80% of new products fail mainly because teams jump to solutions without validating the problem 22 .
    • How to apply:
      • Follow the Lean Product Process: customer → needs → value prop → features → UX 23 .
      • Derive metrics from a clear definition of “solved;” pick inputs that drive the output you care about (e.g., FTUE completion → DAU) 99 87 .
      • Build a metric tree: North Star (e.g., items sold) → first-level metrics (conversion, returns, selection breadth) → drivers (payment conversion, availability, marketing clicks) 24 76 .
  • Strategy-aligned, transparent prioritization beats ad‑hoc requests

    • Why it matters: Without alignment and visibility, roadmaps devolve into noise or ticket queues. You need an intake system, a real strategy with exec buy‑in, and transparent scoring for decisions 114 112 111 .
    • How to apply:
      • Capture requests publicly (e.g., UserVoice/UserEcho) so everyone sees context and votes 113 .
      • Score work (e.g., IDEA/E: Impact, Dissatisfaction, Evidence, Advantage to us, over Effort) and publish why items are promoted, deferred, or denied 111 .
      • Treat choices as “requests that fit the vision vs. those that don’t;” say no often—especially for early-stage products—and prioritize relentlessly 110 84 89 .

Tactical Playbook

  • Discovery that de‑risks building

    • Validate first: confirm the problem is pervasive, urgent, and that users will pay 124 .
    • Talk to customers directly; ask outcome-focused “why” questions; customers are experts in their problems, not your product 71 70 72 . Treat early convos as field research and map gaps between official process and lived reality 135 .
    • Run pre‑launch experiments: landing page + “Buy Now,” explainer video demo, preorders 144 55 54 . Prioritize retention as your truth metric 44 .
    • Make demand measurable: drive repeatable cohorts (e.g., Reddit/X ads) to compute CAC:LTV; avoid over-inferencing from one-off signups 62 61 .
    • Segment and choose where to win: segment customers, compare segment performance (usage, CAC, ARPU) and potential (TAM, competition, ability to serve) 123 .
    • Mine unstructured data for “alpha”: combine 1st/2nd/3rd-party data and behavioral signals to find non-obvious insights 154 153 .
  • AI‑accelerated prototyping (vibe coding) with guardrails

    1. Draft a concise product brief (target customer, top problems, features, data model, UX traits) before generating code 75 .
    2. A/B your prompt: try a one-liner vs. pasting the brief; verify claims (“built drag-and-drop”) actually exist—trust but verify 20 .
    3. Start in Discuss mode to plan; switch to Build to apply scoped changes; use Undo/Versions aggressively; prefer minimal, surgical edits 74 19 17 16 .
    4. Use the inspector to target elements; beware class-level changes propagating globally 18 .
    5. Reverse‑prototype existing UIs from screenshots (e.g., Magic Patterns) 66 .
    6. Staff live sessions as a trio: 1) keyboard, 2) data (synthetic data/schema), 3) QA/UX notes 68 .
    7. Specify persistence early (e.g., local storage/API) to avoid “it doesn’t save” surprises 15 .
    8. Paste exact error messages or screenshots; tools often auto‑diagnose 12 73 .
  • Intake, prioritization, and saying “no” with evidence

  • Making Product Ops a force multiplier (not template police)

    • Clarify mission first: why was ProdOps created (visibility, requirements quality, launch consistency, data standards)? 65 64 63 . Align reporting to the CPO to stay product‑centric 139 .
    • Measure value: faster projects, clearer exec data, more PM time for discovery vs. admin; track impacts like case volume, revenue, churn, and feature adoption 137 121 .
    • Collaboration patterns: let Ops draft; PMs edit; reduce PM admin—“reducing PM admin opens up everything else” 122 . Avoid top‑down “template police”; find an Ops ally who truly understands PM to unblock teams 138 80 .
    • If mandated tools slow you down, implement team‑fit tools and increase stakeholder transparency; report outcomes, not rituals 136 .
  • Metrics and observability you can act on

    • Derive metrics from the defined problem and “solved” state 99 . Use input→output chains (e.g., FTUE completion drives DAU) 87 .
    • Build a metric tree from NSM to drivers to target interventions 24 76 .
    • Search effectiveness: track zero‑shot success (search ends without follow‑ups) and follow‑up search rates 85 .
    • Run monthly/quarterly retros to avoid losing the big picture to short‑term optimization 86 .
    • Better observability = faster learnings—invest in instrumentation early 38 .
  • Releases and launches that keep up with engineering velocity

  • Mobile monetization: pick simplicity to maximize conversion

    • For subscription apps, native IAP (e.g., via RevenueCat) is the safest launch path—higher conversion, simpler refunds, and lower operational overhead than external web paywalls 11 52 51 53 .
    • External links (Stripe) add friction and sync complexity; DMA exceptions increase regional logic without guaranteed savings 10 9 . Match approach to what you sell and test before optimizing fees 8 .

Case Studies & Lessons

  • Trust as growth engine (Crazy Egg)

    • What happened: Heatmaps had to be pixel‑accurate; even small errors killed trust. The team treated accuracy as the business and emailed users plainly when issues occurred 42 41 40 .
    • Outcome: Honesty and reliability improved retention and created loyalty; agencies used the product in client decks—a trust flywheel 7 .
    • Apply it: Define “trust incidents,” set SLOs around accuracy, and make incident comms a first‑class ritual 37 .
  • Fundraising reality for PMs: milestones, cash discipline, and unit economics

    • Lesson: Plan milestones that make the next round “consensus enough” (e.g., from Seed to a $10M Series A); scarcity forces better discipline, while “indigestion” from over‑funding kills companies 81 117 116 . Insist on clear unit economics; avoid extrapolating models from buzzy spaces without proof 115 .
    • Apply it: Tie roadmap to investor‑expectation milestones, model runway to reach them, and publish unit‑economic thresholds for go/no‑go decisions.

  • Rolling‑thunder launches in a rapid release shop

  • Vibe‑coding gotchas (Bolt/V0/Magic Patterns)

    • Observation: A one‑line prompt produced a seemingly complete roadmap UI; claims (e.g., drag‑and‑drop) weren’t always built. Teams needed versions, “minimal change” requests, and clear persistence requirements 20 17 16 15 .
    • Apply it: Use Discuss→Build loops with small diffs; reverse‑prototype from screenshots when modifying existing UIs 66 19 .
  • Early MRR ≠ fundable traction

    • Reality: $500 MRR in two weeks is meaningless to investors without churn and retention data; angels around ~$5k MRR, VCs often at $25–100k MRR 50 49 . Focus fundraising on clear use of funds and strengthen distribution first 60 .
    • Apply it: Reinvest early revenue, diagnose distribution bottlenecks, and use tools to surface high‑fit conversations across Reddit/X/LinkedIn to scale outreach efficiently 56 59 58 .

Career Corner

  • The AI PM advantage

  • Break in (or up) faster

    • Don’t rely on online applications; tap referrals and direct reach‑outs 4 .
    • “Do the job before you get the job”: use the product, talk to customers, bring a prototype to interviews 2 . Vibe‑coded prototypes can help you show—not tell 33 .
    • Tailor your resume/story to the role; speak the company’s language and highlight upstream PMM/PM impact 1 .
    • Reduce hiring risk: show references, make it easy for managers to bet on you 3 34 .
  • Build domain leverage and network early

    • Domain‑expert PMs are in demand (e.g., health tech); leverage backgrounds like neuroscience to enter relevant roles; many openings reported in health‑tech/biotech 120 119 118 . Consider adjacent roles (CSM, ops, BA) to transition internally 69 .
    • In a new org, meet names/faces beyond your dev team early; build informal authority by spotting cross‑team patterns and learning how work really gets done 132 131 133 134 .
  • Compensation and equity hygiene

    • Beware low‑equity/low‑salary deals (e.g., ~1% with a 35% pay cut); insist on fair equity or salary 57 . Equal‑share pre‑funding is a common expectation; dilution later is normal 46 .
    • Use Slicing Pie: track unpaid fair‑market contributions (“bets”) and split equity proportionally: Your Share = Your Bets / Total Bets 48 47 .
    • Sanity‑check founders: verify claimed exits; lack of proof is a red flag 145 .
  • Interview prep signal

    • If you’re targeting CPaaS/SaaS, be ready to discuss metrics and KPIs across ideation, development, launch, and growth; link inputs to outputs with a metric tree 78 77 24 .
  • Work with AI, faster

    • Treat AI as a teammate for drafting, prototyping, and discovery, but keep the human edge—customer understanding and strategy 32 14 . “You have to do everything faster today” 35 .

Tools & Resources

  • Evals 101 for PMs

  • Eval tooling: RAGAS, DeepEval

    • What: Open-source tools PMs are exploring for AI evaluation 129 .
    • Why: Standardize quality bars for LLM features before shipping.
  • AI prototyping & reverse‑prototyping

    • What: Magic Patterns (screenshot→UI), V0/Bolt for vibe‑coding 66 21 .
    • Why: Jump to live prototypes quickly; modify existing UIs from screenshots 66 .
    • Tip: Use hyphens for bullets in PRDs to avoid ingestion issues 13 .
  • Roadmap/KR alignment

  • Feedback & request portals

    • What: UserVoice/UserEcho; internal ideas portals for voting/commenting 113 141 .
    • Why: Transparency, prioritization at scale, and less siloed request sprawl 113 .
  • Mobile subscriptions

    • What: RevenueCat + native IAP 11 .
    • Why: Higher conversion and easy refunds vs. external web paywalls 52 51 .
  • AI PM career kit (Aakash Gupta)

  • ChatGPT conversation branching

    • What: Branch conversations to explore directions without losing your original thread; available on web for logged‑in users 126 125 .
    • Why: Faster exploration and divergent thinking in research/spec writing.
  • Warehouse‑native analytics

    • What: If you already have a data warehouse, consider a warehouse‑native analytics tool to cut costs and improve data fidelity vs. standalone analytics 140 .
  • Metric Tree playbooks

“Retention is the ultimate reality check. It’s the difference between building a moment and building a company.” 44

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