Solana hat gerade die Blockchain repariert?! 🤯

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Okay, die Solana-Stiftung hat also etwas getan. Sie haben etwas namens Kora auf den Markt gebracht, das im Grunde ein digitaler Butler für Ihre Transaktionen ist. Damit können Sie gebührenfrei Geld senden und sogar mit Ihren Treuepunkten oder ähnlichem bezahlen. Anscheinend müssen Sie SOL nicht mehr horten, nur um Solana zu nutzen. Es ist, als ob ihnen klar geworden wäre, dass die Notwendigkeit einer speziellen Münze nur zum Bezahlen ein bisschen … extra war. 🙄

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Dieses Kora-Ding kam am 22. Dezember auf den Markt. Die Stiftung hat darüber getwittert. (Weil alles Wichtige auf X passiert, oder?). Sie behaupten, es erlaube „gebührenfreie Zahlungen und individuelle Gebühren-Tokens“. Was aus dem Fachjargon übersetzt bedeutet: „Wir versuchen, diese ganze Krypto-Sache weniger nervig zu machen.“

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Wir stellen Kora vor, einen Gebühren-Relayer und Signierungsknoten für das Ökosystem, der gebührenfreie Transaktionen, benutzerdefinierte Gebühren-Tokens und mehr ermöglicht

– Solana Foundation (@SolanaFndn)

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Quelle – X

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Schauen Sie, seien wir ehrlich. Eines der größten Probleme bei Kryptowährungen besteht darin, dass bestimmte Token benötigt werden, um … irgendetwas zu tun. Es ist, als ob Sie für Ihr Auto eine spezielle Art von Benzin benötigen, das nur an einer Tankstelle verkauft wird. Kora versucht, das in Ordnung zu bringen, ein hehres Ziel, nehme ich an. 🙏

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Apps zahlen, Sie spielen (und lassen Sie sich hoffentlich nicht verwirren)

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So, the idea is apps will foot the bill for transactions. Think of it as, „We\’ll cover the tip, you just enjoy the experience.“ Which is nice, I guess, if you trust the apps not to, like, hide the fees in the price of the virtual goods. 🤔

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They\’re saying any token can pay the fees. USDC, your dogecoin collection, maybe even that weird meme coin you bought on a dare. And apps can decide how they want to make money. It\’s capitalistic! It\’s freedom! It’s also potentially a chaotically messy system, but hey, we\’ll see.

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This is especially good for games. Because nobody wants to spend 20 minutes figuring out how to buy SOL before they can even start beating level one. Now, you can just dive in, spend your in-game currency, and ignore the blockchain fuss. Progress!

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Formerly, you did a whole song and dance to buy SOL before doing anything. Kora cleverly skips the dance.

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You might also like:Next Year Is A Reset, Novogratz and Scaramucci Explain (Seriously, they said that…weather reset? Economic reset? Who knows?)

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Security (Because We Definitely Need That) & Flexibility

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Apparently, some very clever people at Runtime Verification checked Kora for bugs. They also used „differential fuzz testing,“ which sounds impressively complicated. So, hopefully, nothing will explode. 🤞

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Kora has six remote signers (are those like digital bouncers?), plus alerts if things are running low on funds. They offer standard tools for developers involving command lines and configuration files. It’s clearly complex, but they’re making an effort.

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Teams can control exactly who’s allowed to do a thing and what they\’re allowed to do. Payment is checked and re-checked, and everything is flexible. Apparently. 🤷\u200d♀️

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And they\’re being very careful about security, keeping the keys safe with AWS KMS and Turnkey. Because, you know, losing the keys to the blockchain is a bad day at the office.

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Solana Just Fixed Blockchain?! 🤯Solana Just Fixed Blockchain?! 🤯

Okay, so Solana’s Foundation did a thing. They launched something called Kora, which is basically a digital butler for your transactions. It lets you send money without fees and even pay with, like, your store loyalty points or something. Apparently, you no longer need to hoard SOL just to, you know, use Solana. It’s like they realized needing a special coin just to pay was a bit…extra. 🙄

This Kora thing debuted on December 22nd. The Foundation tweeted about it. (Because everything important happens on X, right?). They claim it allows „fee-free payments and custom fee tokens.“ Which, translated from tech speak, means „we’re trying to make this whole crypto thing less annoying.“

Introducing Kora, a fee relayer and signing node for the ecosystem, enabling fee-free transactions, custom fee tokens, and more

– Solana Foundation (@SolanaFndn)

Source – X

Look, let’s be real. One of the biggest headaches of crypto is needing specific tokens to do…anything. It’s like needing a special kind of gas for your car that only one gas station sells. Kora is attempting to fix this, a noble goal, I suppose. 🙏

Apps Pay, You Play (and Hopefully Don’t Get Confused)

So, the idea is apps will foot the bill for transactions. Think of it as, „We’ll cover the tip, you just enjoy the experience.“ Which is nice, I guess, if you trust the apps not to, like, hide the fees in the price of the virtual goods. 🤔

They’re saying any token can pay the fees. USDC, your dogecoin collection, maybe even that weird meme coin you bought on a dare. And apps can decide how they want to make money. It’s capitalistic! It’s freedom! It’s also potentially a chaotically messy system, but hey, we’ll see.

This is especially good for games. Because nobody wants to spend 20 minutes figuring out how to buy SOL before they can even start beating level one. Now, you can just dive in, spend your in-game currency, and ignore the blockchain fuss. Progress!

Formerly, you did a whole song and dance to buy SOL before doing anything. Kora cleverly skips the dance.

You might also like:Next Year Is A Reset, Novogratz and Scaramucci Explain (Seriously, they said that…weather reset? Economic reset? Who knows?)

Security (Because We Definitely Need That) & Flexibility

Apparently, some very clever people at Runtime Verification checked Kora for bugs. They also used „differential fuzz testing,“ which sounds impressively complicated. So, hopefully, nothing will explode. 🤞

Kora has six remote signers (are those like digital bouncers?), plus alerts if things are running low on funds. They offer standard tools for developers involving command lines and configuration files. It’s clearly complex, but they’re making an effort.

Teams can control exactly who’s allowed to do a thing and what they’re allowed to do. Payment is checked and re-checked, and everything is flexible. Apparently. 🤷‍♀️

And they’re being very careful about security, keeping the keys safe with AWS KMS and Turnkey. Because, you know, losing the keys to the blockchain is a bad day at the office.

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2025-12-25 07:42