The Solana Foundation and Asymmetric Research launched STRIDE, a tiered security program for the ecosystem.
Protocols with over $10 million TVL will receive 24/7 active threat monitoring, while those over $100 million get formal verification support.
The Solana Incident Response Network (SIRN) was established to coordinate real-time crisis response among top security firms.
The Solana Foundation has introduced a sweeping set of security initiatives designed to fortify the network’s decentralized finance layer following a massive $286 million exploit of Drift Protocol on April 1. The new framework, developed in collaboration with security firm Asymmetric Research, aims to move the ecosystem away from one-off audits toward a model of continuous, real-time monitoring and standardized safety assessments.
Central to this effort is the Solana Trust, Resilience, and Infrastructure for DeFi Enterprises (STRIDE). Under this program, Asymmetric Research will conduct independent evaluations of Solana-based protocols across eight core security pillars, including governance controls, oracle dependencies, and smart contract integrity. In a push for transparency, the results of these assessments will be hosted in a public repository, allowing investors and users to verify the security posture of the applications they interact with.
The program introduces a tiered support system based on Total Value Locked (TVL). Projects that pass the initial STRIDE evaluation and maintain a TVL exceeding $10 million will qualify for ongoing operational security support and round-the-clock threat monitoring funded by the Solana Foundation. For high-stakes protocols with more than $100 million in TVL, the foundation will provide formal verification tools, which use rigorous mathematical proofs to ensure smart contracts behave as intended under all possible scenarios.
To address active threats, the foundation also launched the Solana Incident Response Network (SIRN). This membership-based coalition includes founding members such as OtterSec, Neodyme, Squads, and Zeroshadow. SIRN serves as a dedicated communication layer for sharing threat intelligence and coordinating rapid responses during live security breaches. While the network is open to all projects, the foundation noted that access will be prioritized based on a protocol’s TVL to protect the largest pools of capital first.
“While Solana Foundation will continue to deploy resources to ensure a safer ecosystem that benefits everyone, this does not transfer the underlying responsibility away from the protocols themselves,” the foundation stated in its announcement, emphasizing that these tools are meant to augment, not replace, project-level security measures.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute advice of any kind. Readers should conduct their own research before making any decisions.
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