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From YouTube: The Baseline Show: Office Hours
Description
The weekly office hours for the Baseline Protocol open source community, Wednesdays at noon in the US-Eastern timezone. And don't miss the show on Saturdays at 6pm in the Indian (IST) timezone. Learn more at https://baseline-protocol.org.
Date: September 8, 2021
A
Hi
everybody
it's
john
walpert
here
with
the
baseline
protocol
office
hours
weekly
at
wednesdays,
at
noon.
U.S
eastern
here
we
have
our
our
studio
audience
our
panel
of
esteemed
guests,
of
course,
andreas
frye,
mark
cattle,
and
we
have
alex
nissan
and
we'll.
We
will
be
shortly,
hopefully
getting
kyle
thomas
in
to
have
a
little
session
on
what's
coming
up
for
eath
atlanta
and
what's
going
on
with
base
ledger
yeah
he's
he's
committed
to
coming
in,
but
he's
pretty
busy
getting
ready.
A
So
we'll
we'll
see
if
we
can
get
him
aboard
pretty
soon,
it's
good
to
see
everybody
here,
nick
andreas,
I
think
andreas.
We
can
probably
take
this
chance
to
talk
about
to
talk
about
the
the
standard
which
I
think
is
what
a
day
away
from
from
there's
kyle
right.
There,
hey
kyle.
B
A
A
Not
at
all
here,
you're
good,
so
we're
going
to
talk
real
quick
about
the
standard
andreas
is
here
to
kind
of
update
us
on
that,
and
this
grace
now
is
is
is
leading
the
standards
work
through
to
final
ratification
at
oasis
and,
ultimately,.
A
C
Sure
so
we
have
so.
The
standard
is
comprised
of
three
documents
right
document
number
one
is
the
core
specification.
So
what
what?
What
should
a
a
baseline
protocol
implementation
bsi
stack?
Look
like
what
should
it
comply
with?
C
What
what
are
the
requirements
that
is
ccsm
consensus,
controlled
state
machine
should
comply
with
for
it
to
be
compliant
to
use
with
with
the
core,
with
the
baseline
protocol
core
and
then
least,
and
last
but
not
least,
that's
right.
Last
but
not
least,
the
apis,
and
we
are
still
in
the
process
of
finalizing
that.
We
hope
that
tomorrow,
we'll
have
the
final
agreement
on
what
it
should
look
like,
and
then
we
probably
need
another
week
to
to
to
write
everything
up
and
upon
that
we
should
be
ready.
C
We
need
to
do
a
final
edit,
editor
read
through
to
make
sure
that
that
literally
the
eyes
and
the
t's
are
dotted
and
crossed,
and
then
we
will
submit
for
ratification
of
the
draft,
which
is
step
one
and
once
the
draft
has
been
has
been,
has
been
ratified
by
the
tse
it
will
be,
it
will
be
a
submitted
for
final
ratification
to
to
oasis.
So
I
hope
that
should
be
a
fairly
smooth
sailing
process.
I
am
in
contact
with
chat
our
our
oasis
standard,
shepard,
yeah.
A
A
C
A
One
of
the
I
think,
one
of
the
originals
that
the
oasis
organization,
which.
A
Be
confused
with
there
isn't
a
blockchain
oasis
organization,
which
is
not
the
same
oasis
is
the
open
standards
body
behind
things
like
sgml
and
amqtt
and
amqp
and
other
internet
standards,
many
of
which
go
on
to
ieee
or
iso
or
other
standards
bodies
from
there.
C
Correct
so
we'll
we
will,
we
will
hopefully
get
that
and
get
that
done
by
the
end
of
the
year.
Current
feedback
seems
to
be
that
that
that
shouldn't
be
a
problem.
You
know,
since
the
standard
seems
to
be
in
in
in
good
shape,
so
we
we
anticipate
no
major
obstacles
as
of
now
that
obviously
can
change
on
a
dime,
but
who
you
know
we
will
we
will?
We
will
see.
I
think
everybody
is
committed
to
to
getting
this
done
in
in
an
ex
an
expedient
way.
A
Right
now,
okay,
this.
B
A
Andreas
so
yeah.
What
do
you
guys
think
about
all
that
kyle?
You
think
we're
ready
to
to
get
it
to
get
it
in
the
can.
B
A
I
put
the
link
to
the
to
the
to
the
standard
in
both
chat,
and
I
think
I
put
the
caption
up
here.
One
of
the
things
I
do
like
about
this
free
stream
thing,
so
the
caption
is
there
and
if
you,
if
anybody
out
there
is
a
distributor
systems
person,
I
think
this
is
a
something
that
you're
going
to
want
to
look
at
in
that
it's
it's
not
just
about
blockchain
or
even
it
system
integration.
It's
really
a
so.
A
A
Indeed,
indeed,
distributed
systems
is
hard
stuff
man
I
mean.
I
remember,
I
don't
remember
who
it
was.
I
don't
remember
his
name,
but
one
of
the
the
ogs
of
of
of
distributed
systems
said.
You
know,
the
rule
number
one
of
distributed
systems
is,
if
you
can
avoid
doing
a
distributed
system.
Do
so
so
it's
always
easier
on
one
machine
right,
one
cpu.
A
Okay,
so
I
think
that's.
That
was
the
first
thing
we
wanted
to
talk
about.
So
thanks
andreas
and
we'll
be
able
to
talk
people
through
the
standard,
hopefully
at
at
eea,
at
at
the
event
in
atlanta.
B
A
A
A
I
liked
it
yeah
so
heath
atlanta,
that's
that
that's
the
first
through
the
third
of
october,
and
it
will
be
at
in
in
what's
the
location.
B
A
Right,
so
if
you
want
to
join
a
hackathon,
there
are
already
prizes
being
compiled
and
cash
money
and
other
kinds
of
good
things
and
there's
going
to
be
some
real,
interesting
challenges.
I
know
we're
going
to
bring
one
of
them
around
nfts
and
using
baseline
to
to
really
transform
nfts
into
something
crazy,
so
much
better
than
that
for
creators
than
I
think
what
we
have
today
in
in
the
nft
world.
I
think
it
could
set
it
on
fire.
Everyone
I
was
on
a
I
was
on
clubhouses
for
nine
hours.
A
I
was
driving
back
from
a
trip
and
all
sunday
long,
I
was
on
different
clubhouse
sessions
with
different
nft
people,
and
it
was
funny
that
when
I
told
the
the
general
idea
of
how
to
use
baseline
and
for
for
a
more
powerful
way
of
doing
nfts
people
just
lost
it.
They
were
like
how
soon
can
we
get
that?
There
was
probably
2
000
people
all
up
on
these
different
channels,
and
they
all
were
really
really
excited
about
that
and
how?
A
Where
we
get
it,
how
can
we
get
it
so
we'll
be
we're
working
right
now
to
build
a
prototype
of
that
for
hackers
to
use
to
extend
by
october
1.-
and
I
have
to
say,
I'm
I'm
being
a
little
brave
by
saying
that,
because
we're
working
on
it
right
now,
andreas
and
I
and
some
others
to
to
build
that
out
by
october
one
and
that's
three
weeks
away,
so
we're
like
how
minimal
can
we
make
this?
How
simple
and
how
doable
can
we
do
this?
A
C
C
C
C
A
A
Hey
jax
good
to
see
you
jack
lee
here,
everybody
from
provide
and
yeah,
so
any
any
other
words
of
wisdom
or
anything
about
the
hackathon
or
ethan
atlanta
jack.
That
you'd
like
to
add
before
we
move
on.
D
I
apologize,
I
missed
the
beginning
of
the
show
I
was
running
over
on
a
meeting,
so
I
don't
know
it
was
articulated
at
this
point
in
time.
Kyle
have
you
shared
some
of
the
insights
on
some
of
the
bounties
that
we're
expecting?
D
Want
to
steal
your
thunder
jack,
I
actually
didn't
want
to
steal
kyle's,
fortunately
so
well,
somebody's.
D
Do
you
want
to
give
just
some
initial
thoughts
on
it?
I
know
we're
still
afraid
yeah
we've
baked
out
most
of
the
agenda
at
this
point
in
time
we
are
in
contact
with
a
number
of
the
organizations
that
are
going
to
be
involved,
some
of
those
sessions
that
are
happening,
the
how
to
build
sessions
prior
to
that
or
just
after
the
hackathon
kicking
off
there
will
be
bounties
associated
to
a
number
of
those
organizations.
Kyle
do
you
wanna
connect,
storage,.
D
Well,
thank
you
provide.
D
Yeah,
but
to
that
to
that
point
to
that
point,
we're
fortunately
securing
a
number
of
great
sponsors
for
eth
atlanta.
We
welcome
more
sponsors
getting
involved
as
part
of
that
we
have
a
number
of
sessions
kicking
off
right
after
the
hackathon,
in
which
they're
kind
of
like
how
to
build
sessions.
There's
one
with
connect,
says
kyle
was
saying
storage
chain,
link
the
graph
and
provide
we
may
continue
to
sound.
B
D
Sonal's
got
a
question
in
chat
that
that
is
probably
pretty
prudent
for
the
the
audience
and
the
hackathon
attendees.
If
you
want
to
tackle
that
one.
A
All
who
is
our
new
community
organizer
and
operational
integrity
leader
for
baseline
and
for
my
team
here.
It.
B
Yeah
yeah,
I
think
it
depends
right,
like
you,
could
be
very
much
a
blockchain
expert
and
maybe
see
yourself
or
find
yourself
working
on
something
related
to
base
ledger
during
the
hackathon,
the
bridges
between
the
the
ethereum
network
and
base
ledger,
or
you
could
know
absolutely
nothing
about
blockchain
and
use
the
abstraction
layers
provided
to
you
by
provide
and
others
to
build
your
to
build
your
project
during
the
hackathon.
B
So
I'd
say
that
you'll
you'll
be
able
to
find
find,
find
a
good,
a
good
mix
of
talent
there
and
from
different.
You
know
different
backgrounds
and
interests
from
from
the
enterprise.
You
know
all
the
way
to
systems
level
engineers.
A
That's
great
and
yeah
so
there'll
be
a.
B
Project,
yes,
bsn
bsn
forgot,
bsn
they're,
going
to
be
doing
something
as
well
during
that
that
initial
set
of
like
hackathon
kickoffs
it'll,
be
good
too.
A
Outstanding
yeah
and
there'll
be
projects
like
ours
that
we
can
take
on
other.
You
know
people
right
so
and
say:
hey.
You
know
this
nft
thing:
here's
the
basic
structure,
form
teams
right
exactly
yeah
and
there's
a
lot
of
so
there'll.
Be
a
lot
of
companies,
especially
from
around
the
atlanta
area.
Is
that
right?
So
that's.
B
A
A
I
think
next
week,
by
the
way,
just
so
you
know
next
week
we
will
be
having
our
general
assembly
meeting
during
this
time
frame,
which
so
we've
decided
to
have
take
one
of
the
baseline
shows
a
month
and
have
it
be
more
of
our
general
assembly
session,
which
so
we'll
have
lots
of
people
on
you
know
discussing
the
business
of
the
community
of
baselining,
and
you
know
the
core
devs
will
report
in
the
the
outreach
team
will
report
in
the
standards
team,
so
we'll
do
that
next
week,
next
wednesday,
the
19th
or
the
15th
of
september
and
then
we'll
be
back
to
our
your
normally
scheduled
programming,
where
we're
going
to
be
more
and
more
booking,
interviewees
and
interviewers
to
talk
about.
A
You
know
real
specific
things
that
they're
doing
either
with
baselining
or
with
systems
that
need
to
baseline.
That
sort
of
thing.
So
today,
kyle-
and
I
were
talking
about
how
we
can
use
today
and
the
week
after
next
for
and
the
following
week
to
kind
of
get
hackers
and
people
ready
for
the
the
event.
A
So
you
might
have
seen
last
week's
show
with
chico
crypto
who's,
giving
us
an
interview
about
the
about
this.
But
it
was
pretty
high
level.
I
thought
we
could
kind
of
dive
in
a
little
bit
deeper
and
do
a
little
bit
of.
A
Yes,
yes,
code,
don't
lie
everyone
code,
don't
lie,
so
we
can
get
everybody
thinking
about
what
they
need
to
do,
what
they
need
to
build
and
and
kyle
thought
we
could
go
into
a
little
more
depth
on
that
today.
Is
that
cool
with
you
hope,
you're
on
you're,
on
mute.
B
B
You
know
on
how
to
run
a
node,
so
we
could
see
a
pretty
significant
increase
in
node
operators.
You
know
in
advance
of
october
first,
so
I
just
shared
that
link.
If
anybody.
B
Okay,
cool
yeah,
so
I
think
that's
that's
a
really
good
place
for
folks
to
start
in
terms
of
the
in
terms
of
sort
of
being
prepared
on
the
base
ledger
side.
We're
gonna
be
really
pushing
some
code
in
the
next.
The
next
days
that
turn
on
the
validator
sort
of
the
validator
testing
for
the
for
those
early
test
net
operators
yeah.
B
So
that's
I
would
hit
up
the
discord
as
a
starting
point
and
then
also
in
terms
of
riffing
on
like
what
sort
of
good
ideas
you
know
might
inspire
people
for
the
hackathon
john.
I
think
you
know,
I
think,
that's
a
probably
a
good
approach
for
today.
A
Yeah,
okay,
yeah
mute,
andreas
who's,
typing
so
yeah.
Let
me
I
just
got
the
discord
up
and
yeah
I
can
let's
see
do
shall
I
shall.
I
show
that
to
folks.
B
You
you
sure
you
certainly
can.
If
you
want
it's
just
I
mean
it's
just
a
discord
with
people
in
it,
and
I
mean
if,
if
you
join,
that
that
discord
you're
going
to
be
we're
going
to
do
a
few
sort
of
sessions
that
help
folks
get
onboarded
to
run
nodes
very
quickly,
so
I
would
stay
tuned
in
there.
You
know
in
the
coming
coming
few
days
for
some
interactive
content
there,
helping
folks
get
notes
turned
on.
B
I
will
say
a
lot
of
really
big
organizations
have
reached
out
already
interested
in
running
nodes
on
the
base,
ledger
network
and
we're
talking
with
all
of
them
and
they're
gonna
run
notes,
swing.
B
A
Are
we
seeing
traffic
on
the
I
mean
are?
Are
we
seeing
network
activity
on
the
on
the
test
so
far
and
it's
still.
B
A
little
early
so
so
so
we've
got,
we've
got
two
test
nets
and
we
so
there's
activity.
But
it's
I
mean
it's
sparse,
but
it's
gonna
ramp
up
here
in
the
coming
weeks.
A
B
This
is
this
is
the
this:
is
the
the
peachtree
block
explorer,
and
so
this
is
the
network
that
is
going
to
be
bridged
to
ethereum.
Here.
In
the
I
mean
it's
bridged
now,
but
there's
a
we're
working
through
a
few,
a
few
upgrades
to
our
stack
once
again
that
primarily
around
nats
and
the
nats,
the
jet
stream
service,
we've
taken
some
measures
to
really
speed
things
up
and
yeah.
It's
we're
rolling
the
rest
of
that
out
right
now,.
A
Very
cool
so
yeah,
let's
go
through,
let's
go
through,
and
and
so
you
know,
andreas
and
I
are
working
on
this.
This
nft
scheme
right
that
would
drop
baseline
proofs
on
the
base
ledger.
D
A
So
what's
the
first
thing,
you
know
that
that
I'm
gonna
do
as
a
you
know,
I'm
in
the
hacker
hackathon
we
haven't
prepped,
but
I'm
going
to
go.
I've
been
looking
at
the
disco
discord.
I
know
I'm
going
to
go
over
to
baseledger.net
or
baseledger.network
right.
That's
our.
B
I
mean
you're
gonna
start
putting
you're
just
gonna
run
the
run
the
bri
one
essentially
and
call
the
privacy
service
to
to
generate
proofs
you're,
probably
gonna
wanna,
we're,
probably
gonna
wanna-
think
about
the
circuit
right
or
is
it?
Is
it
just
gonna,
be
a
generic
circuit
like
how.
A
Is
this
circuit?
We've
got
one
circuit,
a
specialized
circuit
in
our
case,
yeah.
A
B
Github.Com
provide
platform
privacy
and
you
look
at.
A
That
was
I'm
sorry
again.
B
Github
dot
com,
slash,
provide
platform,
privacy,
you'll
wanna,
do
that
and
then,
if
you
look
at
the
bond
circuit
branch.
A
Okay,
but
if
I'm,
if
I'm
just
coming
to
base
ledger,
walk
me
through
how
I
would
find
it
from
here.
B
And
then
click
on
provide
github.
Actually
there
you
go
and
then,
if
you
click
on
privacy.
B
Right
and
then,
if
you
look
at
bond.go,
that
is
the
bond
circuit
from
from
the
bond
bounce
or
the
bond
bounty
that
the
jpmc
guys
did
built
what
we're
looking
at.
So
you
could,
you
could
create
a
branch
like
you
could
fork
this
and
create
a
branch
and
drop
your
circuit
in
there
or
there's
probably
going
to
be
an
easier
way
where
you
can
just
mount
the
directory
that
contains
your
circuit.
However,
that's
in
our
backlog
we're
looking
to
have
that
in
place.
B
So
you,
instead
of
having
to
like
fork
the
repo
you
could
just
run
the
container
and
run
the
circuit
alongside
the
container,
just
mount
it
basically
on
as
a
docker
volume
and
then
the
bond
circuit
for
in
this
example,
the
bond
circuit
is
essentially
available
to
our
our
privacy
api.
So
if
you
go
to
docs,
if
you
go
into
docs.provide.services
slash
privacy.
A
A
B
Oh
yeah
that
works
yeah
that
works.
So
if
you
look
at,
if
you
under
the
rest,
api
v1
privacy
down
right
down
one
more,
oh
right,
there
yeah!
So
if
you
look
at
the.
A
Oh
yeah,
we
should
probably
mention
to
newbies
that
this
is
yeah,
that
both
socrates
and
narc,
the
gna
rkr,
are
supported.
B
Yeah
we
looked
at
socrates,
but
there
was
some
good
performance
issues
with.
A
You
probably
want
to
change
that
on
your
your
your
readme
says
both
are
supportive.
B
B
The
bond
circuit-
oh
the
for
the
bri
one,
it's
been,
it's
been
pushed
it's
ready
to
it's
ready
to
merge.
We
can
merge
it
today.
A
A
What's
up
with
just
a
quick
update
on
bishwashree
day's
excel,
there's.
A
A
Pretty
excited
about
getting
using
excel
and
hackathon.
B
Yeah
she's
going
to
do
a
she's
going
to
do
a
workshop
as
well
around
that
that.
B
A
Cool,
if
you
haven't
she's.
A
Yeah
she's
she's
a
developer
out
and
got
her
own
company
working
out
of
india
and
she
worked
with
kyle
and
I
think
what
dan
norken
and
those
guys
right
as
well
on
making
a
plug-in
for
excel.
So
you
can
baseline
excel
spreadsheet
items
with
yeah.
It's.
B
It's
quite
good
yeah,
we'll
circle
back
and
get
the
pr
merged
as
well
before
before
the
hackathon,
but
she'll
yeah
she'll
be
doing
a
workshop
around
how
to
how
to
build.
On
top
of
it.
A
Okay,
everybody
stay
tuned
to
this
channel
when
it
when
it
does
come
out,
we'll
we'll
definitely
announce
it.
On
the
on
the
show
and
we'll
we'll
make
sure
you
get
those
those
resources.
I
think
you
can.
You
can
see
the
work
in
progress
on
baseline
protocol
dot
org.
If
you
go
to
the
to
the
repo
which.
B
It's
pretty
it's
more
than
it's
pretty
close
to
done.
I
just
think
it
needs
to
get
merged.
You
need
to
need
to
work
work
with
some
folks
on
that.
A
Okay,
so
we're
back
to
provide
privacy.
So
here's
the
I'm
going
to
look
at
the
first
thing.
I'm
going
to
do
is
I'm
going
to
go
and
get
you
know
fork
the
forked
repo
for
provide
privacy,
and
so
what
else
am
I
going
to
do.
B
Well,
once
you
drop
your
circuit
in
there,
you
don't
necessarily
have
to
fork
it.
You
might
just
be
able
to
mount
the
cert
your
circuit
as
a
volume.
That
would
probably
be
a
little
a
little
easier.
Then
when
you
run
the
container
it'll
be
available
in
the
circuit
registry.
A
So
I'm
gonna
go
to
circuit
registry.
There
you
go
some.
B
And
so,
let's
see
under
circuit
registry,
you've
got
oh,
maybe
it's
actually
an
approvers
yeah
center
provers.
B
We
just
we
just
have
to
update
these
docs
so
essentially
like
what
you'll
be
able
to
do
is
create
a
new
prover
which
so
andreas.
This
is
a
bit
more
in
line
with
the
verbiage
that
we
talked
about
related
to
just
more
more
generic
verbiage
around
the
circuits.
B
B
You'll
be
able
to
call
generate
proof
on
that
on
that
circuit,
and
that
does
all
the
magic
of
not
only
creating
the
proof,
but
writing
it
to
base
ledger
and
yeah.
That's
that's
sort
of.
A
B
B
A
B
A
B
A
handful
of
circuits
in
there
the
bond
circuits
in
there
from
the
jpmc
example.
A
That'll
allow
you
to
to
basically
validate
a
bond
right
like
a
financial
bond
yeah,
it's
it's!
It's
a
good.
B
Example,
so
it's
a
pretty
good
example
circuit
and
then
yeah,
I
think,
there's
there's
a
few
others
in
there
as
well,
but
yeah,
I
think,
yeah.
I
think
the
the
general
consistency
one
works
but
yeah
it'll
be
cool
to
see
folks
build
additional
narc
circuits
for
their
hackathon
projects.
A
Right
on
so
kylo,
and
maybe
andreas
you
might
want
to
tap
in
on
this
question
as
well,
what
what
is
your
sense
of
of
when
or
where?
Where
would
you
send
somebody
to
get
really,
you
know
a
practitioner's
understanding
of
zero
knowledge
circuits
and
and
how
they
might
be
used
in
these
cases.
B
B
I
mean
andreas
there's
probably
has
some
some
good
links
like
I
always
like
to
think
about
it
in
in
like
simple
story
terms
like
the
where's
walden
thing,
the
where's
waldo
example,
and
the
commercial
fishing
example.
I
think
those
are
pretty
solid,
but
yeah
andreas.
You
want
to
weigh
in
on
something
more
scientific
in
terms
of
resources.
It's
true
certainly
helpful.
A
Professor
freud.
C
Oh
okay,
one
of
the
things
that
I
would
recommend
is
is
matter.
C
Labs
has
a
great
library
of
zero
knowledge
resources
so
that
that
I
would,
I
would
definitely
definitely
recommend
as
a
starting
point,
because
that
goes
from,
like
you
know
the
simplest
examples
of
what's
zero,
knowledgeable
blah
blah
blah
to
the
really
sophisticated
explanations
of
recursive,
recursive,
snarks
and
stuff
like
that,
so
that
that
is
a
great
that
is
a
great
place
to
to
to
start,
but
again,
just
like
with
solidity
right.
You're
writing
solidity
code.
D
C
A
Well,
I
I
gotta
tell
you,
I
think
this
is
where
you
a
nice,
you
know
like
simple,
almost
visual,
you
know,
circuit
builder
tool
would
be
hugely
useful.
I
mean
yeah
consistency
circuit.
Most
of
the
way
there
right.
C
A
A
C
Yeah,
so
so
so
you
know
it's
like
if
you,
if
you
wanted
something
like
open,
zeppelin,
has
sort
of
like
a
toolbox
right,
a
solidity
toolbox
where
you're
like.
Oh,
you
want
that
just
deploy
this,
and
this
like
gets
your
erc20s
and
your
c721s,
like
out
of
the
box
with
all
the
right
with
all
the
right
security
features,
blah
blah
blah
and
you
can
get
going
right.
So
you
can
you
can
you
can
build
off
from
from
there?
C
C
B
I
think
we're
also,
I
think,
we're
also
going
to
show
a
pretty
nice
teaser
of
what
we've
been
working
on
with
shuttle
at
east
atlanta,
so
we'll
be
able
to
show
sort
of
the
state
of
the
no
code
integration
bits
as
they
stand
at
that
point,
we've
been
working
working
hard
on
that
and
looking
forward
to
sharing
just
where
it
sits
and
maybe
do
something
cool
around
it.
D
A
A
B
What
you
want
is
for
the
solidity
code,
that's
being
used,
whether
even
if
it's
like
dynamically
generated
to
have
been
very
well
audited,
and
you
don't
want
to
go
and
write
new
solidity
code.
You
want.
You
want
to
only
modify
constraints
around
circuits
that
then
you
know
the
solidity
code
gets
code
generated
based
on
very
well
audited,
a
very
well
audited
base,
and
then
you
don't
have
the
quite
the
risk
of
of
writing.
A
C
There
is
a
there
is
so
so
one
of
the
biggest
efforts
that
are
currently
being
done
in
in
in
the
in
the
community
around
you
know
that
that
you
know
to
write
circuits
is
is
is
really
the
like.
You
haven't
solid
the
ability
to
to
to
integrate
other
contracts
in
your
contract
right
and
and
to
call
other
contracts
right.
So
it's
it's
the
it's!
It's
the
it's!
It's
that
next
layer
of
abstraction
that
it's
like.
C
So
what
if
I
wanted
to
have
a
proof
from
another
circuit
being
input
to
my
circuit,
but
I
don't
want
to
have
to
like
you
know
manually,
do
that.
How
do
I
do
that?
That
is?
That
is
one
of
the
big
things
that
are
that
are
that
that
people
are
currently
working
on,
whether
that's
stark,
where
with
cairo
or
aztec,
with
noir
or
or
matter
laughs,
with
with
zinc
that
you
know
it's
like
there's,
there's
leia
with
leo.
So
it's
like
those
are
all
these.
That's
basically
it
right.
C
You
want
to
be
able
to
call
to
call
not
only
functions
within
your
within
your
circuit,
but
you
want
to
call
integrate
other
circuits
that
already
have
been
done
into
your
into
your
into
your
circuit.
Just
like
a
library
you
have
right
and-
and
you
want
to
be
able
to
call
others
to
call
other
circuits
right
and.
B
C
That's
why
that's
why
you
know
I
was
like:
go
and
read
the
best
solidity
best
practices
around
security.
That
consensus
has
done
an
awesome
job
with
those
docs.
I
I
really
must
salute
them.
That's
besides
open
zeppelin,
those
are
the
two
two
two
two
resources
I
give
to
everyone
who
who
who
says?
How
do
I
get
started?
What
do
I
do?
It's
like
these
two
open,
zeppelin
consensus,
best
practices,
checkbox.
C
Oh
that
one,
the
the
nightfall
yeah,
that's
actually
that's
actually.
B
A
A
All
right,
well,
that's
cool!
So
so
I
know
kyle
in
a
couple
weeks:
you're
gonna,
you
guys
are
gonna,
give
us
a
demo
of
or
not
a
demo
we'll
do
that
during
atlanta,
but
you're
going
to
show
us
sort
of
the
cookbook
for
how
you're
doing
the
the
the
battleship
yeah.
A
We
should
talk
a
little
bit
about
this,
so
I
think
this
is
kind
of
a
cool
thing.
So
for
folks
who
don't
know
a
really
good
way
of
visualizing,
what's
going
on
with
baselining
is
the
game
of
battleship
right.
So
the
notion
here
is
that
in
battleship
you
have
a
you.
A
You
have
if
you've
ever
played
the
game,
especially
the
not
electronic
one,
and
I
did
this
with
my
daughter,
who
was
eight
recently,
and
you
know
she
was
putting
pegs
in
willfully
and
sometimes
unwillfully
in
the
in
the
wrong
and
the
wrong
holes
when
I
would
call
hits-
and
so
I
wasn't
confident
that
where
she
was
putting
the
pegs
on
her
board
were
the
same
as
the
ones
I
was
calling.
A
If
I
would
say,
e6
right,
maybe
she
put
in
an
e5
or
maybe
she
didn't
put
it
there
at
all,
and
so
I
would
what
I
would
have
to
do.
I
would
have
to
look
over
the
top
of
her
port
and
double
check,
which
of
course,
is
kind
of
not
dissimilar
to
when
you
are
sharing
an
invoice
between
you
and
your
customer,
and
you
want
to
be
sure
that
they've
got
the
right.
One
you've
got
to
email
them
and
say:
hey.
Can
you
confirm
the
what's
on
your?
A
What
your
your
version
of
the
invoice
is
and
that's
human
time
and
it
takes
it
yeah
it
takes
some
time
so
with
bit
with
a
battleship,
a
baseline
battleship.
You
know
you
don't
want
to
give
away
what's
on
the
board,
but
you
want
to
be
sure
that
the
call
the
hits
that
I
call
are
verifiably
consistent
with
what
is
on
their
board
without
telling
me
anything
else
about
the
board
there
is
that
kyle.
Is
that
a
good
way
of
describing
it
yeah.
D
B
A
Then
you
can
call
your
hits
and,
and
each
of
those
will
you
will
use
baselining
to
verify
that
you
have
the
that
anything.
You
called
is
consistent
with
the
other
players
right.
D
C
A
B
B
A
Well,
you
can
certainly
use
the
zero
knowledge
to
say
I
am
not
lying
that
that
this
whole
card
is
below
the
or
you
know
it
has.
You
know
yeah
without
showing
it's
the
same
as
battleship
ace
right
here
like
you've
got.
I.
D
D
A
A
A
A
Yeah
like
like
it
would
be
great
if
devon
could
get
on
david,
could
get
on
and
say
all
right
here.
You
know
I'm
still
working
on
this,
but
here's
how
I'm
approaching
it
and
here's.
You
know
I've
made
this.
B
C
A
Know
what
they're
doing
beforehand,
I
think
that,
seeing
how
yeah,
how
battleship
is
being
constructed
will
help
them
get
quickly
into
the
rhythm
of
doing
this
stuff.
That
makes
sense,
sweet
all
right,
hey,
I
did
see
up,
and
I
I'm
sorry
for
the
for
the
person
who,
where
to
go.
This
is
a
little
bit
late,
but
I'll
put
I'll
bring
this
up.
Oops!
That's
yours!
Nick!
When
will
invitation
emails
be
sent
out
for
those
who
have
registered
for
the
east
atlanta
event,
which
is
eth
atl.com.
A
The
emails
will
be
sent
out
for
those
who
are
registered
and
yeah
yep.
Okay
sounds
good,
let's
see
anything
else
to
announce.
A
There's
a
lot
coming
like
I
said
I
I
predict
and
I
put
this
on
twitter
and
I
think
I
got
like
300.
You
know
likes
and
retweets
and
stuff
I
said
yeah.
I
predict
that
nfts,
any
smart
nft
in
the
future
is
gonna,
especially
the
kind
that
we're
we're
talking
about
that
we'll
be
talking
presenting
in
east
atlanta
is
going
to
need
a
baseline,
we're
going
to
want
a
baseline
proof
on
something
like
base
ledger.
So
I
thought
people
were
pretty
excited
about
that.
A
I've
been
getting
a
lot
of
questions
about
how
that's
going
to
work,
and
forgive
me
everybody,
I'm
not
going
to
tell
you
yet,
but
because
we
wanna
a
work
it
out
and
be
presented
in
in
real
code
rather
than
me.
You
know
kind
of
waving
my
hands
over
it,
so
stay
tuned,
be
there
at
east
atlanta
and
we'll
it's
not
too
far
away.
D
You
know
around
baseline
and
base
ledger
specifically
when
it
comes
to
tokenization
and
the
nfts
and
stuff
everyone
asks
you
know.
Well,
how
do
you
prevent
the
double
spend?
D
And
you
know
my
common
answer
is
the
zero
knowledge
proof
will
allow
for
that,
and
I
think
it's
something
that
we
definitely
need
to
keep
at
least
on
the
front
pew
about
the
zero
knowledge
crew.
A
B
C
Yeah,
by
the
way
you
you
do
need
to
the
the
you,
do
actually
need
to
code
up
the
the
the
reentrancy
protection
in
in
in
the
updates
of
the
nullifiers
on
and
and
and
the
the
nodes
right
right.
Kyle.
A
Ago
you
know
we
we
did
that
with
pro
with
purchase
orders
right.
We
said
you
know
we
don't
want.
We
want
purchase,
orders
to
come
in
sequentially
and
to
not
double
up
right,
and
so,
in
that
case
yeah
you
wrote
that
into
the
circuit,
specifically
in
such
a
way
that
you
would
be
able
to
prevent
two
or
more
purchase
orders
coming
in
and
calculating
off
of,
say
the
the
same
discount
rate.
A
But
that's
a
you
know
that
that's
I
don't
really
think
of
that
in
the
same
way
as
I
think
of
anti-double
spend
in
traditional
blockchain,
you
know
when
I
want
to
do
a
hardcore,
anti-double
spend
of
a
token
or
a
currency
of
some
kind,
yeah,
I'm
probably
going
to
do
that
on
the
blockchain.
That's
the
point
of
it.
C
Here
here
here
it
is,
it
is,
it
is
really
the
double
spend
stands
for
stands
for
for
for
changing
the
same
state
twice
right.
That's.
C
That's
really
what
this
is
about
right.
So
it's
like
it's
like
it's
like
it's
one
and
done,
and
so
so
you
need
to
you
want
to
change
your
state.
Okay,
get
in
line
right,
so
you
need
to
have
the
the
the
assurance
that
you
know.
You
can't
jump
the
line
right
so
that
that's
the
that's!
That's
what
what
you
need
to
do
and
that's!
Why
that's
why
you
have
the
consensus
right
in
in
a
blockchain.
C
C
A
B
C
Because
you
can
still
do
double
double
spend
on
the
on
the
in
the
l2,
if
you're,
if
you're,
if
your
code,
if
your
code's
poor
right
so
unless
you're
again
have
a
have
a
have
a
have
a
network
on
top
of
it,
that
kind
of
like
defeats
the
purpose,
though
so
it's
it's
in
the
end.
Shitty
code
creates
bad
outcomes.
So
it's
like
it's
like
whether
it's
it's
it's
it's
on
a
blockchain
or
in
an
l2
code.
A
This
is
a
family
show
here,
so
hey
yeah.
I
think
we're
way
past
that,
but
hey
kyle.
What
else
would
you
like
to?
I
mean
anything
else
about
provide
stack
or
where
it's
going,
that
you
wanna
talk
about
today
before
we
take
off
no.
B
A
B
Know
I
think
it's
you
know,
join
the
tele
that
join
the
disc
with
that
discord
group.
If
you
want
to
run
a
base,
ledger
node,
there's
quite
a
bit
of
interest.
There
yeah,
I
think
it'll
be
we're.
D
So
I
you
know,
I
foresee
that
they're
different
ones
predicated
on
the
different
systems
of
record,
as
we
continue
to
build
this
out
in
which
more
folks
and
enterprise
architects
can
gain
insights
in
through
the
discord
on
these
various
systems
of
records
and
organizations
that
we're
building
with
so
join.
Now.
A
Very
cool
I
will
say
in
my
capacity
as
chair
of
the
committee,
I
will
say
you
know,
base
ledger
and
provide
are
only
one
set
of
stacks
base
letters.
You
know
you
can
put
your
baseline
proofs
anywhere,
you
like
as
long
as
they're,
compliant
with
the
standard
which
we
put
up
before,
but
base
ledger
and
provide
stack
are
way
out
ahead
of
anybody
else.
A
I
know
everybody
I
know
is
is
including
my
team
is
building
on
that
stack
and
good
on
you
guys
for
for
for
providing
that
leadership
right
yeah,
it's
important
to
know
that
you
know
if
you're
getting
involved
with
baselining
use
base,
ledger
use,
provide
you're,
not
getting
locked,
then
you're
not
getting
into
better
vendor
lock
and
you
can.
You
can
use
any
set
of
systems
that
are
compliant
with
the
standard,
but
right
now
the
easiest
way
to
do
that.
It's
still
early.
You
know,
I
think
everybody
agree.
A
The
easy
button
is
still
still
coming
the
true
the
true
easy
button,
but
it's
getting
easier
and
easier
every
day
and
I
think
it
is
finally
to
the
point
where
you
know
a
competent
developer
can,
with
you
know,
just
you
know
normal
amount
of
effort,
figure
it
out
and
start
deploying
things
it
might.
D
One
little
nugget
to
drop
just
because
there's
been
some
nft
conversation
today
there
will
be
a
ethereum
nft,
focused
on
east
atl,
auctioned
off
by
one
of
the
creators
that
are
going
to
be
involved
in
east
atlanta,
and
there
will
also
be
a
unibrite
provided
bright,
nft
auctioned
off
at
eat
atlanta,
as
well
by
the
same
artist.
So
keep
your
eye
out
for
that.
D
That
will
be
coming
out
here
pretty
soon
and
those
will
be
auctioned
off
through
foundation,
as
well
as
a
number
of
other
pieces
of
work
by
creators
that
are
going
to
be
involved
at
eath.
Atlanta
will
be
auctioned
off
via
foundation
as
well
a
couple
through
openc
as
well,
and
we'll
have
a
metaverse
built
out
for
those.
So
people
virtually
can
go
and
see
those,
and
if
they
have
interest
to
auction
on
them
to
do
so.
A
Going
to
start
with
another
yeah,
maybe
we
can
make
their
their
thing.
One
of
the
one
of
the
the.
B
A
One
last
psa,
as
you
know,
we
have
the
we
have
a
baseline
show
in
india
now
saturdays
at
6,
pm,
india
standard
time
isd,
that's
8,
30
am
us
eastern
and
you
can
do
the
math
on
all
the
other
time
zones.
If
you
you
can
go
to
our
website
baselineprotocol.org,
baseline.protocol.org
and
and
and
find
the
link
to
all
of
these
signups.
We
now
have
a
really
easy
talk
about
easy
buttons.
A
It's
really
easy
to
sign
up
for
teams
and
meetings
and
projects
on
the
right
there
on
the
website,
just
go
to
the
join
the
community
or
get
involved
link
at
the
top
and
you'll
be
able
to
do
that
and
there's
an
event
in
india
that
will
will
be
discussed
on
saturday,
I'm
sure
the
nascom
event.
So
if
you
go
to
that
link
down
there,
you
will
be
able
to
register
for
that
event.
A
So
if
you're
in
india
make
sure
to
join
the
baseline,
show
there
and
maybe
join
that
event,
we'll
be
featured
at
that
event,
I
think.
C
But
for
myself,
if
anybody
wants
to
learn
about
about
dids
and
vcs
and
and
and
how
to
utilize
them,
also
in
baseline
in
a
hands-on
way,
come
come
join
my
session
an
ungodly
time.
Oh.
A
B
A
B
D
Hey
john,
can
we
can
we
get
that
nascom
link
in
the
chat
just
so
it's
clickable
instead
of
you
can't
even
copy
paste
from
where
it
is
now
so.
You've
yeah.
A
D
You
know
thing
on
their
vcs
and
dids
pay
close
attention
to
those,
because
those
are
going
to
gain
traction
very
quickly
if
one
point
of
utility
for
vcs
and
dids.
B
Is
that
spells.
B
D
D
A
C
B
C
System
right
so
so
you
need
a
a
secure
location,
so
you.
B
C
C
D
A
You
all
and
we'll
see
you
next
time
on
the
bass
line
until
then
keep
on
baselining
ctrl.