►
From YouTube: Everything EOS #11
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.
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Twitter: @Cypherglass
A
Welcome
to
episode
11
of
everything,
yes,
I'm
Zack
Gaul
Nico
data
analyst
at
ICO
alert
the
trusted
ICO
discovery
platform
visit
ICO,
let
calm
the
most
complete
calendar
of
all
active
and
upcoming
icos
to
discover
the
latest
projects
and
opportunities
like
a
OS,
I/o
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
another
episode
of
everything
ye
Oh,
so
we
sincerely
appreciate
all
the
feedback
and
comments
that
would
continue
to
get
about
the
show
whether
you're
talking
on
YouTube,
SoundCloud,
Spotify
or
somewhere
else.
Please
continue
to.
Let
us
know
if
you
like
the
show
by
either
leaving
a
comment
liking,
subscribing
or
following
the
podcast
in
any
of
those
places.
Alright,.
B
We
get
started
I
do
need
to
mention
that
this
podcast
is
not
sponsored
and,
as
a
matter
of
disclosure
is
a
can
I
do
both
owned
euros
tokens.
However,
this
should
not
be
construed
as
legal,
financial,
tax
or
professional
advice.
We're
just
two
people
talking
about
the
technology
that
we're
very
passionate
about,
and
you
should
always
do
your
own
research.
Alright,.
A
B
A
B
Definitely
weird:
we've
been
honestly
kind
of
surprised,
but
but
obviously
thrilled
about
all
the
community
support
that
we've
gotten
we've
gotten
close
to
40
million
votes
that
have
kept
us
in
the
top
twenty
one.
So
we
sincerely
appreciate
everybody.
That's
voted
for
us
whether
you
have
10
yes
or
10,000.
Yes,
we
appreciate
every
single
vote
so.
A
B
I
think
this
is
a
great
thing
and
honestly
I'm
kind
of
surprised
that
the
amount
of
votes
continues
to
go
up.
I
thought
for
sure
that
once
we
hit
15%,
it
might
be
go
below
15%,
but
it
looks
like
more
and
more
people
continue
to
vote
as
voting
gets
easier
and
people
start
to
understand
it
more
so
I
think
that's
a
great
thing
overall
for
the
the
health
of
the
network.
A
B
Huge
I
mean,
if
you
look
at
other
depo
systems
arc
and
liske
and
rise
all
these
other
systems.
The
highest
voting
percentage
I've
ever
seen
is
about
40
or
45
percent
and
I
was
on
arc,
and
that
was
also
when
you
were
getting
paid
to
vote
for
people
so
to
have
it
at
almost
25
percent.
Now
and
people
aren't
even
getting
paid,
then
it's
a
pretty
big
accomplishment
and.
A
B
Yeah
I
mean
on
the
test
net.
We
were
on
the
jungle
test,
net
participating
a
lot
and
we
still
participate
there.
When
do
software
updates
or
patches
come
out.
We
hit
fourteen
hundred
and
seventy
five
transactions
per
second
I'm,
not
sure
if
the
592
is
just
that
the
max
we've
hit
so
far,
but
the
single
threaded
implementation
can
definitely
go
much
much
higher.
So.
A
B
So
when
that
happened,
all
that
the
bp's
got
together
ourselves
included,
although
with
the
exception
of
a
few,
it
was
kind
of
disappointing
to
see
that
BitFenix
will
be
and
I
believe.
One
other
were
not
on
the
call
and
not
trying
to
resolve
this
issue,
so
that
was
kind
of
a
bummer,
but
everybody
else,
including
a
lot
of
standby
bp's
who
are
out
of
the
top
twenty
one
sort
of
hopped
on.
This
call
figured
out
what
was
going
on
dan
Larimer,
obviously
hopped
in
for
a
little
bit
and
helped
patch
the
issue.
B
But
ultimately
what
happened
was
the
bug
froze
the
chain?
We
went
in
patched
it
up
figured
out
where
the
bug
was
got
the
patch
from
block
1
and
from
Dan.
We
all
upgraded
our
nodes,
all
the
top
21
bps,
and
then
we
tested
it
made
sure
everything
was
working
and
then
unfroze
the
chain.
So
this
is
a
process
where,
unlike
chains
like
Bitcoin
or
if
you're
in
one
there's
a
critical
error,
you
have
to
hard
fork
out
and
make
an
entirely
separate
chain
to
fix
the
issue
with
AO.
A
That's
interesting
because
these
things
that
you
just
mention
as
being
a
positive
all
the
food
stores
are
seeing
it
as
a
negative
right.
So
the
other
thing
people
have
been
complaining
about
on
Twitter
is
the
7
accounts
that
were
also
recently
frozen
by
the
bps
right
eye.
You
want
to
kind
of
give
your
side
of
that
yeah,
so
that
was.
B
Something
that
we
were
very
very
hesitant
to
do.
We
were
really
pushing
for
evidence
of
okay.
We
need
to
know
for
sure.
We
need
cryptographic
proof
that
these
people's
accounts
were
actually
act
before
we
put
in
this
freeze
and
the
reason
why
all
of
this
happened
and
happened
through
a
BP
vote
rather
than
the
arbitration
process
is
because
the
arbitration
process
right
now
does
not
really
exist
on
the
chain.
There's
no
decentralized
arbitration
system.
Ekf
is
kind
of
like
a
fill
in
for
arbitration
in
some
kind
of
a
way.
B
But
ultimately
what
happened
was
seven
people
who
were
able
to
cryptographically
prove
that
their
accounts
were
hacked
and
their
tokens
were
being
unstick.
They
came
to
us
and
said:
hey.
We
need
you
to
freeze
our
account
so
that
we
can
save
our
funds
I.
Think
in
total
was
maybe
1,300
years
across
those
seven
accounts.
So
ultimately
all
the
bp's
decided.
Okay,
yes,
we're
going
to
freeze
it
sort
of
see
how
this
works
test.
B
It
out
successfully
froze
the
accounts
and
now
obviously
we're
going
through
this
process
of
setting
up
arbitration
so
that
in
the
future,
the
bp's
don't
have
this
kind
of
power.
Because,
honestly,
I
don't
think
we
should
have
this
power
and
I
don't
think
we
want
to
have
this
power
of
responsibility.
So
it's
important
to
note
that
in
the
future,
when
something
like
this
happens,
if
your
account
is
compromised,
you'll
go
through
the
centralized
arbitration
process
where
you
know
you'll
pitch
your
evidence
to
the
arbitrator's.
B
A
B
A
B
May
be
talking
about,
they
may
be
talking
about
the
quote-unquote
final
Constitution,
which
will
never
really
be
final,
because
people
can
constantly
submit
updates
and
new
proposals,
but
right
now
it's
technically
an
interim
Constitution.
So
that
may
be
what
the
referencing
is,
that
this
is
technically
a
placeholder
and
then
in
the
near
future,
we'll
have
to
do
a
vote
and
hold
a
I
believe
15%
of
token
holders
have
to
be
voting
on
the
Constitution
for
a
period
of
90
days,
in
order
for
that
new
Constitution
to
then
be
ratified
at
considered
valid.
B
But
there
are
a
lot
of
things
in
the
current
Constitution
that
we
definitely
want
change
the
biggest
one
being
article
15,
which
basically
says
that
if
you
don't
send
a
transaction
for
three
years,
your
account
will
be
be
taken,
which
is
something
that
I
think
goes
totally.
Is
the
ethos
of
Yeo's,
which
is
you
know,
securing
life,
liberty
and
property
so
that
that's
something
that
we're
pushing
pretty
hard
to
change
and
I.
Think
the
community
is
pretty
pretty
on
board
with
that.
So.
A
B
So
ETF
is
a
group
of
a
couple
of
community
members
who
have
all
basically
stood
up
and
said:
hey.
You
know
we're
not
associated
with
blog
producers,
we're
not
associated
with
with
really
anybody
in
the
community
so
that
they
can
have
some
kind
of
an
unbiased
approach,
but
right
now
they're
the
ones
that
these
arbitration
issues
are
being
passed
through.
So
if
you
have
an
issue
like
a
my
account
was
hacked
that
need
help,
you
would
go
through
ETF,
but
in
the
near
future.
B
B
Yeah,
but
for
those
that
don't
know
real
quickly
that
the
worker
proposal
system
is
where
four
out
of
five
percent
of
the
inflation
goes.
So
80%
of
all
inflation
on
the
es
network
goes
to
this
worker
proposal.
Fun
block
producers
get
1%,
the
work
of
Rosel
system
gets
4%
and
all
of
that
inflation
basically
sits
there
in
this
massive
account
that
can
then
be
used
to
fund,
say
community
projects
or
fund
and
really
any
idea
you
have.
That
will
help
improve
the
es
network
in
some
way.
A
And
I
think
it's
going
to
be
one
of
the
biggest
things
ever
seen
in
blockchain.
If
this
is
successful,
not
nothing
like
it
has
ever
been
successfully
implemented.
I
know
has
some
sort
of
proposal
system,
but
it's
still
pretty
immature.
Also
and
and
I
expect
the
EOS
version
to
be
it's
gonna,
take
a
while
to
reach
its
full
potential
but,
like
Rob
said,
like
there's
a
there's,
a
5%
annual
inflation
on
the
network,
so
in
the
first
year
there'll
be
50
million
tokens
generated.
A
Only
10
million
of
them
are
going
to
go
to
the
block
producers,
and
then
that
leaves
40
million
tokens
to
be
used
to
grow
the
ecosystem
and
and
whatever
way
the
community
deems
relevant
and
necessary.
So
when
we
talk
about
different
branches
of
a
government,
you
have
the
block
producers,
they
already
kind
of
have
a
salary
built-in
to
the
1%
inflation,
but
then
they're
the
arbitrator's
might
be
paid
through
this
worker
proposal
system.
A
There's
certain
projects
that
people
deem
very
necessary
there's
been
a
lot
of
talk
about
developing
a
stable
coin,
and
that
would
be
a
top
priority
that
people
would
probably
be
willing
to
fund
through
proposal
system.
Just
just
anything
like
if
you
want
to
do
something
that
you
think
can
grow
the
ecosystem.
The
worker
proposal
systems
going
to
be
your
route
to
do
that
and
I'm
just
really
really
looking
forward
to
being
part
of
more
of
these
conversations,
and
you
guys
can
join
also
anyone
listening
just
go
to
us.
Go
do
go
into
the
forums.
A
You'll
see
a
section
for
the
worker
proposal
system,
though
of
the
links
to
the
telegram
groups.
Thomas
Cox
has
been
very
active
in
all
of
this,
as
he
has
with
governance,
but
he
actually
just
posted
a
timeline
recently
and
their
goal
is
to
design
and
propose
the
actual
system.
Like
an
outline
of
what
exactly
it's
going
to
look
like
by
q3.
They
also
want
to
have
the
smart
contracts
done
by
q3.
They
want
to
have
the
UI
ready
by
q4
and
then
the
go
or
no-go
vote
before
the
end
of
the
year
Wow.
A
B
I
mean
you
could
do
it
for
anything
for
people
who
are
working
on
the
the
core
code.
If
you
know
there
are
a
bunch
of
volunteers
that
work
on
the
code,
in
addition
to
block
one-
which
I
think
is
something
people
don't
know,
and
those
volunteers
could
be
compensated
through
this
and
I
think
something
that's
important
to
mention
is:
let's
say
that
this
is
done
in
December.
There
is
already
going
to
be
20
million
Neos,
then,
in
that
fund
between
now
and
December.
B
So
even
at
a
ten
dollar
token
price,
we're
talking
200
million
dollars
that
can
go
into
funding
all
these
different
different
projects
and
initiatives.
So
it's
it's
gonna,
be
a
pretty
sizeable
chunk
of
money.
In
addition
to
the
billion
dollars
block,
one
is
already
put
up
to
fund
gap
specifically
and.
A
That's
what
I
think
we'll
see
is
this:
this
fund
is
just
going
to
accumulate
before
the
the
system's
ready
and
then
even
once
this
system
launches
it
might
be
slow
to
kind
of
get
off
the
ground.
So
there
will
be
a
pretty
decent-sized
war
chest
when
this
thing
gets
going.
So
it's
never
going
to
be
an
issue
of
how
much
balance
is
left
and
can
we
afford
to
do
things
that
if
you
have
a
good
idea
and
you
can
get
the
support
of
the
community,
anything
is
possible.
B
Yeah
and
I
think
the
most
key
thing
here
is
going
to
be
making
sure
that
the
projects
and
initiatives
that
are
being
funded
or
high
quality
projects
and
also
have
some
kind
of
accountability
behind
them.
So
before
we
go
and
give
ten
million
dollars
to
some
DAP
to
build,
you
know
whatever,
whatever
DAP
they're
building
and
before
we
go
and
pay
a
salary
to
somebody
who's
committing
code.
I
think
there
needs
to
be
some
kind
of
review
process,
whether
it's
decentralized
through
the
community
or
something
else.
A
There's
been
already
a
lot
of
talk
of
like
how
do
you
avoid
like
spamming
the
proposals,
so
there's
been
talk
of
like
having
a
fee
like
I.
Think
charges
like
seven
just
to
submit
a
proposal
and
is
I,
don't
know
what
it
is
like
250,
maybe
somewhere
around
there.
So
it
costs
you
money
to
submit
a
proposal,
but
that's
good
because
it
prevents
like
submitting
garbage
and
spamming.
A
If
you
have
like
thousands
and
thousands
of
garbage
proposals,
it's
gonna
be
really
hard
for
the
community
to
filter
them
down
and
choose
which
ones
they
want
to
vote
for
also
having
having
some
sort
of
fee
and
I
actually
like
the
idea
of
a
fee,
because,
let's
let's
say
you
do
want
to
apply
for
like
a
10
million
dollar,
ask
an
EO
s
equivalent
to
do
something.
Some
really
big
idea.
Let's
say
that
the
fee
is
actually
a
percentage
of
what
you're
asking
for
oh
wow,
that
that
would
cause
like.
A
Let's
say
I
want
to
do
a
10
million
dollar
project,
but
I
don't
have
and
and
the
fee
would
be
like-
let's
just
say,
1
percent
just
to
make
up
a
number
I
wouldn't
have
that
many
iou's
to
put
in
a
deposit
or
a
stake
to
submit
this
proposal.
So
I
would
be
forced
to
kind
of
find
angel
investors
in
a
way
where
they
could
delegate
their
tokens
to
me
as
a
deposit
to
allow
me
to
submit
this
proposal.
They.
B
Interesting,
that's
a
cool
idea,
that's
something
Henry
thought
of
there's
also
I,
think,
even
if
it
was
only
like
if
it
was
a
flat
fee
like
how
I
said
if
it,
if
it's
the
equivalent
of
a
thousand
dollars.
If
a
thousand
people
apply
with
a
thousand
dollar
fee,
some
ten
million
dollar
bounty.
You
can
offset
already
ten
percent
of
that
ten
million
just
through
the
fees
that
people
are
to
ensure
high
quality
submissions,
mm-hmm.
A
That's
going
to
review
the
I
guess
the
milestones
and
project
completions
right,
someone,
there's
gonna,
have
to
be
people
behind
this
to
verify
that
things
are
getting
done,
possibly
a
rating
system
to
rate
you
said:
if
you
do
a
terrible
job,
you
won't
ever
be
able
to
get
another
proposal.
Prairie-Like.
A
B
Knows
well,
I.
Think
that's
like
an
important
note
for
all
of
this,
especially
when
we're
talking
about
those
seven
accounts
that
were
frozen
earlier
is
that
none
of
this
has
been
done
before
and
that's
why
everybody
is
kind
of
working
through
this
as
a
learning
process
and
even
with
our
initial
block,
creaser
calls
when
we
were
getting
up
and
running
and
getting
ready
to
launch
the
network,
there
really
wasn't
some
kind
of
organizational
structure
to
make
sure
okay.
B
These
BP's
need
to
be
on
this
call
at
this
time
and
now
that's
in
place
and
now
we're
looking
at
things
like
arbitration.
Okay,
you
know
us
going
and
you
know
debating
on
a
conference
call
whether
or
not
to
freeze
an
account.
It's
not
the
right
way
to
go
about
this.
We
need
a
real
system
in
place
that
that's
going
to
be
consistent
over
time,
so
we're
learning
as
we
go
and
I
think
to
your
point,
all
of
this
being
so
new.
B
A
What
are
the
big
things
that
we
were
looking
forward
to
dan
has
actually
been
teasing.
A
new
hardware
wallet,
yes,
I
know
interests
you
because
you've
we
talked
about
it.
Last
week
you
put
out
a
hundred
thousand
dollar
bounty
for
developers
who
are
able
to
successfully
implement,
put
into
production
a
ledger
and
an
an
OS
Hardware
wallet.
Yeah
I
ledger.
A
B
Oh,
this
is
so
exciting,
so
Dan
has
said-
and
this
is
a
quote-
we
are
signing
transactions
with
a
iPhone
app
now
and
then
he
goes
on
to
say
using
hardware
and
what's
most
exciting
about
this.
To
me
is
that
most
people
don't
realize
if
you
have
an
iPhone
that
you
bought
in
the
last
like
three
to
four
years,
your
iPhone
actually
has
a
secure,
Enclave
chip
in
it
and
what
that
secure,
Enclave
or
se
chip
is.
Is
it's
basically
an
offline
computer?
That's
in
your
iPhone,
so
you
can
store.
B
You
know
the
biometric
data
from
your
touch
ID.
When
you
unlock
your
phone
with
your
fingerprint,
you
can
store
your
face.
Id
data
there.
You
can
store
any
kind
of
secure
data
that
you
don't
want
to
go
online
on
that
chip
and
then
there's
no
risk
of
somebody,
stealing
your
phone
or
hacking
into
your
phone
and
extracting
that
data.
A
I,
don't
use
it
regularly.
I
still
use
my
debit
or
credit
cards,
but
it
is
really
cool.
How
like
it's
becoming
more
and
more
POS
systems
are
accepting
like
payment
through
just
like
swiping,
your
phone
by
the
POS
def
and
as
as
more
and
more
things
get
tokenized
and
it
could
be
used
in
an
everyday
as
an
everyday
currency.
It
only
makes
sense
that
you'd
pay
from
your
cell
phone
yeah.
B
Absolutely
and
I
think
if
you
think
right
now,
when
somebody
says
hey,
how
do
I
buy
a
Bitcoin
or
how
do
I
do
this?
You
know
generally
the
place
you
point,
someone
is
to
like
the
coinbase
app
and
they
download
the
app
on
their
phone.
They
like
the
credit
card
and
they
kind
of
go
for
there,
but
if
you
can
actually
land,
you
know
then
there's
a
process
after
introducing
them
like
hey
by
the
way
you
shouldn't
actually
store
your
tokens
on
that
exchange,
because
you
don't
actually
own
them
on
that
exchange.
B
You
should
store
them
here
and
there's
this
whole
complex,
like
process
that
comes
after
that
initial
introduction.
But
by
having
your
iPhone
as
a
hardware
wallet,
you
could
totally
eliminate
that
and
I
think
would
be
a
lot
easier
to
onboard
the
average
person
where
you
can
say,
hey
download
this
app.
You
store
your
coins
here,
you
can,
you
know,
buy
more
right
here
and
it's
just
an
easy
process
where
you
know
that
it's
secure
and
you
don't
have
to
recommend
they
go
by
a
ledger
in
store
the
recovery
seeped
into
all
this
other
crazy
stuff.
B
Absolutely
and
speaking
of
our
bounty
that
we
put
out
so
we've
gotten
a
ton
of
submissions
already
more
than
a
dozen
people
have
reached
out
every
email
saying,
hey,
you
know,
give
us
the
participation
package
we
want
to
participate,
but
we
put
an
update
video
of
this
on
our
central
s,
YouTube
channel.
It
also
basically
shows
up
a
proof
of
concept,
so
somebody
named
crypto
ferry
came
out
with
a
proof
of
concept
where
he
was
signing
transactions
directly
from
his
legend
nos
years
transactions.
So
he
has
basically
the
core
functionality
working.
B
He
has
the
private
keys
stored
on
the
actual
legend
nos
now.
It's
just
a
matter
of
you
know,
building
the
interface
for
it,
so
that
the
average
user
can
use
it.
But
it's
awesome
that
even
a
week
after
the
bounty
was
announced,
we
already
have
some
people
to
proof
concept.
We
have
more
than
a
dozen
teams
that
are
actively
working,
so
I
think
we
may
see
a
hardware
wallet,
but
for
the
legend
nos
and
for
the
Trez,
or
sooner
sooner
than
people
think.
A
B
B
I
wish
we
had
put
out
this
bounty
four
months
ago,
although
cypher
glass
wasn't
officially
announced
then,
but
I
think
I'm
glad
we
put
it
out
now
at
the
beginning
of
this,
so
that
we
can
get
this
ready.
And
then
the
majority
of
people
that
on
board
in
this
ecosystem
will
have
the
ledger
where
the
treasure
option,
but
I
wish
that
we
had
done
this.
You
know
a
couple
months
ago
and
made
sure
that
it
was
ready
ready
for
so.
A
B
Interesting,
it's
interesting.
There
actually
have
10
billion
total
IQ
tokens
and
they're
giving
away
51%
of
those
in
this
initial
airdrop,
but
they
are
reserving
the
right
to
do
future.
Additional
air
drops,
which
I
thought
was
kind
of
interesting,
but
that's
why
it's
such
a
weird
ratio.
Five
point
one
to
one:
mm-hmm.
A
And
they're
basing
it
off
the
es,
Genesis
snapshot
stow,
which
was
what
the
original
plan
was.
But
there
there
was
some
talk
that
they
might
take
a
different
snapshot,
but
it
seems
like
they're,
they're
gonna
stick
to
the
Genesis
and
they
released
a
web
link.
It's
ever
a
pedia
network,
github
that
I
have
front
slash,
airdrop
or
you
can
just
google
it
and
you
could
put
it
in
your
EOS
public
key
and
it'll.
B
I
expect
that
it
will
be
relatively
soon
like
I
would
think
by
the
end
of
June,
maybe
sometime
in
early
July,
that
they
actually
do
the
airdrop,
because
it's
supposed
to
coincide
with
the
release
of
their
us-based
platform
and
I.
Think
that's
that's
almost
done
so.
I
think
we
should
see
it
pretty
soon
have.
B
Nearly
as
much
as
it
was
originally
I'm
kind
of
managing
a
few
different
pages,
like
my
personal
page,
the
cypher
glass
page,
some
of
the
es
pages
that
I
seal
alert
page
just
kind
of
focusing
on
those
core
pages
and
keeping
them
up
to
date.
But
once
the
blockchain
version
is
actually
launched,
I'm
planning
to
block
out
time
every
day
to
go
in
and
continue
contributing.
B
Articles
like
in
the
background
I've
been
using
ancestry.com
to
compile
information
about
my
family
I
think
will
be
awesome
to
make
like
this
permanent
blockchain
based
record
of
all
of
my
different
ancestors.
That
I
don't
even
know
about,
but
you
know
make
a
make
an
entry
for
myself
and
then
my
brothers
and
then
you
know
my
parents
and
then
their
parents
and
etc,
etc,
and
have
this
whole
kind
of
blockchain
based
family
tree
on
every
pedia.
So
that's
one
of
my
goals,
one,
the
action
version
actually
launches
yeah.
A
So
as
far
as
air
drops,
everyone
was
all
excited
about
the
potential
of
the
air.
Drops
you
put
out
your
big
video
about
your
thoughts
on
the
air
drops
and
why
you
think
it'll
make
the
US
token
so
valuable
by
the
end
of
the
year.
Right,
but
I
do
you
feel
like
block?
One
has
been
quiet
since
the
main
net
launch
definitely.
B
Definitely
and
it's
kind
of
interesting
I
mean
they've
really
taken
and
I
think
this
is
for
a
lot
of
different
reasons:
number
one.
It
is
a
community
initiative,
it's
not
really
there
blockchain
anymore,
but
they
have
been
sort
of
I.
Don't
know
if
I
would
say
unusually
quiet,
but
they
definitely
have
been
quieter
than
they
usually
are
it's
interesting
I,
don't
know!
Why
do
you
think
they've
been
so
quiet,
I.
A
Don't
know
I
so
not
only
is
block
one
quiet,
but
all
of
these
initial
es
VC
partners
have
been
quiet.
Also
yeah
and
ever
pedia
is
still
the
only
official
airdrop
that's
been
announced.
We
mentioned
bought
chain
a
few
weeks
ago
and
I
actually
did
record
a
conversation
with
their
CEO
I'll
just
give
away
a
spoiler.
A
It
is
not
going
to
be
an
es,
toke
and
they're
still
looking
into
different
platforms,
but
it,
but
it
won't
necessarily
be
on
EOS,
and
it
was
just
kind
of
miscategorized
on
on
crunchbase
as
being
under
the
the
ESV
sea
arm
of
galaxy
digital,
because
galaxy
digital
is
bigger
than
just
an
es
fund.
They
invest
in
other
projects
also,
and
he
said
he
thought
is
just
miscategorized,
but
still
it's
just
crazy
to
me
that
so
much
vc
money
has
been
been
distributed,
but
only
one
projects
been
announced.
B
A
B
I
would
totally
agree
with
that
and,
if
you
think,
they're
really,
the
last
thing
we've
heard
from
block
one
was
their
hackathon.
That
happened
in
Hong
Kong
on
the
9th
and
10th
and
I
think
the
next
hackathon
is
in
early
August
early
to
mid
August,
not
sure
where
I
would
have
to
check
that
you
as
hackathon
to
I/o
website,
but
that's
really
the
only
and
that's
what
we've
gotten
after
launch
so
I
think
you're
right.
B
A
There
any
other
big
stuff
going
on
I
know:
I
got
one
the
CC
ID,
which
is
the
China
electronic
information
industry
development.
They
they
unfilled
crypto
ratings,
so
they
released
their
first
round
of
crypto
ratings.
I.
Think
like
a
month
or
two
ago
and
a
theory,
man
was
the
the
top
of
a
couple
different
categories,
but
the
latest
one
that
they
put
out.
Yose
is
number
one
in
technology
and
number
one
in
innovation
by
a
longshot,
yeah
and
bitshares
did
really
well
on
this
list
and
so
did
steam.
C
A
They
raided
I'm
a
forty
four
point,
one
and
then
the
next
closest
was
twenty
eight
point
three
with
aetherium,
but
but
they
did
get
a
bad
score,
an
applicability.
They
got
a
15
point.
4
and
aetherium
got
almost
a
25
that
video
got
twenty
seven
and
a
half,
so
it
I
kind
of
liked
seeing
that
them
they
got
one
bad
score,
because
if,
if
they're
top
top
of
the
board
on
everything
would
kind
of
look
a
little
fake
right.
B
Yeah
I
mean
as
much
as
I
love
the
project
yeah.
It
makes
sense,
since
there
are
no
real
there.
A
couple
cooled
apps
like
monster
iOS,
which
is
kind
of
like
a
crypto
kitties,
but
monsters
built
on
EOS
and
everything's
free.
You
don't
have
to
pay
to
breed
them
or
pay
to
buy
them
or
sell
them,
and
all
that
good
stuff.
It's
free
since
you're
on
use
there.
B
B
Only
other
thing,
I
would
say:
I
think
FNX,
actually
just
what
an
hour
maybe
two
hours
before
we
started
a
missed,
call
on
Wednesday,
actually
open
deposits
and
withdrawals
for
year,
so
I
think
they're
the
first
exchange
to
open
main
net
deposits
and
withdrawals.
So
if
you
have
us,
they
want
to
move
to
an
exchange.
You
can
do
that
now.
If
you
have
us
on
bid
for
next
that
you
want
to
take
out,
which
is
probably
more
likely.
B
A
A
B
Exactly
it's
interesting
I
mean
the
we've
seen
other
exchanges
who
have
gotten
hacked.
Maybe
this
was
an
act,
but
I
forget
the
name
of
it.
I
think
it
was
a
Japanese
or
Korean
exchange,
I
got
hacked,
but
for
half
a
billion
dollars
and
they
were
like
no
worries
we'll
put
up
the
half
a
billion
like
we'll
cover
it.
B
What
shows
you
how
much
money
these
exchanges
are
making,
but
it
could
also
be
something
with
unspent
help
puts
on
Bitcoin
where
they
have
to
pay
massive
transaction
fees,
to
consolidate
them
from
all
the
wallets
or
something
else
and
they're,
counting
that
just
mess
them
up
but
30
million.
Then
that's
a
huge
amount
of
money.
Nobody.
A
Really
knows
how
much
these
exchanges
make
I
heard.
The
CEO
of
Kraken
was
on
the
Unchained
podcast
with
Lauren.
I
listened
to
it
the
other
day,
and
she
straight
Avastin
like
about
their
prophet
he's
like
I'm,
not
going
to
tell
you
about.
B
I'm
sure
they
are
Jesse's,
a
cool
guy
I
met
him
in
where
was
it
New,
York
or
San
Francisco
I
think
it
was
during
tokens
summit
in
New
York,
and
he
had
like
this
big
dog
with
him.
He's
like
a
total
character,
he's
a
really
nice
guy,
but
it's
cool
that
they're
still
making
money,
even
though
their
platform
is
not
the
best
like
we've
said
this
before
well,.
A
B
It'll
be
interesting
to
see
what
happens
with
exchanges
as
we
go
forward
with
will
coin
baselessness
this
year
the
the
NASDAQ
exchange
I
think
that
their
DX
exchange,
which
is
the
crypto
change
I,
think
launches,
is
it
tomorrow?
Is
it
June,
21st
I'm,
not
sure
it's
it's
sometime
this
month,
I
think
it
might
be
tomorrow,
but
one
of
the
pairs
that
they
said
that
they're
gonna
list
is
a
US
and
I
believe
that
we'll
have
a
USD
pair.
Also
so
it'll
be
interesting.
B
C
A
Nothing's
decoupled
from
Bitcoin,
since
this
whole
thing
started
so
we'll
see,
but
we
could
all
help.
Definitely
it's
not
fun
to
succumb
to
the
king
when
it
goes
up
when
it
goes
down.
Every
else
goes
down.
It's
kind
of
annoying
right
exactly,
but
this
is
good
spot
to
wrap-up.
Unless
there's
anything
else
you
want
to
cover,
you
want
to
mention
the
updates
for
a
safer
glass
or
anything
before
we
I.
B
Think
the
only
other
thing
if
you're,
still
curious
about
that
account,
freeze
and
kind
of
what
happened
with
the
you
know.
Both
you
can
freeze,
but
also
the
bug
that
we
had
on
the
chain
go
just
search,
cypher
glass
on
YouTube
or
go
to
youtube.com,
slash
so
I
forgot
I'll,
be
posting
video
there
today,
there's
well
as
some
other
airdrop
videos
and
some
other
cool
stuff
in
the
pipeline.
So
stay
tuned,
therefore,
for
more
info,
but
otherwise
you
know
go
yes.
Alright,.
A
C
See
overtly
teens
the
only
trusted
comprehensive
list
of
pre
I
SEOs
and
the
initial
point
offerings
this
Pittsburgh
based
startup
has
grown
to
serve
over
1
million
users
in
less
than
a
year,
but
how
did
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
grown
to
over
14
team
members
and
produce
hundreds
of
ICO
reports.
C
These
in-depth
reports
feature
exclusive
interviews
and
offer
insight
into
past
active
and
future
icos
head
on
over
to
ICA
Willard
comm
lead
the
team
and
use
their
game-changing.
My
portfolio
function
track
your
favorite
blockchain
projects
become
your
own
venture
capitalists.
Only
at
ICA,
Willard,
calm.