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From YouTube: The Baseline Protocol - October 2022 General Assembly
Description
Every month, the Baseline Protocol community from across the world comes together to talk about the achievements of the past month, the things that we are working on, and the most exciting things we are looking up to.
Join us to hear more from all working group leaders of the Baseline Protocol.
A
B
Show
this
is
our
October
General
Assembly,
and
we
have
quite
a
gathering
today
and
a
quite
interesting
one,
because
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
our
participants
today
are
joining
us
from
Defcon
in
Bogota.
So
a
very
warm
welcome
to
everybody.
Who's
joined
us
today
on
the
zoom
call,
of
course
you
know
I
will
let
sonal
introduce
I,
I
can
see,
I
can
see,
Mark
I
can
see
you
have
and
and
who's
the
other
gentleman
behind
I.
Don't
I,
don't
see
him
properly.
C
Update
and
then
we
have
Otto
over
with
Andreas
and
then
we
have.
C
B
Is
super
amazing?
Thank
you.
Thank
you
so
much
sonar
and
we
also
have
Claudia
from
Oasis
to
talk
to
us
about
in
the
elections
today
and
my
nominations.
We
have
the
oh.
We
have,
we
have
more
cattle,
we
have
webhub.
We
also
have
the
very
amazing
provide
team
with
us
today
for
some
Community
updates.
Much
awaited
Community
updates.
B
We've
been
building
up
to
these
updates
since
a
while
and
I'm
sure
these
are
all
not
going
to
fit
into
one
episode,
so
we're
gonna
do
two
episodes
with
them,
so
so
yeah
with
that,
let's
kick
off
our
October
General
Assembly
and
I.
So
so
why
don't
we?
Why
don't
we
first
hear
what's
what's
happening
at
at
Bogota?
What's
the
what's
the
temperature
like
and
what's
the
vibe.
C
It
was
supposed
to
rain
all
week
which
it
hasn't
so
we're
very
pleased
with
that,
but
a
little
cloudy
which
isn't
too
bad.
And
yesterday
in
one
of
the
talks
they
said
there's
over
5
000
people
here,
so
it's
packed
and
everyone's
just
been
long
awaiting
the
next
Devcon
conference.
So
it's
really
cool
because
you
see
people,
you've
met
online
or
you've
heard
of
about
and
you
get
to
see
each
other
in
person.
So
it's
been
really
nice.
B
B
C
Okay,
I
saw
some
metamask
and
other
Billboards
places,
which
is
pretty
cool,
and
it's
really
cool
to
see
people
from
around
South,
America
and
they're,
just
like
they
didn't
expect
to
have
a
local
event
anytime
soon,
so
that's
been
inspiring.
B
Yeah,
that's
that's
amazing.
That's
amazing
and
yeah
how's,
the
how's,
the
let's
go
to
part
number
two
Andreas
and
auto,
and
keep.
A
A
A
Is
pretty
cool
yeah
lots
of
lots
of
interesting
talk,
I
mean
obviously
at
Argentina
as
well
right
guys
from
Mexico
like
yeah.
Just
amazed,
you
know
chili,
you
know
it's
like
I
met
one
from
Uruguay
yesterday,
oh
yeah,
just
just
yeah,
just
really
really
impressed
I
was
also
at
the
eat.
Bogota
hackathon,
like
yeah,
just
amazing
amazing,
to
see
like
the
vibrancy
of
the
community.
All
the
cool
projects
you're
working
on
especially
I,
think
around
regenerative
Finance.
It
seems
to
be
a
recurring
topic
yeah
because
you
know
I
think
there's
there's
opportunities
there.
A
B
A
No,
we
we
have
been
going
going
around
sort
of
Baseline.
Is
it's
not
a
it's
not
a
thing,
but
people
understand
when
you're
saying.
Well,
you
know
it's.
It's
coordination
under
zero
knowledge
and
they're,
like
oh
yeah,
like
Roll-Ups
and
stuff,
like
yeah
kind
of
like
then
they're
like
yep,
and
then
so
it's
it's.
It's
no
there's,
there's
there's
in
the
broader
ethereum
Community,
there's
there's
we
need
to
do
more
Outreach
and
more
education,
and
you
know
we
didn't
have
like
a
dedicated
Baseline
talk
here.
A
B
B
C
C
People
are
very
interested,
that's
a
Hot
Topic
here,
but
it
is
highlighting
some
of
the
efforts
we're
doing
in
the
Outreach
team
for
attending
different
events
like
Gartner
conferences
and
kind
of
like
the
industry
focused
events
where
the
anomalies
is
I,
think
where
we're
going
to
have
a
big
impact
from
Baseline,
but
I
have
surprisingly
come
across
a
few
people
who
honestly
they're
in
our
ecosystem
in
some
way
from
consensus
or
the
eea
or
different
groups,
but
they
knew
about
Baseline
and
they're
kind
of
watching
and
excited
to
have
more
materials
around
existing
and
new
reference
implementations.
C
B
Super
super,
that's
so
good
to
hear,
yeah
and
and
yeah,
let's
just
let's
just
let's
just
hope
that
Baseline
becomes
a
thing
very
very
soon
and
we
are
all
greeted
you
know
we're
all
men
and
red
greeted
with
with
a
lot
of
fancy
each
time
we
go
to
these
events
and
India
a
lot.
Let's
hope
that
a
lot
of
people
start
baselining
really
really
soon,
it's
so
good
to
hear
about
the
vibrancy
of
the
community
in
in
that
part
of
the
world.
B
Okay,
with
that,
let
me
come
on
to
a
little
a
little
bit
of
the
October
updates.
So,
let's
start
with
mark
haddle
on
the
on
the
Outreach
team.
F
You
basically
just
keep
moving
along
when
it
comes
to
the
you
know:
Outreach
materials
and
the
collateral
that
we're
starting
to
put
together
to
really
help
showcase
the
SRI,
our
Bri
3
or
actually
any
of
the
reference
implementations
as
far
as
getting
it
out
there,
because
you
get
a
lot
of
people
saying
how
do
I
get
started.
F
We
want
to
be
able
to
have
that
quick
answer
for
that,
and
you
know
all
that
will
go
into
end
and
with
the
development
work
on
that
we
did
kind
of
kind
of
start
to
socialize
a
little
bit
of
an
idea
with
the
TSC
to
see
if
we
could
maybe
put
together
a
CRM
tracker,
but
so
that
we
can,
as
we
talk
to
more
and
more
people,
so
that
we
could
be
able
to
curate
all
these
all
of
the
people
that
we've
talked
to
give
a
little
bit
of
you
know
idea
about
what
we
talked
about,
and
you
know
who
we
can
contact
for
next
next
steps,
so
that's
been
working,
we've
got
updated
collateral,
that's
coming
out
the
new
stickers
and
new
I
think
things
to
share
when
you
start
to
socialize
Baseline.
F
Coming
up
at
the
end
of
this
month
is
all
things
open
which
is
going
to
be
in
Raleigh,
North
Carolina,
so
I
will
be
there
because
it's
local
to
me
I'm
going
to
be
helping
man,
the
booth
and
walking
around
and
socialize,
and
you
know,
talk
to
anybody
and
everybody
about
Baseline.
You
know
how
it's
you
know,
it's
really
simple,
but
it
solves
so
many
problems
that
people
have
to
live
with
every
day
and
it's
like.
F
Wouldn't
it
be
great
if
you
didn't
have
to
live
with
that,
so
that
is
the
end
of
this
month,
and
so
you
know
I'll
be
helping
out
there
and
that's
pretty
much
the
updates
that
we
have
going
on
right
now.
Excellent.
B
D
Yeah
I
do
the
the
blip
one
working
group
effort
is
going
well.
We
made
it
through
most
of
the
user
story,
grooming
that
we've
been
exercising
it's
about
a
General,
International
Customs
border
patrol
supply
chain,
use
case.
We
are
we're,
mapping
out
all
the
state
objects
that
need
a
transition
state
verifiably
and
correctly
we're
listing
out
their
properties.
D
We're
talking
about
what
ZK
validation
is
needed,
specifically
for
the
properties
in
each
of
those
objects
and
we're
talking
about
the
anchoring
if
it's
needed,
if,
if
not,
what
we're
actually
getting
out
of
it
and
we're
trying
to
create
a
repeatable
decision-making
model
that
we
can
apply
to
other
use
cases
and
in
different
Industries.
This
one
is
specifically
supply
chain
where
we're
working
with
sap
right
now,
but
there
are
certainly
some
other
Industries
and
people
in
adjacent
industries
that
are
interested
in.
D
Think
next
up,
once
we
get
to
this
grooming,
we're
gonna
talk
about
the
the
the
SSI
layer
component
that
could
go
into
this
into
this
user
story
that
we're
talking
about
here
so
good,
stuff,
intellectually,
stimulating
great
exercise,
and
that's
that's
the
full,
very
detailed
update
of
the
blip
one
working
group
and
yeah.
Is
there
anything
else
you
want
to
talk
about
some
rock
no.
B
That
that's
that's
awesome
and
thanks.
So
much
Mark
for
the
update.
I
was
not
hoping
to
hear
so
many
updates.
While
you
were
there,
so
you
you
all
chill,
have
fun
I'm
really
jealous
by
the
way
you
know
looking
at
the
background
and
and
everybody
around
one
table,
so
it
would
have
been
really
cool
to
be
there.
So
so
yeah,
it's
it's!
It's
awesome
that
you're
caught
up.
C
C
I
know
Claudia
will
cover
where
we're
at
in
the
TSC
elections,
but
we
are
at
the
end
of
our
2021
period.
Yes,
so
I'm
excited
to
see
who
remains
and
who
joins
for
the
next
committee
and
also
our
core
devs.
We
have
our
next
call
on
Monday
we're
working
through
the
items
on
the
road
map
as
well
as
different
blips.
We
have
open,
there's
frequent,
PRS
and
work
happening
in
the
repo
thanks
to
our
core
devs
working
on
the
simple
reference
implementation,
as
well
as
some
of
the
other
efforts.
C
We're
continuously
circulating
the
rfps
that
we
have
open,
I.
Think
I'm,
not
alarmed
that
we
haven't
gotten
someone
yet
this
year,
because
there's
a
lot
of
groups
that
could
potentially
be
the
right
fit.
So
we're
excited
to
see
when
we
find
the
right
identity
group
to
work
on
the
two
rfps
for
identity,
as
well
as
the
test
harness.
B
Super
awesome
and
there
is
something
which
actually
I'm
working
on
where
maybe
you
know,
I
I
have
found
a
team
which
is
ready
to
do
to
pick
up
two
of
the
rfps,
so
so
yeah,
let's
see,
let's
see,
let's
see
how
that
pans
out.
You
know
they
are
they're
still
like
80,
confident
so
I
still
said,
You
know
guys.
You
just
go
back,
take
some
time
and
be
100
confident
before
you
come
okay,
so
so
that's
on
I
don't
want
to
speak
too
soon,
but
let's,
let's
just
see
how
how
that
goes.
B
Okay
I
would
like
to
invite
Claudia
now
to
talk
a
little
about.
What's
going
on
with
the
nominations.
G
I'll
keep
it
short.
It's
looking
great.
We
have
currently
have
17
candidates,
so
there
that
should
be
an
interesting
election.
The
call
for
nominations
is
open
for
two
more
days
until
Friday
this
week
and
we're
hoping
to
have
many
of
the
candidates
on
the
Baseline
show
next
week.
Hopefully,
I
will
reach
out
to
all
of
them
in
the
next
couple
of
days,
and
some
of
you
have
already
sent
and
candid
candidate
statements,
which
are
great,
which
we
want
to
send
out.
G
So
people
get
to
know
you
a
bit
better
but
yeah.
It's
looking
good.
G
G
Yeah
I
think
there's
for
me,
there's
nothing
else
to
say.
Unless
you
have
any
questions.
B
That's
very
exciting
Claudia
and
it's
good
to
see
you
know.
I
was
while
I
was
getting
all
those
emails.
I
didn't
realize
that
we
have
already
got
17
nominations.
It's.
B
Yeah,
even
lesser
I
think
yeah.
So
that
means
that
there's
more
interest
in
shaping
of
the
protocol.
G
B
Mean
you
know
how
it's
getting
built.
That's
that's
awesome
and
thank
you
all,
for
you
know
those
who've
sent
in
their
nominations
and,
if
you're
on
the
edge,
please
do
nominate
yourself,
I
will
be
hosting
the
candidates
in
the
following
two
Baseline
shows
for
them
to
be
able
to
talk
about
their
statement
and
their
their
motivations
Etc
to
be
part
of
the
TSC.
B
So
that's
on
the
that's
on
the
sponsorship
of
that's
on
the
election
updates.
We
don't
have,
unfortunately
Carol
today
to
talk
about
sponsorships,
so
we'll
skip
that
part
solo.
Do
you
have
any
updates
I?
Don't
have
any
updates
on
the
sponsorships.
Yet
in
the
past
month,.
B
H
I
Yeah
I'm
around
so
I
would
like
to
kind
of
quickly
show
something.
Let
me
just
share
my
screen.
I
Okay,
so
I
will
just
do
so.
The
basic
update
is
that
the
so
the
back
end
is
completed
and
the
repo
was
pushed
to
it
and
then
the
front
end
part
is
also
90.
Then
it's
just
that
it's
just
some
of
it
is
remaining
and
yeah.
That's
about
it.
Okay,.
B
Okay,
so
back
to
you,
you
will
bring
in
chat
now.
C
Yes,
so
we
have
Chad
here
and
I
will
let
him
give
an
introduction
of
himself,
but
he
started
a
blockchain
unit
at
CGI
Federal
that
he
is
leading
and
has
been
watching
the
protocol
to
find
the
right
points
to
contribute
and
demo
things
within
his
networks,
but
also
he
won.
The
hackathon
this
weekend
did
solo
development
and
it's
very
impressive.
J
Thank
you,
Sono
I,
though
some
of
the
faces
here
I
met
in
eth,
Atlanta
I,
don't
know.
If
you
guys
remember
me,
coming
up
with
the
term
Enterprise
djin
I
would
like
to
do
an
update
to
that
term.
There's
a
new
term
come
up
with
the
Enterprise
region,
we're
going
towards
regenerative
Finance.
That's.
J
It's
it's
really
good
to
you
know,
connect
back.
You
know.
I
I
was
actually
kind
of
sad
to
hear.
I
got
kicked
out
of
being
a
core
Dev
from
Andreas,
but
remember.
K
J
Got
you
I
had
a
push
to
the
readme
file
after
the
hackathon,
so
I
was
I'm
technically
at
cordov.
This
is
my
re-entry
back.
F
That's
there's.
A
J
Sure
yeah,
so
the
project
name
was
called
Beacon.
It's
an
acronym.
It
stands
for
blockchain
enabled
access
control.
So
essentially
the
problem
with
today,
web3
today,
is
that
there
are
no,
you
know:
Advanced
Access,
Control
permissioning,
it's
just
binary,
just
like
a
blacklist
or
a
white
list
or
token
Gates.
J
So
you
know
Enterprises
need
those
advanced
level
permissioning.
So
what
I
had
done
is
create
a
series
of
smart
contracts
that
essentially
allow
you
to
add
additional
attributes
to
a
real
world
identity
using
a
soul-bound
nft.
So
the
idea
is
to
allow
segregation
of
information
between
departments.
So
if
you
are
a
person
in
this
organization
in
this
department
with
these
credentials,
only
you
should
be
able
to
see
this
specific
blockchain
asset.
J
So
this
has
been
you
know
a
long
time
in
the
making,
actually
over
a
year
now
what
I've
been
working
at
CGI,
but
the
implementation
was
on
with
the
rc20
and
this
past
weekend,
I
had
integrated
so
about
nft.
So
that
was
the
big
challenge
with
those
smart
contracts.
But
now
we
can
enable
governments
and
Enterprises
to
have
those
advanced
level
permissioning
where
you
can
have
secure
levels
of
access,
so
only
you
know,
HR
should
be
able
to
see
HR
things.
J
Only
finance
and
legal
everything
is
separated,
so
now
think
about
how
dials
can
use
this
think
about.
You
know
how
government
Enterprise
level
organizations
can
use
this,
so
this
is
to
bridge
that
Gap
that
that
exists
today
in
blockchain.
You
know
I
think
without
this
we
will
never
see
governments
and
Enterprises
use
blockchain,
because
everything
is
public.
Everything
is
transparent
and
real
world.
We
can't
have
everything
be
transparent,
so
I'm
really
excited
to
you
know,
bring
come
back
to
Baseline,
because
the
next
step
for
this
is
zero
knowledge.
J
Integration
and
you
know,
I,
know
what
I'm
my
goal.
Bigger
goal
here
is
to
create
a
web
3
toolkit
for
the
federal
government
and
I
see
based
on
as
one
of
those
Lego
pieces
and
I'm
talking
to
so
many
different
government
agencies
and
I
want
to
be
able
to
rapidly
spin
something
up
and
be
able
to
demo
use
cases
and
I.
Think
Baseline
is
going
to
play
a
big
part
and
I'm
excited
to
like
hear
how
far
Baseline
has
come.
J
C
B
Absolutely
yeah,
you
know
what
deployment
in
production
happens
to
be
the
flavor
of
the
month.
You
know
we
can
talk
about
this
on
the
monthly
Journal
assembly.
Thank
you
so
much.
This
is
so
exciting
and
you're.
Welcome
back
into
the
community
chat
and.
J
C
B
Yeah
I,
love,
energy,
okay,
so
I
think
that's
all
for
from
us
on
the
on
the
monthly
updates
from
the
community.
I
know
that
folks
in
Bogota
would
want
to
go
back
to
having
fun
and
attending
all
the
events
and
meeting
so
many
new
people
kudos
to
you
all
for
bearing
the
Baseline
flag
in
Bogota
and
now
I
would
like
to
call
upon
the
leaders
from
provide
who
are
here
with
us
today
for
our
community
updates.
Kyle
is
here:
Taylor
David,
Jack
Ryan.
B
All
of
you
are,
are
welcome
to
go
ahead.
Take
the
floor
and
yeah
amaze
us
with
all
the
updates.
K
Thanks
Sam
Rod
appreciate
you
having
us
and
Andreas,
you
know
Andreas
and
I
I
think
we
we
have
a
some
sort
of
interoperability
meet
upcoming.
You
know
after
Defcon,
so
that'll
be
that'll,
be
awesome,
so
yeah,
you
know
we
we've
been
pretty
pretty
heads
down
and
busy
building
a
business
provide.
You
know,
we've
been
working
with
customers
and
really
you
know,
building
out
Revenue
models,
understanding
how
different
you
know.
K
Enterprise
systems
can
be
in
connectors,
for
those
systems
can
be,
you
know
scaled
into
actual.
You
know
production
environments
at
you,
know,
banking
organizations,
you
know
soft
drink,
bottling
organizations
and
and
many
other
types
of
organizations
as
well,
and
so
you
know
the
team
has
grown
a
little
bit
and
you
know
I'm
really
proud
of
the
T
of
our
team
at
provide.
K
You
know
more
punch
than
ever
in
terms
of
of
it's
just
really
starting
to
hit
on
all
cylinders
in
terms
of
of
how
we
work
together
here
so
super
proud
of
the
team
and
and
also
really
also
very
proud
of
the
of
the
Baseline
Community,
and
what's
been
going
on
with
the
ongoing
development
of
Bri,
three
I
think
that's
there's
you
know,
there's
some
legs
there
and
I'm
I'm,
hoping
to
see
to
see
how
it
you
know
it
becomes
interoperable
in
the
coming
in
the
coming
months.
K
K
We
officially
formed
the
prvd
open
project
under
Oasis
as
well,
and
the
founding
organizations,
in
addition
to
provide,
include
cenadia,
which
is
the
the
commercial
entity
behind
Nats
chain
link,
polygon,
Bank,
United,
an
organization
called
Data
brains
and
a
European
organization
called
Haas
online,
so
so
really
really
proud
of
of
how
also
of
how
that
project
has
you
know
you
know,
can't
come
together.
It
really.
The
charter
calls
for.
K
K
So
all
the
pr
all
the
all
the
source
code
for
the
our
implementation
of
the
Baseline
protocol
lives
under
the
prbd
Oasis
repo
on
GitHub,
and
you
know,
essentially
the
Bri
one
reference
implementation
inside
of
the
Baseline
repo,
which
we
will
demonstrate
end
to
end
I,
believe
if
it's
not
next
week,
I
think
some.
Maybe
the
following
show
one
of
these.
One
of
the
upcoming
shows
we
will,
whenever
we,
whenever
we're
we're,
able
to
not
conflict
with
other
guests
and
agenda
items,
come
in
and
show
and
really.
B
K
K
Next
week,
let's
get
it
perfect,
can't
wait
in
addition
to
showing
the
Bri
one
harness
next
week,
we're
gonna
we're
gonna,
I,
think
have
sort
of
a
takeover
sort
of
block
of
time.
K
I
I
hope
where
we
could
really
deep
dive
into
these
connectors
that
we've
been
building
along
the
lines
of
a
few
different
flavors
of
our
servicenow
integration,
which
you
know,
we've
really
deepened
some
Partnerships
on
the
Enterprise
side,
with
with
with
organizations
such
as
servicenow
working
working
towards
you
know
this
really
interesting
relationship,
perhaps
with
sap,
with
this
Pro
UBC
open
source
connector
that
that
Ryan
has
been
building
and
Ryan
can
can
speak
more
to
that
here
here
in
just
a
second
and
yeah
yeah,
so
we're
just
really
really
focusing
on
building
a
business
with
real
customers
using
this
Tech
and
it's
you
know
it's
starting
to
you
know
the
the
fruit
of
our
of
all
the
the
labor
that
that
went
into
you
know
to
this
is
starting
to
to
really
become
apparent,
and
you
just
can't
wait
to
see
you
know
these.
K
These
customers,
just
you,
know,
just
gushing
over
how
much
value
they're
getting
out
of
this
protocol.
K
It's
certainly
it's
certainly
coming
so
yeah
Ryan
you
want
to
do
you
want
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
about
your
about
your
efforts
with
Pro,
UBC
and
I
mean
it's
just
a
sick
project.
I
think
it's
the
first
like
of
its
kind
in
you
know
in
the
world,
in
in
sap.
K
A
E
You
know,
and
there
are
other
open
source
sap
projects,
but
I,
don't
not
like
this
one
right,
not
that
that
use
zero
knowledge
and
integrate.
You
know
smart
contracts
on
on
blockchain
networks
right
so
very.
E
And
integrate
the
Baseline
Protocol,
no
less
right,
so
so
many
great
attributes
of
pro
UBC
one
of
the
things
that
we're
working
very
hard
on
is,
you
know
documenting
it.
You
know
making
it
so
that
it's
very
easy
from
the
open
source,
repo
to
actual
implementation
into
additional
SAP
systems
to
just
run
and
Gun.
With
that
thing
across
sap
environments-
and
you
know.
K
That
paid
a
marshalling
right,
like
that's
one
of
the
such
I,
think
such
an
overlooked,
like
complexity
of
the
the
protocol
right,
is
exactly
how
the
SAP
systems
how
data
in
an
sap
system
can
actually
be
synchronized
with
data
that
lives
in
another
system
like
or
even
like,
an
Excel
spreadsheet
and
and
how
that
can
just
magically
and
seamlessly
work.
That's
just
the
complexity
that
that
we've
been
spending
a
lot
of
time
on
right.
E
Yeah,
the
the
one
of
the
the
use
cases
of
using
Pro
UBC
is
baselining
an
eye
doc
right
and
if
for
people
outside
the
SOP
sap
domain,
don't
know
much
much
about
that.
But
idocs
are
like
the
native
EDI
format
of
sap
and
they
they
can
be
enormous.
They
can
be
very
complex
data
types.
So
what
we'll
demonstrate
in
our
like
blowout
demo
of
it
is
you
know
how?
How
do
we
Baseline?
E
How
do
we
apply
zero
knowledge
to
something
like
an
IDOC
right,
and
why
would
you
do
that
right
as
well?
There's
there's
use
cases
of
that
for
tokenizing
the
asset,
but
it's
also
for
like
business
process,
optimization
like
business,
Process,
Management
right
or
even
something
like
archival
as
well.
As
you
know,
when
you,
you
know,
take
data
out
of
the
production
system
and
you
want
a
long-term
history
of
yeah.
My
is
my
archived
data,
correct
right,
you
could
use
Baseline
for
that
too.
E
We
have
some
exciting
things
going
on
with
Pro
UBC
and
the
weeks
to
come.
The
the
chain
link
hackathon
is
kicking
off
and
we,
you
know
with
Pro
UBC,
we
developed
a
smart
contracts
interface
for
for
abop,
so
we're
going
to
give
that
some
legs-
and
you
know
showcase.
You
know
using
chain
link
smart
contracts.
You
know
within
the
context,
within
the
four
walls
of
sap,
so
that's
what's
coming
ahead
and
we're
really
excited
to
show
that
off.
E
We
got
a
really
great
reception
from
all
the
link
Marines
out
there
and
and
sap
people
as
well
about
you
know
what
are
what
is
the
kind
of
the
web
three
business
values
there,
a
quick
plug
for
a
recent
blog
I
put
up
on
the
provide
website.
I
called
an
intro
to
web3
On
sap
right
where
we
talk.
What
I
talk
about
there
is
like
what's
the,
and
this
is
really
directed
at
like
the
sap
audience,
who
doesn't
necessarily
always
know
much
about
web3.
E
They
have
a
very
surface
level
understanding,
and
you
know
in
that
blog
I
do
talk
about
what
the
importance
of
Baseline
is
and
the
the
application
of
zero
knowledge
that
Baseline
informs
and
how
that
makes
the
web
3
integration
to
something
like
this
would
be
possible
and
makes
it
work.
The
best
way
possible,
so
very
excited
to
share
that
as
well
and
I.
I'm
I'm
really
excited.
E
You
know
next
week,
where
we
get
more
time
to
demo
to
Showcase
more
about
that,
because
it's
really
awesome
seeing
how
Pro
UBC
you
know
it
augments
the
shuttle
in
a
really
great
way-
and
you
know
the
end
outcome
of
that-
is
that
you
know
an
op-op
developer.
An
sap
developer,
who
often
has
a
lot
of
domain
expertise,
is
often
a
really
smart
person
doesn't
need
to
master
all
the
intricacies
of
zero
knowledge
to
be
able
to
use
zero
knowledge
into
Pi
Baseline.
So
that's
we're
very
excited
to
show
that
soon
you.
K
Know,
and
what's
what's
really
been
interesting
through
this,
this
you
know
these
recent
months
on
our
journey
towards
you
know
like
commercializing,
our
the
prbd
stack
has
been
really
how
as
an
ecosystem,
you
know
hey
Kyle,
you're
you're,.
K
Okay,
I
can
start
so
so
one
of
the
really
interesting
things
that
I,
you
know
that
I've,
you
know
sort
of
noted.
Can
you
guys
hear
me?
Okay,
we're
good
yeah,
yeah,
okay,
so
you
know
one
of
the
really
interesting.
You
know
things
that
I've
noticed
on
these.
The
last
few
months
of
this
journey
has
been
as
we've
we've
gone
towards
commercializing
the
prvd
stack
organizations
that
are
essentially
operators
like
organizations.
You
know
who
sign
up
essentially
using
shuttle
to
create
an
ecosystem.
K
Just
let's
just
say:
there's
one
workflow:
they
have
in
mind
right
that
they
wanna
they
wanna
start
baselining.
They
will
they
sign
up.
You
know
using
shuttle
and
they
have,
like
you,
know
their
their
initial.
You
know.
First,
everyone
has
an
initial
like
first
organization
that
they're
going
to
invite
to
the
work
group
right
and
start
baseling
these
workflows
with,
and
it's
interesting
because
you
know
the
ecosystem
operator.
They
have
a
reason.
K
They
might
you
know
they
might
not,
but
if
they
do
what's
interesting
is
how
the
system,
the
method
by
which
the
first
organization
is,
is
using
the
stack
and
the
pr
and
the
protocol
in
a
specific
system
of
record
is
not
necessarily
the
way.
The
second
organization
that
was
invited
wants
to
use
it
and
or
or
is
willing
to.
K
You
know
to
use
it
in
terms
of
adoption,
and
so
what
we've
been
sort
of
having
to
to
to
work
through
is
how
to
architect,
you
know
very
elegant
solutions
for,
for
you
know,
for
one
for
either
for
either
method.
K
You
know
you
know,
for
example,
one
being
for
like
deploying
the
stack
on
your
own
infrastructure,
the
other
being
like,
for
example,
you
have
a
existing
rest
API
that
you
integrate
with
and
essentially
being
able
to
continue
to
call
that
same
API,
but
have
like
this
sort
of
slide
of
hand.
It's
a
proxy.
For
all
intents
and
purposes
that
sits
in
front
of
the
stack
that's
also
deployed
on
could
be
deployed
on
on
the
second
organization's
infrastructure
or
it
could
be
assass
deployed.
K
You
know
solution.
So
that's
been
a
really.
You
know.
There's
been
a
lot
of
maturity,
I
think
that
that
has
been
derived
from
just
having
to
go
through
and
really
just
get
it.
You
know
getting
boots
on
the
ground
in
terms
of
our
attraction
yeah.
So
that's
been,
that's
been
very
exciting.
I'll
stop
I'll,
stop
talking
and
share
the
floor
a
little
bit.
Maybe
you
know
David
David's
got
you
know,
I've
been
working
on
shuttle,
I
mean
it's.
K
It's
he's
I
think
he'll
be
demoing
that
next
week
yeah
so
we'll
demo
shuttle
we'll
demo
Pro
UBC,
we'll
demo
provide
sync,
which
is
our
servicenow
integration
and
we'll
show
a
couple
of
different
integration
methods
by
Keith.
See
you
guys,
okay,
yeah,
so
we'll
deal
with
those
things
we'll
demo
the
Bri
one
test
harness
yes,
so
super
excited
for
that
and
yeah
David.
Do
you
want
to
say
anything
about
about
shuttle.
L
A
little
more
a
little
more
robust
and
and
really
making
it
connector
friendly,
so
that
these
connectors
that
we're
building
really
work
well
and
without
without
too
much
for
the
the
operator
to
do
to
actually
make
them
work.
And
we
also
we
I,
don't
know
if
I've
been
on
the
show
since
we've
done
this.
But
we
released.
K
L
L
You
and
the
team.
Thank
you.
Thank
you
and
there's
a
there's.
A
beta
version
out
that
you
can
go
poke
around
in
shuttle
dot
provide.services.
So
that's
that's
pretty
cool.
We
got
that
out
there
continuing
to
iterate
on
that
and
then
Kyle.
You
mentioned
the
the
provide
sync
app.
L
That's
actually
going
to
be
an
app
that's
going
to
be
available
in
the
servicenow
store.
We've
done
a
lot
of
work
on
that
incorporating
servicenow
into
you
know.
A
baseline
ecosystem
has
been
a
little
tricky.
L
Out
it's
very
elegant
now
and
we're
really
close
to
to
getting
it
certified
in
the
servicenow
App
Store
that
we'll
show
it
to
you
next
week.
Yeah
and
those
are
those
are
my
updates.
Oh,
it's
yes,
yeah.
H
H
It's
important
to
have
flexibility
and
the
ability
to
deliver
these
type
of
solutions
for
customers,
and
so,
as
we
continue
to
embark
on
this
journey
from
a
base
signing
perspective
and
synchronizing
these
systems,
you
know
you're
we're
gaining
a
lot
of
maturity,
I
think
as
an
ecosystem
here
to
understand
how
to
build
these
type
of
flexible
solutions
to
still
you
know
achieve
what
it
is
that
we're
set
to
achieve
from
a
baseline
synchronization
perspective,
but
then
also
to
drive
value
for
the
end
user
customers
themselves
and
how
they
can
most
effectively
engage
with
those.
H
The
partner
Inspire
networks
like
I,
was
mentioning
so
I
think
that
that
has
just
been
a
a
really
important
lesson
that
we're
we're
finding
as
we're
embarking
on
this-
and
you
know
these
are
the
type
of
lessons
that,
from
an
Enterprise
space
that
you
have
to
really
kind
of
walk
through.
In
order
to
be
able
to
build
these
solutions
to
permeate
across
ecosystems,
so
complexity.
K
B
Is
that
is
there
any?
Are
there
any
use
cases
of
interest
you
know
which
we
can
we
can
talk
about
on
this
show
I
mean
which
other
ones
we
should,
because
you
know
you
know
give
me
give
me
something
to
run
with
so
I
will
take
it
to
which
company
should
I
Target.
H
Know
a
service,
I.T
service
management,
just
just
to
clarify
for
those
folks,
may
not
be
familiar
with
it.
Yeah
any
really.
Service
management
module
across
service.
Now
this
can
be
applied
to
We've,
primarily
been
focused
within
itsm
with
the
first.
You
know
large
engagement
that
we
have
ongoing
right
now,
but
but
that
with
the
intention
to
move
that,
to
request
management
and
across
those
servicenow
manual
modules,
as
we
move
forward
change,
management,
inclusive
of
and
and
samrat
like
you
know,
to
provide
a
little
bit
more
clarity
there.
H
So
one
example
could
be
a
customer
is
working
with
their
managed
service
provider
and
that
managed
service
provider
provides
all
their
Office
365
support
to
this
customer,
and
they
do
that
utilizing
I.T
service
management.
So
the
you
know,
anytime,
that
they
have
some
type
of
identity
issue
within
this
particular
customer's
environment
or
whenever
they
have
something
that
they
needed
adhered
or
changed
to
within
within
Office
365.
H
They
utilize
servicenow
to
effectively
interact
between
the
managed
service
provider
and
this
end
customer,
and
so
that's
a
huge
use
case
that
can
this
can
be
applied
to
and
then,
as
you
start
to
bake
this
out,
to
how
to
incorporate
service
level
agreements
in
the
context
of
that
it
can
carry
so
much
weight
and
benefit
to
these
end
user
customers
in
the
way
in
which
that
they
interact
with
their
msps,
their
partners
and
suppliers.
K
And
then
you
know,
I
think
all
roads
you
know
could
could
have,
could
very
well
lead
to
defy
in
that,
and
even
in
that,
you
know
on
that
use
case
in
the
future
as
well
yeah.
So
that's
that's
super
super
cool.
Another
thing
that
is
like
sort
of
you
know
good
to
know
is
like
when
we,
when
Baseline
product
when
the
Baseline
protocol
you
know
sort
of
sort
of
was
born.
K
The
idea
was
that
you
know
organizations
won't
have
to
do
Integrations
right,
like
one-off
Integrations,
with
all
of
the
different,
and
that
is
still
the
the
rate
like
the
resounding
value
proposition
for
Baseline.
You
don't
have
to
do
Integrations.
You
know,
I
I,
think
that
the
prbd
stack
is
sort
of
our
our
motto
or
or
sort
of
like
our
our
tagline.
If
you
will,
we
sort
of,
like
you
know,
supercharge
your
Erp,
you
know,
and
you
just
won't-
have
to
do
any
any
more
Integrations
and
obviously
it
extends
Beyond.
K
Just
the
Erp
systems,
but
yeah
I
think
that
the
lack
the
fact
that
you
don't
have
to
do
these
one-off
Integrations,
you
know
is,
is
a
huge.
It
will
be
a
huge
driver
of
adoption,
yeah.
H
Traditionally,
these
traditionally,
these
organizations
are
doing
customized
Integrations,
which,
with
each
of
their
partners
and
suppliers-
and
this
is
a
way
in
which
Baseline
can
add,
to
the
ability
to
standardize
the
way
in
which
that
they
go
about
that
and
can
deploy
that
across
their
ecosystem.
So
that
is
one
of
the
key
value
propositions
here.
A
K
Yes,
I
mean
that's,
that's
really
sort
of
I
think
the
update
for
my
side,
I
mean
I
I.
If
anyone
else
on
the
team,
you
know
once
wants
to
say
other
some
more
stuff,
I
mean
I
mean
feel
free.
Samurai
I
really
appreciate
your
having
us
on
today.
Sorry
for
the
a
bit
of
miscommunication
on
that
I
mean
that
that
was
on
me
I,
think
the
time
zone
difference.
B
B
H
And
to
that
point
very
quickly,
like
you
know,
I
I,
I
I
constantly
have
to
like
bring
myself
back
to
reality
because
we're
having
these
conversations
with
customers-
and
you
you
know
we're
just
all
through
this.
You
know
everyone
at
Devcon.
You
know
us
here,
like
we're
still
going
through
this
education
process.
H
You
know
you're
still
seeing
private
permission,
implementation
Sprout
up,
you
know
new
new
forms
of
them
new
iterations
or
improving
on
current
ones
that
are
out
there.
So
you
know
it's
a
evolutionary
process
and,
as
you
know,
Kyle
has
quite
often
said.
You
know
internally
here
provide
that
this
is
a.
This
is
a
long-term
Vision.
H
It's
going
to
take
time
for
Enterprise
adoption
and
the
truth
of
the
matter
is
that's
what
it's
going
to
take
and
this
the
vision's
only
growing
and
and
we're
seeing
interests
here
still
and
but
but
there's
really
no
way
to
get
get
through
it,
but
just
to
continue
to
build
towards
it
and
no
I.
Just
the.
K
Cool
thing
about
the
cool
thing
about
you
know:
the
public
I
want
to
touch
on
one
thing,
because
you
I
don't
mean
to
interrupt
Jack.
You
said
you
know,
there's
still
a
lot
of
private
blockchain
like
stuff
going
on,
and
you
know
what's
cool
about
how
how
another
project
is
leveraging
the
prvd
stack,
there's
there's
a
project,
that's
that's
coming
up
called
the
prvd
network
and
that
that
is
a
layer,
3
Network
that
also
uses
the
provide
stack.
That
is
also
using
the
Baseline
protocol.
K
That
is
also
using
a
ZK
sync
and
is
also
you
know
basically
like
allowing
a
very
interesting
possibility
for
outer
inner
curve.
Zero
knowledge.
Proof,
like
you,
know,
recursion,
and
so
that's
a
I,
don't
know
if
we'll
be
able
to
show
that
next
week
on
on
the
show,
but
in
terms
it's
coming
right
and-
and
so
that's
really-
you
know
going
to
that
because
that
the
network
is
public
permission
permissionless.
K
You
know
that
the
prvd
network,
and
so,
if
you
have
a
layer,
3
Network,
that's
public
permissionless
and
you
can
settle
that
on
polygon,
for
example,
that's
public
permissionless-
and
you
know
you
really.
You
know
you
really
start
to
see,
you
know
defy
come
to
fruition
on.
You
know
the
ethereum
mainnet,
so
yeah
yeah.
It's.
E
Exciting,
yeah
and-
and
things
like
you
know,
doing
like
an
Enterprise
D5
like
an
invoice,
factoring
we're
seeing
a
real
uptake
of
awareness
inside
of
the
sap
Community
about
you
know:
what's
the
actual
business
proposition
there
right
thinking
about,
you
know
settling
payments
faster
and
you
know,
but
also
before
you
even
get
to
that
step,
and
that's
often
a
use
case.
E
Enterprise
use
case
people
know
about
when
you're
thinking
about
how
Goods
issues
or
Goods
receipts
happen
across
warehouses
and
how
you
want
that
to
trigger
payments
or
or
you
know,
financing
you
know,
that's
that's
a
huge
area
of
to
implement
Baseline
into
right.
K
We
can
overlay,
like
you,
know,
provide
payments,
sort
of
I
mean
that's
a
commercial
offering
right
on
top
of
shuttles,
not
to
confuse
the
open
source
aspects
for
everything
we've
been
talking
about
today.
Other
than
shuttle
and
provide
payments
are
completely
open
source
under
the
prbd
Oasis
repo
and
represented
we'll
very
soon
be
represented
with
any
the
pull
request
on
Bri,
one
which
we
you
know
think
would
would
be.
We
think
it'll
be
a
very
good,
at
least
example
for
the
test
harness.
K
If
not,
you
know
able
to
be
developed
into
the
the
official
test
harness
for
the
Baseline
protocol.
K
Provide
sync
is
not
that's
that
so
yeah,
so
that's
that's
so
the
connect
the
connect
provide.
Sync
is
actually
not
open
source
thanks,
Mark
you're
right,
the
providesync
is
the
is
another.
Is
one
other
one
pro
UBC,
though,
is
100
open
source,
and
so
you
know
the
idea
for
pro
UBC
is
is
to
really
just
really
because
it's
complex
one
give
it
give
it
away
right
and
let
folks
collaborate
on
it
and
have
like
sort
of
the
stand.
K
You
know
the
open
source
model,
but
also
really
reduce
the
barriers
to
getting
something
certified.
So,
like
you
know
it,
you
know
you
all
of
a
sudden
organizations
like
Kona
could
can
Fork
Pro,
EBC
and
certify
it
on
their
own,
and
you
know
have
it's
just
really
going
to
reduce
the
barrier
to
entry
and
that's
you
know.
We
just
think
that
model
is
gonna
going
to
be
to
be
very
a
little
fruitful
for
the
community,
because.
F
K
Exactly
the
idea,
the
idea
is
that
that
the
answer
to
that
is
almost
oh
man,
yeah
yeah,
almost.
I
K
H
Amazing
and
in
the
same
way,
that's
almost
you're,
seeing
these
eke
EVMS
being
launched
right
now.
You
know
summer
and
test
that
some
are
moving
to
mainnet
we've
had
we've
had
a
fort
we've
had.
K
A
zkev
import
going
since
before
before
it
launched
yeah,
it's
still
it's
it's
coming
that,
but
that's
not
that's
again.
That's
for
the
network
project,
which
is
sort
of
a
Skunk
Works
pet
project
of
mine.
So
so.
B
Here
is
something
which
I
would
like
to
drop
and
and
sort
of
get
everybody's
views
on
so
Malaysian
government
a
few
days
back,
they
announced
that
they
are
going
to
introduce
a
government
blockchain
now
that
now
now
that
becomes
the
the
sole
place
for
people
and
and
the
place
of
choice.
You
know
for
people
to
drop
proofs
and
becoming
compliant.
They
don't
have
to
worry
about
anything.
Now,
because
that's
right,
you
know
the
government
has
said
you
know.
We
just
don't
believe
what
is
here
yeah,
it
makes
sense.
B
K
The
other
well
I
think
it
does,
because
what
you
can
do
is
you
you
can
have
your
layer
three.
Well,
your
two
configurable
per
you
know
at
the
work
group
level
and
that's
where
your
your
proofs
propagate
out
outward
and
then
you,
you
know.
Layer
1
is
also
configurable.
It's
just
a
matter
of
like
you
know.
You
really
like
I,
think
all
roads
sort
of
sort
of
lead
back
to
the
evm
there
in
terms
of
so
that
and
that's
what
shuttle
is,
makes
things
so
shuttle
makes
in-chain
easy
to
use
for
multiple.
K
You
know
multiple
networks,
and
so
you
could
literally
configure
your
layer,
three
layer,
two
layer,
one
for
your
work
group
and
you
know
maybe
a
lot
of
people
are
concentrated
on.
You
know
that,
like
that
one
configuration
sort
of
setup-
like
maybe
you
know,
prvd
network
polygon,
you
know
ethereum,
but
you
know
you
never
know.
Maybe
Malaysia
has
a
layer
three
of
their
own
right.
Maybe
that's
the
layer
three,
maybe
it's
the
layer,
two!
Maybe
that's
not
legal
I.
K
Like
making
it
easy
and
configurable
is,
is
really
the
name
of
the
game,
yeah
and
then
interoperable
right.
K
E
K
Mean
I've
met
with
Anatoly
before
you
know,
Solana
has
its
merits,
you
know,
and
it's
also
got
its
drawbacks
right,
just
like
any
other
technology
yeah,
but
we're.
Definitely,
you
know
in
the
in
the
ethereum
camp
and
yeah
I
think
that
it's
a
very
it's
very
you
know
I
still
excited
still.
You
know
still
we're
still
cranking
over
here
and
it's
very
humbling
to
be.
You
know
to
still
be
here
and
to
still
see
this
thing
cranking
right
to
see
where
it's
at
today
from
where
it
started.
K
You
know
right
when
the
pandemic
was
actually
starting
yeah.
It's
very
it's
very
cool
to
see
it
that
it
that
it's.
You
know
that
that
we've
made
it
this
far
and
that
it's
gonna
it's
gonna,
get
there
super.
B
So
yeah
with
that,
let's
bring
today's
show
to
a
close,
and
we
look
forward
to
hosting
you
all
with
the
demos
you
know
sometime
very
very
soon
and
and
yeah
with
that,
so
I,
you
know
we
bring
the
October
General
Assembly
to
a
close
I
would
just
like
to
bring
back
something
which
most
of
us
may
remember.
K
F
A
K
Samurai,
thank
you
for
for
hosting.