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there is a difference between professional coder and code auditor though and often a difference in the way they look at the code. Having it independent also means that they aren't coloured by social dynamics or any particular outcomes. It is their job to find errors, not make sure it works and that often takes a different set of eyes.

Interesting. Do you know if other blockchains use this "service".

No idea but auditing code is common practice in most tech industries (it is a boring job) as it is like looking for spelling mistakes in a text. The testing I did was localisation for languages and it doubled as test service that ran specific test cases to look for errors.

Here, it might not even have to be as formal but I wonder how many witnesses fully audited it considering it had so many massive issues and then, in a couple weeks, how much of the testnet could be thoroughly tested. From my limited understanding, there is a fair bit of complexity and a lot of things that can easily be overlooked so, having fresh 'less' biased eyes limits risk a bit further.

Yeah, I hear you. I've heard many witnesses suggest they don't even try to audit the code. It is frightening. :)

Quantstamp audits blockchain code for tokens. Presumably they have some clients. They might not be able to do it for STEEM since we aren't an ERC20, but where there is one, there may be others who are more broadly focused.

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