Nader Dabit is the Director of Developer Relations at Eigen Labs, the company responsible for the EigenLayer restaking protocol on Ethereum. Dabit is recognized for his contributions to developer education, having held senior developer relations roles at Amazon Web Services (AWS), Aave & Lens Protocol, Edge & Node, and Celestia. [1] [2]
Nader Dabit is a native of Mississippi, having grown up in Jackson and later residing in Madison. [3] He has publicly shared that he followed a non-traditional path into the technology industry. In a social media post, he detailed his journey, which included dropping out of high school at the age of 17 and later leaving college at 19. He did not begin learning to code until he was 29 years old. [4] His professional profiles also indicate that he attended Mississippi State University to study for a Bachelor of Science degree in a technical discipline. [1]
In 2014, Dabit founded CodeSouth Labs in Jackson, which was recognized as the city's first coding school. The initiative provided free programming classes to local residents aspiring to become software developers. Concurrently, he established the "Jackson Area Web and App Developers," a monthly meetup group designed to foster networking, collaboration, and peer-to-peer learning among local coders. [3]
Dabit's professional career is marked by a transition from a self-taught developer to a leader in developer relations at major technology and Web3 companies.
Dabit began his software development career in 2013 as a Web Application Developer at Connect Technology, LLC, before moving to a software developer role at US Legal Forms the same year. [5] He has shared that he was fired from his first developer job at the age of 30, a year after he started coding. Despite this setback, he continued in the field. [4]
In a well-known tweet from May 10, 2020, Dabit summarized his early career progression:
"My path as a developer:
Following his initial roles, he worked as a software developer at C Spire from 2014 to 2015 and then at SchoolStatus from 2015 to 2017. During this period, he also established himself as a trainer and consultant, founding React Native Training in 2016. As an independent consultant and trainer, he conducted software development workshops for major corporations, including Amazon, Microsoft, American Express, and Warner Brothers. [5] [3]
In June 2018, Dabit joined Amazon Web Services (AWS) as a Senior Developer Advocate, a position he held until January 2021. At AWS, he was a key member of the developer relations team for Front End Web & Mobile, focusing on technologies such as AWS Amplify, the GraphQL service AWS AppSync, and serverless architecture. His work involved creating extensive educational content, tutorials, and technical talks to help the AWS developer community build cloud-powered applications. During his tenure, he also authored the book Full Stack Serverless. [1] [6]
Dabit transitioned from cloud computing to the Web3 industry in 2021, holding developer relations leadership roles at several foundational protocols.
From January 2021 to March 2022, Dabit served as a Senior Developer Relations Engineer at Edge & Node, one of the core development teams behind The Graph. In this role, he was responsible for evangelizing the protocol, which enables developers to index and query data from blockchains like Ethereum. His work included producing tutorials and technical presentations on creating and utilizing subgraphs, which are open APIs for blockchain data. [1] [2]
In 2022, Dabit briefly worked in developer relations at Celestia Labs, the core team behind the Celestia modular data availability network. [5] Subsequently, from March 2022 to August 2023, he became the Director of Developer Relations for Aave Companies (now Avara). His primary focus was building and leading the developer relations program for Lens Protocol, a composable and decentralized social graph. He was responsible for creating tools, documentation, and educational content to onboard developers and foster an ecosystem of applications on the new Web3 social layer, working under the leadership of Aave founder Stani Kulechov. [1]
Dabit joined Eigen Labs as Director of Developer Relations in August 2023. [1] At Eigen Labs, he leads the efforts to educate and onboard developers to the EigenLayer ecosystem. His work focuses on EigenLayer's core concept of restaking, which allows developers to leverage Ethereum's pooled economic security to build new decentralized networks known as Actively Validated Services (AVSs). He also leads developer relations for EigenDA, a data availability service built as an AVS. His role involves communicating the protocol's value proposition, creating educational materials, and engaging with the developer and validator communities to drive the adoption of restaking for building new forms of decentralized infrastructure. [7]
Dabit has authored multiple technical books for the publisher Manning Publications.
His author page is available on Amazon. [6]
Dabit is an active angel investor in the Web3 and technology sectors. His known investments include:
In the interest of transparency, Dabit maintains a public spreadsheet detailing his financial interests and disclosures, which is linked from his personal website. [6]
In an interview published on December 19, 2024, on the YouTube channel Web3 Quest with Diksha Dutta, Nader Dabit discussed his professional background and outlined his perspective on developer relations within the Web3 sector. In the interview, he described his career path from roles in traditional technology environments, including AWS, to positions in the blockchain space, referencing his work at The Graph and his subsequent role at Eigen Labs, where he is associated with EigenLayer.
According to Dabit, developer relations activities are structured around sustained interaction with developer communities rather than short-term adoption outcomes. He described the function as involving ongoing coordination with engineering teams, technical communication, and support processes intended to maintain alignment between developers and protocol development. He also addressed the professional transition from Web2 to Web3, stating that prior technical specialization can be applied to blockchain contexts when combined with familiarity with decentralized systems.
Dabit identified network effects as a structural element influencing the development of decentralized platforms. He explained that developers often prioritize ecosystems where existing usage, liquidity, or community activity is observable, which can limit participation in early-stage networks. Within this context, he described developer relations as one of several organizational functions involved in lowering participation barriers through documentation, events, and technical assistance.
The interview also addressed operational topics such as hackathons and content production. Dabit outlined differences between remote and in-person hackathons, noting that extended, remote formats can alter participation patterns and project timelines. He also referred to the use of tracking methods and internal metrics to document developer engagement and activity within Web3 organizations.
The discussion concluded with comments on professional conduct in public-facing roles, including responses to criticism and approaches to workload management. Throughout the interview, Dabit presented his interpretation of how developer relations functions interact with network effects and organizational processes, based on his experience across both traditional and blockchain-focused technology environments. [8]
In a video published on August 29, 2025, on the YouTube channel of Nader Dabit, the speaker presents his account of Google’s Agent2Agent (A2A) protocol and its proposed use for communication between AI agents developed across different platforms and vendors.
According to Dabit, the A2A protocol, introduced by Google, is defined as an open technical standard intended to enable interoperability among autonomous agents. He describes the protocol as a response to the fragmented nature of existing AI systems, in which agents typically function independently and lack standardized mechanisms for direct interaction.
The discussion outlines the main structural elements of A2A, including the use of “agent cards,” which are JSON documents describing an agent’s declared capabilities. In Dabit’s description, these documents allow agents to be discovered and engaged through standardized task objects. He states that the protocol supports both short-duration and extended tasks, provides mechanisms for task status updates, and accommodates different content types. Communication is described as being based on existing web technologies, such as HTTP, with integrated authentication and security features.
The video also includes a technical walkthrough demonstrating how an A2A-compatible agent can be implemented using TypeScript. From Dabit’s perspective, this demonstration covers the configuration of client and server components, the creation of an agent card, and the exchange of basic messages. The example is expanded to show how task execution can be managed over time, including asynchronous processing, cancellation handling, and progress reporting.
In a concluding segment, Dabit introduces a specialized agent designed to answer movie-related queries using a large language model API. He presents this example to show how agents can be constrained to a specific domain and integrated into a multi-agent environment, where distinct agents operate with defined scopes and responsibilities. [9]