For our latest episode, I sat down with MEV Senpai, one of the top searchers in Ethereum. He gave us the unique inside perspective of someone who finds and captures MEV himself. The result was a long & intense convo, one of the best I’ve had in a while. We discussed: The structure and actors...| Uncommon Core by Su Zhu and Hasu
this episode, Su Zhu and Hasu invited Kyle Samani from Multicoin Capital, one of the most successful venture funds this cycle. Kyle is a day-one supporter of Solana, a smart-contract platform optimized for high throughput. They talked about: Multicoin’s approach to investing How will the winning blockchain scale? What is enough decentralization? Win conditions for...| Uncommon Core by Su Zhu and Hasu
Su is sitting out today, and I instead welcome Charlie Noyes and Georgios Konstantopoulos of Paradigm, one of the largest investment funds in crypto. We cover a lot of ground in this episode, including How Paradigm can so consistently identify and back the category-defining protocols and companies in crypto MEV and how it can be...| Uncommon Core by Su Zhu and Hasu
Thanks to Matt Klein for creating this transcript! Hasu: Welcome to Uncommon Core, where we explore the big ideas in crypto from first principles. This show is hosted by Su Zhu, the CEO and chief investment officer of Three Arrows Capital and me Hasu, a crypto researcher and writer. In this episode, Su and I...| Uncommon Core by Su Zhu and Hasu
In this episode, Su and I discuss the rise of WallStreetBets and financial populism. As one of the most experienced market participants I know, Su has a unique perspective on the story behind the G…| Uncommon Core by Su Zhu and Hasu
Tim Berners-Lee: We have to realize that the people who run the social networks, the existing social networks, can change them. You know, they’re all just code. Maybe you’re a feminist blogger on Twitter or something. And you get up in the morning, and it’s hard to avoid people saying really nasty things about you. Then it’s reasonable to go to the platform. It’s reasonable to hold them accountable.| Untangling the Web