►
Description
Everything EOS is a weekly podcast from ICO Alert that follows the EOS ecosystem: dApp spotlights, VC partnerships, announcements, and more!
—————————————
The ICO Alert Podcast showcases exclusive, in-depth interviews with founders of past, present, and future Initial Coin Offerings. New episodes are released weekly. If you’d like, you can request a guest to appear on a future episode by tweeting us @icoalert
The ICO Alert Podcast is available on iTunes and anywhere podcasts are found.
ICO Alert Podcast: https://blog.icoalert.com/podcasts/home
ICO Alert: https://www.icoalert.com/
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Twitter: @Cypherglass
A
Welcome
to
episode
10
of
everything,
yes,
I'm,
Zack
gall
and
I
see
a
data
analyst
at
ICO
ler,
the
trusted
ICO
discovery
platform
visit,
ICO,
lured,
calm,
the
most
complete
calendar
of
all
active
and
upcoming.
I
ciose
to
discover
the
latest
projects
and
opportunities
like
EOS,
IO
and
I'm
here
today,
with
the
founder
of
ICO,
ler
and
CEO
of
cypher
glass,
Rob
Finch.
Thank.
B
You
all
so
much
for
joining
us
for
this
10th
episode
of
everything.
Yes,
it's
crazy
that
we've
already
been
through
ten
different
episodes.
I
just
wanted
to
say
to
everybody
that
we
sincerely
appreciate
all
the
feedback
and
comments
that
we
get
about
the
show
we
hope
you
continue
to
share
your
thoughts
and
opinions
on
YouTube
SoundCloud
Spotify,
wherever
you
may
be
listening.
It
helps
us
know
what
you
want
us
to
talk
about.
It
helps
us
know
that
you're
still
enjoying
the
show
on
today's.
A
B
Before
we
get
started,
I
do
need
to
mention
that
this
is
not
a
sponsored
podcast
and
that
Zack
and
I
has
full
disclosure.
Do
own
AOS
tokens
we're
just
two
people
that
are
incredibly
excited
about
this
new
technology
and
we
want
to
share
what
everybody
else.
This
is
not
to
be
treated
as
a
legal,
financial,
tax,
professional
or
any
other
kind
of
advice.
Like
I,
said
just
two
people
that
are
very
passionate
about
this
and
discussing
it
so
go
out
there
do
your
own
research
and
go
yes
all.
A
Right
we're
in
the
process
of
a
big
week
here
with
the
SiO
main
net
launch.
So
since
our
last
episode
last
week,
the
block
producers
all
got
together
this
past
Saturday
and
they
had
their
daily
vote
for,
go
or
no
go,
and
if
they're
gonna
do
the
main
that
launch
I
was
watching.
Some
of
the
livestream
I
saw
the
block
producers
on
the
call
you
want.
You
want
to
talk
about
how
that
went.
Rob
yeah.
B
So
it
was
one
of
our
go
or
no-go
calls
like
Zac
said
we're,
basically,
all
the
different
block
producers
who
pledged
to
launch
one
single
us
main
net
and
sort
of
eliminate
the
risk
of
all
these
different
Forks
popping
up.
We
had
a
final
call
that
was
basically
okay.
You
know
we
fixed
all
of
the
major
security
bugs
that
people
had
found
that
people
found
in
the
bug,
bounty
or
you
know,
found
on
their
own
and
after
those
bugs
have
been
fixed,
we
all
sort
of
agreed.
Yes,
it's
time
to
launch
the
main
net.
B
So
then
what
happened
was
the
maintenance
was
started
by
an
anonymous
person?
Who's
just
known
as
the
ABP
or
the
appointed
block
producer
could
have
been.
A
group
of
people
could
have
been
one
person.
Nobody
knows
it's,
they.
They
are
anonymous
sort
of
similar
to
how
how
Bitcoin
started,
but
in
a
very
different
way,
but
they
spun
up
the
chain
pushed
it
live.
We
all
came
in
connected
to
the
chain
and
validated
it,
and
then
the
ABP
resigned
and
gave
up
all
their
controls.
So.
A
There
was
a
lot
of
I
guess:
uncertainty
among
the
community
of
what
exactly
happened
after
after
the
token
freeze.
A
lot
of
people
wondered
why
there
was
this
delay,
so
how
many
votes
were
there
before
the
VP's
all
unanimously
voted
to
go
because
there
were.
There
was
a
couple
of
times
where
it
was
a
no-go
vote.
Yeah.
B
We
got
very
close
to
hitting
the
go
vote
several
times.
We
originally
needed
I
believe
it
was
75%
of
all
votes
to
hit
go,
and
then
we
had
a
vote
that
dropped,
that
down
to
two
thirds
to
66%
and
we
hit
55%
I
think
was
the
closest
we
got.
We
were
about
eight
percent
away
and
then
finally,
the
next
vote,
we
got
everybody
to
I
think
pretty
much.
Everybody
voted
go
so.
A
B
You
keep
voting
no
yeah
I
mean
there
was
clear
community
pressure
for
bps
that
were
voting
no
to
vote
yes
and
the
reason.
Why
was
because
a
lot
of
the
bp's,
not
all
of
them,
but
a
lot
of
them
who
were
voting
no-go?
Could
it
justify
why
and
then
it
led
us
to
speculate?
Oh,
maybe
they're
not
ready.
Maybe
their
infrastructure
is
not
ready,
they're
waiting
for
something
you
know
all.
We
have
80
other
bp's
ready
to
go.
Why
are
you
still
voting
now,
so
I
think
that
the
pressure
was
real
and
they
they
voted.
A
A
B
To
explain
that
if
you're
not
familiar
basically
15%
of
all
tokens,
so
150
million
tokens
on
the
US
blockchain
have
to
be
voted
towards
one
or
more
block
producers,
the
people
that
are
running
the
network
in
order
for
the
chain
to
unlock
and
allow
you
to
transfer
your
tokens.
So
that's
what
we're
going
through
now
and
we've
actually
made
a
lot
of
progress.
I
think
we're
at
what's.
B
A
Been
a
bit
of
a
slow
start,
though
so
I
think
9:00
a.m.
Eastern
Time
on
Sunday
was
when
the
the
main
that
launched
yeah,
so
so
the
process
after
launch
was
the
the
maintenance
launched.
All
the
servers
are
running,
but
tokens
aren't
transferable
right,
so
you
could
see
your
token
balance.
You
know
how
many
tokens
you
have,
but
you
can't
really
do
anything
with
them
until
15
percent
of
them
are
staked
into
voting,
and
whenever
this
first
happened.
A
B
Yeah
we
put
out
a
video,
unfortunately,
the
scatter
version,
I
guess
people
are
having
trouble
scatter
and
it's
not
really
working,
but
the
the
token
niihka
method,
which
is
the
second
method
in
that
video,
is
really
the
safest
that
we've
used.
It's
what
I
used
to
vote
and
it
allows
you
to
vote
completely
offline
so
that
you're,
not
risking
somebody
still
need
your
keys
yeah.
So.
A
C
A
Think
that's
a
problem
we
have
with
with
voting
in
general
yeah
like
blockchain
aside.
Yes,
aside,
like
just
in
the
world
people
voting
like
my
vote,
I'm,
just
a
nobody.
My
vote
doesn't
count.
Oh
I
only
have
this
many
ESO.
My
vote
doesn't
really
matter,
but
there's
probably
even
a
lot
of
people
with
a
lot
of
use
whose
votes
would
count,
but
they
just
want
everyone
else
to
do
it.
B
Yeah
I
mean
it's
a
classic
example
of
the
bystander
effect
where
you
know
somebody
falls
and
breaks
their
leg
outside
in
a
public
square,
and
nobody
calls
9-1-1,
because
everybody
expects
somebody
else
to
very
similar,
but
now
we're
finally
seeing
people
step
up
to
the
plate.
Big
holders
and
small
holders,
and
one
of
things
I
wanted
to
convey-
was
that
even
if
you
only
have
five
yose,
your
vote
still
does
count.
B
I
mean
we
have
thousands
and
thousands
of
individual
wallets
who
have
small
small
amounts
of
us
voting
for
us
that
have
made
a
massive
difference
in
keeping
cypher
glass
in
the
top
21
so
sincerely
appreciate,
even
all
the
small
voters
out
there.
Your
vote
count
in
this
system,
especially
when
you
know
not
all
1
billion
tokens
are
being
voted.
I.
A
B
Yeah
pop
down
to
23,
but
then
very
shortly
after
that,
whether
it
was
thanks
to
this
one
guys
thread
on
reddit,
you
know
saying:
hey
vote
for
cypher
glass.
They
should
be
talking
every
wonder.
We
got
a
massive
vote
that
came
our
way.
I
think
it
was
close
to
10
million
AES
and
bumped
us
back
up
to
12.
So
Rob
comes.
B
A
Yes,
I
think
we'll,
probably
very
very
shortly
we
got
off
to
a
slow
start.
I
think
everyone
knew
it
was
a
serious
issue
when,
after
a
couple
days,
we're
still
at
like
2
or
3
percent
right
boots,
III
skimmed
the
block
producer
telegram
chino'
a
little
bit,
and
there
was
a
lot
of
there's
a
lot
of
wearing
I
would
say
about
definitely
uncertainty,
I,
guess,
I!
Think
another
big
part
of
what's
gonna
move.
The
vote
is
BitFenix
put
something
out
the
other
day
saying
that
they
gave
instructions
on
how
to
vote.
A
B
Flex
basically
came
out
and
said:
hey
we
have
70
million
Yoast,
which
at
the
time
was
more
than
enough
to
unlock
the
chain,
and
now
obviously
still
is.
If
it
was
enough.
Dane
push
it
past
that
150
million
token
threshold
and
they
said
hey,
if
15%
of
all
of
the
eos
token
holders
on
BitFenix
vote.
Yes
for
us
to
sort
of
vote
this
temporarily
and
unlock
the
main
net
and
then
unbowed
they
were
going
to
actually
come
in
and
just
vote
for
the
top
30
and
then
on
vote
as
soon
as
it
unlocked.
B
Exactly
I
mean
I
think
a
lot
of
people
are
doing
that,
unfortunately,
but
fortunately
on
the
BitFenix
side,
they
were
going
to
just
vote
and
then
immediately
on
vote.
So
they
didn't
really
affect
anything.
They
just
wanted
to
get
the
unlock,
but
I
honestly
think
it's
cool
that
that
didn't
happen
and
I
think
it's
awesome
to
see
the
community
come
together
and
really
push
us
past
that
15%
mark
and
if
organic
way,
I
guess.
A
One
last
reason
the
turnout
may
have
been
low
was
just
security,
the
uncertainty
of
our
my
tokens
secure
if
I,
if
I
vote
in
this
way.
A
big
reason
is
the
lack
of
hardware
wallet
currently
for
it
for
the
es
Maine
tonight
and
robbed
at
with
safer
glass,
they
actually
put
out
a
hundred
thousand
dollar
balance
yeah.
You
want
to
explain
the
rules
of
it
and
you
know
someone
can
get
involved.
They
got
a
email
you're,
something.
B
Yeah
this
was
something
that
I
mean
we've
been
passionate
about
for
a
while
and
thought
that
there
were
other
people
working
on
it.
But
when
you
know
the
main
that
launched-
and
we
didn't
see
a
ledger
solution,
we
didn't
see
a
treasure
solution.
It
was
very
clear
to
us
and
and
I
think
the
community
really,
you
know
credit
to
the
community
and
asking
us
to
do
something
like
this.
We
realized
we
needed
to
do
something
to
kind
of
expedite
Hardware
wallet
support.
B
So
if
you
have
a
ledger
and
nos
or
a
treasurer,
we've
basically
put
out
this
hundred
thousand
dollar
bounty
to
expedite
the
development
of
both
of
those
apps
so
in
the
very
near
future,
you'll
be
able
to
store
your
main
ideas,
tokens
and
vote
from
your
ledger
securely
or
vote
for
your
treasurer
securely.
So.
A
B
Think
it's
a
little
bit
of
both
I
mean
we've
seen
we
have
the
the
email
bounty
at
cypher
glass
comm,
where
you
have
to
reach
out
and
get
your
participation
packet
and
we
kind
of
go
over
the
rules
with
you
and
we've
had
a
lot
of
people
reach
out,
including
somebody
who
actually
has
built
an
app
that
was
approved
on
the
ledger.
App
Store,
so
I
think
it
cool
even
for
the
people
that
have
already
sort
of
started.
B
A
B
A
So
you've
been
you've
been
doing
a
lot
of
stuff
at
the
community.
So
what
other
plans
do
you
have
like
on
top
of
this
bounty
like
what's
next
on
the
roadmap,
because
it's
looking
like
your
problem
unless
something
changes
in
a
can
at
any
moment,
it
looks
like
at
least
for
the
first
three
days
of
voting
yeah
you're
gonna
be
one
of
the
top
21,
which
means
you'll
have
the
reliability
of
the
resources
coming
in
to
fulfill
the
promises
that
you've
made
already.
Oh
absolutely.
B
Yeah,
it's
important
to
note
that
the
things
like
the
hundred
thousand
dollar
bounty
or
just
that's
just
coming
out
of
my
own
money-
we're
not
gonna
I'm,
not
gonna,
reimburse
myself
from
block
rewards
it's
not
coming
from
the
network.
That's
just
coming
from
us
because
we
care
about
this
and
we
want
a
hardware
wallet
just
as
much
as
everybody
yeah.
A
B
A
A
So,
for
those
who
don't
know,
yo,
SVC
and
block
one
have
been
that
they're
sponsoring
for
global
hackathons.
The
first
one
was
on
June,
9th
and
10th
and
Hong
Kong
they're,
bringing
in
hundreds
of
developers
to
these
things
to
all
work
with
the
common
goal
of
building
decentralized
applications.
They
gave
out
one
and
a
half
million
dollars
in
prizes
last
weekend
with
the
top
prize
being
awarded
to
a
group
about
building
something
called
ID
pass,
which
is
a
product
that
will
give
a
validated
ID
to
global
citizens
with
no
formal
documentation
of
their
identity.
A
Wow
I
I
watched
their
three-minute
pitch
that
they
gave
to
I
think
kick-off
the
competition
and
it
was
pretty
wild
I
can't
really
explain
it
to
well.
You
could
look
it
up
yourself,
but
it
involved
using
a
retina
scanner
to
identify
yourself
on
the
blockchains
that,
like
if
you're
in
a
third-world
country,
you
might
not
even
have
a
cell
phone
or
have
the
means
to
store
your
private
key.
So
your
private
key
really
is
your
retinas.
Skin
is
pretty
hazy
and
they
gave
this
use
case.
A
Example
of
working
with,
like
the
Red
Cross
and
like
a
village
in
Africa,
it
was
pretty
cool.
That's
fascinating!
Yeah
I'd
like
to
see
more
from
all
of
these
teams
that
worked
on
the
hackathon,
because
all
I
really
did
was
read
the
summaries
of
what
they're
building
and
they
sound
interesting,
but
they're
so
early
that
they
don't
even
have
really
like
websites
to
see
more
of
like
what
their
goals
are
term.
Well,.
B
A
A
little
bit
different
because
it's
really
hard
to
probably
enforce
those
rules,
because
you
already
know
what
you're
building
going
into
it,
whereas
in
the
traditional
hackathons
I've
been
to
you,
don't
know
what
project
you're
going
to
be
on
until
you
get
there
right
like
there's
a
bunch
of
companies
that
pitch
they,
they
give
a
pitch,
and
then
the
teams
of
developers
decide
which
ones
they
want
to
help.
That's
interesting.
A
So
what
else
buying
in
finance
made
a
big
announcement,
so
they
announced
that
they
will
be
supporting
at
least
three
of
the
major
air
drops
for
esa.
Oh,
that's,
including
IQ
tokens
that
year's
DAC
tokens
and
then
the
Aeon
tokens,
but
I,
don't
think
Eon
riq
they
haven't
dropped.
Yet
right,
I
know
IQ.
They
use
the
Genesis
right
yet.
B
B
Absolutely
is
trading
around
ten,
but
the
way
it
went
I'm
curious
to
see
what
happens
from
the
you
know.
We
never
really
talk
about
the
market
here
on
the
podcast,
but
I'm
very
curious
to
see
what
happens
once
this
thing
is
unlocked
and
people
see
that
it
actually
does
work.
Because,
right
now
it's
technically
live.
You
can
vote.
A
We
all
know
what
crypto
kitties
did
yeah
and
I
think
there's
a
lot
more
votes
coming
in
then
there
were
transactions
on
the
kitty
network.
So
besides
the
hackathon
I
think
we
mentioned
in
the
last
episode,
but
we'll
mention
it
again,
because
it's
worth
mentioning
that
iOS
developer
portal
is
live
at
developers
Yoshio
and
they
just
want
to
get
in
touch
with
people
that
want
to
build
apps
there,
there's
so
much
funding
available
and
that's
why
we
believe
in
this
network.
So
much
is
because
there's
never
been
a
team
or
community.
Okay
now
hold
on.
B
Waitress
we're
just
getting
we're
getting
confirmation
now
that
the
network
has
been
unlocked
as
we're
doing.
This
looks
like
all
of
the
votes
went
to
eos
canada
they're
at
75
million
votes.
We
are
still
number
12
and
the
top
21,
but
the
network
is
officially
online.
Oh
right,
we
have
people
outside
the
studio,
sort
of
motioning
15.
We
have
15
percent.
B
B
Thank
you
all
to
everybody
out
there
who
came
out
and
voted
for
us
who,
you
know,
listened
to
the
ways
that
we
were
trying
to
support
the
community,
whether
it's
through
the
bounty
or
making
sure
the
BP
stay
independent
and
we
hope
you'll
continue
to
vote
for
us
as
as
this
thing
gets
rolling,
but
this
is
truly
just
the
beginning,
happy
birthday
es.
So
so
what
happens
next?
So
that's
a
good
point.
We're
going
to
talk
about
what
happens
next?
What
happens
at
this
point?
B
First
and
foremost,
the
network
is
now
officially
online,
so
people
are
producing
blocks.
I
can
see
Biff
and
X's
producing
block
right
now
we
just
finished
producing
blocks
seconds
ago.
Here
we
come
again
producing
six
more
blocks,
but
the
network
is
now
online.
So
what
this
means
is
there
are
no
longer
any
restrictions
on
what
you
could
do
with
your
tokens.
You
can
stake
your
tokens
for
bandwidth.
You
can
stick
your
tokens
for
voting.
A
It'll
I
think
it'll
take
a
little
bit
of
time.
So
if
I
wanted
to
send
tokens
from
my
use,
wallet
serious
well,
it
that'd
be
possible
but
I'm
guessing
the
exchanges
are
gonna,
be
a
little
bit
delayed
on
when
they're
going
to
allow
deposits
and
withdrawals
again,
except
they
need
to
test
the
new
wallets
that
you're
using
in
software
and
everything.
B
I
would
imagine
that
exchanges
in
order
to
excuse
me
take
advantage
of
these
transaction
fees,
as
that
I
think
we're
gonna
see
the
volume
just
shoot
up
both
on
the
buy
side
and
the
sell
side,
as
people
look
for
liquidity
and
as
peoples
go,
oh
wow,
it
actually
launched.
Let
me
get
in
on
this
thing.
I
think
exchange
is
it's
possible.
They
get
it
open
today.
If
not,
I
would
expect
very,
very
quickly.
They'll
try
to
get
this
unlock.
A
Yeah
I
mean
it's
unfortunate
with
like
the
current
state
of
the
market,
so
what
I'm
expecting
is
once
these
tokens
are
once
the
wallet
once
once
the
withdrawals
and
deposits
are
made
available
on
the
exchanges.
I
think
we're
gonna
see
initially
a
group
of
token
holders
liquidating
just
because
they've
been
holding
through
through
this
downturn,
yeah
and
not
necessarily
don't
believe
in
us,
but
they
might
need
money.
It's
been
frozen
for
longer
than
they
expected,
but
I
think
the
buy
pressure
will
be
high
enough
that
we're
not
really
gonna
see
a
dip.
B
Lot
of
volume-
oh
yeah
I
mean
we
could
see
I
think
the
highest
volume
we've
ever
seen
on
us
was
three
three
and
a
half
billion
dollars
in
a
single
day
and
I
would
not
be
surprised
if
we
shatter
that
volume
record
as
people
realize
now
that
the
main
that
is
officially
live
and
what's
I
want
to
focus
on.
One
amazing
thing
here
is
that,
through
this
50%
unlock
and
I
think
block
one
kind
of
maybe
they
knew
this.
B
A
And
unless
they
altered
the
Genesis
block
yep
and
gave
oh,
they
took
every
block
ones
right.
Exactly
then
they'd
at
least
get
to
ten
right,
yeah
it'd
be
so
impossible,
like
we
talked
about
how
there
would
be
potentially
scam
chains
popping
up,
and
there
were
a
lot
of
scams
that
did
pop
up.
But
if
you
did
some
due
diligence,
it
would
be
impossible
for
anyone
to
it.
B
Was
off
well,
this
is
amazing.
I
think
that
the
fact
that,
as
we
were
talking
about
earlier
talking
about
how
we
were
glad
you
know,
BitFenix
didn't
come
out
and
just
just
vote
theirs
and
that
we'd
really
did
get
to
this
through
community
support,
at
least
until
we
hit
this.
This
last
whale
who
dumped
40
million
I,
think
it's
awesome
that
we
were
able
to
come
together
as
a
community.
B
A
A
It's
kind
of
thrown
off
the
itinerary
here.
I
think
the
last
thing
I
was
talking
about
was
just
a
year's
developer
portals
live
and
now
the
year's
main
that
is
live
everything's
transferrable
yeah.
So
we
need
devs
to
start
reaching
out
to
block
one
go
to
careers
block
one
comma
there
there's
a
bunch
of
jobs
available,
I,
don't
I,
don't
think
I
mentioned
this
last
time,
but,
interestingly
enough,
I
was
creeping
on
the
block.
One
LinkedIn
just.
A
Backgrounds
of
all
of
their
employees-
yes,
one
I-
was
surprised
about
how
many
employees
they
have
and
I,
don't
know
whose
remote
or
who's
in
Blacksburg
Virginia,
but
looking
at
their
experience,
because
we
keep
talking
about
this
war
chest.
So
they
brought
in
that
VP
of
like
banking,
from
Australia
to
be
their
CEO.
Oh
right,
like
he's
highly
reputable
highly
experienced,
but
then
they
have
people
on
their
development
team
and
they're
like
like
consulting
team,
and
these
are
like
executive
level.
A
Employees
who
have
like
executive
level
experience
and
they're
just
managers
at
block
one
so
they're
like
getting
the
best
of
the
best
talent.
Oh,
absolutely
and
and
they're
gonna
build
this
community
because
there's
people
who
have
been
wanting
to
build
these
DAPs
and
and
they've
they've
been
limited
by
the
scalability
of
yeah.
The
other
networks
available.
B
Well,
I've
had
a
lot
of
people
either
people
we've
worked
at
you
know
through
SEO
alert
or
just
other
people,
I
know
in
the
community
who
are
deaf
developers.
Maybe
they
have
a
tap
on
a
theorem
or
they're
looking
to
build
a
new
DAP
and
a
lot
of
people
been
reaching
out
to
me
saying:
hey,
how
do
you
get
an
introduction
to
block
one?
How
do
I
reach
out
to
the
VC
arm
on
block
one?
And
it's
it's
all
very
public?
That's
something
I
want
to
make
it
a
pretty
google,
it
potentially
I
mean
I.
B
Think
people
just
expect,
because
other
VCS
are
kind
of
very
closed
off.
You
can't
just
email
somebody
with
a
pitch
and
getting
they'll
get
back
to
you,
but
with
with
block
one,
if
you
email,
if
you
have
an
idea
or
better
get
an
MVP
and
a
team,
and
you
want
funding
for
something
email
VC,
as
in
venture
capital,
adblock
dot
one
and
you
will
get
a
response.
If
you're
looking
for
developer
support
a
developer
relations
check
out
that
developers
do
at
I/o,
but
you
can
also
email,
I,
believe
its
dev
Dez
at
block
dot.
A
Want
to
spend
this
money
yeah,
it's
not
like
they're
holding
back
here.
They
want
to
spend
this
money.
It's
meant
to
build
the
community
I
guess,
while
we're
on
the
topic
of
community,
you
pointed
out
a
pretty
interesting
quote.
The
other
day
from
Mike
Novogratz
from
is
Bloomberg
in
yeah.
Why
don't
we
play
that
for
everyone,
real,
quick?
Well,
the.
C
Barriers
to
start
a
new
like
new
idea,
have
been
low
but
they're
getting
higher,
because
you
can
start
something,
but
it
won't
succeed
without
community,
and
so
the
barriers
to
building
community
are
getting
higher
and
so,
quite
frankly,
we're
looking
at
investing
in.
You
know,
tokens
or
ecosystems
that
have
resource
that
have
reputation
and
resource
and
participants.
C
So
you're
going
to
see
some
big
names
in
the
next
six
months
that
you've
all
heard
of
moving
into
the
token
world
or
the
blockchain
world
and
I
think
those
projects
are
pretty
interesting
because
they
already
have
community
and
they
have
resource
right
now,
it'd
be
really
hard
to
start
a
new
blockchain
to
compete
against
the
other.
Ninety
there
are
some
people
doing
it.
If
you
have
enough
reputation,
if
you
have,
you
know
enough
expertise
and
a
brilliant
idea,
you'll
still
get
funding,
so
I
think
what
what.
B
Novogratz
is
talking
about
here
is
something
that
a
lot
of
people
have
a
hard
time
grasping
when
they
first
hear
about
Bitcoin,
you
think
about
any
kind
of
blockchain
know.
If
it's
open-source
I
can
just
go
out
and
duplicate
it
right,
I
can
take
the
EOS
maenette
and
go
and
try
and
launch
a
new
one,
but
it's
not
gonna
succeed
whether
the
50%
unlock
is
there
or
not,
you're
not
going
to
have
something
succeed.
If
you
don't
have
a
community
behind
it
and
I
think
the
way
that
Novogratz
described.
A
I
mean
it's
gonna
become
apparent.
I
think
this
is
the
year
this
year
next
year,
new
year
after
that,
we're
really
gonna
see
a
lot
of
disruption,
yeah
a
lot
of
disruption.
We've
been
waiting
for
and
talking
about
for
years,
and
it's
it's
not
just
because
of
es
IO,
but
it's
it's
definitely
gonna
pour
some
gasoline
on
that
fire.
Oh
yeah,
well,.
B
I
think
now
we're
gonna
start
to
see.
You
know
once
these
developers
get
in
there,
they
start
building
these
EO
staffs.
We're
gonna
see
those
mainstream
news
stories
of
oh,
this
decentralized,
uber
uber,
which
is
the
example
Novogratz
gives,
is
now
actually
competing
with
uber
in
these
cities.
This
decentralized
Airbnb
is
competing
with
this
and
I
think
we're
gonna
see
people
go
after
those
kind
of
low-hanging
fruit.
So
to
speak,
where
these
concepts
exist,
there
they've
proven
demand.
B
B
Lot
of
messages
that
the
entire
cypher
glass
team
is
so
excited
infrastructures
on
it,
we're
producing
blocks
were
up,
but
I
gotta
go
make
sure
everything's
running
smoothly.
So
thank
you
all
so
much
for
tuning
in.
Please
leave
a
comment
and
leave
a
Happy.
Birthday
egos
comment
be
a
part
of
this
historic
moment
and
we'll
see
you
next
week.
All.
D
I
see
you
alerts
me
teens
the
only
trusted
comprehensive
list
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pre,
I,
SEOs
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coin
offerings.
This
Pittsburgh
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startup,
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grown
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over
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million
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how
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they
get
started?
Well,
at
first,
the
company
was
just
an
online
tool
for
two
brothers
Mike
and
Rob
Finch
to
keep
a
calendar
of
their
favorite
icos.
After
just
a
few
months,
the
team
has
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These
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