Luna CEO Do Kwon proposes forking LUNA, UST to reimburse hodlers

cryptoslatePublicado em 2022-05-14Última atualização em 2022-05-14

Resumo

Luna Foundation Guard CEO, Do Kwon, has written a proposal that suggests forking LUNA to a new chain using a snapshot from before the attack.

Luna Foundation Guard CEO, Do Kwon, has written a proposal that suggests forking LUNA to a new chain using a snapshot from before the attack. He details a recovery plan that includes giving the new blockchain to the community and not including the LFG wallet.

The new chain would have a cap of 1 billion coins. 400 million would be given to LUNA holders “before the de-pegging event”, 400 million to “UST holders at the time of the upgrade,” and 100 million to LUNA holders at the “final moment of the chain halt” and 100 million to a community pool. Except for the 100 million tranche, all LUNA should be “staked at the network genesis state.”

He continues,

“The Terra community must reconstitute the chain to preserve the community and the developer ecosystem.“

At no point in the proposal does he offer an apology to the community and seemingly refuses to step down, stating, “I’ll always be here.“ Whether he would have an active role in the new blockchain is, however, unknown at this time.

If LUNA2 is decentralized through community development, there may be no role for LFG and, thus, Do Kwon. Instead, he says,

“The priority now should be to preserve this amazing ecosystem and to make as many users and builders as possible. Terra should first preserve its L1.”

In a “call to action”, he states,

“Why does this redistribution make sense? UST holders need to own a large share of the network, as the network’s debt holders they deserve to be compensated for the tokens they have been holding to the end.“

He also accepts that UST has “lost too much trust with its users”, claiming that any attempt to salvage the current blockchain would be impossible as

“Holders of Luna have so severely been liquidated and diluted that we will lack the ecosystem to build back up from the ashes.”

Alongside those statements, he continues to brag about Terra even being “in distress, strong brand recognition and a name that almost everyone in the world will have heard about.”

He may believe that there is no such thing as bad publicity, but it is hard to agree after the past few days.

He does mention the developer community building on Terra, which must be remembered at this time. These projects will lose everything if Terra fails. Removing all ecosystem control from the hands of LFG could be the only way to save these projects.

In the final call to action, he states,

“The rallying cry for the Terra community has always been “a decentralized economy needs decentralized money”. This is an exciting vision, and while UST has not been successful the Terra community will find ways of iterating on the idea at some point in the future.”

The response to the proposal has been mixed with 930 replies since going live earlier this evening. When asked if he felt responsible for what had happened, he chose to ignore the question and answer another part of the user’s response.

Many responses are from LUNA holders instead of the developer community, with countless stories of investors who have lost money. Many replies disagree, calling the plan “rubbish” and “unfair.”

Stablechen posted to Twitter earlier that validators convened to decide on a proposed route forward. It is possible that Do Kwon may not have been invited, given the nature of this post, but no information has officially been released.

However, in reply to the post, Stablechen also outlined a very similar plan to Do Kwons. For a new chain to occur on Terra, validators must agree to a proposal submitted by another validator.

This would not necessarily be the case with Do Kwon’s strategy, given that a new blockchain would be being used. Validators would need to load a snapshot version of the Terra chain from a previous moment and then activate the nodes. The next step is to wait and see. The whole crypto community is watching.

Forking a chain after an attack isn’t unprecedented, as Ethereum did a similar thing after a hack. The result will have blockchain maximalists arguing that you cannot change the blockchain. A fork of what was a top 10 project could have a massive knock-on effect on the whole community as the immutability of blockchain is brought into question.

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