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Erick Pinos

Head of Ecosystem Nibiru Chain

Erick Pinos Bio

Erick Pinos is a crypto ecosystem and partnerships professional whose work has focused on growing developer, application, and community activity around Layer 1 blockchain networks. He is known for leading ecosystem initiatives at Nibiru Chain and for earlier work supporting Ontology Network’s expansion in the Americas. His profile blends go-to-market execution for blockchain platforms with education-driven community building, including leadership roles connected to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Bitcoin community.

Overview

Pinos’ work is centered on the practical layers that sit between core protocol teams and the builders who deploy applications on-chain. In ecosystem roles, this typically includes partnership development, integration support, developer enablement programs, and public representation at conferences and community events. Public biographies and posts describe him as Head of Ecosystem at Nibiru, as well as a former ecosystem lead for Ontology in the Americas.

Role at Nibiru Chain

At Nibiru Chain, Pinos is associated with ecosystem growth efforts for a Layer 1 network that has promoted multi-VM development and a path for Ethereum-compatible deployment. CryptoSlate coverage of Nibiru’s public milestones has described the network’s mainnet launch and later work toward an EVM-equivalent execution environment, framing these as steps intended to make deployment and tooling more familiar for teams coming from the Ethereum ecosystem.

In an ecosystem leadership role, responsibilities often extend beyond partnerships into coordination across product, developer relations, and community channels. Typical deliverables include supporting application teams through onboarding, improving feedback loops between builders and core engineers, and developing collaboration pathways with wallets, infrastructure providers, and liquidity venues.

Ontology Network experience

Prior to Nibiru, Pinos was publicly profiled as Ontology’s Ecosystem Lead for the Americas. In that role, he described day-to-day work that included scouting potential partners, supporting integration discussions for Ontology-adjacent products, and coordinating across internal working groups and external teams. CryptoSlate has covered Ontology in the context of decentralized identity, including interviews in which Pinos discussed decentralized identifiers (DIDs) as a way to improve user control over data in Web3 and metaverse-style environments.

Ontology’s broader positioning has historically emphasized decentralized identity and data management, alongside smart contract functionality and ecosystem applications. For additional context, readers can review CryptoSlate’s Ontology (ONT) overview and related coverage such as CryptoSlate’s interview on decentralized identity and Web3 privacy.

Education and early community involvement

Pinos is an MIT alumnus with an academic background that combines management training and entrepreneurship exposure. Public profiles list a Bachelor of Science in Management from MIT, as well as a concentration in Entrepreneurship through MIT Sloan School of Management. During and shortly after his time at MIT, he held roles spanning student-led community building and research-adjacent work tied to digital currency topics.

  • MIT Bitcoin Club: Former President, with involvement in event and community coordination
  • MIT Media Lab: Researcher affiliated with the MIT Digital Currency Initiative during his tenure
  • Additional experience: Lead Researcher at Game Theory Group (as listed in public profiles)

Public-facing ecosystem work

Across his roles, Pinos has been visible in conference and community contexts where ecosystem leaders typically discuss developer adoption, interoperability, and practical deployment requirements. His public posts have highlighted multichain and interoperability themes, and he has referenced participation in industry events and collaboration discussions with other projects and organizations. This type of work generally involves translating technical roadmaps into builder-facing narratives and helping align external partners with the network’s product direction.

Risks and considerations

Ecosystem leadership roles are often evaluated through a mix of qualitative outcomes, such as partner alignment and community momentum, and quantitative metrics, such as developer activity, application growth, and usage. Many ecosystem claims are communicated via project announcements, sponsored updates, or conference biographies, which may not be independently audited. Readers assessing network progress should consider primary project disclosures, on-chain data where applicable, and third-party analytics when available.

Erick Pinos Current Work

Erick Pinos Previous Work

Erick Pinos Education

  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Bachelor of Science, Management, 2013 - 2017
  • MIT Sloan School of Management, Concentration, Entrepreneurship, 2013 - 2017

All images, branding and wording is copyright of Erick Pinos. All content on this page is used for informational purposes only. CryptoSlate has no affiliation or relationship with the person mentioned on this page.