►
From YouTube: Baseline Show - India
Description
The official office hours of the Baseline Protocol for the community in India
A
Hello:
everyone
hi-
this
is
sumrat
kishore,
I'm
the
co-chair
of
the
ptsd
and
baseline
protocol.
I
welcome
you
all
once
again
to
the
wasteland
show
in
india.
This
is
a
very
special
episode,
so
hang
on
with
me,
I
have
tried
to
put
together
music.
A
That's
the
music
which
has
been
keeping
us
together
for
two
years
now,
and
I
would
like
to
congratulate
the
space
ledger
folks
for
completing
their
millions
of
blocks.
So
that's
the
news
I
wanted
to
start
with.
We
bring
the
base
intro
every
week
to
you,
thursday,
at
6
00
p.m.
This
one
is
special
because
the
millions
blog
because
the
business
happened
just
about
30
minutes
back
so
jack
waiting
is
here
with
us
to
celebrate
the
millionth
block
on
base
leisure
jack.
A
You
want
to
say
something:
let's,
let's
celebrate:
let's
go
out
there
and
congratulate
the
community.
It's
a
big
win
for
you
know,
based
ledger
is
the
place
to
be
right
now
to
if
you
start
to
start
baselining.
That
is
the
place
to
be
so
yeah.
B
I
think
it's
live
now
for
about
two
months
yeah
and
I
think,
half
an
hour
ago
it
was
the
one
millions
blocked
and
yeah,
of
course
that's
sort
of
milestone,
but
it
still
keeps
running
so
just.
B
Yeah
yeah
and
yeah.
I
encourage
everyone
to
check
it
out
and
see
what
you
can
do
with
it.
Everyone
can
use
it.
It's
a
public
public
blockchain,
so
go
find
out,
go
check.
The
docs
ask
questions
if
you
need
anything
and
need
some
help,
and
we
will
yeah
help
you
with
that
with
everything
and
nice
to
be
here
samrat.
If,
if
the
co-chair
is
asking,
if
you
can
join,
you
can
refuse
that,
of
course,
I'm
happy
to
stay.
A
Here,
thank
you.
Thank
you,
john.
Thank
you,
jack.
I
think
it's
it's
a
it's
a
you
know.
You're
always
welcome
all
dsc
members.
Actually,
all
community
members
always
welcome
on
my
show
as
well.
It's
just
that
people
don't
make
it
to
the
show
quite
often,
but
you
know
we
we
sort
of
have
fun.
We
also
discuss
a
lot
of
updates
which
are
going
on
from
the
community,
but
since
we
have,
the
wednesday
shows
sort
of
people
get
fatigued
and
I
don't
want
to
repeat
the
the
same
thing
again.
A
A
A
So,
ladies
and
gentlemen,
I
would
like
to
introduce
you
to
shadow
movement,
he's
the
ceo
of
a
dc
incubator
in
india,
which
is
one
of
the
largest
incubators
in
delhi
and-
and
you
know,
he's
himself
seen
seen
many
startups
through,
so
they
come
to
his
nest
and
and
he's
seen
them
through
to
raising
funds
and
sort
of
becoming
larger
companies
and
and
moving
out
from
the
incubator,
etc.
He's
also
an
advisor
to
multiple
ceos
and
different
companies.
A
I
myself,
you
know,
I
learned
a
lot
from
him
when
I
talk
so
so
it's
a
it's
a
it's.
It's
an
honor
to
have
you
today
and
we
would
want
to
learn
more
about
your
experiences
so
far.
Building
startups
and
you
know
things
and
things
which
need
data-
and
this
show
is
all
about
data
silos
data
synchronization.
So
let's
talk
about
some
opportunities
there.
So
yeah
you
can
build
your
thoughts.
A
While
I
also
welcome
mark
haddle
he's
the
he's,
the
head
of
outreach
for
for
baseline
he's
been
instrumental
in
all
the
messaging
that
you
see
see
around
and
which
I,
with
which
I
would
also
like
to
invite
my
viewers
to
visit
our
website
and
give
us
some
comments
and
also
definitely
get
involved.
So
our
website
is
baseline,
hyphen
protocol.org,
there's
a
section
called
get
involved
and
there's
also
a
very
important
section
called
get
baseline,
so
click
on
get
baseline.
A
You
will
get
connected
to
the
best
of
companies
which
are
able
to
deliver
baselining
to
you.
You
can
get
that
asap.
The
whole
community
is
super
excited
about
about
baselining
and
taking
baseline
to
production.
Okay,
I
just
got
a
comment
about
rules
here.
Okay,
when
you
have
kids
you'll
know
also
so
so
yeah
this
keeps
happening.
You
know
there
was
a
time.
I
got
a
comment
about
low
lighting
in
my
room:
yeah,
okay,
fine,
I'm
sorting
this
out
so
okay.
So
so
what
is
so?
What's?
A
What's
going
on
on
the
on
the
community?
It's
very
important
to
understand
at
this
moment
it's
it's
a
buzzing
community
of
webster,
which
is
which
is
you
know
there
is
one
platform
which
is
gone
live
you
know
this
base
ledger
is
saying
that
yeah
you
can
start.
D
A
Your
zika
proofs,
it
is
ready
for
breeze
training
and
then
there
are
certain
components
which
are
getting
built.
There
are
tons
of
working
groups
within
the
baseline
community.
So
if
you
come
join
us,
you
will
see.
There
are
just
like
the
working
group
that
mark
is
running,
which
is
the
outreach
team.
There
is
a
very
vibrant
community
of
50
plus
core
developers
who
are
who
are
building
baseline
components
and
we're
also
ready
to
go
on
a
lot
of
blips,
which
are
baseline
improvement
proposals
that
as
we
as
we
call
them
blips.
A
The
flip
bounty
program
was
also
running
as
part
of
the
amster-based
event
that
we
conducted
in
amsterdam
almost
a
month
back
and
very
recently,
the
play
bounty
hunt
has
concluded,
but
that
does
not
stop
us
from
bringing
in
great
ideas
to
the
wasteland
community.
So
if
you
still
have
an
idea,
you
want
to
come
in
present
that
idea
and
apply
for
a
grant.
Please
do
so.
Please
do
so.
The
grant
applications
are
on
github,
and
that
also
brings
me
to
the
important
session
about
okay.
A
Will
also
find
a
link
to
the
github
where,
where
the
code
is
and
last
but
not
the
least
before
I
bring
in
our
speakers,
do
do
subscribe
to
this
channel,
we
make
a
lot
of
updates.
We
do
these
shows
every
week
twice
a
week
now
and
we
make
a
lot
of
updates
by
this
youtube
channel
so
do
like
and
subscribe
to
the
channel.
A
Okay
with
that,
you
know,
let
me
let
me
let
me
sort
of
go
once
again
to
jack
for
all
the
euphoric
things
that
you
want
to
say,
jack,
let's,
let's,
let's
take
take
about
two
minutes
and
discuss
what
are
the
ideas
the
community
had
around
the
millionth
block?
What
are
you
going
to
do?
How
are
you,
how
are
we
celebrating
the
millions
block
and
and
shalab
said,
I'm
giving
you
all
this
time
to
prepare
your
thoughts
around
what
you're
going
to
talk
about
yeah.
B
Yeah,
I
don't
know
if
we
should
celebrate,
I
think
we
should
focus
on
on
bringing
new
users
and
bringing
out
the
words
what
you
can
do
with
base
ledger
and
also
the
the
proxy.
Of
course,
that's
the
open
source
proxy.
You
can
connect
it
with
your
sap
systems.
For
example,
you
can
create
work
groups,
it's
it's
all
in
there
yeah.
You
just
need
to
find
out
how,
if
that's
needed,
we
can
help
or
assist,
but
it's
basically
everyone
can
use
it
now,
it's
not
that
you
need
unibright
company
or
another
company
for
it.
D
About
the
million
block,
no,
I
mean
I
think
it's
great
the
work
that
all
the
people
over
at
unibride
has
been
doing.
A
D
You
know
really,
if
you
want
to
go
ahead
and
really
start
to
dig
deep
and
get
baselining
getting
started
on
on
base.
Ledger
is
probably
the
best
option
out
there
because
it'll
give
you
so
much.
You
know
downstream
functionality
should
you
want
to,
you
know,
add
on
you
know,
really
dynamic,
smart
contracts
or,
if
you
want
to
add
on
you,
know
maintaining
nfts
for
digital
assets.
You
know
everything
is
all
ready.
A
Facebook,
absolutely
absolutely
so
yeah!
That's
that's!
That's
super
awesome!
I'm
gonna
remember
this.
This
show
for
a
very
long
time.
The
the
first
millionth
is.
Is
you
know
it's
it's
important,
that's
the
most
memorable
one
and
it
so
happened
that
it
just
happened
before
the
show
so
yeah.
Thank
you.
Thank
you,
jack
for
coming
in
and
choosing
this
as
the
first
platform
to
tell
I'm
sure.
You're
gonna
have
multiple
other
celebrations
awesome.
A
So
with
that
I
bring
in
our
speaker
for
today,
which
is
so,
let's
start
with
a
little
bit
about
your
background,
your
your
experiences
so
far
and
and
and
yeah
you
know
what
do
you
see,
as
you
know,
data
silos
in
current
industries
and-
and
you
know
especially
startups
where
you
know
when
do
they
struggle?
A
Last
week
we
had
aditya
and
thanks
to
you,
we
had
on
our
show
last
weekend,
and
he
spoke
about
a
lot
of
you
know
startups
when
he
when
they,
when
they
interact
with
third-party
apis,
especially
when
they're
ingesting
data
back
into
third-party
apis,
so
so
yeah
over
to
you.
You
can
start
with
your
instruction
and
then
we
can
talk
about
any
industry
that
you're.
C
C
So
coming
from
a
finance
and
banking
background,
I
I
see
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
opportunities
emerging
in
fintech
where
these
these,
because
fintech
is
going
to
be
a
huge
use
case
when
you're
talking
about
data
silos
and
and
and
things
like
what
was
discussed
in
the
last
show
that
you
had
with
aditya.
C
So
I've
been
I've
been
dealing
with
startups
for
about
three
four
years
now
and
four
years
has
been
a
generation
when
it
comes
to
the
way
the
technology
has
deep
fraud,
and
we
are
today
talking
about
stuff,
which
was
unimaginable
about
three
four
years
back
and
very
young
people,
very
smart
people
coming
up
with
very
out
of
the
box
with
and
again
coming
to,
the
opportunities
that
are
before
us.
Gaming
gaming
is
a
segment
reward.
C
C
And
out
of
because
of
that
about
that,
the
way
it
mushroomed
a
lot
of
lot
of
spurious
applications
also
crept
in
and
then
as
a
somebody
who's
looking
for
some
kind
of
borrowing
and
he's
averse
to
sharing
the
data
and
that's
where
the
data
silos
or
zero
information
data
sharing
comes
into
play.
So
I
would
be
very,
very
careful,
while
sharing
the
data,
my
my
my
identity
details,
my
credentials
with
respect
to
the
banks,
because
they
take
all
sorts
of
plugins.
C
Person
or
not,
I
think
that
that's
a
very
strong
use
case
and
fintech
would
be
listening
to
this
this
opportunity
with
very
keen
years,
that
that's
the
least
I
could
say
on
this.
A
We
hope
so
too.
I
think
that
is
something
which
you
know
we
are.
We
are
currently
looking
for
more
adopters
and
you
know
people
to
join
in
the
community
and
sort
of
start
building
using
baseline.
So
so
definitely
I
mean
we
hope
so
too
that
that
fintechs
are
listening
and
they
come
and
join
us
and
sort
of.
A
B
C
A
C
Of
things
are
happening
around
this
I
mean
we
were
only
talking
about
the
other
day
about
one
startup,
a
couple
of
startups
who
are
trying
to
build
a
reward
program
around
giving
their
users
some
kind
of
some
kind
of
monetization.
C
By
virtue
of
their
time
invested
on
the
platform
and
that
that
again
converges
onto
a
platform
which
is
a
redemption
platform,
but
how?
How
are
we
sure
that,
when
we
have
more
than
more
than
two
platform
plug
again,
how
are
we
sure
about
the
fidelity
of
the
data
that
is
coming
into
the
system?
So
that's
where
without
sharing
too
much
without
sharing?
C
C
C
That
is
also
an
area,
and
I
and
samrat
and
adit
had
been
discussing
about
this
for
a
while.
So
yes,.
D
C
Of
opportunity-
and
I
I
think
you
baseline,
has
has
set
in
motion-
something
which
is
going
to
be
to
be
really
really
big
in
times
to
come.
A
Thank
you.
Thank
you
for
those
kind
words.
I
think
it
feels
it
feels.
You
know
I
get
that
reassurance
each
time.
Somebody
says
that
that
we've
we're
really
on
to
something
which
is
which
is
worthwhile,
even
if
it
is
solving
problems
for
one
industry.
You
know
it
solves.
It
solves
many
many
problems,
because
you
know
we
look
at
look
at
the
economies
like
india,
for
example.
I
mean
this
is
based
on
show
india.
So
I'm
going
to
pick
up
that
you
know
you
need.
You
need
things
which
are
super
fast
hyper.
A
You
know
hyper
connected
and
then
you
also
need
things
to
be
absolutely
cheap.
So
where
is
the
infrastructure
to
do
this?
You
know
you're
gonna
have
the
best
of
controls,
but
look
at
how
does?
How
does
somebody
pay
for
for
nasa
great
security?
You
know
as
they
call
it
the
cliched
world
and
and
while
still
maintaining
you
know
the
cost
assurance
the
market
is
growing.
A
Definitely
you
know
with
a
lot
of
unbanked
people
now
getting
banked
and
people
coming
on
connected
devices,
etc.
I
think
that's.
The
market
is
definitely
growing
and-
and
I
do
see
you
know,
especially
since
you
picked
up
kyc,
I
don't
see
a
lot
of
data
sharing
opportunities
which
are
missed
out
by
by
foreign
companies
and
even.
C
Insurance,
I
mean
insurance
is
also
a
use
case,
which
is
very
heavily
data
dependent
and
a
lot
of
time.
A
lot
of
a
lot
of
redundant
data
is
shared,
so
if
we
are
able
to
pinpoint
that
this
is
exactly
what
we
want,
why
do
we
have?
Why
do
I
need
a
sheet
load
of
data
to
process
a
health
insurance
claim?
For
example,
somebody
is
standing
at
the
hospital
getting.
C
Team
gets
stuck
for
hours
together,
just
because,
just
because
the
insurer
has
not
cleared
it
from
his
desk,
so.
D
Yeah
and
definitely
when
you
take
a
look
at
the
provider
aspect
of
it,
because
you
know
many
people,
they
go
to
see
their
doctor
or
they
go
to
see
a
clinic
and
they
think
that
they
have
one
doctor
and
they
don't
realize
that
you
have
a
whole
host
of
providers
and
it
doesn't
have
to
be
a
human.
It
can
be
a
lab,
it
can
be
a
building,
it
can
be
a
clinic,
but
all
of
them
are
going
to
be
billing
for
their
services
so
that
they
can
establish
their
position
within
the
claim.
D
Onto
the
same
on
on
the
same
page
and
right
now,
it
makes
it
very
difficult
to
share
that
data.
You
know,
in
light
of
the
data
privacy
frameworks
as
much
as
hipaa
phi,
that
we
have
in
north
america
that
you
know
it
really.
They
have
to
play
this
game
of
go
fish.
You
know
until
they
are
finally
aligned
up
and
that
can
take
you
know
so
much
time,
and
wouldn't
it
be
great
if
you
could
be
able
to
have
that
circuit
or
that
corridor.
D
That
can
tell
you
that
you
know
your
data
set
is
matching
those
of
the
others
that
are
participating
within
the
claim
environment,
and
so
you
know,
but
so
many
people
are
like
you
know
we
would
love
to
innovate,
but
we
can't
oh,
but
you
can,
and
the
thing
is,
is
they're
like
well.
That
would
require
a
massive
investment
in
a
new
platform.
Our
new
hardware,
no,
it
doesn't
use
your
existing
business
logic,
use
your
existing
process
environment.
It's
just.
This
is
the
way
to
make
it.
D
You
know
exactly
prove
that
my
data
set
matches
yours
without
any
of
my
data
ever
leaving
my
my
platform,
so
it
preserves
my
business
logic,
my
security
profile,
my
data
privacy
requirements
and
compliance
and
then
gives
me
a
nice
tidy
reporting
structure
around
every
episode
of
care
so
that
I
can
get
the
claim.
You
know,
process
to
get
it
paid
settled
and
closed.
D
So
it's
a
win-win
for
everyone,
because
you
know
right
now.
So
much
of
the
process
environment,
you
know
revolves
around
what
is
the
determination
of
you
know
the
financial
obligation,
the
ultimate
financial
obligation
each
party
has
to
each
every
everyone
else.
The
providers
want
to
be
paid
according
to
their
contracted
rates.
The
the
payers
want
to
be
able
to
go
ahead
and
you
know
collect
whatever
co-pay
or
uneroded
deductible
may
have
you
know
we
want
to
be
able
to
establish
because
everybody's
saying
well,
what
do
I
owe
and
to
whom
so.
A
D
D
So
you
know
how
do
I
you
know,
keep
those
coupled
with
the
work
step.
You
know,
so
it
doesn't
get
completely
out.
You
know
once
you
start
to
hyper
scale
this
into
millions
of
users
yeah.
How
do
we
make
sure
everything
stays
together?
And
you
know
not
only
health
care,
but
also
you
know
that
translates
into
you
know
pharma
our
pharmacy
development,
our
you
know
pharmacy
benefit
management,
which
is
a
so
much
more
complex
process
environment
than
just
healthcare
than
just
treatment.
D
You
also
have
you
know
clinical
trials
to
where
you
know.
You've
got
an
investigative
medication,
you
know,
and
the
the
the
pharmaceutical
manufacturer
you
know
doesn't
want
to
reveal
much
because
it's
their
patent
protection.
You
know
they
don't
want
to
get
anybody,
ideas
that
we're
working
on
this
particular
opposite
isomer
of
a
statin
molecule
that
is
showing
some
promise.
Well,
other
people,
other
competitors
could
say.
Well,
we
want
to
parallel
start
developing
along
that,
but
at
the
same
time
you
have
to
you
know
manage
this.
A
D
Everyone,
you
know,
there's
there's
that
everybody
is
present
and
taking
the
medication,
but
at
the
same
time
can
have
specific
instructions.
You
know
that
have
to
be
in
certain
increments
at
certain
predetermined
times
and
making
sure
that
you
know
and
there's
a
word
for
it.
It's
called
pharmacovigilance,
you
know:
are
you
taking
your
medication
at
the
proper
times
you
know
take
with
food?
Are
you
taking
it
with
food,
taking
it
with
two
glasses
of
water?
Any
type
of
you
know
special
instructions
so,
but
trying
to
keep
all
of
that
together.
D
Because
all
of
these
you
know
trial
participants
are
patients
as
well
and
fall
under
the
data
privacy
requirements,
and
so
how
do
you
manage
this
big
wheel,
unwieldy
process,
environment
and
you
know
with
baseline,
we
say,
use
your
existing.
You
know
your
existing
systems
of
record.
You
know
we're
just
going
to
tie
them
together
through
zero
knowledge
to
where
none
of
your
data
leaves
your
enterprise,
and
you
know
this
allows
you
to
complete
the
work
step,
knowing
that
your
counter
parties
are
aligned
with
yours.
A
Yeah
yeah
absolutely
mark,
I'm
just
amazed
each
time
that
you,
you
know
the
the
level
of
detail
that
you
go
through
on
on,
especially
on
healthcare.
You
say
I
think
this
is
this
is
amazing,
and
you
know
there's
a
very
prominent
issue
going
on
these
days
on
twitter,
especially
how
many
are
bots.
So
how
does
how
does
how
do
healthcare
companies
determine?
I
mean
there
was
a
lot
of
exchange
yesterday,
but
how
do
companies
determine
in
a
clinical
trial
that
there
are
no
course
patients
out
there?
A
C
Yeah
the
concern
that
you
are
raising
somehow
that
there
could
be
ghost
patients-
I
mean
this.
This
is
something
which
is
in
a
controlled
clinic
clinical
environment.
Also,
there
is,
there
is
a
need
to
hide
the
identity
and
the
details
of
the
patient
and
and
a
lot
of
masking
is
required,
and
it.
C
It's
a
protocol
to
be
followed,
I
mean,
if,
if
a
baseline
can
put
a
layer
on
that,
that
makes
life
much
easier
for
the
people
who
are
doing
that,
so
the
the
entire
process
of
mass
masking
or
hiding
the
identity
of
the
of
the
of
the
patient,
who
is
being
put
on
trial
that
makes
the
entire
process
much
easier,
smoother
and
and
complete
data
fidelity
can
be
assured.
A
Greater
fidelity,
yes,
of
course,
and-
and
I
think
this
is
also
so
so
so
relevant
in
the
in
the
even
the
vaccine-
research
which
is
going
on.
Currently,
you
know
you
get
new
medication,
new
vaccines
on
covered
every
day,
so
yeah,
it's
it's!
It's
so
relevant,
it's
so
it's
so
out
there.
You
know!
Why
are
these
drama
companies
not
using
base
ledger
already.
B
A
B
And
it's
of
course,
maybe
it's
not
the
most
sexy
thing
to
work
on.
Everyone
is
looking
now
into
the
web.
Three.
B
B
It's
crazy,
so
I
missed
the
shut
up.
I
I
I
would
bring
all
your
startups
to
our
community
and
we.
C
Absolutely
so
just
to
let
you
know,
I
mean
I,
I
cannot
talk
about
the
entire
ecosystem
that
india
can
offer,
but
definitely
in
the
in
the
delhi
ncr
region,
the
number
of
incubators
that
we
have.
We
are
very
specialized
incubator.
We
have
a
pharma
health
tech,
dedicated
incubator
in
delhi,
and
that's
where
that's
where
the
use
case.
What
mark
was
mentioning
can
be
absolutely
plugged
in
and
then
we
have
incubators
who
have
fintech
as
their
focus
area
and
and
then
just
keep
keep
our
thinking
hats
on
and
we
can.
A
Perfect
perfect-
and
I
think
a
very
easy
way
of
getting
involved
is
also
coming
up
with
new
proposals.
So
once
you
understand
the
concepts
of
baselining
or
zero
knowledge,
then
you
can
also
come
up
with
grant
requests
and
that's
that's
something
which
I'm
talking
to
the
viewers
about
that
yeah.
You
guys
can
come
up
with
ideas
and
and
present
them
to
the
the
core
devs
we
have
seen.
You
know
courthouse
teaming
up
on
certain
ideas,
applying
for
a
grant
making
money,
doing
cool
stuff
and
making
money
out
of
it.
So
yeah.
B
B
For
sure,
if
if
the
first
startup
talented
team
joins
and
and
they.
B
A
A
Yeah
yeah,
so
I
think
I
think
you
you
will
get
a
definitely
a
great
advisor
in
terms
of
mark
as
well.
I'm
sure
he
won't
deny
advising
the
most
talented
of
the
ones
I
mean
if
you
are
able
to
curate
the
right
people
put
present
present
them
to
him,
and-
and
of
course
you
know,
you
have
all
the
support,
the
people
who
get
all
the
support
from
the
community.
A
You
know
once
they
join
the
slack,
they
will
see
how
vibrant
the
chats
are,
and
you
know
how
detailed
the
conversations
go
on
on
on
baselining
and
on
zkp
in
general.
I'm
just
gonna
share.
You
know
just
for
everybody's
sake.
I'm
just
gonna
share
some
resources
on
zero
knowledge,
so
this
is
something
which
we've
been
talking
about.
A
lot
that
you
know.
Mata
labs
has
done
a
fantastic
job
and
putting
together
some
material.
So
people
can
learn
about
zero
knowledge
using
these
resources
so
yeah.
A
The
visit
matter,
labs,
awesome,
so
yeah
shadow
back
to
you.
So
do
you
so
in
in
you
know:
let's
double
click
on
that
a
little
bit.
So
what
do
you
see
as
the
missed
opportunities?
You
know
when
you
say
that
there
are
startups
which
are
missing
out
data
sharing
opportunities.
Are
you
know
worse
that
they're
sharing
london
data?
A
C
Yeah
I
mean
I
will
not
say
that
there
is
still
grappling.
I
mean
still
not
missed,
still
grappling
with
that,
because
kyc
is
a
big
deal
for
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
startups.
There
was.
There
is
a
startup
in
minecubit
who
was
working
on
a
parking
solution
when
they
were
trying
to
develop
a
cap
and
tap
out
repaired
car
right
now.
Prepaid
card
is
basically
a
banking
instrument
required
at
least,
and
so
there's
a
concept
of
a
minimum
kyc
by
the
rbi.
C
So
you
have
a
full
kyc
accounts
and
you
have,
then
you
have
a
minimum
kyc,
but
even
minimum
kyc
required
multiple
steps
to
be
completed
and
before
before
that
instrument
that
device
becomes
usable.
So.
D
C
Is
an
area
and
like
like
that
particular
startup?
There
are
many
more
I
mean
you
have.
You
have
a
car
which
is
targeted
at
kids
and
now
we
have
a
car
which
is
directly
targeted
and
it
is
linked
to
the
parents
account
and-
and
he
allocates
certain
amount
of
money.
So
instead
of
giving
cash
cash
pocket
money,
you
are
getting
transferred
into
kids
account
in
kids
card
now.
Even
there
there
is
a
mechanism
of
validating
whether
whether
that
kid
actually
belongs
to
me,
so
so
that
okay.
A
C
A
Guys
are
you
listening?
Are
you
listening?
Are
you
watching
my
show
today?
If
you're
not,
then
please
watch
us
and
do
join
us
for,
for
our
discussion.
Sometime
npci
is
something
which
definitely
you
know
it
will
be
a
big
big
addition
to
the
baseline
community
if
they
come
so.
C
I
will
try
to
get
my
dear
friend
denny,
who
is
who
is
leading
the
fast
fast
tag
initiative
in
india
so
fast.
C
So
he's
a
part
of
npci
leading
in
initiative
and-
and
you
can
talk
to
him-
propose
to
him
and
then
see,
because
these
guys
are
are
looking
for
new
technologies,
making
life
easier
for
the
common
people.
Now,
when
we
are
traveling
on
highways,
we
we
already
know
the
kind
of
ease
when
we
pass
through
toll
gates
because
of
fast
time
and.
A
A
I
was
just
going
to
say
that
that
you
know
there
are
times
when
I'm
able
to
get
a
fast
tag,
so
just
for
mark
and
jack's
benefit.
So
fast
is
a
new
rfid
tag,
which
I
mean
it's
not
really
new,
it's
almost
a
couple
of
years
or
maybe
more
older
than
now,
but
but
you
know,
yeah
we
used
to
have
tags
earlier.
A
Also
there
were
prepaid
tags,
but
this
is
one
tag
which
is
like
one
across
the
whole
country
and
and
you
could
just
paste
it
on
your
car
and
that
and
because
of
npci
now
the
debit
can
happen
directly
from
your
bank
account
earlier.
You
have
to
load
money
and
do
stuff,
and
so
this
now
options
multiple
payment
options
and
it's
very
it's
very,
very
convenient.
So
it's
very
fast,
the
rollout
was
surprisingly
fast.
You
know
they
were
like
the
people
were
given
a
deadline.
You
know
you
just
take
it
on
your
car.
Just
take
it.
A
If
you
don't
stick
it
then
we'll
charge
you
twice
so
rollout
was
awesomely
fast,
so
yeah
we
if
we
so
I
I
think
this
is
on
boarding-
is
one
area
where
I
also
felt
that
the
entire
thing
is
so
smooth,
but
on
boarding
need
some
time.
You
know
you
need
you
need
to
click
pictures.
You
don't
need
to
do
stuff.
You
need
to
do
kyc
before
you
can
actually
activate.
C
C
Whether
it's
insurance
document
or
my
driving
license
my
car
registration
documents,
even
my
even
my
graduation
degrees
are,
I
can
put
it
on
on
that
digi
locker
now,
if
we
are
able
to
build
an
ecosystem
using
the
baseline
protocol
and
we
just
a
simple
verification,
why?
Why
does
somebody
needs
to
see
my
pan
card?
He
will
be
sure
that
when
I'm
declaring
that
this
is
my
pan
card,
a
mechanism
can
just
simply
touch
the
digi
locker
database.
A
A
C
A
C
Ministry
of
information
technology.
B
C
A
To
your
national
identity
and
it
it
has
so
it
has
two
ways
of
storing
documents.
One
is
you
can
upload
a
document
which
is
the
least
you
know,
least,
integrity,
preserving
way
of
storing
documents
right,
you
create
a
pdf
of
your
program.
The
other
way
is
that
the
issuers
of
that
document
actually
issue
the
document
directly
on
that
app.
So
my
college
or
my
insurance
company
or
my
you
know
even
the
government
of
india
issuing
me
a
document
is
issued
via
that
app,
so
that
have
gets
a
copy
from
the
source.
Okay.
A
So
when
I
go
to
that
app,
I
look
at
my
wallet.
I
see
all
the
documents
are
there
and
there
are
tons
of
issuers.
All
state
governments
have
come
on
board,
etc.
So
it's
an
amazing.
It's
an
amazing
initiative
by
the
government
of
india,
but
it
runs
in
losses,
because
the
adoption
on
on
verification
is
not
that
much
so,
while
the
issuance
is
happening,
people
are
storing
it,
it
has
operational
costs
because
it
is
running
online,
but
not
a
lot
of
people
are
using
it
for
for
validation
of
these
these
documents.
A
They
still
ask
you
for
hard
copies,
and
you
know
sign
here
and
do
stuff
like
that.
So
so
it's
a
it's
a
great
example.
You
know
it
could
be
used
for
for
verification
of
of
anything.
Actually
you
know
it
could
be
range.
Use.
Cases
would
range
from
employment
to
checking
into
a
hotel
or
or
getting
inside
a
bar.
It
can
be
anything
actually
so.
B
Yeah,
but
do
you
need
from
from
the
ministry?
Do
you
need
permission
to
to
get
access
to
the
locker.
A
In
one
of
my
previous
startups,
I
did
integrate
with
digilocker
and
it
was
it
was.
It
was
good,
it
was
very
fast.
You
know,
I
don't
know
if
vikas
watches
my
show,
but
because
from
block
lab
he's
the
guy
who
was
able
to
do
it
very
very
fast.
So
so
he
so
we
were
we.
We
got
a
lot
of
support
from
the
ministry.
Folks
we
so
it's
like
yeah,
it's
it's
quality
government.
I
don't
know.
A
I
got
a
very
startup
like
feel
when
I
was
speaking
to
those
guys,
but
still
the
government
control
thing
right.
So
these
guys
are
very,
very
supportive,
very
fast.
They
have
published
apis
and
we
were
able
to
integrate
within
our
system
and
we
were
able
to
pull
people's
information,
so
it
works
on
authentication.
So
if
I
want
to
share
my
documents
with
you,
I
can
you
know.
I.
A
So
if
you
initiate
my
verification,
I
will
get
an
otp
I
have
to
plug
in
that
otp.
Only
then
you
will
be
able
to
pull
my
document,
so
that
is
also
possible.
It's
a
it's
a
so,
but
but
then
eventually,
I
end
up
sharing
my
document
with
you
and
that's
the
thing.
That's
the
thing
which
other
point
that
what
if
we
don't
want
to
share
my
whole
document
with
you,
if
we
we
could
just
share
a
proof
of
something.
B
Yeah
yeah,
that's
all,
usually
I
think
yeah
yeah.
A
D
And-
and
I
would
say
this
is
you
know
really
a
lot
of
the
core
tenants
of
you
know
verifiable
credentials.
You
know
when
it
comes
to
digital
identity,
because
people,
you
know
it
puts
the
hands.
You
know
it
gives
a
lot
of
the
power
back
to
the
to
the
user.
To
where
we
can
say,
I
just
need
to
prove
to
a
certain
required
threshold
that
I
am
who
I
am,
and
I
don't
need
to
give
anything
else.
D
You
know,
if
I
you
know
here
in
the
states,
you
have
to
be
21
years
old
to
buy.
You
know
anything.
Alcoholic
all
I
need
to
do
is
prove
that
I
am
21
years
old.
They
do
not
need
to
see.
You
know
any
of
the
metadata
of
my
my
my
home
address.
D
They
don't
need
to
see
my
height
my
weight,
my
eye
color,
all
they
need
to
know
is,
am
I
you
know
compliant,
that's
it,
and
so
and
plus
you
know,
you
can
sit
there
and
look
at
the
you
know
from
the
aspect
of
the
users
is
sitting
here
going
and
once
I
have
proven
my
my
identity
to
the
threshold.
I
then
want
to
invoke
my
right
to
be
forgotten
that
anything
that
I
have
given
you.
D
You
have
to
scrub
from
your
server,
so
you
have
that
right
to
be
forgotten,
which
is
very
powerful.
You
know,
particularly
within
financial
services,
certainly
within
marketing,
but
it
allows
it
gives
that
self-sovereignty,
which
is
really
attractive
to
a
lot
of
people.
And
of
course
you
know,
then
you
have
you
know
other
parts
of
the
population
say
I
I
don't
want
to
bother
with
that.
I
have
enough
to
worry
about.
You
know
I
don't
want
to
have
you
know
another
bucket
of
information
that
I
have
to.
D
You
know
curate
and
maintain
yeah.
So,
but
you
know
did
you
while
it
was
was
perfect
on
on
that,
because
it
really
it
took.
You
know
your
wallet
that
you
had
in
your
pocket
and
put
it
in
a
digital
framework
so
that
you
know
I
don't
have
to
sit
there
and
show
everything,
and
should
I
misplace
something
or
I
get
halfway
to
my
destination,
and
I
found
out
that
I
left
my
wallet
on
the
counter
you
know.
D
A
B
C
A
If,
if
police
stops
me
and
wants
to
check
my
license-
and
I
don't
have
my
license
card-
I
could
still
show
them
my
license
under
the
digilocker
app
and,
and
they
would
have
to
you
know
they
would
have
to
agree
to
it
right.
So
so
that's
the
best
part.
It
has
legitimacy.
It
has
legitimacy
of
the
government
yeah.
Why?
A
C
We
can
we
can
definitely
do
that
because
mighty
more
than
one
incubators
are
connected
with
mighty,
because
mighty
also
has
an
accelerator
program
that
they
run
through
literature.
So
we
have.
A
C
Access,
we
know
people
and
in
any
case,
like
you
just
mentioned
they
they
work.
You,
you
said
semi
government,
they
work,
semi,
startup,
so
semi.
A
C
Because
it
is
under
a
digital
india
campaign
and
it
is
being
taken
under
that
same
spirit
so
like,
and
similarly
I
just
mentioned
to
you
that
national
academic
depository
is
being
created.
So
all
all
the
degrees
being
issued
in
india
will
be
will
be
pooled
at
one
place
in
digital
form,
so
that
takes
care
of
somebody
trying
to
fake
his
credentials
and-
and
I
will
do
a
back
check
so
that
can
also
be
done
now
that
this
this
this
capability
is
being
given
by
nad.
C
A
You
don't
have
to
store
the
degree
somewhere
else.
You
know
in
the
case
of
nad,
it
is
like
a
repository,
so
you
you're
issuing
it
somewhere
else
and
the
owner
is
somebody
somebody
else-
and
this
is
a
third
party
repository,
which
is
also
taking
all
the
risk
and
storing
all
the
personal
information
somewhere
else.
It's
like
a
extra
copy
of
that
of
that
degree
which
again
needs
its
own.
You
know
protection
and
and
whatnot.
A
So
so
I
think
the
the
the
fantastic
thing
is
and
yeah
I
mean
I
was
fortunate
that
within
the
same
time
I
was
working
with
the
cars
and
block
labs
I
used
to
get
access.
I
got
access
to
nad
as
well,
and
that
was
you
know.
The
unfortunate
part
was
that
they
were
struggling
to.
You
know,
bear
the
cost
again,
because
not
a
lot
of
people
adopted
it
for
verifications,
so
not.
A
D
I
would
say
another
use
case
of
that
is
certainly
in
in
the
in
the
world
of
e-commerce,
where
you
have
abandoned
shopping
carts
as
a
persistent
problem
to
where
people
will
go
online
and
they'll.
Look
at
something
and
they'll
add
items
to
their
cart.
They
go
to
check
out
and
the
platform-
maybe
you
haven't,
visited
it
in
a
while
and
they
want
you
to
log
in
again
and
people
are
like.
I
don't
remember
my
password,
so
they
just
you
know,
say
never
mind.
D
I
don't
need
this
stuff,
because
I
don't
want
to
be
bothered
to
have
to
think
about
my
password
or
change
it,
and
so
that's
an
abandoned
shopping,
cart
and
that's
a
problem
for
e-commerce
organizations,
because
while
it's
in
the
in
someone's
shopping
cart,
you
can't
really
allocate
it
for
someone
else.
You
know
from
inventory,
and
so
you
know
being
able
to
have
that.
You
know
identifier
and
that
credential
to
where
you
know
you
can
sit
there
and
you
know
re-authenticate.
D
You
know
on
the
on
the
website
within
the
shopping.
Cart
that
you
are
who
you
are,
and
you
know
making
sure
that
you
can
have
access.
So
you
can
go
ahead
and
complete
the
transaction.
That's
been
a
persistent
problem
with
e-commerce.
Vendors
right
now
has.
A
Been
for
a
while
yeah,
I
agree.
Okay,
in
fact,
one
of
my
one
of
my
descriptions
to
somebody
I
was
trying
to
explain
e-commerce
use
cases
for
baselining
or
zero
knowledge
in
general
to
somebody,
and
I
was
like
yeah.
The
first
thing
that
you
should
be
doing
is
people
processing.
My
order
should
not
be
getting
access
to
my
personal
credentials.
Why
do
they
need
to
know
my
address
and
my
phone
number
they're
just
processing
my
order?
They're
just
packing
something
sending
it
out
to
the
by
the
shipping
company.
A
They
don't
need
to
know
me,
but
what
is
happening
is
on
the
other
side.
I
mean
I'm
saying
very,
very
simply:
it's
amazon
people
I
buy
things
on
amazon.
I
get
phone
calls
from.
I
don't
know
who
and
and
the
people
are
saying
the
people
are
saying
on
the
other
side.
Oh
you
know
what
you
should
go
to
amazon
give
us
five
stars.
Okay,
the
product
has
not
reached
me.
A
Yet,
how
can
I
go
and
give
you
five
stars
so
so
and
that's
all
that's
all
happening
because
the
data
shared
everywhere
I
all
I
did
was
very
simple
thing-
just
placed
one
order
on
the
most
amazing
ecommerce
website
known.
But
then
what
I
get
is
it's.
It's,
it's
yeah,
it's
it's
completely,
destroying
my
trust.
Okay,
so
I
see
stefan
is
on
youtube
chiffon.
Why
are
you
on
youtube?
You
should
you
you
were
invited
to
the
live
studio
if
you're
watching
us,
please
show
up
just
click
on
that
link
I'll.
Let
you
in.
A
Yeah
yeah
yeah.
There
are
a
couple
of
good
good
comments
which
came
so
aditya
is
our
common
friend.
He
was
our
speaker
last
week.
He's
just
commented
on
linkedin,
so
you
can
actually
take
a
look.
He's
he's
talking,
he's
he's
listening
carefully
to
us
discussing
about
the
fast
act
and
I'm
glad
he
spoke
about
a
pilot
program,
so
I
think
I
think,
connecting
digital
ids
and
giving
digital
ids
to
vehicles
and
connecting
them
to
wins.
That
is
something
which
is
which
is
happening.
A
Think
I
think
this
is
a
this
is
a
great
point.
Thank
you
for
pointing
out
and
and
yeah
it's
always
good
to
get
appreciation
from
people
who
are
around
your
right.
So
so,
thank
you
so
much
somebody
who
goes
by
the
name
of
never-ending
meditation.
I
hope
you
get
peace
and
solace
in
life.
This
has
to
be
the
best
baseline
show.
Ever
I
watched
okay,
good,
great
description
of
use
cases.
I.
A
Yeah
we're
getting
better
at
it.
You
know.
That's
I'm
also
learning
right.
We
all
are
learning
as
we
go,
so
I'm
not
a
professional
youtuber.
I
just
do
this
for
the
love
of
the
community
and
the
and
what
we're
doing
together.
So
it's
it's
it's.
It's
awesome
how
all
this
comes
together
and
the
ideas
which
were
discussed
today.
Even
I
am
going
back.
You
know
a
better
human
being.
I'm
I've
learned
today.
A
C
A
We
started
late,
so
we're
gonna
sort
of
give
another
five
or
ten
minutes.
If
you
guys
have
five
ten
minutes,
I'm
cool
with
that,
but
but
today
was
exceptionally
awesome,
show
we
we
we
discussed
about
use
cases.
We
also
celebrated
the
millionth
vlog
on
base
ledger,
I'm
I'm
I'm
going
to
turn
this
show
into
an
nft.
Is
that
a
good
announcement
to
make
at
the
end
of
today's
show
sure.
D
We've
got
60
minutes
worth
of
video.
You
know
a
1080p
video,
I
imagine
what
would
that
require
as
a
payload
for
an
nft
to
mint
that
I.
A
Don't
know
I
I
don't
want
to
do
on
on
on
on
change
storage,
so
I
think
it's
still
going
to
be
okay,
it's
going
to
be
stored
somewhere,
but
yeah.
This
is
this.
Is
these?
Are
you
know
these
are
the
moments
I
do
this
I
just
show
for
so.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
So
much
all
of
you,
and
especially
shadow
for
instigating
these,
these
conversations
and
bringing
in
the
real
examples
which
which
could
make
a
difference
for
all
of
us,
yeah.
A
A
D
A
A
A
C
C
Yeah,
so
this
is,
this
is
like
the
moment
of
truth,
people
walk
in
and
they
they
scratch
their
head.
What
is
that
so?
They
ask
me,
and
I
need
I
say
that
you
need
to
figure
out
yourself.
A
C
This
is,
this
is
fact
camouflaged
as
puzzle.
A
Yeah,
you
expect
something
really
witty
and
you
expect
something
really
interesting
to
be
written
on
somebody's
wall
and
then
you
end
up
with
this
yeah.
It's
very
lousy,
awesome
awesome.
So
with
that
you
know
great
vibes
today.
Thank
you
so
much
once
again,
all
of
you
and
thank
you
for
people
who
stuck
stuck
around
watching
the
whole
show
and
and
keeping
the
chat
alive,
see
you
next
week.
We
are
also
looking
for
more
speaker
suggestions.
A
You
know
people
like
shadow
people
who
could
who
we
could
bring
in
and
and
sort
of
strike
conversations
around
various
industries.
So
please
nominate
people.
I
am
very
accessible
on
linkedin
telegram
everywhere,
actually,
twitter.
So
just
just
please
pour
in
your
speaker
recommendations
if
you
can
make
introductions
nothing
like
it
awesome.
Thank
you
all.
This
was
the
baseline
show
in
india
today.