The Solana Foundation has launched STRIDE – Solana crypto Trust, Resilience and Infrastructure for DeFi Enterprises – a structured security evaluation program covering all Solana-based DeFi protocols, funded through a partnership with security firm Asymmetric Research.
The program arrives five days after the Drift Protocol exploit on April 1, in which attackers drained $286 million in under 12 minutes – a breach that exposed the absence of any standardized, ongoing security baseline across Solana’s DeFi layer.
STRIDE is not a bug bounty or a one-time audit mandate. It is a continuous monitoring framework, independently administered by Asymmetric Research, with tiered benefits tied directly to protocol TVL and public evaluation results available to users and investors.
Whether that structure is sufficient to rebuild institutional confidence in Solana DeFi is the question the market will answer over the next several months.
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The core mechanism: Asymmetric Research evaluates protocols against its own eight-pillar security framework covering operational security, access controls, multisig configurations, and governance vulnerabilities, then publishes those results publicly.
That is not an audit; it is a continuously maintained security rating. The distinction matters because audits are point-in-time assessments that expire when a protocol upgrades; STRIDE’s continuous monitoring model keeps ratings calibrated to evolving threats.
The tiered benefit structure is where the program’s real incentive logic lives. Protocols above $10 million TVL that pass evaluation receive foundation-funded 24/7 threat monitoring at no cost to the protocol – operational security support that most teams currently cannot fund independently.
Protocols above $100 million TVL receive access to formal verification tooling, which uses mathematical proofs to check every possible smart contract execution path rather than sampling representative scenarios. At current Solana DeFi TVL concentrations, that $100M threshold covers the protocols whose failures carry systemic contagion risk.
Running alongside STRIDE is SIRN – the Solana crypto Incident Response Network – a membership-based coalition of security firms that functions as a shared threat intelligence layer and rapid-response coordinating body.
The five founding members are Asymmetric Research, OtterSec, Neodyme, Squads, and Zeroshadow. SIRN is open to all Solana protocols, but response prioritization is explicitly ordered by TVL and estimated impact. The foundation funds the coalition’s operations; protocols don’t pay for access.
Prior Solana security infrastructure – Hypernative for threat detection, Range Security for risk alerts, Riverguard for attack simulation, Sec3 X-Ray for static analysis – addressed individual threat vectors. STRIDE’s version 0.1 attempts to unify those capabilities under a single evaluative baseline. Whether version 0.1 evolves quickly enough to match the attack surface expanding in parallel is the core execution risk.
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