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Brande Ordahl JNcu
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Brande Ordahl JNcu
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Brande Ordahl JNcu
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btc drowdown alertToday news of 3 are literally saying that btc fall Short position are best for big profit let's done it #news_update #BTC
btc drowdown alert
Today news of 3 are literally saying that btc fall
Short position are best for big profit let's done it
#news_update
#BTC
BTC
+0.38%
Brande Ordahl JNcu
·
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#Binace #profit I have been done trade for extra income
#Binace
#profit
I have been done trade for extra income
Brande Ordahl JNcu
·
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I have been invested throu binace #eassyway because of it coll#feature over all good
I have been invested throu binace
#eassyway
because of it coll
#feature
over all good
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I keep noticing that upgradeability is usually discussed as a contract problem. Newton’s Smart Contract Integration docs made me look at it differently: what if the contract address stays stable while the authorization logic behind it evolves? @NewtonProtocol $NEWT #Newt In NewtonProtocol, an existing PolicyClient can be pointed to a newer policy using: setPolicyAddress(newPolicy) But this isn’t just a blind pointer update. When setPolicyAddress() is called, the policy’s factory version is checked against the TaskManager’s minimum compatible runtime version. If the version is incompatible, the update reverts instead of attaching unsupported policy logic. The migration flow goes further: Check compatibility ↓ Redeploy incompatible policy data ↓ Deploy policy via latest factory ↓ Update existing PolicyClient ↓ Verify migration What stood out to me is what doesn’t move. The PolicyClient address stays the same. That means the execution-facing client can remain stable while policy implementation and compatible policy data evolve. Newton’s docs also note that identity links and user consent remain intact because the client address doesn’t change. To me, that creates an interesting architectural separation: Stable client identity ≠ frozen authorization logic The client provides continuity. The policy provides change. The compatibility check defines which changes are safe to attach. That feels more important than a simple “upgrade” feature. Authorization systems need to evolve, but integrations built around them also need continuity. The question I’m left with is about consent: If the PolicyClient stays the same but its policy changes, what should users think they approved? The client itself, or the specific policy version behind it? Where should consent attach? #VitalikOutlinesLeanEthereumRoadmap #BrazilCentralBankSaysStablecoinsElectronicMoney #UKFCAPublishesCryptoRegFramework #BitcoinFallsOver50%FromOctoberHigh $LAB $VANRY
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