The Address
Book
What is this address, and what has it actually done on-chain? Look it up — with the receipts.
A documented map of the pDAI ecosystem, built from months of on-chain forensics. Every entry states neutral facts with a reproducible receipt. Measured on-chain facts and inferred linkage are kept strictly apart — and you can re-verify any address live.
A record of what addresses did — not a list of who to blame.
Block explorers show you raw transactions. What they don't show is what those transactions mean. This book is that missing layer: a documented, receipt-backed record of how the pDAI ecosystem actually operates on-chain — which contract forwards to which, which address holds which role, which pool fed which loan. It exists so the community can look things up instead of taking anyone's word for it.
It is built on one strict rule: facts, never accusations. No entry calls anyone a scammer or an attacker — those are judgements, and judgements are not ours to hand you. Every line states what an address is or what it did, and points you at the receipt so you can confirm it yourself. And it keeps two things apart that most “research” blurs together: a measured 3/3 fact is a direct on-chain reading verified across three RPCs; an inferred statement is analysis — a linkage or a “same operator” pattern — which is weaker than a fact and is labelled as such. When you can't tell the two apart, you can be misled; here you always can.
Look up an address
Type an address or a label to filter. Every fact links its receipt; every address re-verifies live in your browser.