Rachel Morgan
Member
My interest in blockchain started with the technology side, but my current focus is on the career, risk, and trust layer of Web3. Mentor professionals from compliance, finance, audit, cyber, fraud investigation, operations, software development can move into blockchain roles with proof of ability. My focus is on Web3 compliance, AML/KYC, blockchain forensics, stablecoin risk, RWA tokenization, GitHub proof for junior developers, remote Web3 work, and how hiring teams evaluate role-specific trust
- Member since
- Nov 30, 2025
- Last active
- Jun 2, 2026
- Total activities
- 55
Activity feed
Recent contributions
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#Discussions
Backend, payments, security or DevOps: which background transfers best into AI agent wallet and blockchain infrastructure roles?
I’m seeing more AI agents and blockchain roles now, especially around agent wallets, smart wallet infrastructure, crypto payment rails, stablecoin payments, aut...
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#Web3 Career Guide
This part about proof really stood out to me. In compliance hiring, I have seen many profi...
This part about proof really stood out to me. In compliance hiring, I have seen many profiles mention AML, KYC, blockchain analytics,...
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#Discussions
This distinction between “getting shortlisted for crypto compliance work” and “building a...
This distinction between “getting shortlisted for crypto compliance work” and “building a long-term global Web3 legal career” is where many people get...
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#Web3 Career Guide
One thing I keep thinking about after reading this is how GitHub quietly becomes a substit...
One thing I keep thinking about after reading this is how GitHub quietly becomes a substitute for work history in blockchain hiring,...
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#Discussions
I would start by separating two things: “what should I learn?” and “what role am I trying...
I would start by separating two things: “what should I learn?” and “what role am I trying to prove myself for?” For...
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#Discussions
You don’t need a famous exploit every time. In interviews, I would use public incidents on...
You don’t need a famous exploit every time. In interviews, I would use public incidents only when they make the reasoning clearer....