New Resolver Dashboard Now Available
The ENS Explorer has introduced a dedicated Resolver dashboard for users who own resolver nodes. This new feature consolidates all resolver configurations into a single, centralized page.
Key Features:
- View all resolver node configurations in one location
- Simplified management of technical setups for ENS names
- Streamlined interface for resolver node owners
Recent Platform Updates
This launch follows the February redesign of the ENS dashboard, which introduced:
- Clearer organization of names, settings, and activity
- Architecture built to scale with ENSv2
- Foundation for future feature integration
The Resolver dashboard represents another step in improving the user experience for ENS name management and technical configuration.
A new Resolver dashboard is now live on the ENS Explorer. Users who own resolver nodes now have a dedicated page that shows their configurations in one place, making it easier to view and manage the technical setup behind a name.
ENS Explorer Launches to Navigate Increasingly Complex Name Configurations

ENS has released the **ENS Explorer**, a dedicated tool designed to provide visibility into the protocol's growing complexity. As ENS names have evolved beyond simple labels, they now involve multiple components: - Different contracts and resolvers - Permission structures - Subname configurations - Cross-application behaviors The Explorer surfaces key information including control settings, resolution paths, historical changes, and protocol context. This allows users and developers to understand how names are configured and how they reached their current state. Key features include: - Dedicated resolver pages for inspecting how ENS data is served - Support for flexible setups where multiple names share records through a single resolver - Automatic wallet balance refreshes when switching views - Enhanced social sharing with richer preview cards The tool aims to serve as a source of truth for ENS, using accurate protocol terminology and surfacing technical details that management interfaces alone cannot provide. [Read the full deep dive](https://ens.domains/blog/post/ens-explorer-deep-dive)
馃Ф Crocheth Wins Runner Up: Wearable Balaclava Becomes Onchain Identity
**Crocheth** secured a $500 runner-up prize for creating crochet balaclavas that function as onchain identities. **Key features:** - Embedded ArUco markers that resolve to ENS subnames on Base (e.g., midnight.croch.eth) - NFC wristband authentication - ZK privacy pool enabling anonymous transactions - Physical wearable doubles as fully functional blockchain identity The project transforms traditional craft into a privacy-focused identity solution, combining physical fashion with decentralized technology.
Groundtruth Launches Verified Intelligence Map with Human and AI Agent Collaboration
**Groundtruth** introduces a verified intelligence mapping system where humans and AI agents work together to report world events. **Key Features:** - Humans verify identity through World ID - AI agents use ENS domains and ERC-8004 reputation scores - Agents like reuters-monitor.kris0.eth submit intelligence reports - Readers pay $0.005 USDC per report via x402 nanopayments - Includes an MCP server for easy integration The system creates a collaborative news ecosystem where both human and autonomous agents contribute verified information. Payment happens through micro-transactions, making individual reports accessible at minimal cost. This builds on recent developments in onchain AI agents, including Ghost in the Machine, which stores fully autonomous agents as ENS text records with transparent states and memories.
npmguard Wins $1000 Prize for AI-Powered Package Security System
**npmguard** by @iamtguy has secured third place and $1,000 in a recent competition for its autonomous npm package security solution. **How it works:** - New npm package versions are automatically analyzed through an AI audit pipeline - Security verdicts are published onchain using ENS subnames - Developers can query packages (e.g., axios.npmguard.eth) before installation **The problem it addresses:** The tool creates a trust layer for the npm ecosystem, which has previously suffered from security incidents affecting billions of downloads through malicious code. By combining AI-powered auditing with blockchain-based verification through ENS, npmguard aims to provide developers with an additional security checkpoint before installing dependencies. The system leverages ENS's hierarchical naming structure to create queryable security records for individual packages.
ENS Subdomain Becomes Programmable Wallet with Privacy Features
**Kondor** won second place ($1,500) at a hackathon for transforming ENS subdomains into programmable wallets. The project allows users to: - Set token policies through a visual flow builder - Execute operations like swap, lend, forward, and route through Railgun - Generate fresh, unlinked addresses for enhanced privacy The innovation uses a **custom resolver for stealth addresses** - each time the subname resolves, it creates a new address that can't be linked to previous transactions. This builds on ENS's existing subdomain functionality, which lets users create multiple identities under their .eth name (like vault.yourname.eth or wallet.yourname.eth). The Kondor project adds programmable wallet capabilities and privacy features to these subdomains. [Learn more about ENS subdomains](https://support.ens.domains/en/articles/8883890-how-to-create-subnames)