Reyorks happen naturally, but blocks become stale, then the chain reorganizes. We have to se with thi foctous rule to ino select between different forks that might be viable an order for the network to stay in consensus with each other. And we tolerate short reox in order to reach the sco basically. But somebody can use this mechanic that aother notes, in the network, we always switch to the heaviest chain without any regard for in throwing away blocks that they have already mined or accepted. A so now let's talk about wy. This is actually destabilizing for the chain and what the negative consequences would be. So you gave a good example, that
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 of the MEV game
- What is searching, how can you learn it, what edges exist
- Intro to private relays and transaction bundles
- The role of Flashbots in DEX trading
- and, of course, the hot topic of the day: short-term reorgs in Ethereum
Enjoy!
Listen to conversations between Su Zhu, the CEO and CIO of Three Arrows Capital, and Hasu, an experienced crypto researcher and writer. Together with occasional guests, we explore the transformative nature of trust-minimized currency and financial services.
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