►
From YouTube: The Baseline Protocol - December 2022 General Assembly
Description
We bring together leaders from the Baseline Community every month for a General Assembly with the baseliners worldwide! We will cover technical, outreach, grant, standards, and other updates!
1) Outreach Team [02:25] & [15:25]
2) Research workgroup [06:40]
3) Core Developer [17:25]
4) Technical Steering Committee [34:35]
5) Standards workgroup [41:20]
6) Grants [44:30]
7) Sponsorship [46:25]
8) Year wrap up [49:19]
9) Open floor [52:06]
A
B
I
welcome
you
all
to
the
Baseline
show.
This
is
our
general
assembly
for
December
of
2022.
This
is
going
to
be
our
final
general
assembly
for
the
year.
B
And
and
yeah
just
like
just
like
each
time
we
bring,
we
bring
together
all
of
the
leaders
of
Baseline
protocol
to
talk
about
the
various
developments
which
are
happening
in
various
working
groups
and
we're
going
to
be
at
the
end
of
the
day.
At
the
end
of
the
show.
Today,
we're
also
going
to
be
opening
up
the
floor
to
hear
people
from
the
community
what
they're
doing
with
their
what's
interesting
them
these
days
and
what
they're
working
on
so
yeah
without
further
delay.
B
Let
me
call
upon
Mark
haddle
for
updates
on
the
Outreach
oops
I
just
realized
Mark
is
not
in
yet
so
yeah
he's
he's
gonna
become
pretty
soon
I.
Guess,
let's
move
on
to
another
working
group,
okay,
Mark
rimsa!
Can
we
start
with
research.
C
D
B
Hey
Mark,
you
just
made
it.
We
just
I
was
in
the
other
window
and
I
announced
that
my
Mark
is
going
to
start
with
the
Outreach
and
then
I
came
back
just
realized
you're.
Not
in
so
let's
go.
Let's
go!
Let's
go
to
you
with
the
updates
on
the
on
on
the
final
Baseline
show
and
not
to
find
ways
to
make
sure,
but
the
general
assembly
of
the
Year
2022.
D
It's
been
a
productive
year.
We
actually
got
out
there
and
started
socializing
at
you
know
several
of
the
events
you
know
to
where,
when
people
can,
you
know
find
out
what
blockchain
is
when
it
isn't,
and
you
know
how
it
can.
Actually,
you
know
improve.
You
know,
certainly
on
process
and
operational
environments,
but
you
know
how
it
can
be
an
alternative
to
a
blockchain
implementation,
because
you
know
a
lot
of
these
more
lighter
weight.
Use
cases
probably
don't
need
something
that
robust.
D
D
You
know,
presence
of
course,
at
Columbia,
also
at
fintech,
Devcon
I
wound
up
doing
that
one
this
this
year
and
you
know
what
we
want
to
do
for
2023
is
to
you
know,
really
increase
that
and
you
know,
get
the
visibility
out
there
and
you
know
really
for
outreach.
Is
we
want
to
kind
of
shift
to
you
know
what
can
Baseline
do
for
you?
You
know
outside
of
just
leading
with
the
tech.
D
We've
got
a
lot
of
really
cool,
Tech
and
stuff,
and
we
certainly
have
an
audience
that
is
really
engaged
on
that,
but
we
want
to
reach
the
people
that
you
know
really
are
like
ideal
in
operation
and
risk
and
governance,
and
just
whatever
Department
that
I
you
know
have
to
have
to
you
know,
keep
tabs
on
and
stuff.
You
know,
I
really
don't
know.
D
What's
going
on
under
the
hood,
and
now
that
you
asked
me
I
pretty
much
I,
don't
care
I
just
want
to
push
a
button
and
know
that
it
works
so
we're
starting
to
really
kind
of
curate
a
lot
of
the
content
out
there
to
engage
that
audience.
You
know
to
bring
them
in
to
say
Hey.
You
know
this
is
how
you
can
do
things
that
you're
not
able
to
do
right
now,
but
wish
you
could.
D
You
can
interact
with
your
counterparties
and
you
know
be
able
to
have
that
interaction
safe
in
the
knowledge
that
all
of
your
data
is
completely
private,
secure
and
at
rest.
So
that's
what
we're
looking
to
do
and
also
you
know
the
news
cycle
has
really
kind
of
helped
us
quite
a
bit
because
you've
had
a
lot
of
high
profile.
Blockchain
yeah
I
hesitate
to
call
them
failures.
D
It
was
just
they
were
not
going
to
reach
the
Finish
Line
as
originally
envisioned
or
anticipated.
Really
trade
lens,
of
course,
is
one
of
the
biggest
ones
that
was
out
there
and
one
thing
that
trade
lens
did
was
it
demonstrated
that
Enterprise
blockchain
can
be
done?
It's
just
that
implementation.
Vision
needs
a
lot
more
attention.
D
You
know,
as
I
think
everybody
was
really
obsessed
with
how
much
cool
technology
that
we
had,
and
you
know,
and
not
so
much
as
hey,
where
what
what's
this
going
to
do,
and
why
do
you
want
this,
and
why
do
you
need
this?
So
that's.
That's
one
thing.
That's
really
helping
us
right
now
and
so
right
now.
Another
thing
that
we
want
to
look
at
within
you
know.
Baseline,
of
course,
is
you
know
some
of
the
operational
and
business
value
aspects
of
Baseline
protocol.
D
You
know
what
is
a
cost
model?
What
does
it
cost
to
actually
set
up
and
run
a
baseline
implementation?
You
know
what
is
going
to
be
the
budgeting
that
you're
going
to
have
for
that
and
I
think
we're
at
the
face.
Now
that
we
have
the
tech
really
developing
on
its
own.
D
We
need
to
set
a
parallel
track
on
the
business
and
operational
environments,
which,
admittedly,
have
not
gotten
the
attention
that
I
think
that
they
deserve,
because
that's
really
the
path
forward
really
for
implementation-
and
you
know
wider
adoption
when
you
start
to
you,
know,
engage
the
business
domain
to
say
hey.
This
is
how
you're
gonna
save
money,
make
money
stay
out
of
trouble.
I
mean
those
are
the
three
legs
of
the
stool,
and
so
that's
what
we
want
to
deal
with
it.
B
Thank
you
Mark
to
you
for
updates
on
the
research
working
crew
and
you
wanted
to
show
us
some
slides.
C
C
Yes,
so
the
the
update
for
for
the
research
work
group
is
that
we've
been
researching
or
working
on
this
blip
one
issue,
which
is
what
you
see
right
now
on
the
screen.
Everybody
can
find
this
in
the
Baseline
Improvement
proposals
repo.
This
is
where
we
work
on
different
ideas
that
are
supposed
to
improve
the
Baseline
protocol
and
the
reason
why
this
issue
was
originally
brought
up
is
because
a
lot
of
people
in
the
open
source
Community
were
wondering.
C
Well,
we
know
that
we
have
to
Anchor
things
on
chain
and
we
know
that
we
need
to
prove
things
with
zero
knowledge
proofs,
but
let's
say
we're
on
the
business
side
of
things
and
we're
trying
to
map
out
a
specific
use
case.
How
do
we
actually
know
when
zero
knowledge
proof
is
adequate?
How
do
we
know
if
anchoring
something
is
adequate
or
what,
if
they're,
actually
cases
where
we
don't
need
to
do
one
of
them
or
we
don't
need
to
do
either?
C
But
basically,
this
idea
has
been
turned
into
an
actual
International
Supply
Chain
use
case,
which
is
just
a
model
example
that
we
can
use
and
sort
of
groom
and
go
through
and
turn
into
a
real
use
of
story
that
we
can
practice
and
start
creating
some
patterns
or
decision
making
models
for
ourselves
that
anybody
can
use
when
trying
to
make
any
sort
of
Baseline
implementation.
That
allows
them
to
make
it
in
an
easier
fashion
so
that
they
don't
have
to
sort
of.
C
It
all
out
on
their
own
meaning
a
lot
of
these
things
like
zero
nudge
proofs
and
on-chain
anchoring
and
dids
and
VCS.
These
are
new
things
for
a
lot
of
people,
especially
for
business
analysts
or
other
product
people
who
are
interested
in
creating
trustless
or
you
know,
zero
trust,
ecosystems
for
business
use
cases,
but
it's
hard
for
them
to
put
all
the
pieces
together
and
create
a
system
for
it.
So
this
this
use
case
that
we've
outlined
in
blip
one.
C
It's
been
synthesized
into
this
swim,
Lane
diagram,
which
shows
all
the
different
parties
of
this
International
Supply
Chain
process
that
our
team,
also
in
tandem
with
sap,
has
been
working
through,
and
it
shows
all
the
different
documents
that
are
needed
in
a
end-to-end
International
Supply
Chain
use
case
the
signatures
that
are
needed.
C
Maybe
whether
there's
anchoring
you
can
see
this
in
the
on
the
far
right,
ccsm
corner
I'm
not
going
to
explain
all
this,
but
I
encourage
other
people
to
take
a
look
at
this
to
understand
a
little
bit
more
about
the
use
case
that
we're
working
through
right
now
and
the
take
it
one
step.
Further.
C
We've
been
able
to
take
that
use
case
and
that
swim,
Lane
diagram
and
we've
grouped
it
into
a
story
Journey
which
details
all
the
different
I
guess
from
like
a
pro
programmatic
view,
all
the
different
objects
that
would
be
moving
around
in
this
system
and
the
the
properties
that
these
objects
would
have
who's
initiating.
Maybe
the
creation
of
this
object
in
in
in
Baseline
implementations
Baseline,
is
you
know
it's?
What's
the
what's
a
good
way
to
describe
it?
C
The
processes
typically
have
someone
proposing
a
state
change
and
then
the
other
party,
you
know
verifying
it
and
then
accepting
that
state
change.
So
you
can
think
of
a
lot
of
these
objects.
The
same
way,
someone
creates
a
catalog,
it's
initiated
by
some
person
and
then
the
other
person
verifies
its
correctness
and
then
accepts
it,
and
then
it
I
guess
it
becomes
a
real
object,
so
to
speak.
C
So
we've
been
able
to
take
that
use
case
and
and
break
it
down
into
all
these
different
objects.
And
finally,
this
is
given
our
group
the
basis
to
create
some
more
solid
product,
or
you
know,
business
requirements
that
we
could
start
passing
over
to
developers
if
they
wanted
to
create
a
real
working
demo
of
a
trustless,
International
Supply
Chain
use
case,
and
this
is
the
current
dock
that
the
entire
team
is
working
on.
C
This
is
our
advancement,
predicates
document,
where
we're
breaking
down
each
sort
of
step
of
the
user
Journey
using
all
the
objects
that
we've
mapped
out
previously
into
into
work.
Steps
into
Baseline,
work,
steps
or
or
workflows
depends
on
what
granularity
we
think
of
it
as
right
now
and
we're
breaking
down
each
of
these
work
steps
into
the
actors,
who's
doing
the
action,
what
what
action
is
actually
taking
place.
C
There
should
actually
be
an
input,
an
input
to
the
work
step
and
then
the
output
of
the
action,
the
verification
of
the
action
and
how
that
action
is
done
or
the
verification.
Sorry.
So
you
know
here
at
Step
Zero.
This
is
where
we
generate
a
shared
State
like
like
you
may
be
familiar
with
from
from
reading
the
Baseline
standard.
There
needs
to
be
a
agreement,
an
MSA
in
place,
which
you
could
really
think
of.
C
As
like
a
baseline,
State
agreement,
there
needs
to
be
a
specific
state
that
starts
out
between
two
counterparties.
You
can't
just
you
know,
start
from
nothing,
so
it
has
to
be
something
defined
before
you
can
move
forward,
and
then
you
know,
update
State
moving
on,
so
that
would
be
Step
Zero
and
then
from
there.
C
If
you
have
that
MSA
or
that
agreed
upon
shared
State
at
the
beginning,
you
can
propose
a
purchase
order
and
then
there
are
different
ways
that
you
can
validate
whether
it's
anchoring
wrapping
this
wrapping.
This
object
into
zero
in
a
in
a
verifiable
credential
and
verifying
the
schema
or
creating
a
zero
knowledge
proved
to
Bear
five
parts
to
the
verifiable
credential
schema
Etc.
C
So
all
in
all,
this
is
very
important.
Work
very
exciting
work.
It's
it's
starting
to
provide
the
groundwork
for
Folks
at
sap
or
others
in
businesses
to
map
out
use
cases
that
they're
looking
to
create
like
trustless
solutions
for
it,
sort
of
bridges
the
gap
between
the
developers
who
really
understand
the
the
the
technical
cryptographic
parts
of
it,
but
the
the
business
analysts
who
sort
of
know
what
they
want,
but
maybe
they
have
a
harder
time,
defining
it
and
a
harder
time
getting
developers
to
build
a
specific
solution
for
that.
C
So
this
is.
This
is
blip
one
for
now,
so
I
encourage
anybody
who's
interested
in
this
effort
to
please
join
and
if
there
are
any
other
use
cases
that
people
would
be
interested
on
interested
in
any
other
businesses
who
are
watching
watching
this
live
stream.
If
they're
seeing
the
work
going
on
with
Bri
3,
and
if,
if
you
can
understand
what
we're
doing
with
blip
one
now
documenting
researching
these
requirements,
please
get
involved
and
let
us
know
if
there's
anything
you
want
to
do
in
the
future
with
any
of
this
research.
C
C
B
It
for
me
this
is
very
exciting
Mark.
Thank
you
so
much
for
that
detailed
walkthrough
and
I
just
loved
it.
You
know
the
the
whole
structure
of
that
document.
It
just
speaks
volumes
about
the
kind
of
effort
which
has
gone
behind
and
putting
this
together.
B
So
you
know
big
kudos
to
everybody
who's
involved
in
that
in
that
in
that
effort,
and
yes,
we
should
invite
more
and
more
people
and
companies
to
come
and
and
start
participating
in
that
effort,
pick
this
up
and
get
get
going
and
yeah
I'm
going
to
fix
up.
Some
calls
very
very
soon.
Thank
you
Mark
for
that
okay,
couple
of
more
updates
to
talk
about.
B
So
there
are
events
which
we
plan
to
attend
in
the
in
the
year
2023
as
well,
and
we
have
already
started
scouting
for
opportunities
to
take
Baseline.
B
You
know
out
and
and
talk
to
more
more
people
and
companies
as
well.
So
you
know
this
is
an
open
call.
Anybody
who's
watching
us
and
would
like
to
contribute
any
event.
Ideas
is
just
like
to
us
or
ping
us
on
slack,
there's,
also
a
blog
post,
which
is
which
we
recently
published.
It's
called
the
digital
business
and
the
crossroads
so
I
encourage
you
all
to
to
read
it
and
and
and
give
us
your
comments
on
that
as
well,
and
now
these
blog
posts
are
going
to
be
fairly
regular.
B
There's
also
going
to
be
a
press
release
about
the
the
the
you
know
the
SRI
work
going
on
so
very
very
soon
we
will.
We
will
all
see
that
happening
as
well
cool
any
other
updates
on
the
Outreach.
Or
are
we
good
to
move
on.
C
Just
stay
tuned
for
blog
posts,
there
are
some
very
cool
topics
coming
out:
there's
going
to
be
a
very
cool
one
on
the
zkevm
as
the
execution
framework
for
the
Baseline
protocol.
So
anybody
who's
been
following
the
news
about
ZK
EVMS
what
they
do.
Why
they're
important
stay
tuned
for
that,
because
that's
going
to
be
a
very
interesting
piece
for
for
anybody,
who's,
technically
inclined
or
curious
and
for
all
the
other
ones.
B
Yeah
there's
a
lot
of
curiosity
about
the
industry
and
people
trying
to
improve
things
all
right.
Thank
you
so
much
for
that,
for
those
updates
really
exciting
world
going
on
I
would
now
like
to
invite
you
go
off
for
core
Dev
updates.
F
E
You
so,
first
of
all,
just
to
kind
of
mention
that
a
lot
of
what
I'm
going
to
discuss
here
is
something
that
was
discussed
by
the
team
brought
up
and
kind
of
worked
through
in
the
previous
core
devs
calls,
which
happen
every
other
Monday
So
for
anybody
listening
who
wants
to
be
kind
of
involved
in
the
direction
or
the
decision
making
or
the
the
technical
actual
like
writing
of
code.
That's
a
great
place
to
start
jumping
in
join
the
calls
get
involved
through
that.
E
E
So
just
to
kind
of
recap
where,
where
the
team's
at
what
we've
been
talking
about
and
I'm
looking
into.
Currently,
there
is
a
draft
for
this
authentication
flow
and
that
draft
was
made
by
scosito
and
team,
and
it's
using
node
packages
specifically
did
JWT
and
ether
did
resolver
and
it
is
using
the
did
ether
method.
E
With
the
current
draft
that's
being
presented
at
this
moment,
it
isn't
currently
utilizing
either
of
them.
The
node
packages
that
I
mentioned
did
JWT
and
did
ether
did
resolver
are
at
the
moment
kind
of
enough
to
to
do
what
we
needed
to
do
without
adding
any
additional
overhead
in
libraries
that
would
kind
of
slow
things
down
in
a
way
that
aren't
necessary.
E
So
that's
where
the
the
did
authentication
is
that's
kind
of
a
recap
of
what
we
discussed
in
the
core,
Dev
call
and
what
we've
been
working
on
in
that
space,
including
that
and
also
other
than
that
there
are
several
open
PRS
for
the
SRI
Authentication
authentication,
cleanup,
zkp
apis
and
the
dead
auth
draft.
That
I
just
spoke
about
the
ZK
openpr
and
the
auth
openpr
have
requested
changes
that
the
developers
are
still
implementing,
but
otherwise
the
the
team
of
maintainers
are
reviewing
and
kind
of
adding
whatever,
whatever
they
see
necessary.
E
In
the
comments
in
order
to
get
those
things
pushed
in
Milestone
2
has
been
complete.
It's
got
a
payment
request
that
has
been
closed
so
kudos
to
the
team
who
made
sure
that
that
was
was
able
to
be
taken.
Care
of
the
timeline
for
Milestone
three
is
to
be
complete,
potentially
by
the
end
of
this
year,
but
more
likely
early,
January
2023.
E
F
Thank
you.
Thank
you
very
much
for
that
overview
and
I
would
just
like
to
correct
you.
We
will
be
trying
to
wrap
up
the
Milestone
3
by
the
end
of
the
year.
There
was
a
lot
of
preparation
work.
That's
already
been
done,
especially
as
you
mentioned
in
this
in
the
field
or
component
of
authentication,
together
with
it,
but
also
with
messaging
and
with
work,
grouping
or
setting
up
the
work
groups.
So
now
we
need
to
go
into
the
execution
mode,
and
this
should
be
moving
a
little
bit
faster.
F
Hopefully,
as
I
mentioned
Milestone
three,
the
the
idea
is
to
try
to
have
once
that
is
done
to
have
a
reference
implementation
that
can
be
that
you
can
have
everything
set
up
where
you
can
then
start
exchanging
the
the
state
and
working
on
the
state,
so
that
means
BPI
subject.
That
means
regroup.
That
means
messaging
channels
and
as
soon
as
it
is
done,
the
next
one
would
be
trying
to
implement
a
really
reduced,
simple
use
case
of
of
State
exchange,
which
is
going
to
be
the
subject
of
milestone
for,
as
you
already
mentioned.
F
Currently,
we
have
open,
authentication,
first
authentication
and
then
did
authentication
PRS
should
be
merged
relatively
soon.
The
zkp
API
and
the
first
instance
of
zero
knowledge
proof
mechanism
to
call
it
like
that.
It's
also
open
and
should
be
merged
soon,
and
there
is
a
number
of
open
issues
if
I
can
share
the
screen
quickly.
F
F
We
split
it
into
issues,
and
then
these
issues
could
be
picked
up
by
anyone
has,
for
example,
we
have
issues
as
small
as
as
these,
where
it's
really
just
one
line
of
code
and
we
strive
to
have
them
as
small
as
possible
so
that
anybody
can
join.
Somebody
already
mentioned
the
cordov's
meetings,
which
are
every
Thursday.
This
is
also
a
good
place
to
jump
in
and
get
up
to
speed
and
maybe
talk
to
the
def
team
to
see
what
could
be
what's
a
good
candidate
to
be
picked
up
and
I.
F
Think
that
covers
the
current.
The
current
efforts,
if
there
are
any
questions,
I
could
pick
them
up
now.
E
Just
to
just
to
correct
a
little
bit
there,
the
the
core
Dev
calls
are
Monday
and
then
the
SRI
specific
workers
causes.
F
B
Okay,
excellent,
thank
you
so
much
and
so
Andreas
do
you
have
any
updates
on
the
correct
side.
G
Do
I
have
updates
on
the
core
Dev
side,
no
I,
but
I
think
what
would
be
interesting
to
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
are:
is
the
ZK
program
system
that
that
the
SRI
is
going
to
employ
and
why
and
why
this
was
chosen
for
the
beginning
and
what
are
the
the
plans
to
expand
that?
Because
you
know
we're
all
about
zero
knowledge.
F
So
it's
it's
too
bad.
The
tree
is
not
around
to
jump
in
because
she's
most
up
to
date
about
the
topic.
What
I
can
say
is
that
the
last
agreement
that
we
came
to
to
is
that
we
are
going
to
try
to
use
the
this
SRI
as
how
do
you
call
it
a
common
frame
of
reference?
F
However,
we
basically
take
a
snapshot
of
of
a
state
and
we
can
place
it
on
train
and
then
we
can
verify
any
system
of
record
can
verify
that
that
snapshot
existed
and
went
through
the
SRI,
so
you
can
think
of
it
as
get
getting
a
bunch
of
historical
snapshot
of
State
changes
that
you
can
verify.
You
can
verify
every
part
of
the
process,
and
this
is
basically
done
through
through
caching
through
creating
a
Merkle
tree
out
of
a
document,
all
the
properties
getting
to
the
root
and
then
storing
that
route
somewhere
on
train.
F
But
this
is
just
this
is
just
the
beginning.
We
are
building
really
in
iterations,
so
the
MVP
is
extremely
simple
and
then,
on
top
of
that,
we
can
add
more
complex
use
cases.
Having
in
mind
that
we
are
trying
to
get
something
to
do
reduction
quickly,
and
we
don't
have
to
to
have
a
feature
over
overload
so
to
say,
maybe
just
to
add
a
little
bit
more
about
the
the
actual
Milestone
three.
F
So
if
you,
if
you
jump
if
I,
can
share
the
screen
again,
if
I
can
still
adjust
like
a
minute
of
your
time,
if
you
jump
to
the
runs,
you
have
the
explanation
here
of
each
milestone
in
a
little
bit
more
details,
and
so
the
first,
the
second
one
was
the
was
the
really
the
crowd
operations
and
the
application
architecture,
and
all
that
and
now,
with
this
Alpha,
we
want
to
be
able,
as
I
mentioned
slowly
to
we,
have
the
concept
of
the
BPI
subjects.
F
Bpi
subjects
accounts
and
the
BPI
accounts
implemented
together
with
the
debts,
so
that
you
can
have
organizations
that
can
actually
interact
with
the
BPI
and
have
places
from
which
they
can
later
on
trigger
transactions
and
also
that
they
can
invite
they
can
create
for
groups.
They
can
invite
other
people
to
where
groups
and
and
start
agreeing
on
what
are
the
workflows
or
the
business
rules.
That
are
going
to
be
part
of
that
work
group.
F
They
will
be
with
really
limited
set
of
features,
so
all
the
security
and
privacy
policies
are
going
to
be
set
to
default.
So
basically
one
use
case,
but
that's
subject
to
change
in
the
following
milestones
and
then
the
last
thing
is
to
enable
messaging
between
them
so
messaging
between
direct
messaging
between
the
parties.
That's
that's,
of
course,
out
of
the
scope.
That's
that's
between
them
to
agree
on,
but
to
have
messaging
through
the
BPI
Whenever.
There
is
an
event
they
might
be
interested
in.
F
They
can
later
on
react
to
and
for
each
Milestone
we
have
our
acceptance
criteria
which
is
set,
and
it
usually
revolves
around
in
this
early
stage.
This
round
you
have
a
bunch
of
tests,
you
can
run
them
and
you
can
manually
test
the
app
the
app
via
Postman
through
the
API
and
this.
So
it
goes
the
same
for
the
next
Milestone.
F
You
will
be
able,
as
you
can
already
do
now,
if
you
jump
quickly
to
sorry
for
that,
if
you
jump
quickly
to
to
the
to
the
to
the
repo,
you
can
jump
into
the
examples
folder
and
the
implementation,
which
is
the
higher
I3
folder,
and
if
you
just
follow
the
readme,
basically
from
scratch
through
using
this
command,
you
can
already
start
the
tests
and
you
have
a
folder
inside
where
you
have
the
postman
collections
that
you
can
use
to
to
try
to
trigger
endpoints
and
you
can
play
around
with
it
and
once
smartphone
3
is
done,
you
will
be
able
then
also
to
create
the
subjects
and
and
do
everything
that
I
mentioned
previously.
F
As
we
move
forward
towards
a
complete
product,
we
will
be
start
introducing
also
end-to-end
tests
that
are
going
to
simulate
user
Behavior
and
are
then
planning
to
try
to
somehow
get
this
closer
to
business
people,
meaning
to
try
to
create
a
damn
UI,
where
you
could
play
with
an
instance.
That's
already
deployed
and
things
like
that.
But
that's
that's
for
future.
G
Accent
onion:
this
is
actually
a
great
segue
to
to
sort
of
like
the
Outlook
for
2023,
which
is
besides
completing
Bri
3.
It
is
then
to
take
that
puppy
on
the
road
right
which
means
is
to
is
to
visit
businesses
and
showcase
a
BRI,
how
it
works
and
blog
about
it,
do
webinars
about
it
more
cattle.
G
Looking
at
you,
there's
a
heavy
workload
coming
your
way,
my
friend
a
lot,
and
because
you
looking
to
you
to
organize
all
of
that
and
that
that's
that's
that
that's
one
so
that
Roadshow,
hopefully
we
can
get
some
some
organizations
also
to
sponsor
that,
and
then
we
will
also
have
because
we'll
have
now
then
actually
several
working
reference
implementations.
G
G
For
for
for
this
approach,
so
I
think
that
is,
that
is
going
to
be
key
and
we're
intending
to
do
that
with
actual
company
with
actual
things.
So
we're
tossing
around
a
couple
of
a
couple
of
ideas.
H
G
Thing
that
I
really
like,
because
it's
relatively
simple
but
as
high
impact
is,
is
agreement
on
on
foreign
exchange
rate.
Why?
Because
that's
super
important
for
International,
Supply,
Chain
or
anything
that
crosses
the
Border
really
when
you're
you
know,
when
you're
paying
in
one
currency,
that's
not
your
own,
then
you
need
to
make
sure
you
agree
upon
exactly
what
time,
what
exchange
rate
to
use
and
there
are
different
approaches
and
if
we
can
generate
basically
a
data
Oracle
there.
G
Oh,
that
would
be
a
great
case
to
Showcase
how
we
can
cross
multiple
reference
implementations
to
come
to
an
agreement
on
that.
So
that's
the
that's
the
Outlook
for
sort
of
like
the
the
two
big
things
for
for
next
year.
Besides,
obviously
any
other
type
of
cool
ideas
that
come
along
the
way
that
people
want
to
work
on
and
put
grant
requests
in,
which
is
you
know
like
shout
out
to
Grant,
there
are
still
a
couple
of
open
ground
requests
and
we'll
talk
about
that.
What
we
talk
about
around.
B
Awesome
awesome,
thank
you
so
much
Andreas
and
and
yeah.
This
is
this
is
exciting
stuff
and
so
I'm
going
to
start
off
with
the
TSC
updates
and
I'm
going
to
invite
you
in
in
a
bit
so
two
Focus
areas
right
now,
one
is
of
course
we.
B
What
we've
done
is,
as
we
had
promised
this
time
around,
that
we
will
split
amongst
the
TSC
members
will
split
various
working
groups
for
the
TSC
members,
so
we've
already
done
that
most
of
us
have
picked
up
the
groups
and
and
that's
how
we
will
be
focusing
in
the
in
the
present
here,
and
you
know,
there's
one
more
thing,
which
is
the
most
important
to
get
started
to
get
started
with
2023
the
Baseline
roadmap.
B
So
the
road
mapping
activity
has
kicked
off
and
we're
all
working
on
our
effective
suggestions
and
inclusions
on
the
roadmap
and
that
will
hopefully
get
finalized
in
the
in
the
first
half
of
of
January,
if
not
by
the
end.
So
so
that's
on
the
that's
that's
two
very
important
activities
going
on
and,
of
course,
I
I
said
in
the
beginning.
B
Also
that
there's
a
Blog
initiative
that
we
recently
introduced
and
that's
going
to
be
a
very
regular
Affair
going
forward
so
I
would
like
let
Andreas
who's
the
author
of
the
first
blog
to
talk
a
little
more
about
about
the
first
one
and
and
more
to
come
and
also
others.
You
can
follow
on
that
with
the
standards
group
update
as
well.
G
So,
thank
you
Samurai,
so
the
first
blog
is
is
talking
about
the
digital
business.
Trilemma
right
You
can
only
have
two
or
three
decentralization
security
or
performance,
and
since
decentralization
or
your
business
applications
is
out
of
your
hands
because
any
webcam
in
the
world
can
hit
your
network
at
any
time
with
whatever
they
want,
and
that
is
only
increasing,
I
think
we're
now
at
15
billion
and
we're
doubling
every
three
years.
G
So
that
is
is
my.
My
favorite
comparison
is
is
the
is
the
case
of
of
the
lake
with
the
water
lilies
right,
the
double
every
every
day
when
you
start
at
one
percent,
you
only
start
to
know
on
day
four
that
there
are
a
lot
of
water
lilies
around
on
day.
Seven,
the
entire
lake
is
covered,
that's
Insidious,
nature
of
of
exponential
growth,
which
we
are
seeing
in
the
iot
space
or
the
device
phase.
G
Generally,
generally
speaking,
you
just
have
to
ask
yourself
how
many
devices
do
you
have
at
home
and
how
many
more,
are
you
using
As
you
move
around,
so
that's
only
only
going
to
going
to
going
going
to
increase
and
if
you
think
that
your
car
only
counted
count
as
one
divide
think
again,
so
the
the
with
that
in
mind,
we,
we
can
only
look
at
you,
know
optimizing
security
and
performance
we
have
to.
We
have
to
have
a
trade-off
right
either.
Do
we
do
security?
G
Are
we
are
we
doing
performance?
So
therefore,
we
need
to
take
a
a
the
approach
of
thinking.
Well,
maybe
we
are
going
into
trust
networks,
small
trust
networks
that
are
that
are
operating
in
the
open,
but
under
zero
trust
and
under
zero
knowledge.
Hence
the
approach
that
the
Baseline
protocol
is
is
is
taking,
which
is
around
zero
trust
and
for
multi-party
coordination.
G
Unders
are
there
are
knowledge,
so
we're
constraining
decentralization
which
allows
us
to
improve
performance
and
security
so
that
that's
the
that's
the
that's
the
thrust
of
the
blog
is
is
positing
this
trilemma,
explaining
it
and
showing
how
the
Baseline
protocol
can
actually
help
solve
that
trilemma,
at
least
in
in
in
in
certain
in
certain
instances.
So
that's
that
is.
That
is
that,
is
that
any
questions
on
that.
B
Well,
good,
thank
you
Andreas
for
leading
my
example.
Actually
you
proposed
that
idea,
and
also
it's
here
in
the
first
blog,
so,
okay
and.
G
Every
TSC
member
is
publishing
a
Blog
this
year,
so
Kudos
to
that
and
the
TSC
is
is
TLC.
Members
also
now
have
focused
areas
so
we'll
we'll
be
able
to
hold
each
other's
feet
to
the
to
the
to
to
the
fire
and
and
have
more
responsibility
and
accountability
on
the
TSC,
which
is
great.
B
Also
take
this
opportunity
to
describe
you
know
what
these
Focus
areas
are,
so
so
this
maintenance
group
there's
Outreach
group
his
grants,
his
research
there's
roadmap.
Of
course,
all
of
us
are
involved
there
there's
standards,
and
there
is
you
know,
there's
this
extra
bit,
which
we
felt
the
need
to
introduce,
which
is
collaboration
with
other
standard
development
organizations.
So
it's
a
lot
of
good
work
is
happening,
for
example
within
Oasis
itself,
and
there
are
other
standards
being
developed
which
could
potentially
be.
B
B
Okay,
I
thought
I
was
cutting
out
again,
something
that
somebody
was
saying
it
so
so
yeah,
that's
something
which,
which
we're
also
doing
and
then
and
yeah
the
there
is.
There
is
tons
of
exploration
to
be
done
this
year,
I'm
very
excited
about
it,
and
if
anybody
has
any
ideas
from
the
community,
please
do
hop
on
to
the
to
the
slack
channels
find
us
there
or
Join
one
of
our
working
groups
and
start
contributing.
B
Thank
you
very
much.
Andreas
back
to
you
on
the
standards
update.
G
Yeah,
thank
you
Senate's
working
group,
so
we
added
three
new
editors
this
year,
which
is
great
because
now
we
have,
we
can
divvy
up
the
work
better
because
we
have
also
done
some
some
great
editing
work.
G
Thank
you,
Joe,
Keith
and
Mark
for
that
to
to,
but
the
big
heavy
lifting
that
we
have
to
do
to
get
to
the
draft
status
is
coming
now
the
pgb
finally
published
the
actually
the
specification
process
to
go
through
and
the
and
the
requirements,
even
though
there
are
still
some
open
questions,
but
we
will
basically
have
to
go
through
all
three
standards
and
and
ensure
that
every
requirement
is
testable
and
we
need
to
also
add
internationalization
and
localization
requirements
where
appropriate
or
not
requirements,
but
considerations.
G
So
there's
there's
there's
now
that
that
we
know
that
that
is
required.
There's
some
additional
work
that
is
coming
up
in
q1
for
the
editors.
The
goal
is
to
get
to
draft
status
by
the
end
of
q1
of
of
next
year,
so
that
we
can.
We
can
then
that
will
also
align
with
with
with
finishing
the
SRI.
G
So
then,
hopefully,
we'll
be
able,
with
two
reference
implementations
in
place,
to
be
able
to
move
with
the
full
projects
project
specification
status,
either
by
the
end
of
Q2
or
Q3
of
of
next
year,
so
that
they
that
the
that
those
are
the
tasks
at
hand
for
the
next
year
and
the
Outlook.
G
B
That's
super
cool,
thank
you,
Andres
for
those
updates
and
and
yeah.
We
wish
to
wish
to
see
this
being
taken
to
fruition
and
to
adoption
by
getting
those
getting
those
little
adoption.
Let
us
know
what
option
this
is
right.
I
recently
saw
Oasis
updates
about
nothing
going,
live
where
they
were
where
they
were
publishing.
That
was
an
option.
Something
like
that.
B
Cool
I
would
now
like
to
invite
sonal
for
the
updates
on
grants.
A
Yes,
thank
you
so
I'm
just
going
to
give
some
brief
updates
right
now
in
our
January
General
Assembly
I
will
share
a
retro
deck
that
I'm
working
on
as
well
as
we
will
publish
a
Blog
similar
to
last
year
to
cover
the
main
Grant
work
of
the
year.
So
we'll
kind
of
save
updates
for
that.
But
I
do
want
to
thank
our
grant
recipients
from
this
year.
A
Earlier
this
year,
Samurai
and
Jack
helped
us
host
amster
based
our
first
Baseline
event
at
devconnect,
and
we
also
had
Boris
represent
Baseline
at
London.
Fintech
Mark
spoke
at
fintech,
Devcon
and
Samurai
just
recently
represented
us
at
East
Vietnam.
So
we
had
a
lot
of
events
this
year
and
members.
Speaking
about
Baseline
in
the
community,
Samurai
also
hosts
our
Baseline
show
as
we
know,
and
then,
of
course,
we
have
our
simple
reference
implementation
group,
also
known
as
bri3,
that
is
getting
a
large
chunk
of
Grant
funds
this
year
for
their
Hefty
development.
Work.
A
I'd
also
like
to
thank
the
donors,
the
ethereum
foundation
and
consensus
mesh
for
making
the
open
source
work
possible
this
year,
we're
going
to
send
requests
out
for
further
donations
next
year
for
our
2023
Grant
Pool,
as
well
as
any
companies
out
there
who
are
interested
in
funding.
The
work
can
also
reach
out
to
make
a
contribution
to
the
grant
funds
and
then
also
I
will
briefly
cover
sponsorship
since
Carol
from
Oasis
isn't.
A
Here
we
had
some
questions
on
the
Twitter
that
I
wanted
to
address
about
sponsor
changes,
and,
although
I
cannot
speak
on
behalf
of
Oasis,
I
did
want
to
say
that
unfortunately
chain
Link's
sponsorship
renewal
was
not
done
this
year.
They
did
not
renew
their
sponsorship
and
although
we
are
sad,
this
is
a
common
thing
to
happen
for
organizations
that
join
standards,
open
source
projects,
especially
towards
the
end
of
the
year,
when
they're
reviewing
their
upcoming
budgets.
A
So,
although
they
are
not
an
official
baseline
sponsor
for
this
upcoming
year,
we
are
still
an
open
source
project,
meaning
anyone
from
sponsoring
or
non-sponsoring
organizations
can
take
part
in
all
of
the
work
that
we
do
and
the
sponsorship
benefits
include
having
a
seat
on
the
project
governance
board.
It
allows
you
to
be
listed
on
the
get
Baseline
page
and
some
other
benefits,
and
we
hope
to
have
some
new
sponsors
announced
at
the
beginning
of
2023.
A
B
Excellent
excellent,
thank
you
so
much
and
yeah
being
a
sponsor
actually
brings
in
things
that
are
a
lot
of
love
from
our
side
as
well.
We
keep
to
keep
the
initiative
going,
keep
the
ship
sailing
there
is.
You
know
there
is
there.
Is
this
mentions
that
we
do
so
you
keep
hearing
a
lot
of
time
that
we're
reaching
out
we're
presenting
based
on
various
events,
so
the
sponsors
get
a
mention
from
our
side
in
each
of
these
events
as
well.
B
So
so
that's
that's
that's
something
which
comes
along
with
it
and
and
yeah.
There's
one
more
additional
I
think
we've
made
that
change
sometime
last
year,
but
worth
mentioning
that
you
can
become
a
sponsor
for
the
entire
initiative
or
you
can
also
start
sponsoring
specific
grants.
So
you
can
also
come
in
and
just
say
only
a
small
amount
of
that
brand
is
going
to
go
to
Baseline
maintenance.
B
Most
of
it
is
just
going
to
be
given
out
as
that
Branch.
So,
if
you're
an
organization
who's
looking
for
solving
one
specific
problem
and
do
not
want
to
respond
to
the
whole
initiative,
then
also
you
can
come
by
this
spirit.
So
do
get
in
touch
and
we
are
always
looking
for
more
sponsors
to
join
us
contribute.
You
know
not
just
money,
but
also
resources,
more
brain
power
and
more
ideas
can
be
anyways.
B
Thank
you
so
much
these
are.
These
are
some
very
interesting
updates
and
I'm
I'm
particularly
excited
about
2023,
because
I
think
we're
going
to
see
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
you
know
real
corporate
stuff
happening
here
and
and
India
really
chatted
about
it.
So
I'm
going
to
go
I'm
I'm
going
to
go
quickly
over
the
year
and
wrap
up
so
I
and,
as
I
said
I.
You
know,
I'm
very,
very
thankful
to
the
sponsors
who
made
everything
possible
this
year.
B
We
also
had
post
sponsors
for
the
amster
based
event,
which
was
it
was
our
meeting
event,
and
you
know
we're
all
we're
all
very
emotionally
as
well.
As
you
know,
technically,
intellectually
invested
in
that
and
went
went
very
well,
so
so
yeah
we
did
some.
We
had
some
real
good
highs
for
the
for
the
recent
Community
and
I
really
appreciate
everybody,
who's
put
in
their
their
blood
and
sweating
into
what
is
happening
and
yeah
I'm
I.
Also
saw
a
lot
of
Sri
were
coming
out.
B
That
was
something
really
powerful.
It's
it's
something
which
gives
us
that
rounding
to
to
go
talk
to
more
sponsors,
talk
to
more
organizations
through
sort
of
adopting,
baselining
and
India.
This
is
you
know
we
we
had
19
code
of
Falls,
I,
think
that's
something
which
which,
which
I'm
told
I
don't
understand
the
code.
As
calls
yet.
But
and
then
there
are
several
other
meeting
meetings
that
we
do
every
week
every
two
weeks
and
we
do
these
Baseline
shows
you
know
we
got
some
really
exciting.
B
People
on
the
Baseline
shows
I'm
going
to
publish
a
Blog
in
January
about
the
Wasteland
shows
as
well
that
you
know
the
kind
of
support
we
got
here
and
you
know
what
is
coming
so
there's
there
are
these
format
changes
if
you're
planning
there
are
these
different
sections
we're
going
to
talk
about?
You
know
the
standard
requirements
Etc,
so
so
all
of
that
coming
really
soon
so
do
watch
out
for
that
and
and
yeah,
let's
open
the
floor
to
hear
more
from
the
community
what
everybody
is
doing.
B
D
Or
I
love
you,
you
look
like
you're
somewhere
warm.
H
I
wore
somewhere
I
was
in
Texas
two
days
ago,
but
now
I'm
back
in
you
know,
Minneapolis
just
looking
out
to
you
know
a
lot
of
white
rooftops.
You
know
so
yeah
yeah
like
two
and
a
half
hours,
you
know
between
Texas
and
you
know,
Minnesota
makes
a
lot
of
difference.
I
guess
so,
like.
H
Yeah,
so
the
article
I
mean
the
article
was
about.
You
know,
chat
GPT
right,
which
is
it's
been
generating
quite
a
bit
of
conversation.
It's
quite
interesting,
I
mean
it.
It
does
have
a
lot
of
capabilities
for
all
sorts
of
things.
Right
I,
you
know,
for
instance,
I
I
gave
it
a
few
tests
right,
I
fed
it
like
abstracts
of
some
of
my
academic
papers
and
asked
it.
H
You
know
some
questions
about
the
papers
right,
so
it
was
able
to
actually
connect
to
you
know
some
whatever
kind
of
data
they've
it
has
access
to.
You
know
supposedly
a
lot
of
data
and
come
up
with
intelligent.
You
know
answers
for
the
most
part,
very
impressive
right,
I,
never
thought
I
would
see
a
general
Apple
say
I
do
this,
but
of
course
there's
a
lot
of
things
as
well.
I
mean
if
you
are
not
an
expert
in
that
subject,
I
mean
you're
not
going
to
know
what
you
know.
H
What
is
valid
and
what's
not
I,
even
to
give
you
an
example
of
the
latter.
You
know
kind
of
issues
right,
I,
scrubbed,
references
of
one
of
my
papers
right
between
parts
of
one
of
part
of
one
of
my
papers
and
asked
you
to
come
up
come
up
with
references.
This
is
because
there
was
this
other
AI
guy
who
had
you
know,
demonstrated
that
it
was
generating
spurious
references
right.
H
So
it
came
out
with
I
asked
you
to
generate
references
in
Harvard
style
right
and
it
generated
perfectly
formatted
yeah,
but
completely
fake.
That
was
quite
an
incredible
capability
as
well
I
mean
you
know
as
dangerous
as
it
is.
It.
E
H
Also,
quite
amazing
that
it
could
do
it
and
what's
actually
going
on
right,
so
it
is,
it
is
a
groundbreaking
thing,
but
it
and
it's
here
to
stay
right
because
it
definitely
will
give
a
lot
of
like
I
knew
a
lot
of
startups
that
were
trying
to
you
know.
You
know,
look
at
contracts
and
then
you
know
big
projects.
B
H
And
pull
out
data-
that
is,
you,
know,
relevant
right.
Those
kind
of
startups,
for
instance,
have
to
rethink
how
they
are
doing
these
things
right,
I
was
able
to
generate
contracts,
legal
contracts
in
a
single
like
with
a
single
sentence.
I
said:
okay
generate
this
interconnection
contract.
You
know
for
the
solar
industry
right
between
these
parties
and
it
generated
a
contract
that
my
wife,
who
is
a
attorney
in
that
sector.
She.
A
H
But
obviously
you
do
need
to
have
an
expert
to
know
whether
whatever
is
being
generated
is
valid
or
not,
but
the
fact
that
it
could
do
it
is
a
you
know,
quite
an
incredible
kind
of
capability,
so
it's
here
to
stay
I
mean
I've,
also
added
to
generate
code.
You
know
a
lot
of
devs
might
have
been
playing
around
with
that
I
mean
it
it
again.
H
You
know
it
has
impressive
capabilities.
You
need
to
be
a
developer
to
interpret
the
code.
You
know
you
just
can't,
but
that
is
it's
here
to
stay.
I
think
we
all
need
to
understand
what
its
capabilities
and
limitations
are,
because
it's
going
to
be
part
of
our
future
right.
Andreas
might
have
something
to
say
about
that.
But
yeah
wait
for
him.
Yeah.
B
I
was
I,
was
playing
with
it
today
and
I
was
telling
you
up
with
me
just
before
we
started
the
show
that
you
know
I
don't
feel
like
closing
that
tab.
On
my
on
my
on
my
laptop.
It's
like
it's,
so
you
know
you're
so
hooked
on
to
it
and
Publishing
your
things.
It's
and
you
know
at
some
point.
It
said
you
know
some
Lottery
going
too
fast.
It's
too
many
requests
user.
E
H
Think
they
reached
like
that
10
million
use
of
whatever
in
a
record
amount
of
time
and
another
thing,
I
guess
one
of
that
that
article
one
of
the
general
observations
that
I
had
was.
You
know:
I
I.
You
know
one
of
my
many
abortive
attempts
to
start
a
PhD
one
of.
A
H
A
H
H
G
That's
how
it
learns
Samurai
yeah,
it's
a
chat,
GPT,
so
GPT
3.0
is
again
it's
yeah
General
adversarial,
Network
right
yeah.
So
it's
like
it's
like
it's
like
you
think.
Twitter
was
bad.
H
G
B
G
Can
you
can
generate
any
information,
it's
completely
fake,
you
cannot
it.
It
sounds
legit,
the
the
you
can
you
can.
You
can
maliciously
flood
a
Twitter
with
this
kind
of
stuff,
any
social,
social
media
media
media
platform.
G
It
is
already
in
the
Arsenal
of
of
of
State
actors.
It
has
already
been
for
years
right.
So
one
of
the
one
of
the
things
in
in
in
times
of
Crisis
real
crisis,
not
Ukraine
crisis.
That's
like
that
doesn't
count
as
rough
crisis.
It
is,
but
it's
not
right
is
is,
is,
is
massive
disinformation
campaign?
G
Fsb
has
been
has
been
using
this
type
of
technology
for
years
and
it's
in
its
in
its
Twitter
troll
troll
troll
Farms
right.
So
it's
it's
as
with
all
technology.
It's
dual
use.
G
The
the
problem
is
that
people
don't
understand
it.
They
don't
understand
the
limitation,
definitely
not
general
purpose
AI,
it's
definitely
not
doesn't
have
a
conscience
or,
if
it
if
it,
because
if
it
did
it's
a
very
simple
test,
if
it
did,
it
would
say,
I,
don't
know
instead
of
giving
you
an
answer
right.
So
it's
like.
That's
the
that's
a
that's
a
that!
No,
that's
the
that's
the
simplest!
That's
the
simplest!
That's
the
simplest
test
right.
B
G
Don't
know,
then
you
know
some
that
then
it
makes
the
next
step
if
it.
If,
if
you
ask
it
something,
if
you
make
a
statement
and
yeah
and
and
it
responds,
you
know
it's
not
it's
not
there,
there's
no
sentience
in
there
and
it's
not,
and
it
will
not
be
for
a
few
more
decades.
It's.
H
G
G
Been
yeah,
the
problem
is
that
people
don't
understand
it
and
therefore
it
will
be
abused
and
abuse
is
much
easier
to
do
than
then
then
then
positive
usage
for
it
yeah
right,
yeah
I
mean
college
students
will
love
it
right.
I.
G
It's
if
it's
not
it's,
not
plagiarized,
and
it
will
it
will.
It
will.
That's
that's
going
to
be
the
biggest
problem
for
for
colleges
anyway.
Well.
B
So
so
I
saw
I
saw
this.
I
saw
this
thing
say:
I,
don't
know
today,
itself
and
I
was
just
I
was
just
gonna
I'm,
just
referring
back
to
it
said
I'm,
sorry,
but
I'm
not
familiar
with
the
concept
of,
and
you
know
that
also
thanks
to
you,
it
is
coming
from
one
of
your
posts
only
which
was
later
on
web
free,
so
I
I
picked
up
some
of
the
words
from
there
and
I
felt
it.
B
D
H
That's
the
the
Turing
test
right
I
mean
you
know
if
you
have
an
interaction
between
a
human
that
and
that's
a
very
subjective
thing
and
I,
do
wonder
how
far
it
doesn't
matter,
whether
we
are
in
how
close
we
are
to
general
intelligence
or
not
I,
think
that's
a
far
away,
but
can
it
past
it
pass
the
Turing
test
right,
I!
Think
it's
not
that
far
from
passing
a
Turing
test
and
that's
why
the
the.
A
B
Right
absolutely,
this
is
all
very
interesting
I
think
we
are
Beyond
time
for
the
for
today's
show,
so
I
think
we
need
to
wrap
up,
and
these
are
very
interesting
chats
by
the
way.
We
should
continue
this.
B
The
next
Baseline
show
we're
going
to
be
bringing
back
the
C4
and
we're
going
to
be
talking
we're
going
to
be
taking
a
episode
two
of
zk101,
so
anybody
who's
interested
in
in
brushing
up
their
Concepts
on
ZK
to
join
in
and
and
yeah,
hopefully
we'll
we'll
all
leave
the
next
episode
as
well.
You
know
very,
very
enlightened
about
CK
Concepts
and
where
it
is
getting
getting
applied.
Thank
you.
So
much
for
making
it
to
Today's
show
any
any
final
closing
comments.
Sorry,
are
we
good
foreign.