๐ฉ๐ถ๐ฐ๐๐ผ๐ฟ_๐ง๐ต๐ฒ๐ข๐ฟ๐ฎ๐ฐ๐น๐ฒ
@victorokpukpan_
Blockchain Security Researcher | Amb: @CyfrinUpdraft
I promised to share some info about the dApp I built for my graduation project using @Neon_EVM. Itโs called Streamline โ a decentralized tip jar where creators can receive tips in multiple tokens. Simple concept, but the implementation showcases something I think is pretty coolโฆ

Collect โem. Flex โem. Share โem. โ Badges and achievements are now live on Updraft: - Earn them for completing courses and lessons - Grow your learning streaks - Pin them to your profile - Showcase your skills - Build a portfolio of progress ๐
You can't secure what you don't understand. Thatโs why most security issues begin at the keyboard, not in a protocol.
Graduation week. ๐ซก
If you want to get into crypto, as a developer, security researcher, or an informed investor. @CyfrinUpdraft is the most cutting-edge platform, while also being free. You shouldn't have to spend a single dollar to learn from the best. And with AI, the learning is even faster.
Not greatness. Not mastery. I wish to rise to the rank of deity.
I made a ๐ฆ wallet plugin that: 1. Decodes your calldata 2. Uses that decoded data as input to an AI 3. Which then searches the web to see if the transaction has anything "fishy" about it. Here is an example where you'd be sending money to the ByBit hackers, but it catches it!
I can't wait to play Art of War again.
Last week, I shared what @Neon_EVM is and how it lets you run Ethereum contracts on Solana. But here's one other thing that really caught my attention during the bootcamp: how they solved the token compatibility problem. It was one of our first lessons and I'm glad it was. Letโฆ
Break problems down to basic principles before solving them.
Nigerians are some of the hardest-working and most sincere folks in crypto. This has been said before. But I had to reiterate.
If you've been following my posts over the past 3 months, you'd have seen me posting consistently each week about @Neon_EVM. I was part of their bootcamp, and through the last 10 weeks, Iโve learned a lot. I feel like it's only fair to share the little I know about Neon EVM forโฆ
This feedback loop stuff feels... good?
If you saw my previous post, you'd remember I said I was going to be learning formal verification in my free time. Well, so far, it's been bumpy. Mostly because Iโve got other stuff Iโm doing dev-wise. Between Halmos and the Certora Prover, I think Halmos connects more easilyโฆ
So far, I have done mostly manual audits. I have learned fuzzing, but have I ever used it during an audit? No. I always feel like I need to understand the codebase properly before I even know what to fuzz. Result? I go down a different rabbit hole each time, chasing someโฆ
Turning an intended behaviour into an exploit path >>>>>>