[{"id":"getting-started","title":"Rollup Economics Still Depend On Boring Data Availability Assumptions","description":"Cheaper execution does not remove the need to reason about data availability, sequencing incentives, and degraded operating modes.","date":"2026-04-18T00:00:00.000Z","tags":["rollups","data-availability","infrastructure"],"authors":["dr-k-volkov"],"url":"/blog/getting-started","content":"Rollup cost models are usually presented as an execution story, but the durable tradeoff remains data availability. The question is not only whether users get cheaper transactions. It is whether the system remains legible when demand spikes, sequencers fail, or settlement assumptions are stressed. ## The Constraint That Refuses To Disappear Data availability is where optimistic projections meet operational reality. Teams can subsidize fees, compress calldata, or tune batching windows, but users still depend on the chain publishing enough information for independent verification. That makes the economics less glamorous and more important. Sustainable rollup design is a balance between throughput, verification cost, and graceful failure modes."},{"id":"hello-world","title":"Execution Risk Is Moving From Bridges To Wallet Operations","description":"Wallet tooling, signing policy, and custody workflows now carry more operational risk than many protocol teams admit.","date":"2026-04-12T00:00:00.000Z","tags":["wallets","security","operations"],"authors":["erudite-protocol"],"url":"/blog/hello-world","content":"Wallet risk is no longer limited to obvious bridge contracts or exchange custody failures. The fragile point is often the operational layer around signing, key rotation, transaction simulation, and permission review. ## Why The Risk Surface Changed Teams have added more automation around treasury movement, deployment permissions, and cross-chain routing. That saves time, but it also compresses review windows and makes small configuration mistakes expensive. The practical mitigation is not another dashboard. It is a narrower signing policy, clearer transaction ownership, and a habit of treating wallet infrastructure as production infrastructure."}]