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From YouTube: DXbiz Weekly Gathering [2022-05-30]
Description
00:00 DXbiz Weekly Gathering [2022-05-30]
01:00 Unstoppable Domains Presentation
34:39 Quarterly or Biannual Checkpoints
48:45 ETHCC - Tickets?
50:51 Bogota - Market Plan? - DXvoice call topic.
B
Hello
and
welcome
to
the
dxdow
business
call
from
monday
30th
of
may
2022.
we
on
the
agenda.
Today
we
don't
have
any
new
member
introductions
under
exploring.
We
have
unstoppable
domains
and
humanity
check
and
under
the
experience
discussions,
we
have
quarterly
dow
level,
checkpoints
and
yeah
a
few
things
that
are
in
plan
like
a
virtual
retreat,
that's
going
to
be
happening
around
devcon
and
under
dx
events.
We
have
ecc
the
last
round
of
tomorrow
and
some
planning
around
the
dx
hackathon
in
bogota
and
yeah.
D
All
right,
thank
you.
Well,
it's
nice
to
meet
everyone,
I'm
charlie
from
ensemble
domains,
I'm
on
the
business
development,
team
and
yeah
here
to
give
you
all
an
overview
on
our
nft
domains
and
a
couple
of
products
that
we're
interested
in
getting
out
there
and
getting
some
usage
so
I'll
go
ahead
and
share
my
screen.
If
I
can
here
and
I'm
sure
most
of
you
are
familiar
with
nft
domains,
you
know
you're,
probably
aware
of
unstoppable
or
maybe
ens.
A
Not
yet
sometimes
it
glitches,
you
may
have
to
log
out
and
come
back
gotcha
give
it
a
try.
Yep.
D
See
your
twitter
yeah,
oh
great,
okay,
so
first
use
case
for
nft
domains
is
simplifying
crypto
payments,
so
I'm
sure
you've
all
sent
some
crypto
in
this
case
sending
some
eth.
So
the
idea
was
to
be
able
to
input
nft
domains
in
the
send
field
so
that
you
have
a
human
readable
address
when
you're
sending
crypto.
D
So
it
kind
of
replaces
the
need
for
copy
and
pasting
addresses,
makes
payments
a
little
more
intuitive,
a
little
less
scary
for
people
and
it's
kind
of
like
venmo
right
where
you
have
a
venmo
and
you
can
say,
hey,
send
me
money
to
my
venmo
name
versus
a
complicated
string
of
characters.
So
that
was
the
first
use
case
for
us
and
it's
super
easy
to
attach.
Crypto
addresses
to
your
domain,
I'm
going
to
show
you
a
different
tab
here.
F
D
Let's
see
okay,
so
this
is
our
management
profile
and
you
can
see
here's
my
pfp,
so
pfp
supports.
If
you
have
an
avatar,
you
like
you
can
attach
it
to
a
domain.
Just
like
you
can
verify
some
different
things
like
social
handle.
Discord
twitter
if
you
want
to
humanity
check
we'll
get
into
a
little
bit
later,
but
this
is
essentially
proving
that
I
am
a
human
and
then
for
attaching
crypto
addresses
super
easy,
you're,
just
copying
and
pasting
into
these
fields.
So
anytime
someone
sends
krypto
to
charlieby.nft.
D
It's
going
to
look
up
and
see
what
crypto
addresses
are
attached
to
that
domain,
and
you
can
also
host
a
website
on
web3.
So,
with
your
domain,
you
can
launch
a
personal
page.
You
can
do
an
nft
gallery.
We
have
some
front-end
templates,
we
provide
it's
pretty
cool
and
this
content
is
stored
on
ipfs
and
it's
a
website
that
you
own
forever.
So
with
a
unstoppable
domain,
once
you
buy
one,
you
do
own
it
forever.
D
They
start
at
five
dollars.
They
go
up
to
a
couple
hundred
thousand
for
some
of
the
more
speculative
domains.
So
if
I
want
to
get
like
a
cars.crypto
that
could
be
pretty
expensive,
but
then
for
all
the
trademarks
out
there
trademark
companies,
we
protect
them.
So
that's
one
of
our
differentiators
compared
to
some
of
the
other
nft
domains
out
there
is
that
once
you
buy
an
ensemble
domain,
it's
yours
forever!
So
if
you're
a
visa
or
your
american
airlines
or
something
like
that,
you
reach
out
to
us,
we
have
your
domains
protected.
D
We
try
to
avoid
squatting
as
much
as
possible.
I
think
it's
pretty
web
2
issue,
we
believe
in
digital
property
rights,
so
we
protect
domains,
especially
for
brands
and
celebrities,
because
we
don't
want
people
just
buying
handfuls
of
domains
and
then
holding
people
hostage
when
it
really
should
be
theirs.
Of
course,
there's
a
lot
of
advantages
to
having
web3
sites
versus
being
beholden
to
web
2
providers
like
godaddy
or
verisign.
D
And
when
they
get
hacked,
you
get
hacked
so
we're
kind
of
moving
away
from
that
model
with
nft
domains,
and
then,
of
course,
our
users
are
always
looking
for
more
functionality
for
domains.
So
let
me
just
switch
my
screen
again
here,
one
more
time,
so
the
most
recent
use
case
or
the
newest
functionality
for
nft
domains
is
called
log
in
with
unstoppable
and
logging
is
our
web3
sso
and
it
sits
alongside
some
of
the
other
popular
options
that
we've
all
seen.
D
Metamask
wall
connect,
coinbase
wallet,
big
difference
here
is
that
with
login,
with
unstoppable
users
can
permission
on
and
off
chain
data.
So,
instead
of
just
getting
a
wallet,
address,
you're
going
to
be
able
to
collect
more
data
from
users
in
a
way:
that's
still
user
controlled.
So
you
can
see
right
here.
You
can
input
your
nft
domain.
We
are
adding
a
flow
to
claim
a
free
domain
right
here.
So
if
you
don't
already
have
an
nft
domain,
you
click
get
a
domain.
It
pulls
up
a
search
tab.
D
You
can
input
something
and
it'll
suggest
some
free
domains.
You
claim
it
right
there
into
your
wallet
completely
free
process.
Gas
fees
are
covered
by
unstoppable
and
then,
if
you
want
to
purchase
a
shorter
cooler
one,
you
can
do
that
and
there's
a
revenue
share
for
whoever
integrates
the
the
widget
here.
So
companies
that
integrate
login
with
unstoppable
don't
have
to
pay
for
this
service.
They
can
offer
free
domains
to
their
users
through
it
and
they
can
earn
revenue
if
they
want
to
it's
totally
customizable.
D
So
we
input
our
domain
here.
The
user
selects
metamask
or
wildconnect
as
a
subconnector,
so
same
kind
of
security,
you're
signing
with
your
private
key
and
then
this
is
where
it
gets
interesting
in
that
the
dap
can
select
a
bunch
of
different
scopes,
and
this
is
where
we're
going
to
add
all
sorts
of
different
fields.
So
right
now
we're
just
seeing
domain
records
and
wild
address,
because
that's
what
the
dap
want
to
request.
But
now
dapps
can
request
things
like
email
address.
D
Twitter
handle
humanity
check,
so
these
are
the
scopes
that
will
be
customized
per
dap,
depending
on
what
they're
looking
for
some
dapps
might
want
an
email
for
things
like
marketing,
because
if
you're
just
using
metamask
it's
hard
to
understand
who
your
users
are,
and
you
can't
really
contact
them
one-to-one.
So
what
a
lot
adapts
do
today
is
they
say:
hey
follow
us
on
twitter.
Follow
us
on
discord,
which
is
pretty
opt-in
right.
D
You
have
to
have
followers,
take
those
actions
and
then,
if
you
want
to
say
hey,
there's
a
bug,
we
have
a
bounty
or
here's
a
new
feature.
You
don't
really
have
a
one-to-one
line
of
communication
so
for
the
marketing
people
out
there
being
able
to
say
hey,
can
we
please
have
your
email?
You
know
here's
what
we're
going
to
do
with
that
we're
going
to
do
a
newsletter,
we're
going
to
keep
you
updated.
D
It's
pretty
powerful
versus
not
really
understanding
anything
and
just
having
a
list
of
wild
addresses,
and
then
the
other
big
use
case
here
for
dapps
is
the
ability
to
run
rewards
so
humanity
check.
Is
that
piece
I
briefly
mentioned
and
humanity
check?
Let
me
switch
screens
one
more
time
here:
humanity
check
uses
a
verification,
service
called
persona
and
what
it's
doing
is
scanning
a
government
id
and
when
the
user
says
yes,
they
take
a
picture
of
the
government.
Id
does
a
face
scan
and
then
a
json
token
is
provided
to
the
dap.
D
That
says
this
person
has
passed
humanity
check.
We
know
that
they're,
a
unique
user,
unique
individual.
So
now
you
can
reward
them
with
a
token,
for
example,
because
if
you
don't
have
something
verifying
that
someone's
unique
people
will
abuse
the
system,
we've
seen
it
a
thousand
times
in
crypto
people
use
hundreds
of
wild
addresses
to
act
like
they're,
a
single
person,
and
so
what
humanity
check
does
is
you
it
says?
Hey?
Can
I
see
your
government
id
it
verifies.
D
Certain
image
jason
took
token
is
provided
to
the
dap,
along
with
the
wallet
address,
along
with
the
email
and
the
nft
domain,
and
unsubtle
domains
does
not
collect
this
private
information
and
neither
does
the
dap.
So
it's
double
blind
in
the
eyes
of
unstoppable
and
the
dap
persona
is
the
company
that
does
the
verification.
So
they
do
keep
the
information.
But
the
user
can
request
that
it's
deleted
after
verification.
D
So
you
know
at
this
point:
someone
has
to
store
some
information
when
we're
doing
verification
and
we're
going
to
have
a
layered
approach
to
it
right
where
right
now,
it's
persona,
but
we're
eventually
going
to
have
like
10
different
verification
providers
that
users
can
choose
from
so
not
only
will
they
have
a
bunch
of
different
choices.
They
can
build
up
a
trust
score
if
a
d5
platform
wants
to
have
some
sort
of
institutional
level
product
or
maybe
have
special
rates
for
high
net
worth
individuals,
but
either
way.
D
The
the
play
here
is
that
dapps
want
to
understand
a
little
bit
more
about
their
users.
They
still
want
users
to
be
able
to
remain
anonymous
if
they
want,
but
they
are
looking
to
collect
some
more
information,
a
way
that's
user
controlled.
So
that's
kind
of
how
we're
thinking
about
login
is
on
and
off
chain
data,
still
completely
user,
controlled,
free
domain
distribution
for
users,
and
then
verification
which
will
just
unlock
all
sorts
of
cool
use
cases,
especially
for
you
know,
dow
voting.
D
If
you
want
to
say,
hey
everyone,
that's
that's
in
our
dow
can
get
some
tokens
or
reward.
You
can
understand
who's,
individual
who's,
who's,
trying
to
pretend
like
they're
more
than
that
and
then
for
creators.
It's
also
a
pretty
important
tool,
because
there's
so
many
fakes
and
scams
out
there
that
we're
looking
to
have
this
tool
added
to
nft
marketplaces
as
a
way
of
saying
hey.
D
You
know
I've
verified
myself,
I'm
still
anonymous,
but
I've
verified
with
the
provider
that
I
am
a
unique
individual
and
the
last
thing
I'll
mention
is
that
we
have
a
bunch
of
gaming
companies
signing
up
for
this
process
to
essentially
create
nft
domains
as
their
default
username
system.
So
if
you
go
to
a
gaming
company-
and
you
see
a
leaderboard
and
it
has
a
bunch
of
different
wallet-
addresses
as
leaders-
it's
not
quite
as
cool
as
having
nft
domains
where
someone's
digital
identity
can
be
carried
with
them
to
different
dap.
D
So
data
portability
is
the
other
big
play
here
for
us,
where
you
can
attach
these
different
things
to
your
nft
domain
and
bring
them
with
you
from
site
to
site
versus
web
2,
where
you're
really
data's
silo
right.
You
sign
up
for
a
website
you're,
giving
a
new
username
new
password
new
information
shared
each
time.
We
want
to
move
away
from
that.
We
want
to
be
data
to
be
completely
user,
controlled
and
permissioned
when
they
want
to
which
will
also
mean
lower
attrition
right,
because
you
go
to
a
new
dap.
They
want
to
say:
hey.
D
Can
you
verify
you're
human?
You
can
call
that
data
you've
already
done
the
verification
once
so.
Each
time
you
go
to
new
dap,
you
can
take
your
data
with
you.
You
don't
have
to
sign
up
each
time
which
will
essentially
replace
the
need
for
80,
plus
usernames
and
passwords
that
we're
all
used
to
today.
D
So
we
want
nft
domains
to
be
that
digital
identity
moving
forward
and
and
a
login
feature
is
a
big
part
of
that.
So
I
will
stop
there.
I'm
not
sure
how
I'm
doing
on
time,
but
and
does
anyone
have
any
questions
about
any
of
this
stuff.
A
Thanks
very
much
charlie,
this
is
really
cool
the
stuff
that
now
comes
to
my
mind
immediately
because
we
are
very
privacy,
preserving
and
mindful
of
decentralization
and
robustness
of
dapps
like
where
would
this
data
be
stored
because
you
said
that
people
can
use
it
and
port
the
data
from
that
to
that
which
is
amazing,
something
that
everybody
hates
facebook
for
for
not
allowing
people
to
do,
and
I
know
a
dab
called
sismo
that
does
identity
like
this,
but
they
use
zk
tech
to
anonymize
data
that
can
distort
like.
D
D
First
of
all,
when
you
get
an
nft
domain,
you
can
choose
to
fill
out
this
profile
page
that
I'm
sharing
here,
which
we
think
the
vast
majority
of
new
crypto
users
will
be
comfortable
sharing
things
like
their
twitter
things
like
their
discord
telegram,
because
what
we're
trying
to
do
is
cut
down
on
the
fakes
and
the
scams
and
the
noise,
and
these
are
all
things
that
you
can
share
without
actually
revealing
your
your
actual
identity.
Right.
D
If
I
share
my
discord,
my
telegram,
you
know,
obviously
my
name
is
a
little
more
public,
because
I
have
my
first
and
last
name
in
there,
but
if
you're
a
crypto
user,
this
can
be
anything
right.
So
no
one
actually
knows
who
you
are
and
that's
what
the
whole
purpose
of
humanity
check
is
is
that
you
can
prove
who
you
are
without
actually
sharing
any
information.
D
D
D
That
will
say:
hey
here's,
the
nft
domain,
here's
the
wallet
address
it's
attached
to
and
here's
an
email
that'll
be
the
typical
flow
for
probably
75
of
the
dapps
that
are
using
login
and
we
just
crossed
100
integrations
last
week,
so
it'll
be
up
to
the
dap
to
say:
okay,
we're
going
to
store
this
json
token,
this
nft
domain,
this
wallet
address
and
this
email-
and
you
know,
there's
all
sorts
of
different
storage
tools
that
dapps
can
lean
on
for
it.
But
essentially
what
they
can
do
is
build
out
a
crm
tool.
D
That
is
still
you
know
in
the
eyes
of
the
customer,
pretty
anonymous
where
they
can
say,
here's
our
list
of
emails.
Here's
when
they
last
signed
in
so
if
you're
a
defy
company
and
you're
saying
well,
you
know
who
are
who's
signing
in
the
most
okay.
Well,
let's
look
at
the
login
payload
and
see.
D
Oh
here
are
users
that
sign
in
you
know
once
a
week
or
once
a
day,
or
here
are
some
users
that
haven't
signed
in
for
a
month,
and
maybe
we
want
to
send
them
an
email
that
says:
hey
we
haven't
seen
you
at
you
know:
cook
finance
for
a
couple
months
would
love
to
bring
you
back.
Here's
a
token
saying
we
miss
you
or
here's
a
special
offer,
saying
we
miss
you
or
some
product
updates.
D
A
I
say
yeah,
I
guess
my
my
question
is
more
about
like
persona
the
humanity
check
service,
where,
like
once,
they
verified
people
with
their
ids
and
face
scan
where's
that
data
stored
and
like
it
would
be
perfectly
all
right
if
those
people
on
their
own
verified
themselves,
but
when
that
product
is
being
marketed
on
our
dap
to
users
who
are
not
customers
of
humanity
check
and
we
recommend
humanity
check
to
them
in
a
way
that
may.
D
D
Right
absolutely
and
that's
why
we
wrote
into
our
contract
with
persona
that
users
have
the
right
to
have
their
data
deleted
directly
after
humanity
check.
You
know,
there's
certainly
people
sensitive
crypto
about
data
storage
and
one
of
the
things
today
is
that
you
can't,
like
someone
has
to
do
the
verification
right.
D
There's
no
way
to
have
a
completely
blind
oracle
that
does
government
id
verifications
that
just
doesn't
exist
yet
so
persona
is
one
of
the
leaders
in
the
space,
so
we
went
with
them
to
start
out
and
then
this
will
be
a
marketplace
of
dozens
of
providers
like
persona.
Until
we
get
to
a
point
where
everyone
can
spin
up
their
own
private
server
and
that's
what
we're
working
for
or
working
towards
is
everyone
having
their
own
private
server.
D
They
can
call
that
houses
their
data
that
requires
their
private
key,
but
we're
just
not
there
yet,
and
certainly,
if
you
guys
have
any
ideas
about
truly
decentralized
data
storage,
I
would
love
to
know,
but
you
know
at
this
point,
there
is
no
way
to
not
have
someone
checking
verification
with
government
ids.
So
that's
kind
of
where
we
are
right
now
is
that
it
is
persona
they
will
delete
your
information.
They
have
super
high
data
security
and
storage
practices,
but
yeah
I
mean
someone
has
to
do
it
today.
A
A
It
is
because
our
system
allows
us
to
call
smart
contract
functions
once
we
pass
proposals
on
chain
and
we
control
collectively
our
front-ends
by
matching
the
ipfs
hash
once
it's
verified
to
the
dow
owned
domain
name,
and
you
showed
us
that
you
have
something
similar,
but
it's
probably
operated
through
your
user
interface
and
not
on
a
on
chain
like
on
on
network
level
through
smart
contract
interactions.
Is
that
something
that
you've
been
thinking
of
allowing
dowse
to
do
or.
D
Yes,
I
don't
see
why
not?
I
mean
we
were
very
similar
product
to
ens.
The
big
differentiators
are
that
with
unstoppable
domains?
You're
you
own
your
domain,
you're,
not
renting
it.
Ens
domains
are
rented.
We
also
cover
gas
fees
for
users
and
we're
a
bit
more
chain
agnostic.
A
And
they've
been
widely
adopted
and
well
not
to
the
extent
we'd
like,
but
you
know,
although
it's
not
the
best
service
cloudflare
has
supported
a
gateway
to
resolve
ian's
domains
with
dot
link
extension,
we've
recently
seen
a
very
ambitious
team
developed
their
own
decentralized
gateway.
Dot.
Limo
brave
browser
has
got
their
dweb
link
service
to
allow
users
to
natively
access.
D
Yeah
exactly
this
is
native
opera
and
brave
browsers
are
native
integrations
and
then
we
have
extensions
with
chrome
and
firefox.
So
I
think
you'll
find
that
you
know
essentially
all
the
major
integrations
they
have.
We
have
as
well
and
we
have
nothing
against
ens.
I
mean
honestly,
I
think
it's
great
to
have
both
in
the
space
we're
just
a
little
different
differently,
structured,
more
extensions,
a
little
cheaper
kind
of
a
lower
entry
price
for
users,
and
then
the
trademark
thing
is
pretty
big.
D
D
So
we
think
that
we'll
both
continue
to
grow
and
push
each
other,
and
you
know
I
think,
there's
there's
definitely
room
for
both
as
we're
both
seeking
onboard
billions
of
people
to
web
3
right
because
they're,
it's
pretty
technical
crypto
in
general,
so
we're
trying
to
make
it
easier
for
users
to
onboard
from
web
2..
D
So
you
know
nothing
bad
to
say
about
ens
and-
and
really
I
think,
we'll
both
be
here
for
the
long
run,
just
kind
of
different
options
and
I
think
we're
a
little
friendlier
to
onboarding
users,
especially
with
our
free
domain
flow,
because
we
really
were
about
education
as
well.
We
want
users
coming
from
web
2..
We
want
an
easy
platform
for
them
to
onboard
to
mint
domains
for
essentially
no
cost,
but
all
the
functionalities
there
as
well-
and
we
have
a
bunch
of
great
integration
partners.
A
D
B
Yeah,
so
I
guess
we
kind
of
touched
on
this
like
difference
between
like
unstoppable
domains
and
ens,
and
I
think
yeah,
I
guess
ens
is
sort
of
decentralized
from
the
get-go.
Like
all
of
these
things
like
what
you're
building
can
be
built
on
top
of
like
ens
as
well
right.
D
Ens,
well,
let's
see
it's,
it's
basically
the
same
product
we're
both
nft
domains
for
both
erc
721
tokens.
The
difference
is
more
around
the
company
structure
and
the
extensions
that
we
offer.
D
So
anything
you
can
do
with
an
ens.
You
can
do
it
on
a
sample
domain
and
vice
versa.
Our
sign
in
is
a
little
different
with
the
data
collection
piece.
We
have
some
different
integrations.
We
have
more
extensions.
You
can
see
crypto.nft.wallet.dao.
D
So
if
you
all
wanted
to
do
free.daos
for
all
your
users,
we
could
enable
that
with
the
login
flow-
and
this
isn't
public
yet,
but
we're
going
to
have
a
different
extension.
That's
the
free
one
and
then
if
people
want
to
purchase
dot,
dow
they'll
be
able
to,
but
for
dxo.
If
you
all
are
interested
we'd
be
able
to
get
a
free
dao
for
all
of
your
users
and
we
also
do
a
ton
of
co-marketing.
D
D
So
you
know
we're
a
fun
company
to
work
with,
and
we've
got
a
team
of
150
people
now
working
on
digital
identity,
and
it's
just
been
awesome.
Seeing
some
really
strong
talent
come
from
web
2
over
the
past
six
to
eight
months.
So
our
road
map
is
super,
exciting
and
just
absolutely
feature
packed.
B
Yeah
super
cool
I
mean
this
is
this
is
interesting.
I
guess
this
is
I
I
mean
I'm
I'm
just
I'm.
B
Oh
I
got.
I
got
myself
muted
for
some
somewhat,
so
I'm
being
direct,
but
it's
kind
of
like
a
more
centralized
version
of
ens,
but
you
know
because
of
that,
then
you
know
there's
a
lot
more.
That
can
be
done
like
more
integrations,
more
collaborations
and
yeah,
basically
like
better
user
experience,
because
yes,
setting
like
yeah
setting
registries
for
ens,
is
kind
of
like
an
annoying
process,
and
you
know
the
ui
and
ux
that
you
guys
are
offering
is
like
way
better.
D
Yeah
we
can,
we
can
move
a
little
faster
because
we're
structured
like
a
typical
tech
company
and
then
the
centralization
versus
decentralization
I
mean
the
product
is
the
exact
same.
You
know,
you're
minting
a
domain
on
the
blockchain
ensemble
domains
cannot
touch
it
once
it's
minted
and
we
we
provide
management
tools,
but
you
know
it's:
it's
still
a
decentralized
product,
it's
more
just
the
company
structure
is
centralized
in
that.
You
know
we're
we're
structured
like
a
regular
tech
company
with
vc
investors
and
everything.
D
D
Absolutely
we're
every
every
day
we're
like
how
can
we
make
this
product
more
decentralized
and
that's
that's
part
of
the
idea
behind
private
servers
like
that
to
us
is
like
the
holy
grail
decentralizations
like
how
can
we
have
data
stored
on
individual
servers
for
users
so
that
no
one
has
to
give
request
permission
anymore,
so
we're
trying
to
bridge
that
gap
and
it'll
take
some
time,
but
certainly
everything
we're
building
towards
is
thinking
in
ways
of
decentralization
data
portability.
B
Yeah
I
mean
my
point
is
that
you
know
there's
the
ens
token
and
I
I
know
a
few
people
who
have
discussed
essentially
making
a
proposal
in
you
know
the
ens
dow,
basically
to
distribute
some
of
the
some
of
the
revenue
generated
by
selling
enas
domains
to
ens
token
holders.
So
essentially,
like
the
value
capture
of
this
entire
thing
is
owned
by
you
know,
ens
token
holders
and
yeah.
I
I
don't
know
I
mean
obviously
being
like
us
and
doxxed
it's
it's
a
bit
more
difficult.
D
Token
I
mean
it's,
it's
interesting,
I
wouldn't
say
it's
on
our
roadmap
and
certainly
we
get
requests
for
it,
but
the
requests
for
it
are
from
a
revenue
standpoint
and
we
we're
more
about
digital
identity
for
individuals
and
for
companies
owning
their
property
rights
versus
you
know.
A
lot
of
ens
buyers
are
buying
domains
to
squat
on
them
and
that's
pretty
unfortunate
for
web
three.
D
So
that's
a
big
differentiator
and
really
when
you
issue
a
token
it
becomes
a
security,
especially
in
the
u.s,
so
yeah
yeah,
it's
hard
you're
issuing
a
security,
and
you
know
we're
a
tech
company
at
our
core.
So
we
want
to
keep
building
products
that
enable
the
functionality
of
nft
domains
and
so
doing
a
token,
just
kind
of
takes
the
focus
off
of
building
and
kind
of
yeah.
It's
just
not.
You
know
we're
just
different
companies
and
and
certainly
we're
vc
backed
and
we
want
to
be
profitable.
D
D
So
you
know,
a
lot
of
people
are
renting
any
ens
domains
that
yeah
it's
I'm
going
to
cost
them
money
every
month,
so
we're
we're
kind
of
in
it
for
the
more
of
the
little
guy
and
the
non-crypto
user,
so
that
we
can
get
much
broader
and
take
nft
domains
to
the
world
versus
ens
is
you
know,
certainly
a
little
more
narrow
in
that
fact,
where
it's
it's
a
little
more
for
the
crypto
native,
so
you
know,
we
think
the
world
kind
of
needs
both
and
we're
just
we're.
A
Said
charlie,
I
really
like
unstoppable
domains.
I,
like
the
experience.
I've
had
purchasing
my
domains,
it's
been
pretty
flawless
and
I
enjoyed
it
as
a
customer.
I
know
it's
not
like
decentralized
completely
from
the
get-go
and
that's
hard
to
achieve,
but
I
do
see
a
possibility
for
us
to
cooperate.
We
have
a
novel
product
for
programmable
incentives
that
can
help
you
run
very
efficient
campaigns
and
drive
user
engagement,
attract
new
users,
and
I
think
that
there's
a
room
for
us
to
to
do
a
lot
together.
D
Yeah,
I
think
so,
and
you
know,
there's
there's,
certainly
a
lot
of
different
ways.
We
can
work
together.
So
if
you
all
want
to
test
out
the
product
here
or
there
or
just
do
a
free
domain,
credit
drop
and
kind
of
see
how
the
community
engages
you
know
we're
happy
to
test
things
out,
certainly
a
lot
of
different
creative
ways.
We
can
work
together
and
and
certainly
drive
our
users
to
dx
down
and
do
some
education
there.
D
So
you
know
we
work
with
all
sorts
of
different
companies,
because
we're
kind
of
all
in
it
together
right
if
we
want
to
really
make
the
migration
happen
from
what
too
it's
going
to
be
a
team
effort,
so
yeah
we're
kind
of
that
id
layer
on
top
that
helps
us
work
with
different
companies
and
provide
value
in
different
ways.
D
On
the
user
control
data
thing
we're
also
envisioning
a
world
where
users
are
getting
paid
for
their
data
right.
If
you
think
about
brave
browser,
you
can
earn
bat
rewards
by
using
brave
browser,
and
the
play
here
for
us
is
that
we
want
users
to
get
paid
for
their
data
and
it
starts
with
data
permissioning,
but
think
about
eventually
cutting
out
big
tech
like
facebook
and
google
and
letting
brands
serve
ads
directly
to
end
users
and
so
for
most
of
the
population.
That
is
just
kind
of
browsing
the
internet
clicking
on
ads.
D
You
know
why
not
help
them
get
paid
directly
for
their
information
that
they're
willing
to
share
that's
already
out
there
on
the
web
so
longer
term.
That's
that's
another
interesting
play
with
nft
domains
with
data.
Permissioning
is
saying.
Well.
Why
am
I
going
to
give
google
my
information
when
they're
going
to
harvest
it
and
sell
it,
and
you
know
their
centralized
servers,
get
hacked
versus
users
permissioning
it
in
a
way,
that's
still
user
controlled
with
brands
that
they
approve
of
so
that's
kind
of
much
longer
term,
but
another
way
that
we're
kind
of
thinking
about.
D
How
can
we
leverage
nft
domains
and
digital
identity
to
make
the
internet
better
and
if
users
are
already
willing
to
share
their
data,
or
you
know,
know
that
it's
being
harvested
and
sold
today
might
as
well
make
a
path
towards
them,
earning
it
earning
that
revenue
directly?
So
you
know
just
another
play
involved
here,
but
also
the
last
thing.
D
I'll
mention
is
just
that
with
nft
domains
and
verification,
it
can
still
be
double
blind
and
we're
working
towards
solutions
better
than
persona,
but
I'm
picturing
a
world
where
you
know
you
go
to
amazon
and
the
reviews
you
see
are
verified
because
the
users
have
nft
domains
or
you're
on
twitter
and
the
tweets
are
verified,
so
we're
avoiding
the
kind
of
noise
and
really
the
that's
happened
over
the
last
few
years,
where
people
are
leveraging
bots
and
fake
information
to
move
elections
and
to
sell
products
that
are
not
legitimate
and
it
all
comes
down
to
digital
identity.
D
B
Yeah,
yes,
that's
I
mean
it's
super
cool.
Do
we
have
a
group
like
usually
sort
of
like
the
next
step
forward?
Is
we
open
a
telegram
group
with
some
of
the
folks
from
the
style,
and
I
guess
you
guys
and
yeah
we'd
love
to
figure
out?
Maybe
we
can
do
like
a
yeah
like
like
a
supple
domain
job.
D
That'd
be
really
cool
and,
of
course,
if
you
guys
want
to
set
up
another,
more
technical
call
to
like
really
dive
into
data
storage
and
everything
I'd
be
happy
to
bring
on
our
cto
who
built
a
product,
because
you
know
he's
certainly
aligned
with
you
and
the
idea
of
true
decentralization.
So
if
there
are
any
kind
of
lingering
questions
about
that,
you
all
could
share
those
in
the
telegram
or
we
could
set
up.
D
A
Fantastic
yeah,
I
love
this.
Thank
you.
It
kind
of
like
speaks
volumes
to
hear
you
say
this
after
this
conversation,
instead
of
just
brushing
it
off
and
forgetting
about
it,.
A
Yeah,
I
love
this
and
we
we
could
definitely
be
a
design
partner
for
unstoppable
domains,
because
we
are
trying
to
push
this
the
envelope
in
the
space
towards
decentralization.
It's
been
hard,
but
we
don't
give
up
and
if
we
could
help
you
in
your
decision-making
to
improve
your
product,
that
would
be
fantastic.
Oh.
D
Yeah
yeah
we'd,
absolutely
love
that
and
we're
constantly
surveying
the
developers
who
have
integrated
login,
thus
far,
so
you
know
that
would
be
fantastic,
because
certainly
all
ideas
are
welcome.
I
think
we're
pretty
aligned
on
how
we
you
know
want
the
end
user
experience
to
be.
A
Nice-
and
I
already
have
some
interesting
ideas
with
third-party
partners
of
ours-
that
you
could
integrate
in
your
product.
D
Yeah
cool
and
I'll
mention
on
that
front.
We
do
have
some
cash
grants
to
kind
of
help
with
integration
for
some
of
the
smaller
projects
out
there.
So
you
know
we
can
also
help
write,
pull
requests
and
yeah.
We
have
all
sorts
of
tools
to
help
with
integrations
and
get
partners
up
and
running
and
also
get
them
some
exposure
right,
because
we
want
to
bring
exposure
to
those
smaller
projects
out
there.
A
Amazing,
okay,
yeah:
we
can
wrap
it
up
here.
You
could
stay
for
the
rest
of
the
call
or
you
if
you
busy
you
could.
You
know,
tends
to
your
other
business
but
yeah
you're.
More
than
welcome
to
stay,
I
will
continue
with
the
rest
of
our
business
cool.
D
Thank
you,
yeah
I'll,
listen
for
a
little
bit
I'll,
just
be
a
silent
participant,
but
really
appreciate
your
time
great
chatting
with
you
guys
and
please
keep
the
questions.
Company
coming
we'll
set
up
the
telegram
chat.
Anything
you
can
think
of
you
know
concerns
whatever.
Please
send
them
my
way
but
appreciate
you
guys
letting
me
chat
here
with
you
all
lovely
cheers,
yeah
awesome!
Thank
you,
charlie.
B
Cool
yeah
so
on
to
sort
of
like
the
next
point,
quarterly
or
biennial
checkpoints.
I
think
this
is
something
we
also
discussed
in
in
lisbon
and
yeah
happy
to
have
like
anyone
like
chime
in
here,
but
yeah
yeah.
A
Yeah,
it's
something
that
has
come
up
several
times
over
the
past
few
weeks
and
I
feel
like
it's
worth
going
over
it.
We
have
made
a
tremendous
effort
towards
aligning
the
community
because
we
are
a
true
global
decentralized
community
and
it's
not
easy
to
organize
ourselves.
Have
everybody
on
the
same
page
and
you
know,
have
everybody
aligned
on
the
same
goals,
so
we've
made
an
effort
last
year
towards
the
end.
A
We
had
an
amazing
retreat
in
lisbon
team
building
with
a
lot
of
hard,
but
very
interesting
and
fruitful
questions
being
asked
and
answered
that
helped
us
tremendously
in
envisioning
and
preparing
our
roadmap
for
2022
we're
on
track
to
have
our
next
retreat
towards
the
end
of
this
year.
But
I
I've
had
a
few
core
contributors
mention
it
to
me.
I've
been
thinking
about
it,
myself,
we've
been
having
a
few
discussions
and
I
think
I
should
bring
it
to
the
entire
dial.
A
What
if
we
did
kind
of
like
virtual
retreats
on
a
quarterly
or
a
bi-annual
dow
level
kind
of
like
set
aside
a
couple
of
days,
one
week,
every
quarter
to
do
heads
up
like
you
know,
everybody
is
heads
down
working
hard
day
in
day
out
in
in
we're
in
different
squads,
and
we
kind
of
like
going
with
the
flow
and
we're
in
this
momentum,
and
it's
not
easy
to
keep
up
with
what's
happening
on
a
dow
level.
A
So
I
I
wonder,
instead
of
waiting
once
a
year
to
do
an
in-person
retreat.
A
That's
still,
several
contributors
may
not
be
able
to
attend
what,
if
we
did
these
checkpoints
once
a
quarter
or
if,
if
that's
too
much,
maybe
twice
a
year
biannually
to
reserve
a
couple
of
days
in
one
week,
everybody's
heads
up
not
working
on
anything
specific
and
we're
just
having
longer
conversations
to
catch
up
and
plan
ahead
and
kind
of
like
avoid
asking
each
other
sporadically
or
what
what's
happening
with
that
squad
or
what's
happening
with
this
quad?
When
did
we?
When
did
the
dao
agree
to
do
this?
A
Like
did
we
pass
a
signal
vote
on
chain
who
decided
that
we
should
be
doing
this
and
and
so
on
and
so
forth?
So
I
I
wonder
what
you
guys
think.
G
I
was
just
gonna
say
I
I
really
like
the
idea
of
this.
I've
been
kind
of
banging
my
head
against
the
wall,
trying
to
figure
out
how
I
can
kind
of
connect,
all
of
like
the
the
new
contributors
to
the
existing
contributors
at
dxtau-
and
I
think
you
know
more
frequent
virtual
retreats
is-
is
a
good
idea,
because
it'll,
just
we
can
figure
out
a
way
to
you
know,
have
people,
okay,
yeah
time
zone,
problems
for
sure
to
have
people
come
together.
G
Even
if
we
just
designated
like
one
of
our
daily
meeting
calls.
You
know
to
get
people
acquainted
with
one
another
and
to
connect
a
little
bit.
I
do
also
like
the
idea
of
more
like
in
real
life
retreats
as
well
now
that
everything's
kind
of
opened
up,
but
I
do
I
do
like
this
idea
and
would
love
to
figure
out
a
way
to
to
figure
out
how
to
make
this
happen
and
sorry
nylon.
B
Yeah,
so
I
I
I
also
agree-
and
I
think,
like
we've
mentioned
this
kind
of
like
this
was
floated
a
few
times-
it's
like
whatever,
like
okrs
and
stuff,
like
that,
I
would
say
that
we
should
probably,
like
I
don't
know,
a
good
way
to
sort
of
start
with
this
low
hanging.
B
Fruit
is
to
take
the
same
week
that
we
have
right
with
the
different
calls
in
each
day
and
then,
instead
of
like
doing
updates
just
have
the
teams
essentially
present
their
plan
for
the
next
quarter
or
the
next
six
months,
and
you
know
this
is
the
plan.
This
is
the
goals
that
we
were
trying
to
achieve
for
the
next
six
or
three
months
and
and
yeah
like
I
think
this
could
be.
B
This
could
be
very
good,
and
I
mean
the
whole
point
of
like
okrs
is
to
like
solidify
these
plans
with
with
measurable
actions,
but
I
mean
I
mean,
maybe
that's
like
a
step
too
far,
and
you
know
to
start
with.
We
could
start,
I
don't
know,
maybe
the
first
week
of
june.
Oh,
I
guess
that's
next
week
or
I
don't
know
the
first
week
of
of
you
know
one
of
the
following
months.
To
basically
start
with.
You
know
it's
not
like
an
update.
Call
it's
just
like
okay.
B
This
is
the
plan
like
in
each
squad.
Leaders
or
you
know,
each
squad
will
basically
present
yeah,
30,
minute
presentation
and
then
30
minutes,
followed
by
by
questions
from
the
rest
of
the
team.
I
think
that
will
help
align
so
like
everything,
that's
happening
so
yeah
and
then
yeah.
You
know
I
don't
know
irl
meetup
for
sure
I
mean
that's
kind
of
what
we
did
in
lisbon,
but
yeah.
A
Yeah
and
I
I
feel
like
we
should
be
more
relaxed
about
it.
I
personally
do
not
like
you
know,
focusing
too
much
on
specifics
in
terms
of
okrs,
because
you
know
there's
this
anecdote.
Someone
asked
the
centipede
how
how
do
you
keep
up
putting
one
foot
in
front
of
the
other
in
a
exact
order,
so
that
you
don't
trip
and
when
it
thought
about
it,
it
started
tripping.
A
We
are
very
diligent,
with
our
numbers
very
open
and
transparent
and
keeping
track
of
everything,
doing
quarterly
reports,
and
all
that
it's
not
like
it's
the
first
time
we're
going
to
be
doing
this,
that
the
reason
for
these
meetings
is
more
on
a
social
level
kind
of
like
you
know
the
overall
alignment
with
where
we
are
headed
as
a
team
as
a
collective,
because
we
are
again
I'm
going
to
say
this,
it's
hard
to
grasp
it.
We
are
a
true
global,
decentralized,
collective.
A
A
We
are
at
the
forefront
of
innovation,
and
I
think
we
are
doing
well
so
not
to
put
too
much
pressure
on
ourselves
just
go
lightly
about
it.
B
Yeah
so
like
I,
I
agree,
I
think
I
mean
try
to.
I
personally
try
to
do
like
or
push
okay,
and
I
don't
think
maybe
this
is
the
right
fit,
but
you
know
just
goals.
I
don't
know
like
the
expis
quad.
Could
you
know
use
the
week
of
simply
planning
like
what
are
our
goals
for
the
next
quarter?
The
next
six
months
and
yeah
maybe
see
like
each
one
of
the
squads.
Each
one
of
the
teams
could
also
present.
F
F
B
Yeah,
I
think
they
they
were
saying
we're
going
corporate.
I
don't
think
I
mean
I
feel
like
a
lot
of
times.
You
know
like
crypto
people
we're
like
it's
everything.
Web
2
is
bad,
but
I
don't
think
that's
that's
you
know
not
everything
in
web
2
is
like
completely
right.
Many
things
are,
but
you
know
we
can
take
some
of
the
stuff
and
use
them.
I
don't
know
like
squads
and
stuff
like
that.
B
This
is
this
is
still
stuff
that
yeah
exist
in
in
yeah
in
web
2
and
then
we're
also
kind
of
like
employing
them
on
indexed
out.
It's
just.
I
think
these
things
will
help
align
like
what
are
the
people
doing.
Who
are
you
working
with?
Who
is
focusing
on
what?
What
are
the?
What
are
their
goals.
A
So
yeah,
if,
if
I
could
use
an
analogy,
it
would
be
like
driving
a
car
and
turning
on
the
the
high
beam
right.
If,
if
we're
on
low
beam,
we
are
just
turning
the
high
beam
and
seeing
further
ahead,
and
it
may
be
so
that
we're
not
changing
anything,
maybe
we're
on
the
right
track.
Everything
is
perfect.
It
we
don't
need
to
necessarily
think
of
something
revolutionary
and
change
the
way
we
we're
going.
B
Yeah,
I
agree
with
ross,
it's
like
a
difficult
and
I
think
we
tried-
or
we
thought
about
using
several
tools
like
so
ball,
and
I
think
people
try
to
like
create
like
sort
of
org
charts
of
you
know
who's
doing
what,
but
yeah
definitely
need
some
yeah.
I
don't
know
operational
organization,
operational
thoughts
on
how
to
map
and
communicate
to
what
you
know.
The
different
teams
in
the
style
are
doing.
H
I
think
what
keenan
and
dx
voice
has
done
right,
like
with
his
posts,
is
like
a
really
good
example,
and
we
probably
just
should
be
doing
that
across
the
squads
and
that's
yeah.
We
can
even
use
existing
calls
to
kind
of
give
time
to
discuss
it
too,
but
then,
like
you,
know
a
nice
post
somewhere.
That
just
highlights
the
the
goals
and
like
happenings
and,
like
you
know,
expenditures
of
the
squad
so
that
the
whole
community
can
review
yeah.
I.
B
Yeah,
I
think
I
mean
this
this
it's
perfect
for
dxvoice,
because
a
lot
of
them
the
expenses,
is
sort
of
external
but
yeah
like
definitely
like
things
to
you
know
to
sort
of
use
from
what
they've
done
and
then
yeah
I
don't
know,
maybe
there
should
be
a
week
of
just
simply
the
squads
focusing
on
you
know
what
what
is
their
plan
and
instead
of
like?
I
don't
know.
B
Instead
of
like
this
entire
call,
you
know
divided
half
to
like
someone
presenting
and
then
another
half
discussing
like
eternal
stuff.
Maybe
the
entire
call
should
be
like
you
know.
What
are
what
should
the
squad
be
doing?
What
should
we
focus
on?
What's
the
high
level
goals
for
the
next
yeah
three
to
six
months,
maybe
just
that.
B
Yeah,
I
guess
I
mean
I-
I
I'm
not
really
able
to
join
like
the
product
strategy,
but
yeah.
I
guess
this
is
also
for
the
other
squads,
not
just
the
products
but
yeah.
B
So
nathan,
we
can
think
on
this
offline
and
then
you
know
we
can
even
make
a
signal
proposal.
Okay,
whatever
first
of
august
to
like
that
week,
you
know
it's
just
sort
of
like
a
meta
discussion
on
the
goals
of
the
call,
the
squad,
etc.
B
Yeah
yeah
yeah,
so,
okay,
we
can
sync
on
this
last
line,
yeah.
So
moving
on
to
the
next
topic,
I
think,
like
a
big
thing
is
like
hcc.
The
last
ticket
sale
is
happening.
I
don't
think
we
have
any
tickets
as
of
now
so
yeah.
A
Yeah
I
I've
seen
dave,
put
a
lot
of
effort,
try
and
help
everyone
secure
tickets
tomorrow
john
shared
a
great
feedback
from
what
he
experienced
last
time.
He
tried.
A
I
think
we
have
an
edge
that
we
could
probably
not
guarantee
that
we
could
succeed,
but
you
know
improve
our
odds
because
it's
it's
been
really
difficult.
A
I
don't
know
why
they
made
it
like
that,
but
yeah,
it's
kind
of
like
almost
a
make
it
or
break
it
moment
for
us
whether
we
are
officially
attending
as
a
collective
or
is
just
a
couple
of
us
being
there,
because
we
we've
been
used
to
having
a
few
of
us
attend
and
creating
this
presence
that
other
organizations
feel
like
with
this
element
and
yeah.
It
would
be
nice
to
have
this
in
paris,
but
we'll
see
how
it
goes.
B
Yeah
who's
who's
planning
on
going
yeah
yeah.
I
guess
some
people
are
just
going
to
be
there.
I
think.
Last
year
I
mean
there
were
good
lectures,
but
but
yeah
many
of
it
was
just
like
a
lot
of
people
chatting
outside,
and
I
gave
my
ticket
like
several
times
to
people
who
wanted
to
come
in
so
yeah.
I
think
it
was
easier
to
get
tickets.
B
So
yeah
do
we
want
to
talk
about
bogota
and
the
execution.
A
Yeah,
I
think
I
forgot
who
it
was
someone
mentioned
that
they
believe
we
should
have
a
proper
marketing
plan.
I
think
it's
more
of
a
conversation
to
have
tomorrow
on
the
gx
voice
call,
but
someone
raised
the
concern
that
it's
a
big
operation
that
would
require
a
lot
of
marketing
well
in
advance,
so
we
make
sure
it
is
successful.
A
There
is
a
risk,
I
know
we're
organizing
it
around
defcon
and
there'll
be
a
lot
of
people
there
already
for
it.
So
it
kind
of
like
helps
us
already
a
lot,
but
someone
raised
the
concern
that
there's
still
a
a
chance
that
we
may
have
a
problem
with
attracting
enough
people
so
that
the
event
is
a
success,
because
we
will,
after
all,
be
investing
a
lot
in
this
and
we
have
to
make
sure
it
goes
smooth.
A
Sometimes
that
requires
a
lot
of
early
preparation,
and
I
myself
didn't
think
of
this,
but
I
think
it's
a
valid
concern
when
and
how
do
we
start
popularizing
this
event?
I
think
we
we're
early
enough,
yet
we
still
have
to
hear
back
from
the
company
that
is
helping
us
with
the
exploration
on
venues
and
and
what
it's
gonna
cost
for
us
to
kind
of
like
make
the
final
decision.
A
B
And
yeah,
I
guess
because
the
last
topic
is
for
the
accentures
just
looking
for
I
guess
tools
that
you
know
we
could
use
in
and
yeah.
I
don't
know
if
I
think
this
is
a
good
time
like
a
lot
of
the
noise.
It's
kind
of
like
a
bear,
mic
advice
right,
but
a
lot
of
the
noise
is
going
to
be
clear.
A
Yeah
we
we
do
have
three
startups
that
are
actively
engaging
with
us,
trying
to
figure
out
how
to
approach
this.
We
we're
not
just
some
vcs
throwing
money
at
startups.
We
care
about
what
they're
building
it
has
to
be
dow
centric.
A
A
I
don't
know
what
to
call
it
turnover
like
many
companies
being
kind
of
like
approved
and
receiving
grants
from
dx
ventures
and
jake
style
and
we're
not
in
a
rush
to
do
it.
A
But
if
anyone
comes
across
and
some
of
you
have
sent
us
some
leads,
but
if
anyone
hears
of
or
has
used
any
novel
application
lately
feel
free
to
send
us
some
info
yep.