@Fluence just removed a core limitation that kept it in “experimental infra” territory, stateless compute. Persistent storage volumes and public IP management push it into real production use. Before this, workloads tied to a VM died with it. Now, storage is decoupled. Disks persist independently, can be attached or detached, resized, and moved across instances. That changes the class of applications you can run. Databases, indexers, backend services, anything stateful becomes viable because data survives reboots, migrations, and failures. The architecture shift is simple but critical, compute becomes replaceable, storage becomes durable. On the networking side, public IPs are now directly managed from the console. Instead of rebuilding deployments to expose services, you assign stable endpoints to workloads. That removes friction in maintaining APIs, services, and externally accessible systems. Combined, these two features close a gap between decentralized compute and traditional cloud expectations. You can now run long-lived environments, maintain identity at the network layer, and keep state intact without workarounds. This is not a cosmetic update, it’s infrastructure maturity, making Fluence usable for systems that require continuity, not just execution.
@Fluence DAO’s Q1 2026 report exposes the mechanical side of the pivot, where capital actually moved, what got shut down, and how the system is being restructured around Ethereum. The DAO spent 400,000 FLT and 1.2 million USD during the quarter, while still holding a large treasury, over 357 million FLT alongside stablecoin reserves. Liquidity operations increased FLT exposure, adding 6 million FLT while reducing USD, implying active buy pressure from the market rather than passive allocation. The rollup shutdown wasn’t just a product decision, funds were actively pulled out and redistributed. Over 57 million FLT and user balances were migrated into contracts for claiming, while unused allocations like USDC for free credits were returned. Even operational ETH used for gas was withdrawn, indicating a full unwind, not partial deprecation. On staking, Fluence abandoned custom experimentation and switched to audited, battle-tested contracts originally used by Synthetix. 400,000 FLT was allocated for April rewards, targeting around 12% APR based on previous TVL. Control of the staking system now sits directly with the DAO, making future incentives governance-driven. Cloudless Labs accounted for the largest expense, charging 1.2 million USD for development and growth, aligning with prior agreements rather than unexpected outflows. Supply dynamics also shifted significantly. Vesting completed for insiders, pushing a large portion of tokens into unlocked supply. Circulating supply now sits around 27.8%, with a much larger portion unlocked but not yet active. The expectation is simple, more of that supply will move into staking now that everything lives on Ethereum and participation friction is reduced. The report isn’t just financial tracking, it confirms the earlier narrative, less experimental infrastructure, more standardization, and tighter alignment with where liquidity and usage actually exist.
@Fluence is shifting fully toward AI driven compute demand, prioritizing GPU infrastructure over its previous rollup based architecture. Core changes: Fluence Rollup is being sunset assets are migrating to Ethereum L1 FLT staking moves to Ethereum provider incentives program concludes The platform already operates 1,400+ GPUs across 32 regions and 71 data centers, with demand now heavily concentrated on GPU usage rather than general compute. Fluence maintains its position on open, vendor independent infrastructure, but is narrowing focus to where decentralization is effective. decentralized compute remains the foundation GPU access and AI workloads become the primary use case This aligns with rapid growth in AI demand and the need for a neutral compute layer. Migration Details migration date: April 1, 2026, 08:00 UTC completion expected by 10:00 UTC pFLT converts to FLT on Ethereum at 1:1 users only need to claim tokens post migration migration window remains open until April 1, 2027 Result: Fluence moves from broad infrastructure ambitions to a focused position as a decentralized GPU and AI compute marketplace.
Low Cost AI für die Sicherheit von Smart Contracts
Eine DeepSeek-R1-Variante wurde für die Erkennung von Schwachstellen in Smart Contracts mit GRPO und LoRA auf einem einzelnen A100 80GB fein abgestimmt. Das Ergebnis ist ein auf die Aufgabe optimiertes Modell zum Screening, nicht für vollständige Audits. Wichtige Ergebnisse: starke Verbesserung der Klassifizierung von verwundbar vs. sauber zuverlässige strukturierte Ausgaben, bessere Integration in Pipelines schwache Leistung bei tiefen Schwachstellenüberlegungen, die SWC-Identifikation bleibt begrenzt Das Modell hat das Formatieren schneller gelernt als das Verständnis für Sicherheit. Die Benutzerfreundlichkeit hat sich verbessert, bevor die Vertrauenswürdigkeit zugenommen hat.
Stablecoins, DeFi, and real world assets are moving on chain, but transparency creates a structural barrier. Financial systems require confidentiality. Without it, institutional participation remains limited. Public blockchains solve for trust through verification. They do not solve for privacy. Every transaction, balance, and strategy is exposed. Privacy is harder because it must preserve two opposing properties: verifiability of execution confidentiality of data Most systems achieve one by sacrificing the other. Trusted Execution Environments TEE introduces a hardware based approach to this problem. Code runs inside secure enclaves where: data remains encrypted in use execution is isolated from the host system outputs can be attested as valid without revealing inputs iExec builds on this by combining TEE with decentralized infrastructure. This allows smart contract logic or off chain computation to process sensitive data while keeping it hidden, yet still provably correct. From Transparent DeFi to Confidential Finance Current DeFi exposes: trading strategies wallet balances transaction flows This is incompatible with institutional requirements. With confidential execution: stablecoin transfers can hide amounts and participants DeFi strategies can execute without being front run compliance mechanisms like KYC can be verified without exposing identity data The system moves from full transparency to selective disclosure. From Protocols to Products Early Web3 focused on base protocols. The shift now is toward usable systems: confidential stablecoins private lending and trading enterprise grade data handling Privacy infrastructure is the enabling layer that makes these viable, not just theoretical. Structural Outcome Trust brought computation on chain. Privacy determines who can use it. TEE based systems extend blockchain utility from open participation to regulated, institutional environments without breaking decentralization. Without confidentiality, Web3 remains retail facing. With it, it becomes financially interoperable at scale.
Fluence Network hat eine begrenzte Zuteilung von NVIDIA B200 SXM GPU-Knoten verfügbar, ab dem 15. März für die dezentrale Compute-Community. B200 ist für großangelegte Schulungen und hochgradige Inferenz konzipiert, und HPC — höhere Speicherdurchsatz und -bandbreite für KI-Arbeitslasten der nächsten Generation liefern. 🌏 Region: Asien 📄 Verfügbare Verträge: 12 & 24 Monate 📝 Vorrangige Zuteilung & bessere Preise für längere Verpflichtungen kontaktieren Sie @Fluence , wenn Sie interessiert sind #NVIDIAB200 #GPU
Der Kryptomarkt zeigt einen neutralen bis vorsichtig optimistischen Ausblick, mit einer Gesamtmarktkapitalisierung von ungefähr 3,2 Billionen Dollar. Mitten in den kürzlichen roten Kerzen im Diagramm haben einige Token dennoch Widerstandsfähigkeit gezeigt und hervorragend abgeschnitten. Hier sind die 5 davon 1. Dogecoin $DOGE DOGE wird häufig für kleine Online-Transaktionen, Trinkgelder in sozialen Medien (auf Plattformen wie Reddit) und als Währung für Nischenhändler verwendet. Es profitiert weiterhin von der Unterstützung und dem Optimismus der Einzelhandelsgemeinschaft hinsichtlich potenzieller Integrationen in den Mainstream-Zahlungsverkehr.