The first thing I checked after hearing about the uniBTC exploit wasn't the explanation thread.
I wanted to know what was actually changing.
Looks like Bedrock is integrating Chainlink Proof of Reserve into the minting process, and honestly that caught my attention more than any post-mortem.
Maybe it's just me, but I've never liked the idea of minting being based on assumptions. If a token is supposed to be backed, the reserves should be verifiable. Simple as that.
That's why PoR makes sense here. Not because it's some magic fix, but because it adds an automated check where it matters most. Before new tokens get minted.
Crypto has a funny habit of rediscovering the same lesson every cycle: trust is great until markets get stressed. Then everyone starts asking for proof.
The exploit was obviously a bad outcome, but I'm paying more attention to the response than the incident itself. Adding reserve verification directly into the process feels a lot more meaningful than another promise that things will be better going forward.
We'll see how it plays out, but this is the kind of change I like to see after something breaks.
#bedrock $BR @Bedrock #Bedrock

