►
From YouTube: Baseline Show - India
Description
The official office hours of Baseline Protocol community in india.
We bring together experts from various industries and talk about data silos and the adoption considerations for Baseline Protocol.
Hosted By: Samrat Kishor
#baselineprotocol #baselineinindia #B2BBlockchain
A
Hi
everyone-
this
is
dr
again
welcoming
you
to
the
baseline
show
in
india.
We
do
this
every
saturday
6
p.m.
This
is
official
office
hours
of
baseline
protocol.
It's
a
community
rapidly
being
built
in
india
and
abroad.
A
A
So
yeah
coming
back
to
the
introduction,
so
I
was.
I
was
saying
that
we
we
do
this
every
saturday
at
6
p.m.
This
is
for
developers
and
community
members
to
come
together
and
ask
questions,
learn
from
the
experts
and
also
exchange
ideas
around
adoption
of
baseline.
A
Today
we
have
a
very
special
guest
who's
building
real
extent.
It's
a
platform
for
fractional
ownership
of
real
estate.
Along
with
them.
We
have
our
baseliners
fellow
baseliners
mark
and
anushari.
A
I'm
sorry
hi
mark
thanks
for
making
it
to
today's
show,
so
for
people
who
are
watching
us
on
youtube
and
for
people
who
may
be
watching
us
in
future.
We
have
a
lot
of
announcements
today
about
the
baseline
protocol
as
well.
As
you
all
know,
I
will
start
with.
You
know:
go
to
our
website.
You
know
there's
a
lot
of
effort
which
goes
into
putting
up
this
website.
There's
also
now
a
get
involved
section
which
has
got
all
the
links
to
our
to
our.
A
You
know
wherever
we
have
found,
so
we
we're
on
slack
we're
on
twitter
we're
on
youtube,
and
we
also
have
a
very
we
have
a
very,
very
vibrant
community
on
one
slide.
People
are
getting
responses
within
15
minutes
to
do
do,
go
there
and
and
sign
up,
find
all
you
you
will
find
all
of
us
on
slack.
A
What
is
important
is
voting
for
the
tfc.
Now
I
can
just
I'm
one
of
the
candidates
who's
up
for
election,
so
I
can
just
say
that
there
is
the
technical
setting
committee
elections
going
on.
Whoever
is
eligible.
Please
do
vote
the
power
to
be
eligible.
You
know
the
in
fact.
Mark
is
also
there
right.
So
so
the
you
know
now
you
cannot
have
new
eligibility.
That
window
has
already
closed
so
now
no
new
people
can
come
and
become
eligible
voters.
A
The
mails
have
gone
out,
but
it's
just
my
reminder
to
people
who
have
not
yet
voted
to
go
ahead
and
vote
for
for
the
technical
selling
committee
of
baseline
protocol.
It's
extremely
important.
This
is
the
committee
which
holds
together
the
vision
of
the
protocol
and
takes
it
forward
in
the
next
year.
A
You
know
where
adoption
is
really
really
key.
Now
we
are
ready
with
all
the
ammunition
we
do
this
show
every
week.
This
is
for
increasing
awareness
about
various
areas
where
blockchain
has
found
an
option
where
baseline
can
potentially
come
in
and
then
play
a
role,
and
to
that
end
we
have
manish
with
us.
Manisha
would
like
to
invite
you
and
talk
a
little
about
your
journey,
your
background
of
how
you
conceptualize
relax.
A
What
have
you
been
doing
so
far
in
your
professional
life
and
personal
life,
and
then
I
would
also
invite
you
to
give
your
views
around
blockchain
in
general.
You
know
what's
happening
with
blockchain
and,
and
you
know
all
of
us
all
the
rest
of
us-
we
have
touch
blockchain
in
some
in
some
capacity,
so
I
would
like
to
know
your
experience
also
with
that
you
can
start
with
the
indian
context
and
also
talk
a
little
about
the
global
context.
B
Thank
you.
Thank
you
so
much,
and
I
will
take
time
after
the
session
to
log
in
and
go
through
the
candidate
find
you
worthy.
Maybe
I'll
have
your
you
know
voting
for
you.
So
having
said
that,
hello,
everyone,
this
is
my
niche
I
am
co-founder
and
ceo
of
which
is
a
blockchain
powered
fractional
ownership
platform.
For
you
now
say
this,
it
looks
very
heavily
loaded.
You
know:
blockchain
powered
the
ownership
platform
for
real
estate.
There
are
two
worlds
in
this.
B
I
guess
you
know
one
of
the
world
says
fractional
ownership,
you
know
in
general
and
we
have
a
lot
of
competition
there
and
the
other
world
is.
You
know
which
is
to
go
about
what
you
know
blockchain
can
bring
in
and
that
world
doesn't
believe
in
anything
really.
You
know
if
I
may.
B
So
these
two
words,
our
attempt-
has
been
to
bring
together
these
two
worlds.
Blockchain
was
the
savior
for
our
model,
because
we
had
blockchain
not
been.
C
B
We
would
have
had
a
difficult
time
creating
a
legitimate
ledger
of
co-owners
on.
You
know.
You
know
in
any
other
way,
so
I
think
I
think
it
was
not
blocked.
B
Blockchain
second
was
was
it
was
blockchain
second,
but
it's
a
critical
cog
in
the
in
the
overall
picture
that
we
are
trying
to
paint
here.
What
are
we
trying
to
essentially?
Is
you
know
in
in
simple
terms,
I
can
say
equitizing
property.
So
what
do
we
mean
by
that?
So
being
that
we
all
can
come
together
become
owners
with
small
investments
into
into
a.
C
B
Property
and
and
ownerships
can
be
recorded
on
what
can
become
the
digital.
B
Now
this
was
a
brief.
This
was
not
a
proper
intro,
but
I
think
I'm
in
a
blockchain
forum.
So
I
spoke
more
about
blockchain,
probably
the
first
time.
C
B
Let
me
try
and
answer
that,
I'm
as
as
much
a
a
middle-class
guy,
as
probably
you
are
some
rat,
so
so
it
was
the
idea
of
something
like
this
really
came
from
not
being
able
to
participate
into
many
kinds
of
assets
when
we
saw
them
as
very
high
value
assets,
but
nobody
offered
us,
you
know
ownership
in
them.
B
So,
to
tell
you
very
simply
the
very
fact
that
when
I
used
to
visit
malls
etc,
malls
are
very
priced
possessions
of
developers,
they
say
basically,
so
that
is
when
you
know
I
was
one
of
the
finishing
thoughts
was
why
this
is
running
very
well.
Why
am
I
not
given
ever
an
opportunity
to
be
part
of
something
like
this?
B
You
know
it
was
never
on
the
block
and
I
could
never
afford
it.
So
so
why
are
we
excluded
from
something
like
that?
So
why
are
we
excluded
from?
So
when
you
go
to
a
toll
booth
which,
and
you
spend
three
minutes,
what
do
you
think
in
three
minutes?
My
thought
is:
this
is
bloody
so
busy.
I
could
have
invested,
I
could
have
been
part
of
this,
but
I
never
could
invest
because
nobody
gave
me
the
option
to
invest.
There
are
many
such
assets
where
this
thing
get
out.
B
All
of
them
have
a
real
estate
play
and-
and
you
know
except
for
the
mainstream,
you
know
you
can
buy
one
house
and
buy
another
house
with
with
a
lot
of
your
head,
which
you
really
didn't
want
and
your
eyes.
That
is
what
you
know
plain
vanilla
served.
You
know
today.
This
is
not
how
it
should
be.
How
if
I
can
buy
two
shares
of
a
company
I
can
I.
B
Why
can
I
not
buy
a
certain
piece
of
asset,
a
asset
b,
asset
c,
and
when
I
talk
about
that,
I
I
mean
today
the
cinema
halls
are
not
running,
so
that
may
not
be
an
example,
but
in
my
imagination
that
time
it
was
an
example
that
this
cinema
all
runs
very
well.
Why
can't
I
have
a
piece
of
that,
a
piece
of
all
the
earnings
from
that
I
could
have
invested.
B
So
that's
when
this
whole
thing
you
know
germinated
rest
is
you
know
just
the
process
of
how
do
you
find
laws
and
technology
anything
you
mesh
took
something
which
gives
you
know
it
a
legitimate.
B
B
A
Hope
I
answered
the
question.
No,
no,
absolutely,
and
you
know
what
you
touched
upon
very
simply.
It's
very
easy
done
easier
said
than
done.
You
know
you
said
regulations
and
technologies
intermeshed
to
create
this
product.
I
think
that
would
have
been
the
biggest
hurdle
for
you
right
to
jump
over
the
existing
laws
and
regulations
and
and
where
does
it
even
sit?
You
know
today.
B
B
His
thoughts
very
early
on
we
got
an
opportunity
to
speak
to
him
quite
honestly,
and
one
of
the
things
that
he
said
was
in
something
like
this
as
a
platform
as
against
you
know
other
options
being
read,
it
is
only
legal
and
legal,
so
if
you
solve
the
legal
in
doing
it,
I
think
according
to
him,
you
know
almost
everything
else
can
can
can
be
done
so
we
took.
A
B
Construct,
which
is
through
seven
legal
documental
stack,
you
know,
like
you,
have
india,
we
have,
you
know
really.
That
makes
it
happen.
So.
B
What
we
do
is,
you
know,
there's
a
use
coming
onto
the
platform,
and
then
you
have
something
like
a
terms
of
use
or
what
we
call
buyer
agreement
from
that
point
to
a
registered
deed.
You
know
and
to
you
know,
to
their
terms
being
recorded,
and
things
like
that.
So
if
there
are
seven
such
you
know,
legal
document
is
that
that
make
all
this
happen,
you
know
and
various
entities
fall
in
place
to
do
to
what
what
we
nationalize
the
whole
services
of
owning
and
operating
real
estate.
A
B
Okay,
so
good
one,
so
we
are
structured,
commercially
structured
marketplace.
So
what
we
don't
do
is
we
don't
take
mandated
sales,
so
we
we
wouldn't
be
selling
something
to
our
investors.
The
investor
is,
is
essentially
my
customer,
so
we
stand
to
serve
the
investor
and
not
the
other
way
around.
So
that's
one,
and
that
is
a
lot
of
things
how
you
do
things,
although
there
may
be
very
many
players
in
the
market,
but
who
your
first
customer
changes
a
lot
of
things.
So
we
are.
B
Where
both
parties
can
are
free
to
to
join
in
so
developers
also
are
free
to
post
their
onto
the
platform
for
sale.
There
is
a
standard.
There
is
a
standard
information
set
that
they
need
to
furnish
most
often
than
not.
They
are
not.
C
B
To
furnish
it
away,
given
the
level
of
information,
asymmetry
and
etc
that
exists
in
the
market
itself,
it
takes
us
a
lot
of
time
to
to
get
that
corrected
from
the
sourcing
side.
Once
you
know,
we
validate
all
that
you
know
for
information,
correctness,
completeness
and
cohesiveness
of
information.
That's
when
we
allow,
I
mean
naughty,
goes
live,
we
do
curate,
but
we
that's
when,
by
and
large
a
good
property
will
go
light.
B
You
know,
and
that's
when
investors
are
able
to
log
in
the
investor,
login
is
pretty
straightforward.
Even
they
have
to
just
agree
to
to
our
standard
buyer
agreement.
B
But
investors
can
you
know
properties,
they
can
look
at
the
deal.
They
can
decide
to
commit
a
certain
investment
in
one
of
the
deals
you
know
at
that
point.
They
only
need
to
first
point.
You
know
they
only
need
to
pay.
One
percent
of
the
commitment
and.
C
B
The
the
property
is
fully
subscribed,
that
is
when
it
goes
to
stage
two,
which
is
when
it
goes
off
here,
and
you
know,
the
the
execution
of
the
process
begins
where
first
step
is
in
the
duties
is
carried
out.
The
due
date
is
being
positive.
We
we
send
the
report
to
the
investor
and
ask
them
for
the
furnishing
the
rest
of
the
amount.
That's
when
you
know
once
that
is
done,
it
goes
for
a
registration
at
the
registrar's
office.
B
All
the
name
for
co-owners
are
recorded
there
as
and
once
based
on
that
record.
We
then
credit
the
information
for
the
first.
You
know
in
the
token
world
called
token
generating
event
you
know.
So
that
is
when
we
credit
all
that
information
for
time
for
this
property
and
create
that
genesis
node,
you
know
block
of
all
the
co-owners
post
this
you
can
now.
You
know
if
you
log
into
the
platform
and
you
want
to
buy
on
secondary,
and
you
know
somebody
is
selling
you.
You
know
that
the.
B
Insane
because
he's
fetched
from
the
blockchain
you
know
so
there
is
no
requirement
for
small
purchases
to
have
their
own
due
diligence.
A
That
is
where
it
kicks
in
yeah,
so
so
of
course
it
acts
as
a
registry,
and,
if
I
may,
if
I
may
compare
manish,
can
we
call
this
a
kickstarter
of
property?
Can
we
call
this
like
that
because,
as
you
said,
the
campaigns
go
live
and
when
it
is
completely
subscribed,
then
it
goes
to
us
to
our
next
stage.
So
can
we
can
we
compare
this
to
kickstarter,
okay,
sure.
B
Sure,
I
think,
essentially,
you
know
all
of
us
democratize
access
to
to
to
such
properties,
and
I
think
we
did
that
for
both
the
parties,
so
we
are
doing
that
for
developers
as
much
as
we
had
for
for
the
investors,
both
of
them
have
a
new
channel
to
interact
both
of
them.
The
developers
also
have
a
brand
to
keep
now.
You
know,
because
if
you
do
not
do
well,
you
are
you
basically
choke
your
future
financing.
You
know.
A
That's
a
very
interesting
notion:
yeah.
What
is
the
creative
wealth
economy.
A
Awesome
awesome:
no,
we
we're
going
to
be
I'm
going
to
be
taking
it
back
now,
so
so
participative
wealth
and
I
think
when
the
question
of
participative
wealth
comes
or
when
the
question
of
having
multiple
actors
in
the
whole
model
comes.
That
is
where
the
need
for
trust
arises.
So
that
is
where
people
need
to
know
details
and,
as
you
said,
that
every
project
is
taken
through
due
diligence.
Who
is
the
party
doing
due
diligence?
Do
you
hire
them
or
the
buyers
hire
them
who's,
who's,
who's?
The
party.
B
B
That's
the
interesting
part,
so
due
diligence
cannot
be
done
by
you
know.
Essentially
any
law
firm
should
be
a
point.
You
know
in
panel
law
firms
to
do
that.
For
us
in
that
aspect
we
are
not
too
different
from,
let's
say
a
bank,
you
know
which
also
as
law,
firms
impaneled
all
of
the
country,
and
you
know
if
they
depute
a
law
firm
to
to
carry
on
the
task
and
the
fees
etc
and
the
reports
etc
is
kind
of
standardized.
So
the.
C
A
B
B
However
said
that
this
is
carried
out
by
professional
law
firms,
we
can
appoint
any
of
the
embankment
wants
to
do
that.
We
don't
really
see
much
of
a
challenge
in
that
and.
A
B
A
B
So
essentially,
it
will
be
like
yes
or
by
and
large.
No,
so
there
may
be
some
very,
very,
very
strong
areas,
and
that
means
that
you
defeat
by
and
large.
Otherwise
you
know
it
will
say
that
some
document
is
not
present,
but
but
the
others
are
there
and
therefore
it
is
it
is.
It
is
with
the
with
with
one
more
affidavit
of
it.
It
may
be,
you
know,
suffice
something
like
that,
so
they
will
have
a
workaround
or
something
like
that.
So
that
is
how
it
happens.
B
A
Yeah,
you
know
why
I
asked
that
question
because
real
estate
in
general,
you
know
as
you
as
you.
You
know.
You
started
with
this
notion,
but
it
sort
of
seems
like
a
distant
thing
to
the
common
man
and
particularly
in
india,
where
we
know
that
you
know
half
of
the
process
is
still
offered
on
paper.
So
so
can
you
little
bit
hey
talk
about?
You
know
what
were
the
challenges
on
you
know
with
the
various
stakeholders
in
in
real
estate
in
general,
and
what
processes
are
already
digitized
and
what
are
not.
B
About
that
we
are
very
nascent
in
the
game
and
we
are.
There
is
no
word,
we
are.
What
are
the
challenges?
Yes,
we
are
still
somebody,
I
think,
a
couple
of
days
back
that
have
you
in
one
of
the
customer
sessions
that
we
do
also
on
saturdays.
A
B
How
many
deals
have
you
sold?
I
said
you
know,
I
said
we
launched
the
10th
of
september
about
a
month
back
and
we
ourselves
are
not
enough
selling
at
the
moment.
All
that
we
are
interested
is
people
getting
to
believe
in
this
and
our
product.
First,
yes,
we
are
not
in
any
mode.
B
B
Very
interesting
anecdotes,
so
we
one
of
the
properties
that
we
early
on
where
evangelizing
was
a
industrial
shed
which
had
a
method,
a
global
mnc
as
a
tenant
and
and
industrial
sheds
as
a
asset
class,
are
always
built
to
suit.
They
were
never
there
built
up
and
then
given
they're
always
built
to
suit
to
the
customer's
needs.
B
B
How
the
industrial
shed
works,
I
mean
you
may
think
of
it
as
reconstruction,
but
that
is
how
it
works.
The
the
the
leases
etcetera
are
long
term
leases
and
if
you
don't
have
long
term
leases,
you
won't
get
exercise
benefits,
you
know.
So
it's
a
it's
a
very
nuanced
thing
which
when
we
brought
in-
and
it
was
a
very
good
deal,
you
know
a
very
stable
client
et
cetera,
et
cetera.
There
were
a
lot
of
good
things,
but
we
had
a
hard
time
explaining
to
our
customers.
What
is
an
industrial
chair?
B
B
A
B
B
A
B
You
know
you
see
a
huge
huge
lot.
I
was
talking
to
one
of
the
media
houses
and
one
of
the
grousers
I
said
was
look.
We
think
we
did
a
fabulous
job
by
bringing
it.
B
A
B
B
Of
these
exchanges-
didn't
you
know,
but
probably
you
know
ideas,
two
years
back
so,
and
that
was
a
probably
a
good
representation
of
of
how
much
this
this
this
takes
to
develop.
There
are,
you
know,
multiple
sides
to
all
this,
that
we
are
talking.
C
A
C
C
In
fact,
like
just
few
days
ago,
I
was
just
me
and
my
husband-
we
were
just
looking
out
to
invest
somewhere
in
some
property,
which
is
something
like
you
said:
maul
some
shop,
because
apartments
no
longer
is
a
charm
in
india,
because
if
you
see
the
prices
in
delhi
and
all
those
things
are
not
really
gaining
any
much
of
a
benefit,
people
are
buying
house
here
and
moving
outside
of
india,
so
the
profit
prices
are
not
really
appreciating,
so
something
like
a
co-investment
in
a
certain
property.
C
A
B
C
C
How
do
you
deal
with
that
over
this,
like
you
know,
well-defined
technical
blockchain,
environment,
yeah.
B
So
so,
to
be
honest,
I
don't
get
to
talk
about
blockchain
much.
This
is
one
such
forum
where.
B
It
is
all
about
which
property.
Where
do
you
bring?
How
do
you
commercially
open?
You
know
all
the
discussions
are
more
only
and
then
our
commercial,
and
it
rarely
touches
it.
In
fact,
in
my
sessions
also,
we
have
one
point
in
the
whole
deck.
There's
one
point
on
blockchain.
You
know
saying
what
are
the
advantages:
blockchain
based
registry?
B
That's
just
one
point
out
of
five,
but
then
coming
back.
I
think
your
question
was
not
really.
If
I
understand
it
right,
it
was
not
really
only
about
blockchain.
It
was
about.
How
do
you
negotiate
the
prices
you
know
in
favor
of
customers
yeah
so.
C
B
B
B
A
B
You
you
would
be
developing
from
our
this
thing,
so
at
least
the
standing
rate
at
which
the
the
the
the
bank
rate
you
know
of
interest
must
be
paid
back
to
us
because
the
property
is
not
earning.
I
mean
I
told
you
in
a
very
nice
language,
but
it
doesn't
go
like
that
exactly
so,
but
yeah
somewhat
it
deal
with
at
least
larger
corporates.
It's
not
exactly
like
huggling.
A
B
Structure
your
arguments
very
well,
where
you
have
to
kind
of
convinced
so
property
market
is
now
divided
today
in
in
two
halves.
One
is
very
organized
players
and
they
will
be
winning
and
acquiring
more
of
these
smaller
guys,
we
will
only
have
very
organized
players,
largely
running
the
market.
They.
A
B
Or
the
sale
probably
is
given
us
his
mandate
to
sell
at
that
price,
so
he
probably
won't
understand.
But
when
we
engage
we
engage
on
a
basis
and
we
don't
do
it
only
for
one
deal.
We
say
you
keep
giving
us
deals.
You
know
one
for
one
unit
sold
then
the
second
unit,
then
the
third
unit,
and
therefore,
therefore
it
has
to
be
very
long
term
partnership
where
it
has
to
become
win-win.
B
You
know
for
for
both
the
party.
A
Yeah
awesome
so,
and
I
think
what
I'm
also
liking
is
sorry
entry,
quick
note,
so
so
what
I'm
also
liking
is
manish
that
you
are
sort
of
segregating
the
entire
market
into
the
good
players
and
and
the
rest
of
the
players.
So
I
think
people
who
will
be
willing
to
come
here
and
be
open
to
scrutiny
will
also
in
a
way
be
the
good
guys
right
because
they're
open
to
you
know
they
have
nothing
to
hide
and
they're
like.
Oh,
you
know
what
all
the
payments
are.
A
B
And
that's
that's
a
big
challenge
for
us
also
because
see
look
at
it
this
way,
sometimes,
when
you're
looking
at
especially
happens
in
pre-leased
assets
when.
B
C
C
B
That
he
can
sell
in
the
market
in
any
bad
market.
Also,
you
know
such
deals
will
go
and
that's
when,
in
fact,
with
what
I
was
talking
to-
and
he
was
telling
me
that
you
know
the
the
same
industrial
shed
one
temple
where
he
was
telling
us
that
the
way
he
currently
his
mark
works
the
moment
he
has
an
agreement
from
potential
and
we
begin
the
routine
construction.
B
And
the
standard
rate
you
know
eight
percent
or
something
that
which
it
will
be
sold.
So
it's
a
very
well
oiled
medium.
I
mean
all
that
when
I
was
looking
at
sitting
in
that
room
changing,
I
really
did
not
understand.
How
do
I
bring
it
to
my
customers,
because
if
these
are
lapped
up
by
funds,
my
my
customers
never
will
have
access
to
something
like
this.
B
C
And
that
is,
most
of
us
are
looking
for
like
a
good
platform,
where
a
reliable
platform
where
we
can
just
go
and
enter,
and
you
know,
find
out
all
the
property,
and
that
is
already
well
verified
beforehand,
and
that
is
probably
that
kind
of
platform.
A
central
platform
is
missing.
Where
we
can.
C
People
like
us
who
are
not
so
aware
of
most
of
the
legal
terms,
probably
can
just
go
blindly
and
then
select
the
properties,
choose
the
co-ownership
partners
or
the
buyers
and
then
finalize
on
a
property
so
that
central
system,
if
developed
like
money,
something
what
you're
doing
that
would
be
great,
especially
in
india.
So.
B
A
A
Absolutely
in
fact
you
can,
you
can
find
customers,
you
can
also
find
partners
just
like
you
know
she
could
go
back
home
and
and
tell
few
of
her
friends
as
well.
So
you
know
moving
on,
I
think,
to
the
to
the
non-trusting
parties
in
the
whole
transaction.
A
A
So
do
you
think
that
that
kind
of
stuff
also
happens
and
how
frequently
does
it
happen,
and,
and
is
there
a
way
today,
it
can
be
monitored.
For
example,
I'm
sold
next
property,
the
same
industrial
shed
that
you
spoke
about
with
certain
specifications,
even
the
commitment
for
a
rent
and
that
sort
of
changes,
because
co-owners
who
may
be
living
wherever
they
they
may
be,
they
may
be
sold
a
prospect.
You
know
this
this
whole
deal
with
certain
parameters
and
what
happens
when
those
parameters
change?
How
do
they
come
to
know.
A
A
B
Extraneous
whatever
are
we
in
a
position
to
overall
defend
the
case
of
customers?
Yes,
we
can
do
that
better
than
that
will
some
of
our
properties
go
into
trouble,
do
and
participate.
They
will
just
like
you
know
in
the
summer.
C
B
B
C
B
B
B
A
B
A
B
A
A
B
You
know
work
on
this
for
post
construction
projects.
There
is
no
development.
C
B
B
B
A
Yeah
yeah,
okay,
but
I
mean
yeah.
There
are
too
many
moving
parts
and
I
think
veda
would
have
would
have
helped
you
structure
a
lot
of
things
so
so
talking
about,
and
we
were
talking
about
non-profiting
parties
and
you
know
silos
of
data.
So
what
baseline
does
is
it?
It
gives
you
ways
to
synchronize,
multiple
systems,
utilizing
public
cloud
infrastructure
or
public
blockchains
and
be
in
a
constant
state
of
synchronization.
A
So
that's
what
and
also
have
multi-party
you
know
secure
multi-party
workflows,
so
I
was.
I
was
just
looking
for
use
cases.
Where
do
you
think,
secure
multi-party
workflows
and
a
secure
way
of
synchronizing
systems
without
actually
exchanging
any
data
on
the
blockchain?
How
do
you
think
it's
going
to
can
fit
in
into
into
this
kind
of
into
this
model
or
into
real
schedules?
In
general,.
A
Yeah
yeah,
no!
No!
No!
So
I
think
I
think
you
can
do
it
no
manish.
I
think
I
don't
want
to
stump
you
on
this,
but
what
is
what
is
important
is
to
to
highlight
what
are
the
transactions.
B
Progressive
and
so
one
of
them
even
looked
at
us
and
told
us,
why
don't
you
help
plus
get
on
get
our
registry
systems
on
blockchain,
which
was
again
as
a
big
googly
for
us?
You
know
so,
and
we
are
a
startup
which
is
focused
on
a
different
line
and
we
are
not.
You
know,
government
project,
implementers,
etc,
so
yeah
and
I
did
upset
you
know
them
by
not
doing,
but
they
were
keen.
You
know
to
do
a
pilot
now
places
where
you
have
more
partners.
B
You
know
where
we
can
play
our
part.
We
can
even
help
with
inputs,
but
as
a
startup,
I
can't
stretch
to
the
level
where
I
can
be
a
government.
You
know,
project
implemented.
That
is
not
my
matter.
You
know
essentially
yeah.
So
one
part
where
governments
are
open
and
we
have
seen
governments
open
to
to
to
many
such
you
know,
technology
implementations
recently.
B
In
fact,
I
submitted
one
of
the
you
know
papers
on
on
suggestions
for
for
blockchain.
You
know
developing
the
blockchain
framework
in
india.
You
know
by
ministry
of
electronics
in
the
suggestions
there
we
said
you
should.
You
should
allow
system
to
prosper,
become
a
become
a
partner
there.
First
yeah.
A
B
B
Now,
coming
to
my
controlled,
you
know,
control
is
a
bad
word
in
in
in
blockchain
parliaments,
but
my
my
controlled
environment
in
the
sense
is
that,
in
my
focused
environment
of
fractional
ownership.
A
B
A
C
B
B
Can
be
a
real
profit
of
growth
for
us,
but
that
will
need
the
the
banks
to
really
start
talking
about
blockchain
implementing
blockchain.
C
B
B
B
A
B
C
B
C
A
Very
interesting
thought
very
interesting,
and
I
think
that
is
where,
where
I
see
you
know
at
a
very
high
level,
that
is
where
I
see
you
could
potentially
use
baseline
to
to
convey
the
state
of
the
systems
you
know
amongst
the
various
actors
so
that
they
know
each
time.
You
know
there
is
a
change
in
the
state
the
records
can
be
baseline
and
that
ways
all
parties
can
be
informed
even
without
you
know,
floating
around
data
on
the
blockchain
or
exchanging
it
over
networks,
etc.
So
I
think
that
is.
A
A
A
A
So
I'm
missing,
I'm
missing
the
chat
today
I
don't
know
for
some
reason
the
chat
didn't
load
up
on
the
platform,
but
I'm
sure
some
of
our
viewers
today,
as
well
in
the
future,
will
have
will
take
away
great
value
from
today's
discussions.
Thank
you
so
much
manish
for
lighting
up
the
environment
and
with
with
so
much
information,
and
we
truly
wish
that
real
x
goes
to
unicorn
state
very
soon.
B
A
Thanks
thanks
for
your
time,
maneesh
for
making
it
to
today's
show.
With
that,
I
would
like
to
sign
now
sign
off
for
today,
people
watching
us
do
tune
in
to
baseline
hyphen
protocol.org
join
us
in
the
conversations
on
various
platforms
and,
if
you're
an
eligible
voter
do
vote
before
the
expense.
Thank
you.