Based Rollups can reward Proposers first come first serve
Based rollups don’t need a complicated auctioning system to reward proposers if they are willing to sacrifice L2 MEV rewards
In 2024, Crypto Summer Is Coming, and This One Will Be Different
Expect greater stability on Ethereum, the convergence of CBDCs and stablecoins, and progress on industrial applications of blockchain tech, says EY’s Paul Brody.
Social Flex #3 — Options
Currently Ethereum is a censorship resistant, credibly neutral state execution machine. It processes transactions according to predefined rules that allow anyone to write smart contracts, or more simply escrow accounts with programmatic rules and state changes. With this capability though, one can write malicious contracts.
On Trust Minimization and Horizontal Scaling
Ethereum is a permissionless world computer that possesses (arguably) the highest amount of economic security at the time of writing, acting as the settlement ledger for a vast number of assets, applications, and services. Ethereum does have its limitations – blockspace is a scarce and expensive resource on Ethereum layer one (L1). Layer two (L2) scaling has been seen as the solution to this problem, with numerous projects coming to market in recent years, mostly in the form of rollups. However, rollups, in the strict sense of the term (meaning rollup data is on Ethereum L1), does not allow Ethereum to scale indefinitely, only allowing up to few thousands of transactions per second.



