►
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. The podcast is hosted by Robert Finch, the Founder of ICO Alert, and new episodes are released weekly. If you’d like, you can request a guest to appear on a future episode by tweeting us @icoalert or @finchify
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/
A
Welcome
to
episode
six
of
everything
is
I'm
Zack,
Gaul
and
I
CEO
data
analyst
at
icy
alert.
The
trusted
ICO
platform
visit
icy
alert,
calm,
the
complete
calendar
of
all
active
and
upcoming.
I
ciose
to
discover
the
latest
projects
and
opportunities
like
SEO,
and
I'm
here
today
with
our
founder,
rob
Finch
thank.
B
You
all
so
much
for
joining
us
on
another
episode
of
everything
gos.
Once
again,
we
do
appreciate
the
feedback
in
the
comments
that
we
get
about.
The
show
we've
seen
you
guys
share
your
thoughts
and
opinions
on
Twitter
on
reddit
and
the
YouTube
comments.
So
please
continue
doing
that.
Please
continue
sharing
your
comments
with
us
so
that
we
know
how
to
improve
in
the
future.
If
you
did
enjoy
the
show,
please
let
us
know
by
liking,
subscribing
or
following
the
podcast
on
YouTube,
iTunes
or
SoundCloud
or
anywhere
else
that
you
listen
to
podcasts
on.
A
B
Before
we
get
started
that
do
you
need
to
mention
that
this
is
not
a
sponsored
podcast.
We
have
not
been
paid
to
put
on
this
podcast
we're
simply
just
members
of
the
community
who
hold
us
tokens
ourselves
as
a
matter
of
disclosure
and
disclaimer.
Both
call
and
I
do
hold
us
tokens,
but
this
is
not
to
be
construed
as
financial,
legal,
professional
tax
or
any
other
kind
of
advice.
We're
simply
talking
about
our
own
opinions,
and
we
recommend
you
do
your
own
due
diligence
before
you
make
any
financial
decisions.
A
B
There
was
a
bug
in
some
aetherium
ERC
20,
smart
contracts,
so
when,
when
you
have
a
token
on
ethereum
blockchain,
it's
basically
just
a
smart
contract
and
there
was
a
bug
that
enabled
some
hackers
to
basically
go
in
and
change
the
mac
supply
of
the
actual
token,
if
I'm
not
mistaken,
so
you
could
go
in
and,
for
example,
change
a
token
supply
from
a
hundred
million
to
a
billion
and
just
print
another
900
million
tokens.
Yeah.
A
It
seemed
like
no
matter
what
what
the
tokens
supply
was
set
out
say.
It
said
it
a
billion
tokens
like
Yeo's.
With
this
bug,
it
was
rumored
that
you
could
just
create
new
token,
so
I'd
be
on
top
of
whatever
the
maximum
supply
would
be
and
have
ownership
of
those
tokens.
There
is
a
link
to
an
article
about
it
that
everyone
was
sharing
at
calling
out,
EO,
says
being
susceptible
to
this
bug
and
it
kind
of
scared.
A
lot
of
people,
but
Dan
was
pretty
quick
with.
A
B
B
Don't
worry,
nobody
can
increase
that
eyo
supply
for
the
placeholder
tokens
right
now,
but
then
somebody
put
out
a
blog
post,
basically
saying
that
using
the
eos
dawn
3.0
code,
like
the
most
recent
version
of
the
code,
they
were
able
to
find
the
same
bug
on
AOS
and
dan
quickly
came
out
and
said:
no,
you
just
coded
it
really
poorly
anybody
can
code
in
that
bug,
but
actually
you're
using
deprecated
code.
You
know
you
basically
did
it
correctly,
so
he
shut
it
down
pretty
quickly.
Yeah.
A
So
so
today,
RC
2
is
being
announced
released.
Candidate,
2
I
should
be
getting
pushed
out.
We're
recording
this
on
Thursday,
so
you
probably
be
listening
to
this
on
Friday.
That's!
Whenever
release
candidate
2
is
being
pushed
out.
You
could
probably
expect
a
blog
post
by
Dan
later
today.
I
think
so
I
think.
So
that's
what
happened
with
RC
one
big
news
around
that
I'm,
not
sure
of
all
the
features
they're
coming
out
with
for
our
c2
I'd.
A
B
Some
of
the
stuff
I
know,
god
it
looked
like
God,
moved
to
a
different
another
different
branch,
but
like
a
different
timeline.
So
like
a
pre-launch
timeline
versus
May
4th
timeline.
So,
but
if
all
still
well
I
mean
they
should
come
out
with
RC
to
on
on
may
the
4th,
so
maybe
Dana's
a
big
star,
Wars
fan
and
that's
why
you
picked
the
4th
I.
A
B
A
A
I
read
the
summary
on
years
ago,
and
his
thoughts
were
that
you
have
this
distributed
group
of
token
holders,
but
like
that's,
not
exactly
safe,
to
have
for
a
governance
model
for
these
people
that
have
nothing
to
do
with
the
company
making
like
company
decisions,
it'd
be
like
putting
a
bunch
of
strangers
on
your
board
of
directors
of
your
company.
Oh
I
see
what.
A
Token
holders
just
want
to
increase
the
value
their
tokens,
but
if
you're
running
a
company
like
with
ES
DAC,
they're
a
block
producing
company
right
and
there's
I,
think
the
same
issue
happened
with
with
Dan
whenever
he
was
doing.
His
first
exchange
was
the
the
governance
model
kind
of
cut
funding
for
future
development.
A
B
A
B
I
mean
I
think
you
have
to
look
at
it
from
the
long-term
too,
though,
like
a
lot
of
people
will
will
probably
use
their
voting
power
to
make
short-term
gains,
whether
it's
like
trying
to
remove
inflation
or
lower
inflation.
But
in
the
long
term,
if
you
totally
remove
inflation
from
the
network,
there
aren't
gonna,
be
block
producers
and
it's
gonna
fail.
So
yeah.
A
I
love
the
air
drops,
but
I
also
do
due
diligence
and
all
the
projects
and
find
a
way
to
get
behind
them
in
whatever
way,
I
can
and,
like
you
said,
I
think
the
people
who
actually
care
about
the
decisions
being
made
are
probably
gonna
go
through
the
process
of
acquiring
as
many
tokens
as
they
can
to
maintain
some
level
of
control
over
the
decision
making
of
the
deckard
hour.
Whatever
project
is
doing
the
airdrop
definitely
yeah.
B
They're
definitely
I
mean
they're
trade-offs
with,
like
you,
said,
kind
of
inviting
all
these
people
to
have
a
board
seat.
Basically,
assuming
your
tokens
are
some
kind
of
governance
power
which
it
seems
like
a
lot
of
these
airdrops
are
but
I
think
you
get
a
lot
of
positives
too,
like
you
get
that
the
potential
to
have
an
instant
community,
whereas
before
you
know
you
would
have
to
go
out-
and
you
know
III.
A
Think
the
marketing
it's
great
in
the
sense
that
it
adds
it
makes,
is
the
biggest
dow
ever
imagined
right
where,
like
these
air
drops,
are
adding
value
to
the
entire
network
rather
than
just
to
the
token
itself,
I
mean
we'll
see,
I
mean
I,
it's
just
such
uncharted
territory.
I'm
really
curious
to
see
what
happens
and
I
think
the
airdrop
model
could
work
better
for
some
projects
than
others,
but
we'll
see
what
happens
yeah.
What
else
is
going
on?
Rob
you
had
a
busy
week,
Kevin
yeah.
B
A
B
I'm
excited
we
announced
this
earlier
this
week,
we're
actually
launching
a
block
producer
candidate
for
the
EOS
Network,
so
we'll
be
hopefully
one
of
those
top
21
active
block
producers
out
there
producing
blocks.
You
know
making
sure
the
transactions
go
through
and
and
securing
the
network.
So
the
name
of
the
block
producer
is
cypher
glass,
cy,
pH,
ER,
glass,
it's
kind
of
a
play
off
of
site
for
being
code
or
key
to
the
code
in
glass,
being
transparency.
B
B
Yes,
so,
first
and
foremost
were
we're
focused
on
stable,
highly
secure
block
production,
so
I
think
rather
than
you
know,
getting
too
far
ahead
of
ourselves
and
saying:
oh
here
are
all
of
our
plans
for
the
future,
for
how
we
want
to
you
know,
add
value
other
than
secure
block
production,
our
main
focus
going
into
June.
When
this
network
launches
is
okay.
How
can
we
make
sure
that
we're
we're
secure?
Nobody
takes
over
a
block
producer
and
that
we
have,
you
know
basically
100%
uptime,
so
that
we're
not
missing
any
block.
B
So
that's
our
focus
first
and
foremost,
but
then
moving
forward.
I.
Think
one
of
the
areas
that
we're
really
passionate
about
at
cyber
glass
is
education,
so
we've
seen
a
lot
of
other
block
producers
a
lot
of
other,
even
even
a
dab
called
Carmel
kind
of
focus
on
education
of
developers
for
us
and-
and
we
really
want
to
focus
on
education
of
individuals
for
you.
So
whether
you
know
you
even
have
any
tech
skills
at
all
or
not
we're
looking
on
sort
of
educating
people
on
what
use
is
the
potential
of
it.
A
I
think
it's
really
interesting.
So
we
talked
about
some
of
the
bigger
name
block
producing
candidates
last
week
and
we
could
rehash
some
of
this
stuff
today.
But
I
won
that
we
didn't
talk
about
last
week
was
a
Oh
sphere.
Yeah
is
a
VP
candidate,
I'm,
not
sure
their
background
before
EO
sphere
like
like
I,
knew
about
like
BitFenix
or
whatever,
but
they
announced
I.
A
Think
yesterday
or
the
day
before,
a
big
university
partnership
with
RMIT
University
in
Australia,
now
RMIT
University,
they
launched
their
first
blockchain
courses
this
this
this
year,
I
think
the
classical
developing
block
change
strategy,
so
they're
pretty
new
to
the
blockchain
space,
but
the
agreement
that
es
fear
made
with
them
includes
a
commitment
to
do
a
lot
of
research.
So
how
I
was
talking
about
the
airdrops?
How
it's
just
unknown
right
now,
because
it's
never
been
done
before
even
doubt
haven't
really
been
proven
before,
like.
A
So
as
part
of
this
research
agreement
with
geosphere
they're
gonna
do
actual
like
peer-reviewed
research,
maybe
the
actually
be
getting
published
in
the
blockchain
Journal.
There's
a
peer-to-peer
or
peer-reviewed
blockchain
journal
it's
out
of
the
universe.
I
can't
remember
the
name.
The
ledger
journal,
the
ledger
journal
yeah,
it's
actually
published
here
in
Pittsburgh
out
of
the
University
of
Pittsburgh
yeah,
you
met
the
editor.
Didn't
you
yeah.
A
A
Research
on
is
blockchain,
enabled
voting
mechanisms
and
governance
structures,
examination
of
new
and
novel
methods
of
collective
decision-making,
including
dowels
and
Dax,
and
comparative
examination
of
the
impact
of
the
es
blockchain
on
trust,
altruistic
organizations
versus
existing
business
models,
and
the
impact
es
will
have
on
existing
governance
structures
of
altruistic
organizations
really
interesting
stuff,
so
yeah
I
have
professed
professional
graduate
level,
PhD
level,
students
and
professors
researching
these
hard
answer,
questions
and
I
think
that's
very
interesting.
Yeah.
B
I
think
it'll
be
I,
mean
it'll,
be
interesting
to
see
some
of
the
answers
that
they
come
up
with,
especially
since
none
of
this
stuff
has
really
existed
in
the
wild.
Yet,
and
maybe
you
know
when
a
Dow
launches
on
EEO
say
it's
maybe
yo
stack,
for
example,
they'll
take
as
a
case
study
it'll,
be
really
interesting
to
see
if
they
study
some
of
the
ones
in
the
wild
and
kind
of
their
impact,
and
maybe
answer
some
of
the
questions
you
had
earlier
about
you
know
is
an
air-dropped
the
right
model.
B
A
Iii
think
education,
like
you
said,
that's
gonna,
be
the
biggest
piece
of
this
because
you
you
need
to
have
a
huge
developer
community
right
now.
Aetherium
pretty
much
has
a
global
reach,
the
biggest
community
of
any
blockchain
software.
That's
that's
been
launched,
but
I
mean
we
believe
that
E
is
blows
aetherium
away.
Oh
yeah,.
B
Well,
I
mean,
if
you
think
of
even
you
know
the
fact
that
eus
doesn't
have
a
new
programming
language.
Like
solidity.
Is
you
know
on
aetherium
that,
then
all
these
people
have
to
learn
to
develop.
There's
already
gonna
be
a
massive
pool
of
millions
of
developers
that
can
build
yost
apps
as
soon
as
US
launches.
So
we
don't
have
to
really
get
people
in
to
learn
a
new
coding
language,
it's
more
just
about
applying
their
existing
knowledge
to
this
new
sort
of
decentralized
infrastructure.
A
I'm
I'm
excited
about
the
the
opportunity
to
bring
new
developers,
and
so
there's
been
rumors
about
certain
eath
projects
moving
over
to
EOS
after
the
main
that
launch
and
that's
great,
if
you
can
convert
eath
developers
into
es
developers.
But
what
really
needs
to
happen
is
fresh
blood
coming
into
the
system.
People
coming
out
of
college
as
blockchain
developers
and
their
main
programming
language
is
going
to
be
built
on
ES
using
web
assembly
and
C++
yeah
I.
A
Think
that's
that's
what
the
future
holds
and
it
seems
like
all
of
not
all,
but
many
of
the
block
producer
candidates
are
on
the
same
page
on
the
educational
piece.
Some
of
the
other
that
value-adds
outside
of
the
education
is
a
lot
of
incubators
and
accelerators
are
being
funded,
are
partially
funded
by
by
the
block
producers
themselves
and
that's
on
top
of
block
1
actually
fund
same
exact
stuff.
So
this
is
huge
guys.
A
B
Than
this
is
something
that
we
definitely
want
to
do
as
well,
if
you
take
a
look
at
our
website
for
cypher
glass
and
you
sort
of
scroll
through
our
values,
DAP
development
or
DAP
incubation
to
some
extent,
it's
definitely
something
that
we
want
to
focus
on
we're
just
not
yet
sure
how
we
want
to
go
about
doing
it.
If
that
makes
sense
the
structure
of
it,
you
know,
should
it
be
an
in-person
incubator,
should
it
be
online?
A
I
tell
them
I
have
some
ideas
for
up
I'm,
not
part
of
cypher
glass
I'm,
just
with
icy
alert,
but
we
do
have
Carnegie
Mellon
University
here
in
Pittsburgh.
There's
nothing
announced
nothing
even
in
the
works,
so
I
don't
want
to
lead
to
any
speculation,
but
for
ico,
like
at
least
I've
been
working
on
integrating
with
that
community
and
I
think
there's
a
lot
of
opportunity
there,
if
not
CMU,
there's
so
many
other
universities.
What
what
u.s.
B
Many
opportunities,
even
when
we
met
with
Chris
last
year
before
this
block
bruiser,
was
even
part
of
the
discussion.
It
was
very
clear
that
there
are
a
lot
of
kids
in
Pittsburgh
who
were
at
these
Pittsburgh
universities
who
are
interested
in
crypto,
some
of
which
you
know
Rand,
if
you're
in
mining
rigs
or
did
something
else
in
the
space
that
I
think
are
now
really
just
looking
for
guidance
on.
How
do
they
get
into
this?
A
At
IC
Oller,
we
actually
put
out
an
internship
program
that
were
working
on
for
this
summer
and
with
all
the
students
at
Carnegie,
Mellon,
University
and
University
of
Pittsburgh
and
I,
think
Edinburgh
University
up
up
in
Erie.
We
got
slammed
with
applications
and
the
job
description
wasn't
for
blockchain
development,
we're
not
a
blockchain
developing
company,
they're
gonna
going
to
do
other
tasks,
but
what
we
found
was
90%
of
our
applicants
were
computer
science,
students
and
none
of
them
are
doing
more
than
hobbyist
work
in
in
blockchain
and
through
the
interview
questions.
A
B
B
Mean
even
online,
if
you
look
at
like
the
the
difference
in
resources,
I
think
we
were
talking
about
this
last
week,
a
little
bit
like
if
you
google,
how
to
build
a
website
or
how
to
learn
HTML
or
CSS,
or
something
like
that.
There's
tons
of
resources,
tons
of
places
to
start
probably
too
many
places
to
start,
but
if
you
google,
something
like
how
to
build
the
centralized
apps
how
to
build
blockchain
apps,
you
really
don't
get
that
much
information
if
any
information
at
all.
B
A
Haven't
watched
any
but
I've
been
kind
of
through
the
telegram
channels
been
seeing
some
videos
posted
or
webinar
upcoming,
webinars
being
announced
that
are
kind
of
doing.
What
we're
talking
about
here,
where
it's
like
introductory
stuff,
is
developing
on
es
so
I'm
interested
to
see
that
stuff
coming
on
I'm
sure
there's
been
stuff
in
the
works,
whether
by
block
one,
the
producers
or
some
of
the
VC
funds,
I
think
there's
a
lot
of
content.
That's
going
to
be
coming
out.
This
is
just
speculation,
but
I
mean
everyone's
looking
forward
to
the
u.s.
launched.
A
B
I
mean
speaking
of
this
summer,
it's
kind
of
interesting.
What's
gonna,
you
know
everybody's
asking
the
question
now
that
we're
what
four
weeks
out
from
the
actual
u.s.
network
launch
is?
What's
gonna
happen,
you
know
what
a
different
scenario
is
gonna
be
is
the?
How
long
is
it
going
to
take
to
launch
when
do
I
get
my
tokens?
Are
they
gonna,
be
multiple
chains
and
I?
Think
it's
gonna
be
really
interesting
to
see
what
actually.
A
B
There
are
two
chains
that
get
the
15%
of
total
tokens,
so
you
you
basically
have
to
have
a
hundred
50
million
people
are
100
million.
Token
excuse
me
sort
of
claimed
in
their
wallets
in
order
for
a
block
chain
to
be
recognized
as
valid
in
order
for
you
to
even
be
able
to
send
transactions
on
that
blockchain.
So
I
would
agree.
I
think
that's
probably
close
to
worst
case
is
two
or
more
networks
launch
and
get
they
both
get
the
15
percent
unlocks.
So.
A
What
I
think
would
happen
in
that
scenario
is
it's,
it
would
create
a
lot
of
controversy
because,
like
by
Nance,
Kraken
and
BitFenix
have
already
announced
there
might
be
other
exchanges.
Those
are
the
ones
I
enough
time.
I
had
to
have
announced,
they're
gonna
support
the
token
swap
so
pretty
much
whatever
one
they
say
is
the
main
chain
is
most
likely
gonna
be
the
one
yeah
howdy
is
one.
B
The
crazy
thing
about
this
day
and
even
mentioned
this
in
telegram
like
there
will,
at
the
end
of
the
day
there
there
may
be
multiple
chains
and
I'm
sure
you
know
there's
some
other.
Even
now
there
are
people,
who've
said:
hey
we're,
gonna,
launch
a
different
chain
with
a
different
distribution
and
and
all
these
different
changes,
but
Danna
good
point.
There
really
will
be
one
yes
because
it
is
just
whatever
is
on
the
exchanges.
What's
going
to
be
the
iou's
pair
on
an
exchange.
A
I
think
I
really
doubt
that
there's
gonna
be
two
equally
supported
chains
that
that's
just
next
to
impossible,
especially
with
the
big
players
we
talked
about
last
week,
putting
their
name
into
the
block
producing
candidate
pull
as
far
as
like
BitFenix
and
okay
blockchain
capital
and
all
the
other
monstrosity.
They
already
have
this
reach
and
bit
on
BitFenix
yes
became
the
top
trading
pair
like
over
the
last
two
weeks,
more
trade
volume
than
Bitcoin
yeah.
A
So
they
have
this
huge
audience
of
supporters
and
even
in
a
lot
of
the
telegram
channels
that
are
Bitcoin
like
evangelists,
are
jumping
on
the
es
train,
so
I
think
whatever
one
these
major
block
producing
candidates
are
on
that's
going
to
be
the
main
chain
because
of
the
21
candidates.
How
many
have
been
announced
so
far?
We.
A
I
think
I
mean
there
that
people
could
disagree
with
this,
but
I
think
the
big
players-
I'm
gonna,
say
that
they're,
a
lock
I'm
voting
for
them.
I'm
gonna
vote
for
BitFenix,
I'm,
gonna,
I'm
gonna
vote
for
all
the
big
players
that
could
add
the
most
value
to
the
system.
The
most
stability
to
the
system,
yeah
I
mean.
B
B
Yeah
I
mean,
if
you
look
at
just
the
the
reach
that
somebody
like
a
bit
FedEx
or
even
an
ampoule,
with
all
the
people
who
have
contributed
to
their
money,
pooling
pass
just
the
reach
that
these
people
have
I
think
it
would
be
shocking
to
me
if
they
didn't
get
voted
in,
because,
even
if
you
know
a
small
small
percentage
of
the
total
people,
they
have
access
to
votes
for
them.
That's
still
a
ton
of
hosts
speaking.
A
Of
this,
this
actually
brings
up
a
point.
I
meant
to
talk
about
earlier.
What's
the
name
pay,
although
I
think
it's
pow-wow,
Paulo?
Sorry
Paulo.
If
you
hear
this,
if
I
mess
your
name
up
but
I'm
in
the
telegram
Channel,
he
was
a.
He
was
kind
of
an
argument
with
another
block
producer
candidate
about
distrust
or
something,
and
he
came
out
and
said
one
of
the
things
that
they're
gonna
do
is
that
they're
gonna?
Actually
I'll
just
quote
him.
A
He
said
my
project
is
that
BitFenix
/es
Phoenix
will
have
an
internal
way
of
staking
for
proposals.
Slash
changes,
customers
money
is
not
ours.
We
don't
have
any
benefit
in
voting
with
customers
coins
for
something
that
customers
don't
want.
That
would
simply
hurt
our
business.
So
that
was
the
first
statement
he
made,
but
then,
a
few
days
later
he
actually
mentioned
that
they're
building
an
open-source
library
to
have
a
way
to
keep
your
tokens
on
an
exchange
while
still
having
the
ability
to
vote
for
different
proposals
and
block
producers.
So
I
think
that's
awesome!
A
Yeah,
because
we
talk
about
voter
participation.
It's
it's
one
of
the
biggest
issues
with
governance
protocols
on
other
block
changes.
How
do
we
get
people
to
vote?
I?
Guess
it's
just
like
in
real
life
yeah
exactly
so.
How
do
you
get
people
to
vote
because
a
lot,
a
lot
of
people
in
the
ball
chain
space
or
just
traders
and
speculators?
Yeah?
A
They
don't
care
about
the
project
as
much,
but
if
they're
allowed
to
keep
their
tokens
on
in
exchange
and
still
be
able
to
support
different
governance
projects
and
proposals,
that's
awesome
and
the
fact
that
it's
gonna
be
open
source
means
that,
like
yes,
Phoenix
won't
be
the
only
decentralized
exchange
on
EIS.
They
have
a
large
audience
already.
So
they'll
have
a
leg
up
on
that,
but
they're
sharing
everything,
they're
building,
yeah.
B
B
So
I
think
that's
awesome
to
see
first
and
foremost
that
they're
not
just
gonna
like
take
a
hundred
million
years
or
whatever
it
is
in
their
exchange
and
vote
for
themselves,
because
I
think
that
would
be
horrible,
but
second
of
all,
I
think
it's
setting
a
good
precedent
that
it's
you
know
every
other
exchange
that
holds
us
is
going
to
look
worse
than
us
Phoenix
and
look
worse
than
bid
Phoenix
until
they
implement
that
similar
system
that
lets
people
vote.
You
know
vote
for
what
at
the
top.
B
A
B
This
is
something
that,
theoretically,
anybody
can
configure
this
number
at
launch.
So
if
all
the
block
producers
said,
oh
I
actually
want
it
to
still
be
121
total
block
producers,
a
hundred
of
which
are
standby.
They
could
do
that,
but
there's
some
interesting
sort
of
ideas
coming
from
block
one
and
haven't
justified.
You
know
why
they
want
to
make
this
change.
A
B
A
B
B
Scenario,
all
the
tokens
are
locked
on.
What
is
it
June,
1st
I
believe
might
be
early
morning,
June,
2nd
and
then
by
June
3rd,
that
the
network
is
launched
without
a
hitch.
So
a
best-case
scenario,
there's
there's
a
very
clear
winner:
here's
one
main
chain:
it's
launched,
it's
stable,
it's
not
dropping
blocks
all
over
the
place.
The
block
cruiser
is
able
to
connect,
people
are
able
to
get
their
tokens
and
vote
and
there's
not
some
there.
B
They're,
no
zero
day
exploits
and
zero
day
exploit,
is
sort
of
a
bug
in
the
system
that
somebody
knew
about.
You
know
before
we
even
launched
but
didn't
disclose.
You
know
to
use
for
their
own
personal
gain.
So
a
best
case
there
are
no
zero
day
exploits
there
are
no
bugs
that
need
to,
you
know
be,
would
be
fixed
in
a
timely
manner.
Everything
just
works
as
it's
supposed
to
work.
What.
B
We're
excited
about
launch
day,
I.
Think
it's
going
to
be
interesting
to
see
you
know
who
ends
up
being
chosen
as
that
group
of
50,
or
so
that
are
actually
going
to
launch
the
chain,
because
now,
with
a
hundred
plus,
you
know
delegates
I
think
it
makes
the
most
sense,
for
you
know,
50
to
sort
of
come
forward
and
say:
hey.
Not
only
are
we
comfortable
from
a
tech
perspective
launching
this
chain,
but
we're
comfortable
from
a
legal
perspective
and
regulatory
perspective,
and
all
these
other
perspectives
launching
this
hey?
B
We
want
to
be
one
of
the
50,
so
I
think
one
of
the
priorities
before
launch
just
figuring
out
who
there's
50
are
you
know
getting
them
in
touch
with
each
other
going
through
these?
These
practice
launches
that
I
know.
Three
different
groups
are
going
through
now
and
and
kind
of
making
sure
that
every
possible
variable
is
accounted
for
ahead
of
time.
I.
A
A
B
It
would
be
depending
on
how
bested
you
are
in
heõs,
and
maybe
if
I
wasn't
doing
cypher
glass,
maybe
I
would
go
to
a
launch
party,
but
I
think
it
would
be
a
mistake
to
be
in
a
strange
place
in
a
place
that
you're
not
familiar
with
when
you
have
to
access
your
tokens
in
case.
Something
goes
wrong
because
you
never
know
what
could
happen.
I
mean
it
as
part
of
that
worst
case
scenario.
The
chain
could
launch
effectively
and
then
there's
a
bug,
and
you
need
to
move
your
tokens
to
protect
your
tokens.
B
B
B
Sounds
good
to
me
so
if
you
guys
are
going
to
tulip
conference
in
San,
Francisco,
June,
7th
and
8th
I
will
be
there
representing
cypher
class
representing
ICO
alert,
so
come
out,
say
hello,
you
know!
If
you
want
to
meet
me,
if
you
wanna
meet
any
of
the
rest
of
our
team,
we
should
have
a
couple
of
our
tech
guys
there
as
well
so
come
take
a
look.
Come
have
a
chat
and
thank
you
all
so
much
for
listening
to
this
episode.
Again.