►
From YouTube: CasperLabs Community Call
Description
Rewards Distribution presentation & status update.
A
Morning,
good
morning,
everyone
day
after
Memorial
Day
in
the
United
States.
Thank
you
for
joining
the
Casper
Labs
community
call
those
of
you
listening
live
those
of
you
that
are
listening
to
the
stream
after
after
the
fact,
we're
here
to
give
a
status
update
on
engineering
on
how
we're
progressing
on
the
project
and
we're
also
going
to
talk
about
what
our
stake
is
on.
A
What
our
thinking
is
on
defy
in
addition
to
and
then
I'm
going
to
do
a
product
demo
I
wasn't
able
to
demo
the
deploy
from
the
browser
last
week,
but
we've
actually
launched
it
so
I'm
gonna.
Do
it
deploy
from
the
browser
presentation
and
demonstrate
how
we
sign
keys,
so
the
funding
of
an
account,
the
uploading
of
webassembly
and
then
signing
of
that
you
know,
uploading
the
keys
to
the
signer
and
then
signing
the
transaction.
So,
let's
get
started
without
further
ado.
I'll
give
the
update.
A
So
we
released
node
19
last
week
and
this
enables
deploy
gossipy
and
the
Omega
block
feature
was
there
for
a
while.
You
might
remember
that
we
enabled
Omega
blocks
in
the
test
net
some
time
back,
but
we
also
added
deploy
gossipping.
So
now,
in
the
test
net
we
have
both
Omega
blocks
and
deployment
gossipping
running
one
of
the
things
you'll
notice
is
that
a
liter
block
or
rounds
actually
happen
much
more
slowly
and
the
reason
for
that
is.
We
want
to
limit
the
amount
of
orphans.
A
Slash
conflicts
that
you
see
so
lengthening
the
round
times
gives
the
validators
more
than
enough
time
to
have
the
deploys
propagate
to
the
network
and
the
conflicts
to
be
resolved
right,
so
only
then
unique
deploys
get
proposed
by
the
validator.
So
this
gives
time
when
a
node
gets
a
deploy,
it
gossips
it.
One
of
the
nodes
sees
the
deploy.
A
It
proposes
a
block
because
it's
turned
to
propose
a
block
in
the
round
and
it
has
a
good
degree
of
confidence
that
it's
already
resolved
any
conflicts
from
other
blocks
that
may
be
flying
around
in
the
network
quote-unquote
flying
around
in
the
network.
But
you
know
what
you
get
my
drift
being
gossiped
on
to
the
network
and
so,
as
a
result,
you'll
notice
that
the
leader
blocks
come
through
more
slowly,
but
the
responsiveness
of
funding
account
requests
is
significantly
improved,
which
I'm
pretty
happy
about
that.
A
A
B
A
A
A
You
check
and
make
sure
that
all
the
validators
are
in
fact
running
Omega
blocks,
because
we
should
have
seen
an
Omega
block
by
now.
If
that
was
the
case,
there
isn't
any
way
for
us
to
verify
that
they're
running
with
Omega
blocks,
but
it
seems
if
they're
not
because
we
haven't
seen
it'll
make
there's
no
Omega
blocks
been
proposed.
This
is
an
example
of
an
Omega
block
here.
C
B
A
A
A
A
Okay,
moving
along
so
yeah,
so
we've
got
deploy
gossiping
and
Omega
block.
So
that's
how
come
that
validator
was
able
to
get
my
my
deploys
here
this
one
here
and
you
see
this
validator
was
stink.
46!
That's
a
proposal
this
one
here
yeah.
So
this
is
a
validator
with
stake.
46.
This
validator
isn't
part
of
the
deploy,
Kasper
labs,
IO
endpoint
right.
So
the
faucet
just
points
to
deploy
Kasper
lives
on
Io,
but
they
were
able
to
get
these
two
deploys,
which
are
my
faucet
funding
requests
because
of
deploy
gossiping.
A
A
B
A
A
Maybe
it's
just
a
drawing
problem,
but
it
doesn't
look
like
it's
finalizing,
which
is
strange,
so
I
do
follow
up
on
that
Ashok.
Please
yeah!
So
yeah
release
note
19
deployed
gossipping.
You
just
got
a
quick
demo
of
deploy
gossipping
there
and
we
did
bounce
the
network
change
to
apply
the
node
19
software
and
that's
what
we
introduced
Omega
blocks.
So
we
thought
we
would
have
run
it
and
we
increased
it
a
lot
roundly
right.
So
the
error
duration
is
longer
ash
oak,
the
error
duration.
It
should
still
be
three
hours,
not
eight
minutes.
B
A
And
so
we've
got
five
nodes
that
are
out
need
to
fix
those
I'll
follow
up
on
that
today.
So
for
those
of
you
that
are
aware,
we
are
building
a
rust
node.
We
are
ahead
of
schedule
on
that
effort.
We
are
doing
all
of
our
work
in
a
new
repository
and
we're
gonna
drop
that
repository
into
the
castle,
aus
repository
at
such
time
that
we're
ready
it'll
be
a
little
bit
of
a
mishmash
at
that
point.
A
We
are
building
a
basic
finality
detector
and
the
generic
synchronizer
in
for
a
highway,
so
we're
building
highway
in
one
module
and
then
we're
building
a
node
that
supports
pluggable
consensus.
That
means
we
can
have
a
generic
consensus
implementation
and
if
we
wanted
to
swap
it
out
with
another
consensus
implementation,
we
can
do
that
very
much
in
theory,
so
we're
really
trying
to
separate
concerns.
If
that
makes
sense,
we
want
to
keep
you
know
the
concerns
of
consensus,
separate
from
the
concerns
of
communication
and
in
principle
this
should
be
very
doable.
A
A
And
then
we
are
supporting
multiple
key
types
and
with
supporting
multiple
key
types,
we
need
to
update
the
Genesis
account
to
use
this
different
key
type.
Instead
of
just
the
easy
2
5
5
91,
validator
keys
will
still
use
82
five
five
nine
one
correct
this
is
only
wallet
accounts.
Is
that
right?
Okay,.
A
A
A
A
It
works
in
conjunction
with
clarity,
I'll
demo
that
later
we're
creating
a
voting
applications
to
support,
crypto,
chicks,
they're,
doing
a
virtual
hackathon
or
remote
hackathon
and
we're
gonna
create
a
voting
app
and
so
we're
building
the
smart
contracts
and
the
front-end
interface
for
that
we're
gonna
open
source
that
so
people
can
build
voting
apps
if
they
wish
to
using
our
technology
and
we're
updating
the
Python
client.
The
Python
client
is
also
going
to
become
a
first
order,
client
and
the
Scala
I
think
kind.
A
A
A
C
Good
afternoon,
everybody-
and
let
me
just
share
my
screen
better
than
it
did
last
time
as
mother
said
today,
we
will
be
talking
about
the
centralized,
finance
and
phases,
just
note
that
you
know
I'm,
not
a
finance
guy
I'm,
a
microeconomics
guy.
So
if
it's
not
an
auction,
I,
don't
really
know
anything
about
it,
but
you
know
I
can
speculate.
So
what
is
the
centralized?
Fine?
It's
right
there.
So
it's
a
basically
emulation
of
at
least
of
this
stage.
It's
a
relation
of
traditional
financial
assets.
C
You
know
in
mechanisms
by
means
of
tokenization,
of
course,
by
it
organization.
We
do
simply
know
digital
representation
of
these
things
or
the
platform
typically
associated
with
some
kind
of
adapt
type
structures
that
makes
is
actually
useful
and
not
merely
symbolic.
You
know
examples.
Of
course
you
know
include
things
like
stable
coins,
lending
platforms,
things
like
maker
Dow,
which
I
believe
is
a
hybrid
between
essentially
stable
Queen
and
the
lending
platform,
various
insurance
things.
In
fact,
you
could
look
at
the.
C
If
you
give
me
just
a
second.
So
if
you
look
at,
you
know,
defy
polls
right
and
we
take
a
look
at
what
these
things
are.
Well,
there's
some
variety,
but
a
lot
of
it
is
at
the
stage
some
form
of
lending,
including
a
may.
Here's
that
I
mentioned,
which
functions
a
bit
too.
You
know
sort
of
like
a
hybrid
between
you
know,
there's
a
bank
in
a
stable
quit.
C
You
know
so
total
you
know
dollars
were
locked
into
these
contracts
peaked
at
something
like
1.2
billion
in
February
of
this
year,
and
this
has
grown
from
essentially
zero
in
late
2017
on
the
first
two
Z's
were
actually
produced
rate
and
there's
seems
to
be
a
lot
of
enthusiasm,
but
the
very
little
clarity
right
and
the
alt
okay.
That
was
specifically.
But
what
do
we
business?
C
You
know
lack
of
clarity
in
the
next
slide,
but
you
know
it
will
cover
the
risk
suffered,
centralized
finance,
at
least
as
I
perceive
them
the
prospects
and
how
Casper
labs
might
support
these
applications
all
right.
So
what
what
I
love
you
like
talking
about
trade-offs
or
what
was
the
trade
officer
you
were
facing
when
you
were
charged
in
the
head?
Visitor
provide-
and
you
know,
support
for
decentralized
finance
at
the
obvious
one.
It
was
first
always
risk
is
the
complexity
of
the
code.
You
know
possibly
worsened
by
poor.
C
Have
you
know
Kim
kitchen
drawers
all
kinds
of
things
right,
of
course,
this
is,
you
know,
of
course,
has
an
you
know
analog
in
the
real
world
right,
because
you
know
real
world
legal
contracts
are
also
a
form
of
complex
coped
in
a
way,
but
they
benefit
from
the
fact
that
in
the
real
world
you
have
course
you
have
lawyers
who
have
established
means
of
resolving
a
problem
when
you
basically
hit
the
buck
right
for
us
in
the
crypt
of
world.
There
isn't
necessarily
you
know,
standard
operating
procedure
for
that
event.
C
So,
but
you
know,
but
what's
the
better
it
of
turning
legal
contracts
into
cold,
alright,
so
well,
one
of
them
is
II
know.
The
fact
is
that,
though
the
gold
is
actually
relatively
transparent,
even
if
it's
complex
right
in
the
sense
that
you
know
it's
sitting
in
the
repository
somewhere
and
I
can
see
it.
This
isn't,
you
know
going
to
be
normally
the
case.
For
you
know
some,
you
know
financial
products.
You
may
be
tracking.
C
You
know
to
traditional
meats
right
I
mean
you
may
be
able
to
obtain
the
actual
contract,
but
you
know
it's
made
it
difficult
for
you
and,
of
course
it
does
a
little
bit.
If
is
you
know,
the
whole
thing
is
completely
formalized
right.
I
mean
the
computer
code,
doesn't
admit
any
ambiguity,
you
know,
unlike
legal
formulations,
so
you
know
you
you're
eliminating
one
potential.
C
You
know
mode
of
failure,
but
of
course
you
are
in
to
potentially
introduce
you
know,
failure
to
complexity,
so
it's
a
clear
how
the
straight
of
shakes
out,
but
so
how
would
one
that
resolves
this
and
the
you
know
tamp
down
this?
You
know
risk
of
complexity.
Well,
I
mean
because
it's
code
right
I
mean
you
may
be
able
to
apply
something
like
you
know,
formal
verification,
techniques
of
various
kinds.
C
Maybe
because
of
course,
most
fees
are
expected
to
be
open
source
projects,
you
may
be
able
to
come
up
with
a
process,
for
you
know
independent
certification
by
the
community.
And
finally,
you
know
you
may
develop
the
busy
reduce
complexity
we
develop
and
specialized
languages,
or
just
even
libraries
that
will
you
know,
standardize
how
you
write
these
things
so
that
you
know
you
are
less
likely
to
use
bugs.
If
you're,
you
know
not
reinventing
the
bicycle
every
single
time,
you
write
a
contract
all
right,
so
there
are
some
routes
to
resolving
this.
C
You
know
so
you
know
this
is.
Maybe
this
is
not
the
greatest
possible
risk.
Second,
you
know
this
risk
is
regulatory
uncertainty
rate
means
so
and
the
the
more
you
push
towards
complete
the
centralization.
The
more
certain
teaser
is
because
there
is
no
real.
You
know
until
last
few
years,
no
real
precedent
for
things
of
that
nature
or
it's
a
release,
no
precedence
that
didn't
look
very
much
like
a
pyramid
scheme.
C
So
you
know
the
regulators
are
naturally
quite
concerned
that
there
are,
you
know,
there's
no
key
to
keep
in
you
know
know
anybody
can
just
come
in
and
do
whatever
they
want.
If
they
probably
you
know,
put
up
some
money.
So
you
know
the
specifics
of
this
regulatory.
You
know
and
of
course,
I.
Don't
think
I
have
to
explain
you
know
the
benefit.
The
centralization
to
people
interested
in
crypto
I
think
we
can
think
this
is
a
given
you
like
the
centralization,
but
you
know
what
is
this:
there
are
specifics
of
regulatory
uncertainty.
C
I
mean
well,
one
particular
example
is
you
know
like,
for
example,
if
you
know
somebody
were
to
transfer,
you
know
all
their
assets
into
crypto
so
as
to
avoid
you
know
having
to
give
it
up.
You
know
core
judgment
right.
The
question
actually
really
well
now
you
know
what
would
we
do
right?
I
mean
you
know,
provided
that
you
know
you're
in
the
US.
It's
not
like
the
police.
Can,
you
know,
beat
your
private
key
out
of
you.
C
So
you
know
you
kind
of
create
a
big
problem
for
the
platform,
because
now
it's
CEO
looks
like
the
platform
is
basically
hiding
assets
that
the
state
would
like
to
receive
and
there
would
appear
to
be.
You
know
no
way
for
the
state
to
actually
receive
these
so
yeah.
This
is
a
very
difficult
problem
and
you
know
they're,
certainly
very
big
downsize
to
make
it
making
it
overly
easy
for
the
state
to
intervene.
I
mean,
in
fact
this
would
destroy
decentralization
if
it
were,
you
know
completely
unchecked.
So
how
does
one
address
this
problem?
C
I
mean
the
first
step
to
this
is
probably
having
you
know,
a
responsive
governance
mechanisms
that
can
coordinate
the
actions,
so
validators
user
stabbed
developers
and
the
core
platform
team
to
make
sure
that
there
is
a
coherent
response
so
that
you
know
you
present
a
united
front
of
that
you
can
actually
negotiate
a
reasonable
solution.
You
know
you
know,
perhaps
you
know
some
kind
of
you
know
in
the
extreme
cases,
maybe
a
fork
or
something
like
that.
C
C
You
know,
risk
number
three
is
application
uncertainty
and
we
talked
about
this
in
somewhere
other
materials.
Basically
you
know
you
want,
like
you
want
this
wild-west.
You
know,
partly
you
know,
to
see
if
somebody
can
discover
you
know
some
business
models.
That
was
previously
no
right,
but
the
downside
is
that
you
know
most
business
models
founder,
we're
not
going
to
be
viable
and
a
lot
of
people
are
going
to
write
so
well.
This
is
a
you
know.
This
is
a
natural
process.
C
So
they
you
know
they
can
develop,
fail
and
learned
quickly
as
quick
as
you
can
it
and
the
final
risk,
which
is
very
very
like
so
that
first
risk
right
I
mean
it
affects
many
things
in
watching
platforms
that
aren't
necessarily
specific
to
decentralized
finance,
although
it's
most
obese,
you
know
in
that
case,
but
the
final
risk
or
for
this
error
is
fine.
It's
implicit!
You
know.
By
doing
these
things,
you
are
inviting
an
intrusion.
You
know
by
finance
guys
right,
I
mean
those
are
Wall
Street,
hedge
funds
and
whatnot.
C
You
know
you
know
there
is
an
opening.
These
people
will
come
in.
These
people
are
not
necessarily
you
know
in
to
further
the
sexualization
or
anything
like
that.
They're
trying
to
you
know
capture
the
market
to
the
best
of
their
ability
right,
so
so
something
to
be
very,
very
afraid
of,
because
these
people
are
really
smart.
They
have
good
lawyers
and
they
have
a
lot
more
money.
Ism.
You
know
anybody
encrypted.
So
you
know
the
benefit
of
bringing
these
guys
in
is
that
legitimizes
blockchain
in
particular,
this
is
actually
a
form
of
protection
against.
C
You
know
regulatory
attacks,
because
these
people
have
establish
a
verb
in
operations.
They
have
influence.
You
know
they
know
how
to
work
the
system,
so
it
provides
you
with
a
shield.
So
you
know
how
do
you
deal
with
this?
Well,
you
know
I
mean
we
try
to
incentive.
You
know,
discourage
snowballing
and
single
points
of
failure
to
the
best
of
our
ability
right
and
if
you
know
you
do
not
have
you
minimize
returns
to
scale-
and
you
know
you
minimize.
The
number
of
these
single
points
or
I
should
say
single
points
of
CAPTCHA.
C
Rather,
as
if
you
minimize
these
things,
then
you
know
it.
Basically,
you
have
lesser
less
to
be
afraid
of
from
you
know
some
external
behemoths,
you
know
pouring
ends
there.
It's
not
going
to
help
so
much
right,
at
least
in
the
sense
that
you
know
just
putting
in
more
money,
doesn't
give
you
an
exponentially
growing
advantage.
For
example,
right.
A
My
perspective
I
mean
I
think
so.
When
we
talk
about
you
know
the
implications
of
this
forecast
for
labs
and
how
important
is
it
for
Casper
labs
I
mean
definitely
Casper
allows
us
building
a
high
security,
decentralized
blockchain
right,
so
in
principle
we
want,
we
will
support
validator
sent
rotation.
It
will
not
be
delegated
proof
of
staying
right.
There's
no
voting
mechanism.
It
should
be
as
open
as
possible,
so
anybody
can
join
the
network
whenever
they
want.
This
is
the
idea
this
is.
A
This
is
where
we
want
to
get
to
with
our
protocol,
and
given
that
defy
seems
like
a
very
natural
and
good
thing,
I
mean
the
challenge
that
I
struggle
with
is
I
find
like.
If-
and
maybe
this
isn't
totally
true
for
Assyrian,
but
it
feels
like
you
know.
The
etherium
hard
fork
happened
because
of
the
DAO
hack
right,
like
I,
don't
want
to
have
to
be
forking
the
core
platform
myself
or
our
community,
because
somebody
wrote
some
buggy
code
because
the
probability
of
somebody
writing
buggy
code,
the
first
time
is
written,
is
literally
100
percent.
A
I.
Think
it
is,
it
is
so
hard
you
implement.
All
of
the
quality
control
procedures
to
get
defect
free
code
like
this
is
what
NASA
does
right.
Nasa
has
to
have
defect
free
code,
life
sciences,
companies
that
are
building
firmware
for
defibrillators
and
IV
pumps.
They
have
to
have
defect
free
code.
I
cannot
believe
that
an
open
source
developer
by
himself
herself
building
a
defy
contract
is
going
to
follow
any
like
nearly
that
level
of
rigor.
A
Right
like
there
are
major
checks
and
balances
that
are
in
place,
and
while
we
build
built
something
that
supports
continuous
integration
right
and
you
can,
you
can
build
a
whole
bunch
of
unit
tests.
I
mean
there's
a
lot
of
investment
that
goes
into
and
a
lot
of
best
practices
that
go
into
writing
defect.
Free
code.
It's
really
it's
very,
very
extremely
rigorous
for
those
of
you
that
you
know
have
worked
in
those
kinds
of
environments.
You
know
exactly
what
I'm
talking
about
and
and
and
that's
what
it
takes
to
really
have
a
high
degree.
A
I
mean
formal
verification
can
help.
Definitely
having
dsls
can
also
help
for
sure,
but
we're
a
long
way
from
like
having
confidence
that
this
immutable
contract
isn't
going
to
have
bugs
in
it
right
and
my
money
isn't
gonna
get
locked
up
or
that
the
the
author
didn't
create
some
kind
of
backdoor
right,
because
how
many
people
are
actually
doing
a
code
review
seriously
so
I
feel
like
a
reputation
system,
is
gonna,
be
really
really
big
in
this,
where
you
I
think
that's
what
it
took
with
HTTPS.
A
Even
for
a
long
time,
people
didn't
put
their
credit
cards
into
web
browsers
unless
they
saw
something
was
Verisign
secured,
right
and,
and
you
start
going
through
third-party
certifications
to
then
know
that
okay,
this
contract
is
secure
or
I
trust
the
central
authority
that
has
built
it
right,
but
then
it's
not
to
centralize
finance
anymore.
So
that's
kind
of
this
stuff
that
that's
what
I've
been
grappling
with.
You
know,
as
you
guys
are
aware.
A
And
so
it's
it's.
It's
a
it's
a
challenge
right,
because
if
we
want
adoption
of
blockchain
broadly
for
business,
businesses
have
to
be
able
to
update
the
state
of
their
internal
contracts
and
buy
the
same
extension.
D
Phi
has
to
have
an
immutable
state
of
the
contract
because
you
certainly
don't
want
somebody
going
in
and
reaching
in
and
stealing
all
your
money
when
they
upgrade
a
contract.
So
that's
that's.
A
The
pickle
I'd
love
to
hear
back
from
the
community
hit
me
up
on
telegram
or
discord,
and
let
me
know
what
you
think
about
this
topic,
because
I
certainly
don't
have
the
answers
to
this
right.
Like
it,
you
know
I.
If
we
want,
if
we
they
are
diametrically
opposed
to
one
another.
So
that's
my
take
on
it.
I
don't
know
if
anybody
on
the
call
has
any
thoughts
on
it,
but
that's
my
take
on
it.
I.
C
C
You
know
eventually,
there's
basically
going
to
merge
some
kind
of
essentially
standardized
solution
for
a
lot
of
the
elements
of
these
contracts
right,
but
it
might
be
that
probably
be
open
source
and,
in
fact
improve.
You
know,
in
fact
the
proof
would
be
expected
to
be
open
source
by
everybody.
But
of
course
you
know
it's
going
to
be
so
complex
as
that.
Inevitably,
it
will
be
controlled
by
relatively
few
core
developers
right.
So,
even
though
everything
you
know
is
formally
decentralized,
the
you
know
Aaron's
open-source.
C
Nevertheless,
you
now
have
you
know
a
single
point
of
capture,
which
is
you
know,
a
box.
You
feel
squishy
humans
run
around
and
we
know
probably
like
five
all
right.
So
this
is
you
know
this
is
a
risk
of
centralization,
but
it's
not
clear
how
to
entirely
get
rid
of
it.
I
mean
essentially
in
any
complex.
C
You
know,
system
like
there's,
there's
always
some
key
people.
You
know
somewhere
right,
I
mean
that
but
I
don't
think
we're
gonna
solve
this
problem.
Many
times
soon,
I
mean
it's
like
even
the
problems
that
we
face
as
a
platform
evac
or
development
team
right
I
mean
like
basically
what
you
know,
probably
as
I
said
show
all
of
our
code
commits.
Are
you
know
by
designated
group
of
people
who
are
played
by
Casper
labs?
Writing
it.
A
C
Know
like
the
example,
in
my
mind,
is
always
Linux.
Ido
I
mean
II.
Assure
me
it's
open-source
project
is
the
world
because
they,
you
know
how
many
people
are.
Writing
the
curl.
So
the
whole
thing
you
know
it
still
ends
up
depending
on
the
handful
of
people.
So
you
know
possibly
you
know
you
know.
The
needs
of
a
blogging
platform
might
spur
enough
innovation
that
somebody
will
finally
discover
some
way
to
incentivize.
You
know
decentralize
development
of
the
schools
you're
never
actually
reliant.
C
You
know
what
a
handful
of
people
you
know
who
have
some
special
knowledge
of
the
code.
You
know
you
write
code
in
some
decentralized
fashion.
You
know
completely
decentralized
fashion
in
a
ways
as
the
code
remains
verifiable
and
you
don't
meet
some
standard
of
quality,
but
you
we
don't
know
what
I
mean
I
mean.
Maybe
formal
verification
is
the
solution
in
the
end
you
know
I
mean,
while
we
think
about
you,
know
like
if
you're
going
to
be
putting
you
know
10
million
dollars
into
a
blockchain
contract.
C
You
know
you
better
expect
that
it
has
been.
You
know
formula
verified
instead
of
you
know
just
written
by
some
guy.
You
know
in
the
basement,
you
know
in
the
week
so,
but
so
you
know
these
are
the
trade-offs
right
to
me
the
curve
face.
You
don't
necessarily
have
solutions
for
these,
but
you
know,
however,
you
know,
but
we
are
making
life
easier
for
the
centralized
finance
developers
sort
of
indirectly
right
I
mean
first
of
all,
you
know
because
we're
doing
them
to
provide
plenty
of
support
for
general
DAB
developers.
C
All
right
I
mean
Excel
guides.
You
know,
libraries,
you
know
whatever
you
want.
You
know
we
always
carefully
think
about
incentive
mechanisms.
Your
Putin
ends
that
you
know
should
be
preventing
Platt
from
capture
by
large
players,
which,
as
I
mentioned,
you
know
it's
potential
risk
when
you're
inviting
traditional
finding
finance
into
these
matters
right
I
mean
flexor
development
tool
chain
so
that
you
know
you
can
write.
Ideally
in
the
future.
C
You
know
in
whatever
you
know
language
is,
you
know
most
convenient
for
you
right
I
mean
because
there
certainly
some
languages
that
are
going
to
be
much
much
better
at
you
know
representing
these
either
these
algorithms
that
need
to
be
completely
secure
and
also
verifiable.
I
mean
something
like
F
sharp
comes
to
mind.
You
know
we
have
a
price
stabilization
mechanisms,
although
it's
not
really
directly
by
alright,
they,
the
press,
civilization.
To
be
clear,
doesn't
you
know
it's
gas
price
stabilization?
It
doesn't,
you
know,
prevent
something.
C
Like
you
know,
token
price
collapse,
which
would
you
know,
be
a
very
serious
risk
for
you
know
most
defy
applications,
so
you
have
seen
recently,
but
never
is
less
stabilized
and
gas
prices.
You
know
reduce
the
general
uncertainty,
you
know,
invites
more
money
into
the
system
and
then,
once
you
have
more
money
in
the
system,
it
becomes
more
attractive
to
build
decentralized
applications.
C
But
you
know
generally
I
would
say
right
now
is
to
support
all
sorts
of
novel
business
applications.
But
without
you
know,
single-mindedly
cheese,
you
know
you
know.
Basically,
you
know
the
digital
copy
of
a
bank
or
something
it's
just
because
you
know
it
promises
that
you
know
that
will
bring
a
lot
of
money
into
the
platform
we
have
to
be.
You
know
we
have
to
think
long
term
right
and
they
know
perhaps
lot
woozi's.
C
You
know
a
lot
of
the
existing
examples
might
not
be
really
viable
in
the
long
term,
I
mean,
as
I
said.
You
know,
this
is
a
two-year
old
thing,
pretty
much
the
Wild
West,
so
you
know
we'll
have
to
see
how
it
shakes
out
and
you
know,
adjust
the
correctly.
But
you
know
if
anybody
has
any
questions
you
know
we
can
definitely
have
you
know
another
one
of
these
stocks,
where
we
dive
in
depth
into
some
aspects.
Look
interesting.
Thank
you.
A
A
All
right,
let's
I'm,
going
to
give
this
a
shot.
The
test
nut
is
acting
funny
right
now.
So
let's
see
what
we
can
do
here
about
deploying
we're
experiencing
an
issue
in
test
net,
so
I've
gone
ahead
and
I've
built
a
bunch
of
example
contracts
here
these
are
in
Casper
labs
execution
engine.
They
just
do
make
build
contracts
and
you'll
get
a
bunch
of
wasum
locally
and
they
they
will
drop
into
the
target
release
unknown.
Thirty-Two
unknown
thirty-two
was
on
folder,
and
so
let's
go
in
here.
We've
got
one
here.
A
A
Okay,
so
we
got
the
tic-tac-toe
a
mailing
list,
hello
name
define,
let's
do
count.
I
always
like
the
counter
define.
Let's
see
here,
was
counter
to
find
treasure
to
account
badge
bonding
call
hello,
mate
call
counter,
define
so
look,
let's
go
ahead
and
we'll
well
deploy
counter
define,
okay,
so
I've
gone
in
and
I've
got
two
accounts
that
are
funded
demo,
one
in
demo,
3
I
really
do
hope.
A
I
have
the
keys
locally,
so
I'll
need
to
just
check
here
real
quickly
and
make
sure
I've
got
the
keys
locally
on
my
machine,
I'm
gonna
do
that
off-screen
and
minutes
1.
Second
demo
and
demo.
Are
you
ok,
great,
so
I've
got
I?
Have
the
keys
for
these
accounts
so
I'm
going
to
go
over
here
to
deploy
contract,
I'm
gonna
say,
select
the
type
of
deploy?
Well.
The
first
thing:
let's
do
in
here:
let's
back
up
here
and
I'm,
going
to
go
into
and
create
a
new
vault.
So
this
is
the
Casper
lab
signer.
A
A
B
B
A
B
B
C
A
B
A
B
B
C
B
B
B
A
B
B
B
A
C
B
B
A
B
A
Minutes
yeah.
A
Everyone,
thanks
for
dialing
in
and
thanks
for
those
of
you
that
listen
to
all
the
way
through
thanks
for
your
patience,
cheers
have
a
great
week.
You.