9 upvotes, 2 direct replies (showing 2)
View submission: Scaling Reddit’s Community Points with Arbitrum
Do you imagine that Reddit will ultimately have to launch multiple instances of Arbitrum to reach the line of scale you're talking about?
This launch today is a big step forward on scaling, and we're exploring how to scale even further. There's still a lot of ongoing development on that front within Ethereum and L2s, so it's hard to predict right now how we will get there.
Does Reddit launching these instances bake in any additional trust or access assumptions?
One of the key goals of our project is decentralization, which means users have complete ownership and no centralized actor has control, including Reddit. We are currently running this network for launch and testing with Community Points, but by the time it gets to mainnet, this L2 network will be a fully decentralized, public network, just like Arbitrum One.
Comment by mellon98 at 23/07/2021 at 07:41 UTC*
2 upvotes, 0 direct replies
So it will not be public while it’s on testnet? Any RPC or something?
Comment by diarpiiiii at 12/08/2021 at 02:02 UTC
2 upvotes, 1 direct replies
One of the key goals of our project is decentralization, which means users have complete ownership and no centralized actor has control, including Reddit.
Isn’t this inconsistent with banning people from talking about trading community points?