I've personally lost money to an over-minting failure. Not a hypothetical. An actual position in an actual protocol where someone minted more derivative tokens than the underlying assets justified and by the time the market figured it out I was already on the wrong side of the depeg.

So I don't read over-minting prevention announcements the way most people do. I read them looking for the specific mechanism, the specific verification layer, the specific moment where the protocol catches a minting request that exceeds collateral and stops it before it circulates.

Bedrock's implementation adds verification between asset deposits and derivative minting that most protocols skip for efficiency. I've seen what skipping that step costs. Bedrock chose slower and safer.

That's not a marketing milestone to me. That's the minimum standard I require before I trust a derivative token with real capital.
#bedrock $BR @Bedrock