Nevertheless, Hoskinson said there had been an "unfair narrative" created about testnet points in a live broadcast that was published immediately after Dean's tweet.
Guillemot expressed his anger at an alleged "hush-hush tradition" that surrounded his work on the Vasil upgrade.
He responded to a post by dev Péter Szilágyi, who openly acknowledged that the most recent Geth 1.10.22 release is "borked."
The founder of Cardano backed up his denial by claiming that open points are publicly available on Github. He said discussions on technical and high-quality assurance on Twitter, Reddit, and Telegram "have no use and merely hurt progress."
After finding three different problems, the Vasil improvement was postponed a second time on July 28. Hoskinson said at the time that the most current 1.35.3 model was most likely going to survive the difficult fork and upgrade to Vasil, and he noted that the implementation of the improvement wouldn't take very long.
Hoskinson commented on this and said that the issues had been known for a "fairly while" and that the solution used was to "roll again" for repair. In addition, rigorous testing of model 1.35.3 has given the organization an excessive amount of confidence that the code is stable, he continued, adding that "all of this stuff has been fixed."