The Good Tech Companies - Is the Time Ripe for a Meta Blockchain to Rule Them All?
Episode Date: May 19, 2025This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/is-the-time-ripe-for-a-meta-blockchain-to-rule-them-all. Solana’s Anatoly Yakovenko sparks... debate with his vision of a ‘meta blockchain’—a unified ledger that merges data from Ethereum, Celestia, Solana, and beyond. Check more stories related to web3 at: https://hackernoon.com/c/web3. You can also check exclusive content about #solana, #blockchain, #web3, #cryptocurrency, #meta-blockchain, #dlt, #anatoly-yakovenko, #good-company, and more. This story was written by: @ishanpandey. Learn more about this writer by checking @ishanpandey's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. Solana’s Anatoly Yakovenko sparks debate with his vision of a ‘meta blockchain’—a unified ledger that merges data from Ethereum, Celestia, Solana, and beyond.
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Is the time ripe for a meta blockchain to rule them all?
By Aishan Pandey. The concept of a meta blockchain, a universal coordinator that merges data from
multiple chains into a single, efficient system, isn't a new one. If blockchains are permissionless
and publicly auditable, why can't we have one ultimate ledger? Recently, the idea came to the surface once more when Solana co-founder Anatoly Yakovenko
shared a compelling vision with his 576kx followers. In the big brainbuilders tweet,
he wrote, there should be a meta blockchain. Post data anywhere, Ethereum, Celestia, Solana,
and use a specific rule to merge data from all the chains into a single
ordering. Racking up over 84,000 views and almost 500
likes within three days, Yakovenko's proposal was clearly a popular one. Indeed, some projects
popped up in the replies purporting to have already built this mythical meta-blockchain.
Yakovenko's Meta-Blockchain Proposal. Yuccavanko's vision centers on a meta-blockchain that optimizes data availability, DA, by allowing
transactions to reference the latest block headers from various DA layers like Ethereum,
Celestia, and Solana.
He elaborated, greater than, simple way to do this would be for the TX to reference the
latest block greater than headers from the potential DA layers.
So meta-TX posted to Solana
would include greater than the last observed block from ETH and Celestia. This would mean it is
greater than guaranteed to be ordered after ETH and Celestia TXS. In theory, a meta blockchain could
have a transformative effect on the way blockchains interact, enabling developers to store data on the
most cost-effective chain at any given time, for instance, using Solana for speed, Ethereum for security, or Celestia for data efficiency.
It could signal the death knell for existing interoperability solutions like cross-chain
bridges, ushering in a brave new era for Web3. Naturally, not everyone endorsed Yakovenko's
vision. Celestia dev Nick White, for example, said DA multipliers were
not that useful since then your rollup requires running a node of each of the DA layers, adding that
your fork choice rule becomes really complex, which just explodes the overhead and complexity for very little gain.
Beyond blockchain. A little later in the replies, a contributor to
universal settlement layer
dimension said the Solana co-founder's concept was similar to what he was helping to create.
Being able to post on any chain with the fork choice on DYML1, working on the Solana integrations
right now. Weeks before Yakovenko's post, Dimension completed its latest upgrade, BEYOND,
effectively turning it into a bonafide meta blockchain. Among other things, BEYOND, effectively turning it into a bona fide meta blockchain.
Among other things, BEYOND allows developers to deploy rollups on any layer 1, using the
L1 as adata layer, while Dimension secures the rollup bridge, facilitating deposits,
withdrawals, and dispute resolution with blockchain level custody and minimal trust assumptions.
The nifty thing about Dimension is that rollups can inherit the data security of their base
chains, while Dimension acts as a meta-layer to manage cross-chain interactions.
In a recent interview, the platform's co-founder Yishui Herald explained, by decoupling settlement
from execution, we're enabling developers to choose the best L1 for their use case without
compromising on speed or security.
Dimension's evolution from a rollup platform within its own ecosystem to a universal settlement
layer marks a significant step toward fulfilling the meta-blockchain vision.
But it wasn't the only project touted in Yuccavenko's mentions.
You can use a Twinexwise's forced include method from any settlement layers which is
then deterministically ordered along with the TXNS to the sequencer to form a block, proposed one user, Ratchin Kolokheti. A multi-settlement network that enables aggregation
of chains, Twine, whose tagline is, deploy once, run everywhere, is currently inviting developers
to build on its devnet to transform the way applications are built and Feltonchain, toward
a more connected Web3. The idea of a meta blockchain
is undeniably appealing, portending a future where networks work together seamlessly, prioritizing
efficiency and accessibility for all. It's a vision that not only addresses the industry's
long-standing scalability challenges but fosters innovation by empowering devs to leverage
strengths in numbers rather than being locked into a single consensus or ecosystem. Over time, such advancements will be vital in building a truly interconnected
digital economy. Don't forget to like and share the story. Thank you for listening to this
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