►
Description
No description was provided for this meeting.
If this is YOUR meeting, an easy way to fix this is to add a description to your video, wherever mtngs.io found it (probably YouTube).
A
Good
day,
everyone
and
welcome
to
the
casper
association
community
called
hosted
and
run
by
the
casper
association
on
this
week's
call.
We
will
discuss
the
association
and
the
road
ahead
in
this
call.
We
are
joined
by
ralph
q
bill
from
casper
association,
meda
ashok,
peter
of
casper
labs
and
christoph
de
spiglia,
co-founder
of
freefold
handing
it
off
to
you.
A
B
B
At
this
point,
I
would
just
like
to
basically
introduce
the
casper
association
as
the
lead
organization
to
thank
you
for
the
slides
to
manage
and
foster
the
community
as
well
as
run
the
network.
That
casper
is
representing
the
casper
association.
Is
an
association
registered
non-profit
association
registered
in
switzerland,
with
articles
of
association
that
allow
members
to
join
and
contribute
to
the
association.
B
The
casper
association
is
basically
running
the
protocol.
It's
also
responsible
for
the
github
and
public
repositories
of
the
technology
going
forward
and
yeah.
That's
the
casper
association.
So
today
we
have
a
a
few
panelists
so
and
then
I'll
hand
back
to
pyotter
and
meda
to
contextualize
what
we
are
talking
today
and
the
partner
that
we're
introducing
today
of
casper.
C
Yeah
sounds
good.
There
is
one
error
on
the
slide
like
pjot
is
going
to
be.
Is
the
program
manager
for
the
public
blockchain,
so
he
works
with
the
association,
alongside
with
ralph
he's
moved
from
casper
labs
to
the
association
fully
so
we'll
get
that
updated,
so
he
is
actually
one
of
the
hosts.
So
I
want
to
turn
it
over
to
you
now.
D
Let
me
try
to
change
to
to
my
part
so
today
what
I
would
like
to
present
to
you
is
the
engineering
status
of
our
current
work
in
progress,
and
what
you
see
here
now
is
the
list
of
features
that
we
are
currently
working
on
and
the
team
is
working
on
the
first
weekly
sprint
of
1.2
release
cycle
internally.
It's
our
screen,
13.1
and
release.
D
1.2
marks
the
second
production
upgrade
of
casper
protocol
and
the
top
priority
here
is
to
keep
maintenance,
stable
and
roll
out
the
upgrade
to
the
network,
and
we
will
focus
in
this
release
on
performance
and
sustainability
and
the
four
main
goals
that
we
set
for
us
is
the
following.
So
the
context
state
improvements
where
we
will,
when
we
will
reduce
the
memory
footprint
on
our
in
our
smart
contracts,
then
we
will
work
on
network
stability
enhancements.
D
D
So
currently,
the
official
release
we
have
is
100,
which
is
our
maintenance
release.
That
was
cut
on
13
march
2021,
and
that
constitutes
our
mainnet,
which
is
called
casper
network.
So
as
for
now,
casper
net
network
is
up
and
running
of
course
stable.
D
The
current
status,
for
it
is
the
block
height,
is
600
966,
with
51
validators
online.
Our
current
focus
is,
as
I
said,
before,
performance
hardening
and
production
engineering
work.
So
basically
that
means
that
we
are
not
rolling
any
big
features.
We
are
focusing
on
stabilizing
the
code
on
small
enhances,
enhancements
and
bug
fixes.
As
for
the
highway,
we
are
working
on
to
prioritize
synchronization
of
vertices,
with
lower
sequence
number
that
was
already
discussed
on
the
previous
meeting
and
on
the
note
side
we
are
focused
on
the
tests,
so
we
are
adding
more
tests.
D
In
addition
to
that,
we
are
fine-tuning
the
the
nodes.
So,
for
instance,
here
we
are
working
on
separation
of
deploys
from
transfers
the
block-wide
directors,
so
we
would
like
to
count
them.
We
would
like
to
have
them
separately
distinguished
then,
on
test
and
srv
site.
We
are
supporting
the
network
or,
I
would
say,
networks
I
will
get
to
that
to
that
later
and
we
also
introducing
improvements
in
monitoring
ecosystem
sites.
D
So
our
downstream
team
is
working
on
javascript
sdk,
where
we
are
continuously
working
on
improving,
improving
and
refactoring
of
sdk
package,
then
we
are
also
maintaining
casper
signers,
so
our
chrome
extension
where
we
are
putting
more
ui
ux
enhancements,
also
to
match
the
look
and
feel
with
with
the
clarity
which
is
our
network
block,
explorer
and
network
monitoring
tool
and
on
the
documentation
site.
We
are
continuously
working
to
provide
up-to-date
documentation
as
well
with
us,
the
slides
and
recordings.
D
So
we
are
also
focusing
to
onboard
new
users
to
the
system
as
well,
economics
and
research.
I
hope
alexander
is
with
us.
E
I
am
in
fact,
so
yes,
so
first
thing
we
are
continuing
to
work
on
formalizing
the
auction
game,
and
we
have
actually,
I
believe,
made
some
progress
on
it
in
the
sense
that
we
found
out
what
the
best
responses
are
and
provided
that
we
can
prove
that
what
we
found
are
the
best
responses
that
will
enable
us
to
calculate
equilibria
in
a
certain
form
of
the
game.
E
Right,
for
example,
we
will
be
able
to
say
okay,
so
this
you
know,
if
is
the
bids
as
we
observe
them
now
in
the
system.
If
everybody
suddenly
became
strategic
and
started
splitting,
you
know
what
impact
would
that
have
on.
You
know
on
the
power
of
the
largest
validators
right,
so
how
much
could
they
exploit
their
size
to
become
even
bigger
right?
So
you're?
Pretty
close
to
that?
E
I
think,
and
the
second
thing
something
that
came
up
last
week,
is
that
currently
the
auction
contract
itself
is
potentially
susceptible
to
basically
a
form
of
spam,
where
you
can
make
you
know,
bids
and
delegations
that
are
very
small
and
we
would
like
to
you
know,
study
how
much
of
an
impact
that
would
that
could
really
have
given
that.
Of
course
you
have
to
pay
for
these
things,
and
you
know
if
the
impact
is
potentially
you
know
dramatic.
E
Then
we
would
like
to
study
some
options
to
mitigate
that
the
two
obvious
ones
on
the
table
being
either
imposing
a
minimum
like
a
basically
a
token
minimum
for
bids
or
delegations
or
another
one,
would
be
to
impose
just
hard
caps
on,
for
example,
how
many
bids
there
might
be
right
because,
for
example,
you
know
if
he
only
limits
a
validator
set
to
100
validators.
Well,
you
know,
there's
not
really
a
lot
of
a
point
to
have
like
more
than
you
know:
400,
validators
and
weights.
E
You
might
as
well
just
capital
like
500
total
and
similarly
it's
a
little
bit
more
complicated
for
delegations,
because
you
don't
have
a
good
idea
of
how
how
many
people
might
want
to
delegate
so
something
that
you
need
to
think
about.
C
E
Vr
so
well,
not
not
yet
I
mean
we
I'm
talking
to
ed
and
henry
about
this
on
thursday,
so
I'm
going
to
prepare
something.
So
you
can,
you
know
systematically
think
through
this
and
you
know
actually
picks
the
best
option.
F
D
Yes,
that
is
something
a
little
bit
outside
of
the
team,
but
it's
very
important.
So
first
thing
is
about
github,
so
we
are
in
the
process
or
almost
finished,
with
moving
all
the
repositories
active
repositories
to
our
new
organization,
which
is
managed
by
association,
namely
casper
network,
and
there
it
will
be
open
source
with
apache
2
license
so
free
to
use
free
to
fork
free
to
collaborate.
D
That's
very
exciting
news,
also
on
the
ecosystem
site.
We
are
opening
all
the
projects
that
our
community
facing,
including
example
smart
contracts,
including
our
plug-in
signer,
and
that
is
also
available
in
an
organization
called
casper
ecosystem.
D
We
have
ongoing
work
on
ledger
integration,
and
I
see
on
the
chat
that
we
also
have
our
friends
from
devdao.
So
I
would
like
to
ask
them,
in
short,
to
describe
the
pro
progress
with
test
network.
I
think
a
lot
of
it's
happening
over
there
team
sure.
G
Yeah
no,
we
have
I've
started
a
test
network
which
will
be
kind
of
the
precursor
to
all
the
exciting
work.
That's
going
to
be
on
the
main
network.
As
every
release
comes
out,
we
will
be
running
that
for
engineers
and
developers
to
test
all
of
their
current
contracts
and
the
ability
for
them
to
to
use
before
validators
select
the
upgrades
as
we
go
along.
That
network
is
launched
to
learn
more
about
that
network
on
telegram
go
to
at
casper
testnet.
It
is
a
it
isn't.
G
We
have
a
reward
system
for
that,
so
you
can
come
in
discuss
how
you
can
be
part
of
those
rewards.
Help
us
build
out.
The
network
help
us
test
different
things,
they're
going
to
be
different
test
functionalities
that
we'll
reward
for
along
the
next
few
few
months
through
and
through
infinium.
So
we're
excited
to
have
launched
that
and
that's
through
the
devex
dow
to
learn
more
about
the
grants
program
that
we
have
for
distributing.
Casper
grants
go
to
at
devx
dao.
Also
on
telegram.
G
We
have
a
few
other,
pretty
exciting
ecosystem
projects
that
we've
kicked
off
and
one
is
the
go
sdk.
So
I
see
that
you,
you
talked
about
the
javascript
sdk
here,
but
there
is
a
go
sdk
as
well
that
we've
kicked.
We
kicked
off
and
begun
the
development
on
so
that'll
be
going.
You
know
available
in
the
next
few
weeks.
Actually
it's
a
very
talented
so
excited
to
have
that
work
started.
G
We've
got
a
number
of
different
grants
that
have
come
true
for
the
transpiler
projects,
where
we
are
taking
some
of
the
well-known
ethereum
standards
and
then
we're
running
them
through
the
transpiler
and
verifying
what
does
work
doesn't
work
and
and
and
then
adding
into
the
work
of
the
transpiler
for
some
well-known
standards.
Do
you.
G
Very
excited
about
that
and
just
help
having
helping
people
benefit
by
contributing
to
their
experience
when
working
with
it.
So
it
just
becomes
a
a
you
know,
continuously
growing
and
better
tool
for
everyone
to
be
able
to
migrate
projects
and
bring
projects
over.
So
I
think.
C
There's
a
bit,
I
think,
there's
a
fair
bit
of
work
to
do
in
the
transpiler.
This
something
aria
might
be
really
interested
in
doing
what
we
want
to
do
is
we.
We
initially
had
a
dsl
for
the
smart
contract
library
and
we
have
decided
to
roll
that
dsl
back,
because
what
we
want
is
we
want
smart
contract
authors
to
actually
put
pressure
on
the
contract
api
itself
in
rust,
so
it
would
probably
the
work
that
needs
to
be
done
for
the
transpiler
right
now
is
we
need
it
trans?
C
We
need
the
ast
to
be
transpiled
to
the
contract.
Basically,
the
rust
contract
api
itself
versus
the
dsl
and
then
which
would
be
better
anyway,
because
as
then,
then
we
can
evolve
the
dsl
later
on
over
top
of
that.
But
then,
if
you
transpile
directly
to
the
rust
contract
library
that
would
the
contract
api,
that
would
probably
be
the
best
way
to
go.
So
we
should
probably
get
a
grant.
It
would
be
advisable
to
get
a
grant
going
for
someone
to
really
sink
their
teeth
into
that.
That
would
be
great.
G
Sounds
good
we've.
We
have
come
a
long
way
and
we
are
launching
our
governance
protocol
shortly
doing
finalizing
the
testing
this
week
and
making
sure
that
we
get
through
a
security
audit.
So
our
efficiency
of
knocking
out
and
then
launching
the
grants
will
just
be
improving
every
day
every
week
and
very
happy
and.
C
The
named
keys
restriction
is
coming
off,
that'll
be
in
the
first,
the
second
patch.
The
first
patch
is
just
the
performance
enhancements,
that's
pretty
much
baked
and
is
going
to
test
that
on
the
12th.
Isn't
that
right
pyot,
if
I
recall
correctly,.
D
You
are
correct
and
that's
also
important
to
know
that
what
I
presented
is
for
1.2,
so
it's
for
the
future.
So
currently
we
are
testing
what
1.1
and
this
upgrade
will
be
soon
scheduled
to
be
to
be
tested
on
the
test
network,
so
we'll
be
upgrading
test
network.
Then,
after
two
weeks
of
of
stabilization
and
test
period,
we
will
also
advise
our
validators
to
upgrade
their
notes,
and
this
will
happen
as
for
now,
we
have
the
date
on
26th
of
february.
D
H
Good,
thank
you.
Thank
you
so
much
for
inviting
me
here,
of
course,
and
being
part
of
this
wonderful
project
and
super
exciting
of
all
the
things
you
guys
are
doing
and
working
for
it's
just
amazing.
So
my
name
is
christoph
I'm
from
origin.
I
sometimes
call
myself
a
nerd
from
young
age
and
working
on
internet
technologies
for
all
my
life
actually
and
since
about
10
years,
we're
working
on
a
project
to
decentralize
the
clouds.
H
So
the
cloud
is
this
big
thing
we
all
use
like
an
amazon
or
google
and
so
on,
and
these
structures
are
very
centralized
by
nature.
Big
data
centers
are
being
built.
They
use
a
lot
of
power,
of
course,
where
they
are,
and
also
they
basically
make
the
internet
rather
unbalanced,
because
there
are
few
locations
in
the
world
and
we
are
with
threefold,
creating
an
alternative
to
that.
H
You
can
basically
compare
us
to
what
basically
solar
panels
did
for
electricity,
so
rather
taking
than
taking
electricity
from
huge
nuclear
plants
right,
no
we've
built
something
else
which
is
like
a
solar
panel.
This
solar
panel
can
go
on
every
roof,
and
the
solar
panel
delivers
electricity
for
the
people
around.
So
we
did
exactly
the
same
thing,
but
then
for
what
we
call
internet
capacity,
and
so
internet
capacity
is
cloud.
C
Yeah,
I'm
I'm
really
excited
about
this
opportunity.
You
know.
One
of
the
things
I
have
not
liked
is
the
number
of
nodes
that
are
running
in
aws
right.
So
it's
like
yeah,
let's
build
a
decentralized
network
that
all
runs
in
aws.
Wait
what
so
I
I
love.
I
think
this
is
just
a
fantastic
thing.
I've
heard
a
lot
of
people
in
our
community
say
you
know.
C
Just
concerns
are
on
centralization
through
these
cloud
providers,
because
there's
only
three
really
big
ones
right
that
make
it
easy
and
affordable
to
launch
a
virtual
system.
But
but
here
we've
got
something
that
will
make
it
just
as
easy
to
do
so
without
needing
to
go
to
those
kinds
of
providers,
so
very,
very
excited
about
that.
That's
really
cool
excited
to
be
partnering.
I
C
You
and-
and
we
were
just
jamming
on
a
call
before
this
and
there's
a
lot
of
other,
really
cool
things
that
we'll
be
able
to
do
with
threefold.
So
this
is
just
like
the
first
dip,
the
toe
in
the
water
engagement.
I'm
I'm
really
stoked
about
some
of
the
other
features
that
we
were.
You
know
coming
up
with
when
we
were
talking
just
before
this
call
so
really
excited.
H
Yeah
me
too,
it
sounds
all
very
wonderful.
We
could
be
more
like
you
know
the
infrastructure
layer
where
the
things
are
in
a
very
reliable
way,
providing
opportunities
for
casper
to
be
in
more
locations
to
go
faster
to
more
places
in
the
world
and
yep
future
looks
good.
C
Okay,
very
good:
do
you
want
to
pull
up
the
github
I'd
like
to
show
people
the
github
where
casper
node
is.
I
D
Anymore,
so
let's
check
yeah
and
what
is
happening
here.
I,
as
I
told
you,
we
are
almost
there,
so
I
swear
casper
node
was
there
just
you
know
two
hours
before,
but
I
was
checking
in
the
background,
my
emails.
We
had
some
small
issues
with
our
ci
engine
and
we
had
to
move
back
to
casper
labs.
We
will
fix
it
and
then
transition
the
repository.
C
D
C
Okay,
got
it
yep,
so
we'll
work
with
the
we'll
work
with
the
association
to
get
that
all
moved
over.
But
the
idea
is
that
we'll
move
it
over
and
license
senator
apache
2.0.
So
those
of
you
that
want
to
fork
fork
the
code
play
with
the
code
work
with
the
code.
You
can
certainly
choose
to
do
so
so
very
exciting
times
joe.
Do
we
have
questions
from
the
community.
A
Sure
one
of
the
questions
is:
is
there
any
listing
news
and
I
can
quickly
touch
on
that?
We
are
not
announcing
any
listings
just
yet,
but
in
early
may
there
will
be
a
listing
and
we'll
make
an
official
announcement
about
that
soon.
And
then
we
have
a
question
here:
what
is
casper's
the
casper
team's
biggest
dream?
F
C
I
mean
I,
I
would
really
love
to
see.
You
know
the
casper
protocol
helping
the
unbanked
right
like
I
would
like
to
see
it
provide
a
mechanism
and
not
directly
like
I
don't
even
care
if
the
users
know
they're
using
the
casper
network.
C
From
my
perspective,
if
there
are
applications
that
are
built
on
top
of
the
casper
network
that
enable
opportunities
for
people
right,
so
we
want
to
make
banking
infrastructure,
crypto-economic
infrastructure
accessible
to
people
that
don't
have
it
right,
and
so
that's
a
pretty
big,
bold
dream
for
me.
Also,
I
would
love
to
see
you
know,
I
don't
know
like
10
to
20
of
the
fortune
100
companies
having
some
kind
of
an
implementation
against
the
casper.
B
B
B
But
the
good
news
is
not
only
will
it
address
the
challenges
that
you
know,
people
have
and
companies
have
in
general,
smaller
companies
have
in
general
to
access
credit
markets,
but
also
it
will
provide
much
more
transparency
on
you
know,
for
financial
transactions
and
that
that's
an
area
that
certainly
is
for
me
personally,
but
also
for
the
association
a
priority.
B
C
C
You
know,
we've
talked
about
you
a
little
bit,
but
could
you
I'm
going
to
put
you
on
the
spot
here
and
just
share
a
little
bit
of
your
background?
I
know
in
the
intro
you
you
introduce
yourself,
you
know
you're
one
of
the
key
members
of
the
association.
C
B
B
That
recall
there
was
everything
was
open.
Probably
you
know
you
could
open
telnet
sessions
on
basically
anywhere
you
wanted
to,
but
anyway,
so
then
I
rejoined
the
tech
tech
environment
in
2014
by
building
the
business
of
an
ai
enterprise
software
startup
in
the
us,
until
I
discovered
crypto
and
blockchain
in
earnesty
in
2000
the
course
of
2015.
B
I
would
say-
and-
and
I
was
immediately
fascinated
by
you-
know
the
the
opportunity
to
really
build
different
economic
systems
thanks
to
this
technology,
because
this
technology
is
challenging
or
not
challenging,
but
it's
certainly
questioning
how
economies
interact
and
how
you
know
how
economic
institutions
of
capitalism,
as
I
as
I
say,
which
are
markets
and
firms
and
governments
how
they
operate
on
this
new,
basically
paradigm.
So
that
is
my
motivation
to
be
to
be
in
this
space.
G
You
know
I
was
going
to
add
to
the
the
dreams.
If
I
can,
you
can
set
some
dreams
on
the
stage
here
for
the
developers
down
and
that's
really
to
create.
G
You
know
financial
freedom
for
millions
of
developers
that
want
to
enter
into
the
web3
space
you
know
being
able
to
create
and
be
creative
by
their
direction
of
their
own
intention,
but
people
that
can
join
as
a
part
of
the
network
be
able
to
receive
value
for
the
things
that
they
want
to
build
is
a
big
part
of
why
we
push
so
hard
away.
We
work
so
hard
and
trying
to
to
make
sure
that
there
is
a
financial
freedom
for
engineers
is
something
that
very
passionate
about,
and
the
casper
team.
G
A
H
Yeah,
thank
you
very
good
question,
but
not
so
easy
to
answer
very
quickly,
but
I'll.
Try
anyhow.
So
there
are
many
things,
but
of
course
I
cannot
explain
everything
we
do
here,
but
basically
we
have
free
implemented
re-implemented
an
operating
system
starting
from
the
linux
kernel,
though,
because
we
did
not
want
to
re-implement
drivers,
but
everything
else
we
kind
of
had
to
redo
and
basically,
when
an
operating
system
starts,
it's
our
own
operating
system,
no
in
no
way
it's
connected
to
us,
so
we
of
course,
have
no
back
doors.
H
We
can
connect
to
it
and
it
will
basically
boot
using
all
the
hardware
features
available
with
certain
vendors.
We
can
even
do
something
called
silicon
root
of
trust,
making
sure
that,
from
boots
over
the
network,
validation
with
hashes
validation
through
blockchain
mechanisms
to
make
sure
that
the
system
boots
in
such
a
way
that
hackers
or
people
remote
cannot
get
in
it.
The
operating
system
has
no
shell,
it
has
no
even
server
interface,
it's
all
controlled
to
blockchain
primitives,
which,
as
well,
makes
it
much
more
safe.
H
H
But
of
course
I
would
have
to
explain
much
more
to
sort
of
explain
how
that
goes,
and
then
we
also
have
programs
where
all
the
farmers
are
independent,
but
some
of
the
farmers
can
get
certified
so
that,
basically,
there
are
more
mechanisms
in
place
to
make
sure
that
they
by
themselves
have
certain
mechanisms
plays
about
security
and
how
to
make
sure
that
the
assets
by
themselves
are
secure.
But
it's
it's
actually
very
big
question
and
we'd
invite
you
to
come
to
one
of
our
websites.
H
A
H
Nope,
nothing
up.
We
don't
because
yeah.
If
we
would,
of
course
it
wouldn't
be
a
secure
cloud.
So
we
don't
it's
really
set
up
in
such
a
way,
just
like
any
blockchain
software,
actually
that
we
have
to
rely
on
the
contribution
for
many
people
in
the
world
and
all
of
these
nodes
are
independent.
Storage
can
be
done
over
multiple
nodes.
So
in
such
a
way
you
don't
have
to
rely
on
one
party
to
provide
you
with
security
and
yes,
no.
We
have
absolutely
no
connection
nor
back
doors
into
the
operating
systems.
A
C
C
I
believe
that
the
initial
foray
into
blockchains
will
be
around
risk
reduction,
so
they
will
focus
mostly
on
obtaining
addition,
like
a
higher
level
of
trust
right.
So
if
you
can
have
a
portion
of
your
application,
that
has
less
trust
in
it.
If
I
increase
the
level
of
trust
in
that
portion
of
the
system,
is
there
value
that
I
can
extract
from
that
as
a
result
of
having
a
higher
level
of
trust
in
the
data,
and
this
is
exactly
what's
happened
with
ipv
right.
C
They
are
doing
a
chain
of
custody
solution
for
for
patents,
and
the
reason
for
that
is
five
to
ten
percent
of
patents
that
are
sold
are
sold
by
somebody
that
doesn't
own
them
now.
You-
and
I
may
not
be
aware
of
that,
but
for
them,
if
they're,
building
a
patent
marketplace,
if
somebody
sells
a
patent
that
they
don't
actually
own,
that
creates
a
huge
problem
for
them
in
their
business
right,
so
being
able
to
get
a
higher
level
of
trust.
C
Around
who
owns
a
patent
is
a
really
big
value
proposition
and
it
will
reduce
the
risk
in
their
business
right
and
and
also
provide
additional
value
for
their
customers,
because
their
customers
know
that
they're
buying
a
patent
from
the
actual
owner.
So
this
is
a
great
example
in
a
nutshell
of
how
I
believe
enterprises
will
adopt
and
it
will
be
very
specific
to
their
business
use
case.
A
Thank
you
one
other
question
here
we
have.
How
can
we
find
more
information
about
staking
procedure
for
cspr,
since
I
don't
find
anything
about
it
on
your
telegram
page.
C
Yeah,
so
the
staking
information
and
the
staking
workflow
is
available
and
the
documentation
page
at
docs.casperlabs.io
that
will
be
shifting
to
docs.caspernetwork.io.
We
just
haven't
gotten
there
yet
or
docs.casper.network.
Actually,
so
you
can
go
there
and
take
a
look
at
it.
I
believe
I
also
saw
a
question
there
about
coin
list
as
well.
C
I
can
let
you
know
piot
and
ralph
answer
that
question.
If
they
wish
around
coinless
staking
options.
I,
as
I
understand
it,
staking,
will
be
possible
with
coin
list
at
some
point
in
the
future
right
around
the
time
when
the
tokens
start.
C
B
I
mean
there
will
be
more
information.
Filtered
there
will
be
more
information
for
forthcoming.
Certainly,
the
association
will
strive
to
make
it
as
transparent
as
possible
to
the
community,
where
you
can
delegate,
you
know
who
has
who
runs
high
quality
notes,
etc,
so
that
that
is
obviously
the
goal
of
the
association.
I
There
is
one
question:
ralph,
not
a
question
more
for
comment,
love
to
see,
casper
win
old
systems
and
that
of
new
idea
and
financial
freedom,
especially
in
africa
by
mustafa.
B
Yeah,
how
should
we
answer
that?
Well,
it's
clear
that
you
know
we're
building,
basically,
infrastructure
that
will
make.
B
I
mean,
maybe
I'll
I'll,
take
a
step
back,
so
so
at
the
moment,
we
all
hope-
and
we
all
believe
that,
because
blockchain
enables
basically
the
ultimate
bearer
instrument
right,
I
mean,
if
you
own
the
key,
if
you
control
the
keys,
you
control
your
coins,
the
old
adage
and,
of
course,
that
is
a
unique
use
case
of
this
technology
that
you
can
basically
secure
your
assets
without
any
interference
of
any
other
entity
and
for
finance
that
has
profound
implications,
because
it
means
that
you
can
secure
assets
whatever
they
are
in
digital
representation.
B
That
basically
enables
you
to
build
an
infrastructure
that
does
not
rely
on
institutions
that
currently
are
not
able
or
not
trustworthy,
and
certainly
depending
on
the
country
that
you're
living
in
and
by
the
way,
it's
not
just
for
developing
countries.
Also
in
developed
countries,
certain
institutions
simply
cannot
be
trusted,
which
is
why
we
need
an
alternative
so
coming
to
this.
B
Yes,
we
we
intend
to
build
from
ground
up
really
the
ability
for
individuals
and
entities
to
issue
financial
instruments
in
a
secure
way,
but
also
in
a
way
that
they
are
transparent,
that
they
are
standardized,
that
they
can
be
well
understood,
easily
well
understood,
which
should
enable
you
know
the
broader
public
to
have
kind
of
an
alternative
financial
system
in
real
life,
and
I'm
not
talking
about
defy,
even
though
it
may
be
similar
to
d5.
B
What
should
I
say,
infrastructure
that
was
provided
for
financial
interactions
and
for
financial
infrastructure,
which
they
cannot
find
in
their
countries
that
maybe
or
in
their
environments
that
may
be
for
loans
that
may
be
for
factoring
that
maybe
for
supply
chain
financing,
all
areas
that
are
highly
important
for
emerging
economies.
Where
you
know,
banking
is
only
developed
where
certain
of
the
payment
rails
are
extremely
expensive,
etc,
so
that
that
is,
that
is
certainly
a
goal.
So
that's
a
long
answer
to
basically
the
question
of
how
do
we
help
the
own
bank?
B
But
I
think
it's
a
much
larger
question
right.
It's
not
just
about
on
banks,
but
it's
really
about
the
financial
infrastructure
that
you
need
in
order
to
accumulate,
to
provide
capital
and
to
enable
basically
economic
transactions
built
on
credit
which
in
the
end,
that's
the
key
right.
You
need
to
have
credit
markets
work
in
order
for
entrepreneurs
and
also
companies
to
be
able
to
function.
B
G
G
I
asked
you
I
can't
personally,
I
can't
wait
to
see
some
of
the
emerging
countries,
land
registries
and
the
effects
that
hopefully
these
systems
will
have
potentially
not
part
of
the
economic
system
in
those
countries,
but
I
wanted
to
really
speak
up
about
staking
and
really
validate
a
reputation
on
that
was
kind
of
addressed
earlier
from
what
I
know
about,
and
and
and
coming
from
the
devdao
I
from
what
I
know
about
the
coinlist
offering
I
believe
that
staking
will
be
enabled,
but
it's
a
real
question
for
who
are
you
going
to?
G
Who
are
you
going
to
to
back
when
you
have
access
to
your
own
assets?
So
these
as
networks
emerge
trying
to
determine
you
know
which
validators
and
who
you
are
going
to
reward?
It
becomes
a
question
of
not
only
who
you
can
trust,
that's
going
to
operate
from
an
engineering
standards
and
expectation,
your
rewards,
but
also
what
might
they
be
doing
for
the
community.
G
So
one
of
the
participants
of
the
devdao
make
systems
is
building
a
validator
reputation
system
that
should
be
launching
soon
there's
a
tool
that
has
been
launched,
cspr
casper.community
and
so
that's
going
to
have
a
bevy
of
information.
That's
going
to
be
thrown
on
it
and
we
really
do
welcome
any
and
all
ideas
towards
community
growth
and
community
transparency.
G
So
validator
reputation
is
really
high
in
that
list.
You
know,
there's,
obviously
a
great
deal
of
anonymity
that
it
come
when
it
comes
to
these
networks,
but
and
when
you
look
for
roles
like
staking
understanding
who
you're
staking
and
understanding
the
validations
is
extremely
important
to
many
aspects
of
the
network,
and
one
of
them
is
obviously
decentralization.
G
If
you
saw
in
the
statistics
as
they
were
going
over,
the
get
there
are
currently
51
active
validators
and
that
number
is
going
to
shoot
really
quickly
up
to
100
maximum
when
the
tokens
start
becoming
movable
over
the
next
couple
of
weeks
and
from
that
point
before
we
expand
that
list,
the
the
the
value
of
validator
rewards
is
going
to
be
based
upon
those
that
can
make
the
choices
in
staking
and
who
they're
going
to
be
staking
towards.
G
So
you
know,
my
suggestion
is
to
go
look
for
the
validator
reputation
system
as
it
launches
it
should
be
on
cspr.community,
but
there
will
be
a
few
other
resources
and
we'll
be
talking
about
it
in
both
at
casper
testnet
and
at
devex
dao.
To
try
to
help
people
make.
You
know
informed
decisions
about
who
they're
sticking
with
on
the
network.
A
Thank
you,
tim
murphy.
We
also
have
a
question
here
anything
else
you
can
share
or
more
information
on
how
casper
and
freefold
will
work
together,
meda
or
kristoff.
If
you
could
handle
that
question.
C
Yeah
I
can
take
that
question
and
then
christoph
can
kind
of
weigh
in
so
one
of
the
things
that
we
talked
about
in
terms
of
the
the
initial
dip
the
toe
in
the
water
is,
you
know,
running
nodes
using
threefold.
You
know
infrastructure
instead
of
using
aws,
google
cloud
or
azure
right.
Three
big
providers,
where
you
see
a
lot
of
blockchains,
will
end
up
being
centralized
on
them.
Right,
aws
decides
one
fine
day
they
wanna,
you
know,
cut
off
blockchain
protocols,
then
boom.
There
goes
your
network
right.
C
C
It
still
makes
it
very
accessible
for
people
to
be
able
to
run
their
own
nodes
without
having
to
spin
up
bare
metal,
but
by
the
same
token,
it's
completely
decentralized
and
not
really
subject
to
you
know
somebody
coming
there
and
just
you
know
unilaterally
deciding
to
shut
it
down.
Another
thing
that
we
actually
talked
about
that
was
very
interesting.
C
Is
you
know,
the
casper
network
presently
does
not
support
thin
clients,
but
but
the
engineers
are
working
very
rapidly
on
building
what
we
call
fast,
synchronization
and
state
pruning,
and
this
would
basically
make
most
of
the
nodes
in
the
network
thin
clients.
We
would
be
actively
pruning
away
the
global
state
with
the
event
store,
which
is
you
know,
the
push-based
mechanism,
by
which
all
events
on
the
blockchain
and
finality
signatures
are
pushed
out
right.
C
So,
as
the
system
processes,
the
blockchain
processes,
transactions
and
events,
those
are
streamed
to
the
event
store
in
port
9999,
and
the
idea
is
that
we
would
then
build
a
storage
system
using
threefold,
where
the
number
of
nodes
running
on
threefold
system
would
all
basically
agree
right.
They
would
submit
their
transactions
or
submit
their
events
to
threefold
storage,
and
you
would
have
this
notion
of.
Like
you
know,
trusted
events.
C
If
you
hit
a
full
node,
you
can
walk
back
all
the
way
to
the
genesis
block
and
you
could
query
the
global
state,
but
that
just
isn't
scalable
and
it's
not
sustainable
right.
So
you
need
a
way
to
have
the
trust
of
the
blockchain
kind
of
meshed
with
a
traditional
database
architecture.
And
how
do
you
get
that?
Well,
you
get
that
by
having
many
many
nodes,
agreeing
that
yep.
This
event
happened
on
this
date.
C
Rather
than
supporting
queries
right,
you
really
don't
want
to
be
supporting
queries
and
you're
in
your
hot
node
right.
You
want
to.
You
want
to
offload
that
work
onto
something
like
what
we
call
an
event
store
and
that's
the
architecture
we've
built.
However,
you
also
want
the
trust
in
the
event
store
right.
You
don't
want
to
hit
a
node
that
maybe
has
changed
something
in
the
event
store,
because
that
is
possible
right.
There
isn't
any
consensus
on
the
event
store,
but
here
in
a
kind
of
pat
way,
we
can
kind
of
get
this.
C
A
Generally,
we're
getting
questions
about
the
launch
of
our
token.
We've
answered
a
lot
of
these
questions.
If,
if
any
of
you
guys
have
questions
about
that,
please
direct
them
to
our
telegram.
Our
moderators
will
happily
answer
them.
There,
any
updates
on
the
legal
front,
no
yeah,
that's
pretty
much
it
for
questions
we've
got
well.
Will
developers
for
casper
ecosystem
be
able
to
deploy
autonomous
workloads
directly
on
freefall,
freefold.
C
Workloads
directly
on
threefold,
I
I'm
assuming
that
those
are
contracts
that
are
triggered
by
some
event.
I
think
we
need
some
clarification
from
nikolai
on
that.
C
C
Okay,
there's
a
question
about
bits.
I
mean
if
someone
from
the
association
wants
to
talk
about
that
they
can
certainly
go
ahead
and
answer
that.
A
Question
regarding
bits
and
all
the
questions
we're
getting
about
that
this
is.
This
is
something
that's
that
we
didn't
do
it's
a
futures
market
and
you
know
I
would
have
advised
to
avoid
so
yeah.
Our
listing
hasn't
happened
yet
and
look
too
early
may
for
an
official
cspr
listing.
C
A
Thank
you,
everyone
for
watching,
be
sure
to
subscribe
and
we'll
see
you
on
telegram.
We'll
see
you
next
week
at
tuesday,
at
9am
pst
thanks
guys.