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by hesdeadjim 3126 days ago
How about a single large scale smart contract launch that doesn’t end up needing a hard fork or result in people having money permanently frozen?

I hold ETH and I am excited for what it could do. But Solidity is hot garbage and that Python inspired alternative is a close second. I also don’t care about quantity of developers. These things deal with real money from real people, it demands a level of seriousness an average developer should run screaming from.

2 comments

Serpent is deprecated, there's no first or second there.

Also think you are confusing poorly made cookie cutter erc20 tokens as representative of smart contracts in general, it is most certainly all a mess, but perhaps those treating alpha software as production ready is the real problem?

Last i looked the biggest user of gas and thus what is keeping your jaded investment afloat is ENS, no token just a pure smart contact. It has been running fine for a year.

Sadly we have people investing into hairbrained marketing brochures created by unqualified people in their underwear rather than proven products, in a free world I see no solution to this other than education.

On the other side of the equation we have people like Dan Guido seeking funding to make formal verification frameworks and the commmunity barely even notices nor puts it on a pedestal like every doomed ico that comes along.

It's not just the cookie cutter ERC20 contracts. There have been repeated serious issues with, for example, multisig contracts written by core Etherium developers and shipped in wallet apps. I think people may still be waiting on a hard fork to release funds locked by the latest multisig fuckup.
Yep this is what I mean. If the core developers find it hard to write bulletproof smart contracts the problem is real.
Fair call, parity bug and dao are indefensible, the fact they were both so intimately involved with Ethereum makes it a magnitude worse.

I just wanted to lament that for all the money sloshing around there isn't more work being done on security.

And PHP powers some of the largest sites on the web. Solidity will work for most people who just copy a boilerplate smart contract.
Like the folks who lost their multisig ethereum wallets less than a month back because a rando sent a kill command to the master contract?
You don’t see people losing millions of dollars when a webpage fails to load due to a simple logic error.
Webpages don't store money in the form of digital tokens that move in accordance to the webpage's logic.
Online gambling webpages do.