‘Cardano Didn’t Go Down,’ Charles Hoskinson Pushes Back FUD

The post ‘Cardano Didn’t Go Down,’ Charles Hoskinscom. The founder of the Cardano network Charles Hoskinson has pushed back against increasing concerns following a recent sluggishness in the network. This has caused a speculation frenzy among the online community. Cardano Founder Provides Verified Incident Report Hoskinson provided an official “Myths vs Facts” breakdown. It confirmed that the mainnet never shut down and that the core protocol was never compromised. Hoskinson shared the post to address increasing FUD since many were unsure of whether Cardano experienced a massive failure. This additional explanation became necessary after claims of a rollback, and that a transaction created by an AI crashed down the network. Hoskinson rejected such assertions by advising people to share known facts as opposed to unverified stories. This push towards factual clarity is preceded by other incidents when Hoskinson addressed an issue concerning ecosystem misinformation. At that time, he reacted to false claims regarding the Cardano treasury fund. His post explained that the event was linked to an edge case in node implementation rather than a failure of the Cardano protocol. It noted that SPOs, crypto exchanges and engineers immediately spotted the issue in real time. Hence, their rapid response allowed the network to continued functioning correctly and securely despite the slowdown as teams pushed out patched software within hours. Report Details Cardano Attack Origins Hoskinson further explained that Cardano ecosystem teams created a joint incident squad shortly after the slowdown began. This is different an account of the same event by Intersect that stated that there was a split in the Cardano chain. It added that a poisoned transaction caused node divergence throughout the network. However, the latest update emphasized that there was no centralized rollback. The update was.

Rea departs Bloomberg to become New Statesman political editor

Associate editor Alibhe Rea has left Bloomberg News to become political editor at The New Statesman. She is based in London and was covering politics and finance for Bloomberg. She previously had been the host of Politico’s “Westminster Insider” podcast. Prior to working for Politico, Rea was political correspondent for the New Statesman in London, covering Westminster politics. At the New Statesman, [.].

Pioneering UMC Bishop Violet L. Fisher leaves a lasting legacy at 86

Bishop Violet L. Fisher, the first African American woman elected bishop in the United Methodist Church’s Northeastern Jurisdiction, died Nov. 17 at age 86. A barrier-breaking leader and lifelong educator, she is remembered for her trailblazing ministry, global service, and enduring impact on women, Black clergy, and faith communities across generations. The post Pioneering UMC Bishop Violet L. Fisher leaves a lasting legacy at 86 appeared first.