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From YouTube: CasperLabs Community Call
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B
B
D
Okay,
hi
everyone
and
welcome
to
the
community
call
this
week.
My
name
is
joe
davis
and
I'm
the
community
lead
at
casper
labs.
On
today's
call,
we
will
be
talking
about
the
dev
dao
and
their
official
release
on
its
grant
program
with
the
eta
we
are
joined
in
today's
call
by
tim
and
wolf
from
the
dev
dao
and
bernd
from
casper
labs.
D
D
C
All
right
so
welcome
everyone
to
the
community
call
the
casper
labs
community
call
I'm
meta
parlocar,
the
cto
and
one
of
the
co-founders
of
casper
labs,
and
today
I'm
joined
by
ashok,
timothy,
burned
and
wolf
as
joe
said,
so
I'm
going
to
turn
it
over
to
everyone,
so
they
can
do
their
introductions.
E
Hi
everyone-
this
is
ashok
here
I
run
the
pro
services
business
for
meda
meeting.
F
B
A
Hey
guys,
hey
everybody,
my
name
is
wolf
carl.
I
have
an
academic
background
for
the
most
part
used
to
work
in
finance
at
goldman
in
london
and
in
new
york
city
and
have
devoted
my
life
to
academic
work
in
in
decentralized
systems,
almost
a
decade
now
and
yeah.
So
I'm
on
a
member
of
the
devdao
and
on
the
eta
side,
I'm
the
the
operations
director.
C
Terrific
thanks
everyone
for
those
great
introductions
and
let's
talk
about,
let's
go
dive
right
in
and
talk
about
the
dev
down.
So
I'm
going
to
kind
of
kick
it
off
and
talk
about
why
we
chose
this
structure
for
our
grant
program.
So
you
know
the
founders
of
casper
labs,
namely
renault
myself
and
our
other
co-founders.
We
strongly
believe
in
the
philosophy
of
decentralization
and
we
felt
that
it,
you
know
to
kind
of
embody
that
philosophy.
F
Guys
that
sounds
good.
It's
tough
to
use
the
word
like
partners
where
you
would
traditionally
use
that
in
a
business
sense
in
this
decentralized
way.
This
was
just
an
enormous
leap
forward.
I
think
in
in
this
concept
of
how
grants
will
be
given
out
to
the
open
source,
decentralized
community.
F
This
all
came
about
about
a
little
over
a
year
ago,
when
speaking
when
I
was
speaking
with
renault
and
in
the
conversation
with
renault
talking
about
how
things
were
broken
in
the
way
that
grants
were
being
given
out
and
engineers
were
being
introduced
to
ecosystems,
as
the
ecosystems
around
all
decentralized
systems
have
really
have
to
mature.
F
Through
my
network,
I
came
and
spoke
with:
wolf
called
wolfcall's,
been
working
on
reputation-based
systems
for
decentralized
governance
and
writing
about
that
topic
over
the
last
decade,
and
I
and
I
I
myself
have
been
involved
in
the
decentralized
engineering
community
for
the
last
decade
and
we
came
together
and
and
proposed
this
new
concept,
where
we
would
have
this
basic
steering
committee
representing
a
what
is
now
a
non-profit
association
in
switzerland,
I'd
the
idea
that
no
dow
really
had
true
jurisdictional
ability
to
represent
or
be
involved
in
contracts
that
we
were
asking
for
or
hoping
to
be
involved
with
with
casper.
F
So
we
spent
a
lot
of
time.
We
met
a
lot
of
great
people
along
the
way
burned.
Last
word:
people
burned
introduced
us
to
the
idea
of
the
bitcoin
implement
through
this
model.
We're
really
able
to,
I
think,
like
no
other
model
of
dow
before
utilize
the
willingness
and
voting
principles
of
a
dow
to
actually
enact
and
distribute
the
value
that
that
we
have
received
in
our
grant
from
our
grantor.
F
So
as
a
grantee,
our
our
job
is
to
execute
our
program
and
our
program
is
to
execute
grant
those
grants
are,
are
wide
and
varied,
but
most
of
them
have
to
do
with
decentralized
engineering.
So
over
the
next
several
years,
we're
going
to
be
responsible
for
large
and
small
opportunities
to
to
to
distribute
grants
to
to
deserving
engineers,
not
only
things
that
are
going
to
be
potential
revenue
production
and
producing,
though
we
are
not
an
equity
grant
giver
we're
not
someone
who's
going
to
take
a
position
in
anyone's
organization.
F
Software
development-
that
is,
you
know
strictly
for
research
purposes,
we're
very
interested
in
trying
to
break
barriers
both
from
a
technical
aspect
and
from
the
international
concept
of
who
is
deserving
of
a
research
grant
who's
deserving
of
a
development
grant.
So
we're
very,
very
we're
very,
very
excited
to
launch
this
program.
We've
done
over
the
last
year,
a
tremendous
amount
of
work,
not
only
in
the
structure
of
what
that
is,
but
also
the
technology
behind
that
as
casper
mainnet
will
launch
in
the
next
few
months.
F
A
Yeah,
so
I
mean
you
covered
a
lot,
but
it's
important,
as
you
said,
to
underscore
that
we
really
have
a
legal
wrapper
solution
here
that
allows
us
to
operate
as
a
dao
in
the
real
world
and
do
what
we're
what
we're
tasked
to
do,
which
is
create
decentralized
infrastructure
solutions
by
recruiting
the
top
talent
in
the
deaf
communities
and
through
through
our
grants,
program
right,
and
so
that
is
it's
absolutely
material
for
the
for
our
mission
to
work
with
casper
and
to
to
help
the
developer
community
come
to
the
dao
and
engage
with
the
dao
community
and
build
these.
D
A
That
we've
created
in
the
eta
is
really
giving
us
the
ability
to
to
interact
and
and
and
have
a
legal
solution
that
allowed
the
allows
us
to
interact
with
the
real
world
and
to
me
as
an
academic.
This
is
really
so.
I've
written
several
papers
on
this,
but
this
is
really
revolutionary
in
the
sense
that
you
know
the
the
dow
concept
is
very
still
very
nascent.
A
If
you
want,
we
have
three
generations
or
so
dows,
and
now
with
the
third
generation
this
we
we're
actually
able
to
create
these
real
world
solutions,
and
I
I
also
want
to
emphasize
that
the
dao
really
sees
itself.
The
community
sees
itself
as
a
dao
of
dao's,
so
the
structure
that
the
eta
offers
is
really
intended
to
onboard
other
dow
dows
into
the
the
fold.
A
If
you
want-
and
all
of
this
depends
on
governance
right-
so
we
we
are-
we've
spent
a
lot
of
time
over
a
year
really
just
figuring
out
the
the
the
operations
of
the
of
the
eta,
with
the
with
the
devta,
from
a
governance
perspective
and
with
this
governance
design,
and
I
can
jump
into
this
a
little
bit
in
more
detail.
If
you
like
to,
but
with
this
governance
design,
we
can
actually
become
a
dao
of
dao's
right.
We
can
actually
help
coordinate
conduct
of
other
communities
and
that's
this
process
has
already
started.
A
I've
had
many
conversations
with
developer
communities
that
are
looking
for
these
solutions
right,
so
yeah
I'll
stop
here,
but
I
think
that's
very
exciting
times
for
dao.
So
thank
you
for
for
that,
for
the
help
and
support
and
for
the
partnership,
casper
labs.
C
So
I
do
have
a
couple
of
questions.
I
think
that
these
may
be
some
questions
on
the
minds
of
developers
and
community
members
that
are
listening
to
this
right.
What
is
it
about
the
devdao
that
makes
it
so
unique
right?
We
have
decentralized
contribution
on
ethereum
and
other
blockchain
protocols.
Why
would
a
developer
specifically
say?
Well,
I
want
to
come
and
be
part
of
the
devdao,
because
it
gives
me
what
what
are
the
benefits?
What
what
sets
the
devdao
apart.
F
You
know
what's
interesting
to
me:
meta
is
the
fact
that,
in
all
honesty,
when
we
set
this
up,
this
was
the
chance
for
developers
to
run
the
show,
and
you
know
there
there
is
no.
There
is
no
ownership
at
the
dev
job.
Anyone
who
shows
up
and
contributes
and
participates
is
able
to
make
immediate
impact.
We're
small
enough
at
this
point
to
where
everyone
is
not
only
heard,
but
the
effects
of
the
work
that
everyone
does
is
felt.
So
I
expect
as
we
grow.
F
F
The
being
involved
in
other
organizations
like
vadao,
fantastic
in
in
in
the
web
3
foundation,
where,
where
they're
headed,
is
pretty
awesome,
but
there
seems
to
still
be
a
little
bit
of
a
glass
tower
approach
to
who
is
a
part
of
what
concepts
that
get
driven
forward.
So
you
know
we
still
have.
We
do
have
open
membership,
it
is
a.
It
is
a
an
elected
position.
People
are
to
become
a
member
of
the
dow.
F
There
is
a
voting
process
and
that
is
basically
a
a
now
loose,
as
it
goes
on
the
chain
more
more
tightly,
coupled
ability
to
to
to
nominate
someone
and
bring
them
into
the
fold-
and
you
know
we-
we
we
like
to
think
of
this
group
as
a
group
of
peers
that
all
want
to
accomplish
a
similar
goal
or
a
similar
goal.
So
it
is,
it
is
an
early
stage
of
an
organization
that
is
rapidly
looking
for
quality
individuals
that
are
going
to
be
able
to
come
in
and
make
an
impact.
F
We
are
a
wide
range
of
types
of
backgrounds.
There
are
many
developers,
many
lawyers,
many
people
from
the
academic
area,
so
we're
we're
we're
open
to
many
different
types
of
people
that
want
to
come,
become
be
involved
and
nationalities
of
people
that
want
to
be
involved
as
well.
F
So
it's
a
pretty
ambitious
but
very
unique
effort
in
the
fact
that
it's
done
separately
from
the
protocol,
which
is
which
I
think
is
an
incredible
thing
to
point
out-
there's
not
a
direction
that
we
are
mandated
to
take
from
casper,
which
is
you
know,
incredible
and
an
incredible
honor
to
be
to
be
selected
to
push
forward.
What
we
believe
is
best
for
not
only
the
this
community
but
open
source
as
at
large
as
as
a
whole
and
decentralized
development.
F
So
you
have
come
from
backgrounds
of
the
ietf
and
other
larger
interesting
kind
of
web.
One
web
two
coordinating
efforts
and
a
lot
of
us
have
dreams
for
this
to
eventually,
you
know,
bear
that
same
honor
and
bear
that
same
weight.
So
looking
for
great
people
to
be
involved
and
there's
plenty
of
room
for
people
to
step
in
and
make
a
difference.
B
Let
me
just
ask
add
to
that
real
quick,
because
I
think
the
main
difference
from
this
program
to
any
other
program
is
grants
are
given
usually
by
an
entity.
You
know
it's
it's
here.
It's
it's
casp
labs
is,
as
timothy
already
said,
is
giving
money
to
an
organization
to
a
community
actually
to
maintain
the
the
protocol
or
to
define
what
needs
to
be
done
to
make
this
protocol
successful.
B
So
this
is
totally
different
in
my
opinion
than
any
other
grant
giving
program,
and
it's
it's
really
community
based
it's
the
the
community
decides
what
needs
to
be
done,
how
it
needs
to
be
done.
They
control
the
the
quality
of
it,
they
sort
of
accept
the
outcome
and,
and
they
they
even
get
incentivized
for
doing
that,
which
is
a
reputation
that
they
create,
which
is
very,
very
interesting
concept.
That
wolf
can
can
maybe
also
explain
quickly
if.
A
Yeah
so
following
up
on
both
intimacy
is
exactly
right,
so
they
both
explained
the
uniqueness.
But
I
want
to
underscore
also
that
the
governance
feeds
all
of
this
right.
So
as
soon
as
he
says,
there's
a
lot
of
platforms
that
don't
necess,
don't
necessarily
allow
developers
to
build
what
they
want
to
build.
This
is
different
right.
We
are
encouraging
developers
to
become
part
of
the
community
to
help
build
their
vision
for
the
future
right,
and
so
the
governance
allowed
allows
that
so
decentralized
governance.
A
He
allows
the
devex
dow
to
maintain
the
fluidity
and
decentralized
order
that
was
possible
in
the
initial
stages
of
of
daos,
and
we
we
believe
that
this
governance
system,
that
I'll
talk
about
in
a
second
helps
the
fluidity
and
bringing
in
information
from
the
edge
right
so
enabling
the
developer
community
to
become
part
of
a
community
that
builds
what
they
want
to
build
right.
So
how
does
governance
do
that?
A
We
have
a
system,
is
banned
and
alluded
a
system
of
reputation,
governance
and
the
way
our
system
works
is
people
who
who
are
on
board
into
the
deaf
dow
with
membership.
They
attain
a
reputation
score,
so
that
means
the
community
votes
on.
Is
this
person
a
quality
person
that
can
help
us
perpetuate
the
mission
mission
and
vision
of
the
deaf
dow
and
create
new
infrastructure
solutions?
A
We
can
talk
about
the
the
technicalities
here
as
needed,
but
the
baseline
idea
is
that
you
operate
with
reputation
if
you
do
well,
if
you
interoperate,
if
your
ideas
come
to
fruition
and
are
upvoted
by
the
community,
your
reputation
is
enhanced
and
reputation
is
important
because
future
cash
flows
in
the
form
of
tokens,
predominantly
cspr
with
casper
being
our
main
donor,
will
be
allocated
pro
rata
by
reputation
score.
So
the
more
people
participate,
the
more
they
bring
ideas
forward.
The
more
the
community
validate
validates
these
ideas
and
they
they
are
translated
into
into
active
projects.
A
The
more
people's
reputation
rises.
The
more
reputation
rises,
the
more
they
get
pro-rata
allocations
of
cspr
towards
that
reputation
and
that
reinforces
outputs
right.
So
there's
constant
feedback
loops
involved
where
everybody
is,
is
focused
on
trying
to
accomplish
the
same
common
good
objective
and
then,
in
the
long
run.
Of
course,
that's
the
the
objective
here
being
decentralized
ecosystems.
C
That's
terrific,
that's
you
know
and
we
believe
in
the
much
more
egalitarian
system
where
you
know
it
is
your
work,
your
contribution
of
your
time
that
really
should
drive
these
reputation.
Systems
right
and
I
think,
what's
broke
with
a
lot
of
governance
protocols
out
there
is
that
they
have
these
governance
tokens,
which
are
great
because
it
provides
an
upside
right
for
the
protocol,
but
it's
not
so
great
because
you
could
theoretically
buy
your
way
in
to
you
know
reputation
in
the
voting
voting
system,
because
you
know
the
you
vote
with
the
token
right.
C
So
I
I
really
like
that.
It's
a
much
more
egalitarian
system
now
on
the
back
end
is
the
intention.
I
believe
the
intention
is
when
we
build
this
thing
on
the
casper,
we're
going
to
build
it
on
the
casper
protocol.
I
would
assume
initially.
Are
we
going
to
leverage
a
lot
of
the
key
weights
features
that
casper
has
natively
within
it,
which
you
know
you
can't
buy
yourself,
some
key
weight
right.
It's
something
that
has
to
be
earned
through
specific
actions
and
transactions.
Is
that
the
plan.
A
Mata
this
is
so
great,
and
I
want
to
really
give
kudos
to
to
to
casper
for
this,
because
when
we
started
this
10
years
ago,
what
you
guys
have
as
core
of
your
system
weighted
keys
didn't
exist.
I
couldn't
have
conceptualized
this
10
years
ago.
Right
so
now
we
have
the
ability
to
talk
about
stock
puppet
attack
resistance
right.
If
I
built
this
on
a
sol
sorry
on
on
solidity
right,
I
have
nfts,
but
I
can
send
somebody
down
those
nfts
and
sell
my
reputation.
That's
theoretically
possible
right.
A
I
talk
about
this
but
in
my
mind,
it
creates
additional
system
system
guarantees
that
that
make
this
a
non-fundable
token
that
is
used
as
an
accounting
metric
right,
and
I
don't
see
any
other
system
where
I
could
do
this
other
than
casper
right
so
for
to
me,
this
is
really
really
valuable
and
it
upgrades
our
our
existing
designs
substantially.
In
my
mind,.
F
We
went
through
a
lot
of
different
design
possibilities.
You
know
again
looking
at
the
different
attack
factors
looking
at
different
things
that
weren't
great
for
driving
continued
participation
in
votes,
continued
participation
in
in
governance-
and
you
know
we
at
one
point
where
we're
going
to
go
with
the
non-fungible
method
that
probably
could
have
been
deployed
on
any
number
of
other
chains,
but
then
really
when
driving
down
into
the
engineering
of
it.
You
know
we
are
at
the
we're
past
systems,
design
we've.
This
is
based
on
work.
F
That's
that's
been
done
over
the
last
10
years,
we're
past
our
user
experience,
design
and
now
we're
actually
into
contract
engineering,
and
in
into
that,
as
we
were
diving
deeper
into
contract
engineering
on
it.
We
realized
that
we
could
use
weighted
keys
for
this
purpose
and
that's
when
it
really
kind
of
all
came
together.
So
we
are.
We
are
very
excited
about
the
fact
that
that
feat-
that
is
a
feature
that
is
a
new
feature.
That
is
something
that
really
does
solve
a
problem
for
for
us
in
governance.
F
The
idea
that
you
know
you
can
have
in
an
organizational
organization's
lifetime.
You
can
have
impact
at
different
moments
and
the
moments
that
you
have
impact
matter
based
on
the
results
of
that
organization
and
and
the
life
cycle
of
that
organization.
You
know.
We
hope
that
this
is
a
a
dow
association
that
outlives
us
in
our
work
efforts,
but
ideally
the
people
that
are
that
are
working
and
are
maintaining
reputation
within
this
system.
F
So
reputation
does
a
way
of.
If
you
don't
continue
to
work
with
it,
it
does
have
a
way
of
kind
of
minimizing
towards
the
rest
of
those
that
are
working
on
projects
and
are
working
on
systems
as
they're
developing
them,
so
we're
very
excited
and
that
we
should
be
launching
somewhere
right
in
the
same
line
of
mainnet
as
well.
C
Amazing,
so
if
I'm
a
developer-
and
I'm
really
excited
about
all
this-
and
I
want
to
get
involved,
how
do
I
get
in
touch
with
the
dev
down?
How
do
I
find
find
you
guys,
so
I
can
get
involved.
E
E
I
I
had
one
question:
go
ahead,
yeah,
so
so
how
how
how's
I
wanted
to
understand
you
guys
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
your
mechanics
as
to
how
how
to
things
how
what
are
your
current
plans
to
kind
of
reach
out
to
the
community
or
dev
developers
community,
so
that
you
know
they
get
more
and
more
involved?
What
are
your
short-term
and
long-term
plans,
and
second,
is
when
you
have
projects
reaching
out
to
you?
What
would
be
your
like
selection
criteria?
E
How
are
you
going
to
you
know,
decide
which
projects
to
support
or
vote
on.
F
I'll
go
ahead
and
answer
so
we
have
a
number
of
different
different
development
communities
that
we've
already
been
become
very
involved
with
blockchain
india
is
one
of
those
communities
distributed.
Labs
out
of
ukraine
is
one
of
those
communities.
Ari
lerner
is
our
head
of
kind
of
our
education
and
academic.
Here,
ari
is
a
author
he's
written
many
books
on
angular
and
react
and
he's
one
of
the
heads
of
engineering
education
currently
at
amazon
ari's
going
to
come
in
and
help
us
do
a
number
of
different
educational
outreach
responses
for
members
of
the
community.
F
F
This
call
every
week
as
well
as
grant
workshops
on
fridays,
but
we
are
also
going
to
start
with
pushing
out
a
newsletter
as
well
so
come
to
devxdale.com
sign
up
for
our
newsletter
and
we're
going
to
be
getting
the
information
out
to
everybody.
But
we
expect
to
be
growing.
We
as
a
non-profit
association.
We
are
fully
qualified
non-profit
association
of
switzerland.
We
also
have
a
number
of
great
partnership
features
with
google
in
respects
to
advertising
and
look
forward
to
really
rolling
out
a
great
advertising
campaign
to
to
reach
everybody.
A
And
then
maybe
to
speak
to
a
shark's
second
question
about
the
the
pipelining
and
how
you
get
to
apply
for
grant
timothy.
I
can
handle
that
if
you
want
me
to
okay,
so
so
the
way
this
works
is
you
go
through
the
web
page
and
you
go
to
the
grants,
sub
sub
subdivision
and
click
up
click
on
apply
for
grants.
What
happens
when
when
you
go
through
the
process?
Is
you
fill
out
the
program
associate
form
first,
which
is
I'm
sorry.
A
You
know
there's
certain
legal
hoops,
because
this
is
intended
to
pay
out
grants.
So
we
need
to
run
through
certain
legal
hoops
that
are
dictated
by
law
in
switzerland.
So
you
fill
out
the
form
the
system
automatic
automatically
receives
it.
Then
you
execute
via
docusign
through
the
web
page
the
program
associate
agreement.
A
Once
the
program
associate
agreement
is
executed.
You
now
have
the
ability
to
start
filling
out
the
grant
application
form
the
grant
application
form
is,
I
have
to
say,
quite
rigorous.
We
have
received
some
feedback
that
that
we're
asking
for
too
much
for
the
initial
round.
We're
doing
that.
Just
to
explain
that,
because
we
want
to
get,
we
want
to
get
the
best
possible
view
on
a
grand
application,
and
so
we
ask
that
people
consider
filling
this
out.
A
A
It
then
goes
into
a
repository
and
is
sent
to
the
ux
in
on
the
dev
dial
web
page
in
the
ux.
The
community
can
once
it's
released.
The
community
can
now
engage
with
the
proposal,
the
grant
proposal,
so
once
it's
in
the
ux
and
it
was
released,
the
community
can
see
it
and
can
start
commenting
on
it.
You
will
see
a
system
where
people
literally
asking
questions.
What
do
you
mean
by
this?
Can
you
clarify
that
is
that
the
right
amount
who's
on
the
team?
What's
the
res?
What
are
the
resumes,
etc,
etc?
A
Right
so
there's
a
feedback
loop
built
into
this,
where,
through
the
ux
people
are
inter
interoperating
with
the
grand
proponents,
we
call
them
the
ops
right.
The
original
proponents
of
a
grant
and
in
the
ux
forum
there
is
this
feedback
loop,
where
the
op
now
sees
what
the
community
thinks
and
the
community
gives
feedback
to
the
op
once
the
op
is
at
a
point
where
he
or
she
says
I
had
enough,
I
made
some
changes
now.
I
want
the
vote.
A
They
can
call
for
a
vote.
They
can
make
changes
and
re-put
it
into
the
forum
for
community.
To
comment
on
is
that
are
the
change
is
good?
Is
this
good
enough,
so
this
feedback
will
go
back
for
a
while
back
and
forth
for
a
while.
Then
they
may
pitch
on
a
given
tuesday.
We
have
our
community
calls
on
tuesdays.
They
may
do
a
pitch
show
on
on
on
their
project.
After
having
received
feedback
in
the
ux,
then
they
pitch,
then
they
call
for
the
vote,
and
now
it
goes
to
the
members.
A
The
members
now
deliberate
individually
as
a
member
community
on
the
proposal
once
there's
an
upvote.
It
now
goes
into
the
the
voting
engine
which
is
on
chain
voting
engine.
So
we
have
a
preliminary
vote,
which
is
a
consensus
mechanism
in
our
governance
design
where
reputation
cannot
be
taken
from
members,
but
it's
a
gauge
it
gauges
where,
where
the
community
sees
the
proposal
going
once
there
is
a
preliminary
upvote,
it
now
goes
through
the
unchained
boat
and
it
goes
into
the
proposal
repository
on
chain
and
it
sits
there
once
it's
upvoted
on
chain.
A
Now
you
get
a
notice.
The
eta
gets
a
notice
just
to
walk
you
through
the
process.
Eta
gets
a
notice
and
for
a
final
compliance
review
once
the
once
it
passes,
finance
final
compliance
review.
The
proposal
is
executed,
the
contract
is
signed
by
the
eta.
The
contract
has
to
be
signed
by
the
op,
the
grand
proponent
and
the
contract
is
executed.
Now
we
can
go
on
to
to
the
program
supervision,
which
is
the
the
eta
program
director,
will
supervise,
milestone,
accomplishments
of
the
respective
grand
I'll
stop
here.
E
D
A
D
F
Blessed
that
the
group
has
really
come
together,
you
know,
aside
from
aside
from
just
the
website,
though,
we're
gonna
be
doing
some
really
interesting
things
on
on
git
as
well,
so
we
can
get
some
an
external
commenting
on
some
of
the
proposals
that
are
being
made.
G
F
That'll
come
within
it
with
our
first
update
too,
but
yeah
the
system
is
really
well
designed
and
everyone
involved
has
been
fantastic.
The
community
itself
joining
the
calls
and
being
a
part
of
that
that
is
what's
fun.
I
really
wanted
to
make
it
a
community
of
of
engineers
that
were
interesting
and,
were
you
know
not
only
admirable,
but
people
who
I
I
you
know
I
I
really
love
speaking
with
and
and
was
would
learn
from.
F
C
I'm
really
excited
to
see
the
grant
proposals
come
through.
I
know
that
we've
got
a
pipeline
of
projects
that
have
reached
out
to
us
that
are
very
interested
in
both
the
aws
style
credits,
grants
that
are
offered
right
for
projects
that
are
looking
to
just
offset
gas
fees
in
the
early
days
when
they
first
deployed
to
you
know
those
projects
that
are
looking
for
support
and
help
building
right,
as
well
as
improving
things
like
the
cast
filer
and
the
core
protocol,
so
really
really
exciting.
Work
done
by
the
devdao
and
this.
C
This
legal
structure
that
they've
been
working
on
is
no
small
matter.
It's
it's
absolutely
critical
to
get
everything
structured
correctly.
God
knows
we
know
a
lot
about
that.
So
really
happy
to
have
you
guys
working
on
this
and
to
be
partnering
with
you
and
look
forward
to
you
know
much
success
for
the
developers
right.
Our
goal
is
to
scale
opportunity
for
everyone
to
make
it
very
easy
for
developers
to
become
familiar
with
blockchain,
so
they
can
realize
their
own
personal,
professional,
personal
and
professional
goals
and
ambitions
through
this
wonderful
technology.
C
C
Yeah
with
with
that,
I'm
going
to
turn
over
to
the
engineering
status,
so
you
know
we
do
this
every
tuesday
at
this
time.
So
please
do
join
us
and
join
the
the
zoom
call
as
well.
The
updates
are
available
on
youtube
and
you
can
also
look
at
the
old
updates
to
we.
We
stream
them-
and
I
believe
og
will
also
put
a
blog
post
out
for
those
that
want
a
shorter
version,
so
the
team
is
started.
F
C
Got
it
thanks
pewd,
so
we've
started
our
second
sprint
of
our
basically
our
production
version
of
the
casper
protocol.
This
is
a
production
release
version
and
we're
focusing
mostly
on
protocol
upgrades
performance
and
hardening
improvements,
and
we
will
also
complete
an
integration
with
our
custody
provider.
You'll
hear
more
about
our
custody
provider
closer
to
the
end
of
the
month.
C
We
cut
tag
0.76
with
on
february
8th
and
we
deployed
to
the
delta
test
net
delta
testnet
during
the
relaunch
has
been
just
functioning
just
beautifully.
We're
so
pleased.
If
we
look
at
the
network
statistics,
we
are
up
to
329
peers
in
the
network.
Our
current
block
height
is
54.94,
so
it's
it's
been
performing
admirably
here.
C
We
are
noticing
a
lot
of
activity
in
the
auction
contract.
You
can
see
that
here
that
the
era
switchover
is
taking
a
little
bit
longer.
This
is
because
the
auction
state
we
know
that
we
need
some
to
make
some
enhancements
and
changes
to
the
auction
state.
How
the
auction
contract
is
managed
that
is
planned,
probably
shortly
after
mainnet
launch,
we
will
make
minor
improvements
into
how
the
data
structures
are
stored,
but
that
will
that
will
make
an
adjustment
to
how
the
error
switchovers
happen.
We
also
have
a
new
clarity
block
explorer.
C
That's
come
from
the
community,
so
make
services.
Michael
stoyer's
group
is
one
of
the
teams
that
has
been
part
of
the
early
master
testing
project.
You
know
initiative.
Actually,
in
the
early
days
of
charlie,
charlie
testnet,
between
beta
and
delta,
we
had
a
small
group
of
validators
that
were
working
on
the
on
the
network
to
help
harden
it
and
get
it
ready
for
prime
time
and
his
group
has
actually
built
their
own
version
of
clarity
and
stood
it
up.
So
we're
happy
to
offload
this
onto
them.
C
You'll
notice,
a
few
changes
really
here
you
can
see.
We
can
start
packing
a
lot
more
deploys
in
the
block
up
to
100
deploys
here
so
here
we
saw
somebody
really
try
to
dos
the
faucet
and
we'll
see
that
they
tried
repeatedly
to
request
more
funds
from
their
faucet,
and
the
faucet,
of
course,
doesn't
allow
that.
C
So
all
of
their
deploys
failed,
but
they
did
certainly
make
an
attempt
here
so
feel
free
to
use
the
block
explorer
and
take
a
look
at
some
of
the
utilization
of
the
blockchain
and
some
of
the
transactions
that
we're
processing
there.
So
pretty
cool
stuff.
C
Let's
go
back
to
the
status
page
here.
Our
current
focus
again
is
performance,
hardening
and
production
engineering
work.
So
these
are
all
optimizations
that
you'll
see
to
make
the
protocol
more
performant
and
more
robust,
specifically
features
around
syncing
and
hardening
in
terms
of
upgrade
points,
and
you
know
slowing
down
consensus
if
execution
is
lagging
behind.
I'm
really
happy
to
report
that
the
consensus
protocol
itself
is
very
very
fast.
C
It
is
the
vm
or
the
execution
engine
that
is
actually
lagging
now
in
the
overall
system
right.
So
when
you
talk
about
performance
of
a
system,
you
got
to
find
the
weak
link
in
the
chain,
and
that's
where
you
really,
you
know
kind
of
bore
down
on
that
particular
component
to
make
it
faster,
and
so
you
know
with
the
consensus
protocol
for
those
of
you
that
are
aware,
with
the
cbc
methodology,
the
consensus
protocol,
we're
kind
of
locked
and
loaded
right,
there's
very
little.
C
We
can
do
to
change
the
structure
or
the
mathematics
with
the
consensus
protocol,
but
with
the
virtual
machine.
You
know
we
have
to
obviously
go
through
security
testing
and
penetration
testing
and
we're
tied
to
webassembly,
but
there's
a
lot
of
things
we
can
do
in
the
execution
engine
to
make
it
faster
right,
not
the
least
of
which
is
moving
from
the
wasm
interpreter
to
wazimur,
which
is
a
rather
large
undertaking.
But
we
can
do
this.
C
You
know
over
time,
and
this
will
result
in
a
lot
of
there's
a
lot
of
sealing
right,
that
we
can
take
advantage
of
in
terms
of
the
speed
and
performance
of
the
protocol.
So
I'm
very
excited
about
this.
People
are
telling
me
that.
Well,
you
know
it's
a
great
way
to
make
lemonade
out
of
lemons,
but
truly
from
an
engineering
perspective.
C
You
know,
with
the
consensus
protocol,
we're
really
locked
and
loaded
there's
very
little.
We
can
do
in
terms
of
changing
the
course
structure,
the
protocol
and
how
the
protocol
functions,
but
with
the
execution
engine
there's
a
lot,
we
can
do
right,
there's
a
lot.
We
can
do
to
speed
it
up.
So
henry
and
his
team
have
their
work
cut
out
for
them,
but
they
have
a
good
deep
backlog
of
things
they
can
do
to
speed
up
vm
execution.
So
they've
already
started
some
of
that
work.
Some
of
that
work
will
happen
before
mainnet.
C
E
C
Oh
yeah,
here
we
go
yeah.
I
have
two
screens
I'm
looking
at
here,
so
there
we
go.
Thank
you.
I
test
an
sre
so
obviously
supporting
the
delta
test
net.
We'll
also
be
undertaking
a
lot
of
work
in
terms
of
supporting
validators.
We
want
to
start
onboarding
validators
as
soon
as
possible,
the
ones
that
will
actually
be
supporting
genesis.
These
are
the
staking
providers,
those
that
have
you
know,
expressed
an
interest
in
in
running
their
own
node
as
a
staking
provider.
C
If
you're
interested
in
running
a
note
as
a
staking
provider,
please
do
reach
out
to
us,
send
an
email
to
hello
at
casperlabs.io,
and
let
us
know
that
you're
interested
get
involved
in
the
delta
testnet
and
reach
out
to
us
and
we'll
make
sure
that
you're
there
from
day
one
and
participating
with
the
vfta
providers,
bfta
our
participants
on
the
and
then,
of
course,
we're
doing
a
bunch
of
work
around
production,
engineering
and
production
testing
getting
ready
for
launch.
On
the
ecosystem
front.
C
We've
got
a
lot
of
sdk
enhancements
to
the
javascript
sdk,
both
to
support
the
custody
provider
as
well
as
the
hackathon.
We
did
a
hackathon
in
east
denver.
We
had
some
exciting
engagement
there
and
we're
going
to
be
doing
another
hackathon
post
launch
you'll,
hear
more
about
that
here
later
on
we're
doing
some
work
on
the
dsl
to
make
the
dsl
easier
and
more
friendly
to
use,
and
for
those
of
you
that
are
familiar
with
the
cast
filer.
C
The
cast
buyer
does
cross-compile
solidity
to
the
dsl,
so
we
need
to
enhance
the
dsl
and
then
back
port
that
functionality
into
the
cast
filer.
So
there's
a
lot
of
focus
on
the
dsl
right
now
we're
doing
a
demo
for
this
casper
signer.
C
We
need
to
do
some
enhancements
there,
both
to
provide
prototypes
for
hardware
wallet
integrations
as
well
as
for
other
websites
that
want
to
use
the
casper
signer
not
of
the
least
will
be
be
the
devdao
website
when
they
want
to
sign
sign
for
voting
you'll
need
to
sign
with
your
public.
You
know
your
private
keys,
so
that
will
use
the
casper
signer
as
an
example.
E
This
was
the
demo
that
we
did
for
broadly
one
of
our
partners
where
we
are
building
enterprise
solutions
and
they
had
a
unique
situation
where
they
need
to
use
signer
to
be
able
to
sign
twice
like
once
from
the
individual
users
side
and
then
from
the
organization
side.
E
So
we
we
successfully
gave
this
demo
to
broadleaf
so
that
they
can
integrate
the
solution
in
in
their
final.
C
Very
nice
is.
C
That
the
transactions
you
need
to
sign
will
appear
within
the
signer
and
you
can
apply
your
signature
and
when
you
get
the
transaction
there's
some
metadata
that
comes
with
the
transaction,
describing
it
yes,
perfect,
yeah,
that's
exactly
right,
like
a
really
nice
seamless,
integrated
experience
where
somebody
sends
me
a
deploy
to
sign-
and
I
apply
my
signature-
that's
that's
just
absolutely
awesome
exactly
yeah,
very,
very
nice
love
it
and,
of
course
we
are
also
working
on
more
content
around
courses.
You
know
julia's
done
some
terrific
work.
C
If
you
see
the
multi-signature
casper
tutorial
inside
the
developer,
the
developer
getting
started,
guide
she's,
doing
some
great
work
there
to
support
developer
onboarding
and
engagement,
yeah.
C
Yep,
that's
right,
love
it
we're
also
doing
on
the
economics
research
we've
had
some
questions
from
validators.
We
want
to.
You
know,
really
harden
our
rewards
distribution,
so
we're
sanity,
checking
that
and
ensuring
that
the
numbers
are
correct
with
respects
to
what
we
need
to
do
for
inflation
for
years.
One
two
and
three
we've
also
we're
setting
up
the
genesis
block
to
support
the
vfta
requirements
such
that
people
that
are
not
spinning
up
their
own
node
can
delegate
their
tokens
to
a
selected
validator
that
is
going
to
our
staking
provider.
C
C
Oh
yes
and
there's
a
telegram
channel
right
so.
D
C
C
Perfect
and
we'll
include
that
as
well,
so
folks
can
get
started,
yep
perfect,
so
it's
jitsi,
devdao,
dot,
ch,
slash,
dao,
I've
put
it
in
the
youtube
and
joe
will
also
share
it
in
the
telegram
channel.
So
developers
that
are
interested
can
definitely
join
joe.
Let's
get
it
out
on
discord
as
well,
so
folks
can
join
the
dev
down
if
they're
interested
in
grants
and
participating
with
the
dev
dog.
C
This
is
a
great
place
for
them
to
drop
in
and
say,
hello,
terrific
everyone
love
the
engagement,
love
seeing
everybody
on
the
call
join
us
again
next
week
and
have
a
fabulous
week
and
look
forward
to
seeing
you
on
telegram
and
discord,
cheers.