Shentu Chain and CertiK this week unveiled OpenMath, billed as the world’s first mathematical DeSci platform, opening a new chapter where formal mathematics, verifiable computing and blockchain meet. The launch, announced in a joint release and amplified across social channels, positions OpenMath as a space where researchers and “provers” can raise, collaborate on and verify mathematical problems with solutions recorded immutably on-chain. At the heart of OpenMath is formal verification: proofs and solutions submitted to the platform are checked using proof-assistant technology so that correctness can be mechanically verified rather than left to informal peer review. Shentu’s materials describe the system as integrating well-known formal tools such as Coq and Lean into a blockchain-native workflow, allowing theorems and their machine-checked proofs to be referenced, validated and preserved on the ledger. A Natural Home for DeSci  OpenMath is deployed on Shentu Chain, a security-focused Layer-1 that traces its roots to CertiK and the formal-verification research community. The chain itself, rebranded as Shentu in 2021 after incubating out of CertiK, was developed with an explicit focus on verifiable computing and on-chain security tooling, making it a natural home for a DeSci experiment built around mathematical truth. The platform’s architects say OpenMath was designed with collaboration and intellectual-property protection in mind: a two-phase submission process protects provers’ work while still allowing the global community to participate, validate and build on verified results. By recording provenance, review and verification steps on-chain, OpenMath aims to remove traditional institutional bottlenecks, ensure fair credit for contributors and speed the pace at which rigorous mathematical knowledge becomes discoverable and reusable. OpenMath’s launch comes as Decentralized Science, or DeSci, gains momentum as an approach to democratizing how research is funded, published and validated. Advocates argue that decentralized networks can expand access, diversify funding mechanisms and make validation processes more transparent, goals that OpenMath explicitly mirrors by combining open access to verified results with on-chain traceability. Shentu Chain and CertiK framed the release as the continuation of a shared mission to apply blockchain and formal verification to “real-world impact,” and they say further expansions are planned to let researchers tackle increasingly advanced problems and to broaden incentives within the OpenMath ecosystem. For now, the site and platform are live, inviting mathematicians, formal-methods researchers and the wider DeSci community to explore the new environment where mathematical truth becomes a verifiable, referenceable public good. Shentu Chain and CertiK this week unveiled OpenMath, billed as the world’s first mathematical DeSci platform, opening a new chapter where formal mathematics, verifiable computing and blockchain meet. The launch, announced in a joint release and amplified across social channels, positions OpenMath as a space where researchers and “provers” can raise, collaborate on and verify mathematical problems with solutions recorded immutably on-chain. At the heart of OpenMath is formal verification: proofs and solutions submitted to the platform are checked using proof-assistant technology so that correctness can be mechanically verified rather than left to informal peer review. Shentu’s materials describe the system as integrating well-known formal tools such as Coq and Lean into a blockchain-native workflow, allowing theorems and their machine-checked proofs to be referenced, validated and preserved on the ledger. A Natural Home for DeSci  OpenMath is deployed on Shentu Chain, a security-focused Layer-1 that traces its roots to CertiK and the formal-verification research community. The chain itself, rebranded as Shentu in 2021 after incubating out of CertiK, was developed with an explicit focus on verifiable computing and on-chain security tooling, making it a natural home for a DeSci experiment built around mathematical truth. The platform’s architects say OpenMath was designed with collaboration and intellectual-property protection in mind: a two-phase submission process protects provers’ work while still allowing the global community to participate, validate and build on verified results. By recording provenance, review and verification steps on-chain, OpenMath aims to remove traditional institutional bottlenecks, ensure fair credit for contributors and speed the pace at which rigorous mathematical knowledge becomes discoverable and reusable. OpenMath’s launch comes as Decentralized Science, or DeSci, gains momentum as an approach to democratizing how research is funded, published and validated. Advocates argue that decentralized networks can expand access, diversify funding mechanisms and make validation processes more transparent, goals that OpenMath explicitly mirrors by combining open access to verified results with on-chain traceability. Shentu Chain and CertiK framed the release as the continuation of a shared mission to apply blockchain and formal verification to “real-world impact,” and they say further expansions are planned to let researchers tackle increasingly advanced problems and to broaden incentives within the OpenMath ecosystem. For now, the site and platform are live, inviting mathematicians, formal-methods researchers and the wider DeSci community to explore the new environment where mathematical truth becomes a verifiable, referenceable public good.

Shentu Chain and CertiK Unite Blockchain and Mathematics in a DeSci Breakthrough

2025/10/14 11:00
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Shentu Chain and CertiK this week unveiled OpenMath, billed as the world’s first mathematical DeSci platform, opening a new chapter where formal mathematics, verifiable computing and blockchain meet. The launch, announced in a joint release and amplified across social channels, positions OpenMath as a space where researchers and “provers” can raise, collaborate on and verify mathematical problems with solutions recorded immutably on-chain.

At the heart of OpenMath is formal verification: proofs and solutions submitted to the platform are checked using proof-assistant technology so that correctness can be mechanically verified rather than left to informal peer review. Shentu’s materials describe the system as integrating well-known formal tools such as Coq and Lean into a blockchain-native workflow, allowing theorems and their machine-checked proofs to be referenced, validated and preserved on the ledger.

A Natural Home for DeSci 

OpenMath is deployed on Shentu Chain, a security-focused Layer-1 that traces its roots to CertiK and the formal-verification research community. The chain itself, rebranded as Shentu in 2021 after incubating out of CertiK, was developed with an explicit focus on verifiable computing and on-chain security tooling, making it a natural home for a DeSci experiment built around mathematical truth.

The platform’s architects say OpenMath was designed with collaboration and intellectual-property protection in mind: a two-phase submission process protects provers’ work while still allowing the global community to participate, validate and build on verified results. By recording provenance, review and verification steps on-chain, OpenMath aims to remove traditional institutional bottlenecks, ensure fair credit for contributors and speed the pace at which rigorous mathematical knowledge becomes discoverable and reusable.

OpenMath’s launch comes as Decentralized Science, or DeSci, gains momentum as an approach to democratizing how research is funded, published and validated. Advocates argue that decentralized networks can expand access, diversify funding mechanisms and make validation processes more transparent, goals that OpenMath explicitly mirrors by combining open access to verified results with on-chain traceability.

Shentu Chain and CertiK framed the release as the continuation of a shared mission to apply blockchain and formal verification to “real-world impact,” and they say further expansions are planned to let researchers tackle increasingly advanced problems and to broaden incentives within the OpenMath ecosystem. For now, the site and platform are live, inviting mathematicians, formal-methods researchers and the wider DeSci community to explore the new environment where mathematical truth becomes a verifiable, referenceable public good.

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3 Paradoxes of Altcoin Season in September

3 Paradoxes of Altcoin Season in September

The post 3 Paradoxes of Altcoin Season in September appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Analyses and data indicate that the crypto market is experiencing its most active altcoin season since early 2025, with many altcoins outperforming Bitcoin. However, behind this excitement lies a paradox. Most retail investors remain uneasy as their portfolios show little to no profit. This article outlines the main reasons behind this situation. Altcoin Market Cap Rises but Dominance Shrinks Sponsored TradingView data shows that the TOTAL3 market cap (excluding BTC and ETH) reached a new high of over $1.1 trillion in September. Yet the share of OTHERS (excluding the top 10) has declined since 2022, now standing at just 8%. OTHERS Dominance And TOTAL3 Capitalization. Source: TradingView. In past cycles, such as 2017 and 2021, TOTAL3 and OTHERS.D rose together. That trend reflected capital flowing not only into large-cap altcoins but also into mid-cap and low-cap ones. The current divergence shows that capital is concentrated in stablecoins and a handful of top-10 altcoins such as SOL, XRP, BNB, DOG, HYPE, and LINK. Smaller altcoins receive far less liquidity, making it hard for their prices to return to levels where investors previously bought. This creates a situation where only a few win while most face losses. Retail investors also tend to diversify across many coins instead of adding size to top altcoins. That explains why many portfolios remain stagnant despite a broader market rally. Sponsored “Position sizing is everything. Many people hold 25–30 tokens at once. A 100x on a token that makes up only 1% of your portfolio won’t meaningfully change your life. It’s better to make a few high-conviction bets than to overdiversify,” analyst The DeFi Investor said. Altcoin Index Surges but Investor Sentiment Remains Cautious The Altcoin Season Index from Blockchain Center now stands at 80 points. This indicates that over 80% of the top 50 altcoins outperformed…
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BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 01:43