►
From YouTube: B1 to Vote, EOS Foundation, WPS Update, Staking Rewards, deWeb, and Everything Happening in EOSIO!
Description
Everything EOS is the longest running EOS podcast. Zack Gall (LiquidApps) and Yves La Rose (EOS Nation) go in-depth on the latest news and announcements happening on EOS and EOSIO.
*EOS Nation
https://eosnation.io
https://twitter.com/EOS_Nation
https://t.me/EOSNation
LiquidApps
https://liquidapps.io
https://twitter.com/LiquidAppsIO
https://t.me/LiquidAppsOfficial
****Everything EOS****
https://www.twitter.com/EverythingEOSio
https://youtube.com/c/Everything_EOS
http://t.me/Everything_EOS
https://anchor.fm/everythingeos
https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/everything-eos/id1434560651?mt=2
A
All
right
we
are
live.
We
got
a
Twitter
call
out
mr.
Stephen
west
on
the
live
chat.
He
said
it
could
take
a
while.
We
are
right
here
back
with
you
guys
for
everything.
Yost.
The
longest-running
ears
podcast
shout
out
to
geosphere
on
the
t-shirt
from
b1
june,
happened
to
be
in
my
closet.
I
saw
it
thought
it
was
a
good
opportunity
to
give
them
a
shout
out.
Oh
and
I
got
my
I
got
myself
in
my
ear.
A
One
second
I
got
my
own
live
stream,
hoping
the
back
I'm
here
with
Eve
LaRose,
of
course,
from
US
nation,
who
happens
to
be
only
the
number
seven
block
producer
today
and
we'll
get
into
one
of
the
reasons
why
you
actually
aren't
even
voting
for
yourselves
with
your
giant
proxy
here.
So
that's
we'll
get
int
that
in
a
bit
are
you
doing
a
tape,
I'm
doing
really
good?
How.
B
Notes
are
all
jacked
up.
We
were
doing
the
notes
before
the
show
I
was
like
alright
I
got
to
figure
everything
out.
This
is
gonna,
be
a
really
good
show
today,
Zach
there's
there's
a
lot
to
cover
actually
like
we're
we're
going
over
the
stuff
and
like
no,
we
need
to
go
faster
need
to
go
faster.
You
got
a
lot
of
items
very
busy.
A
B
A
So
a
few
things
are
really
cool
about
this
one.
It's
a
billion
dollars
like
it's
a
28
percent
of
his
wealth,
but
the
other
thing
it's
coming
from
like
square
equity
and
square
like
if
you
don't
know
about
it's
like
a
payment
app,
it's
kind
of
like
venmo
and
he's
also
contributing
a
shitload
of
money
to
lightning
Network
like
he's
really
Pro
Bitcoin
so
having
the
CEO
of
Twitter
doing
stuff
like
this
is
really
cool.
A
Helping
kovin
19,
but
also
the
other
thing
that
was
super
interesting
is
UB
I,
like
the
fact
that
ubi
is
such
a
big
topic
anymore,
and
it's
something
that
like
Dan
Larimer
was
talking
about
like
two
years
ago,
completely
off
the
radar.
No
one
like
knew
what
it
was
at
the
time
and
then
Andrew
yang
came
about
and
he
kind
of
made
it
a
really
mainstream
topic,
but
didn't
get
taken
seriously
everyone,
but
it
did
get
it
into
the
mainstream.
A
A
B
Well,
actually,
before
we
get
into
that,
then
what
the
thing
that
I
thought
that
was
very
cool
with
one
of
the
things
that
I
thought
was
very
cool
with
Jack
Dorsey's
announcement
was
he
addressed
a
couple
of
things
so
Y
one
y
square
versus
Twitter
was
just
because
his
Square
shares
are
worth
just
way
more,
so
he's
got
more
of
them,
but
the
other
thing
was
there's
in
philanthropy.
There's
always
this
issue
with
when
you
created
an
LLC
in
order
to
you
know,
donate
the
funds,
it's
always
very
opaque
and
so
right
away.
B
B
B
He
also
addresses
where
the
money
is
gonna
go
and
where
the
focus
is
gonna
shift
out
later
on,
and
he
talks
about
shifting
that
girl's
health
and
education,
as
well
as
UVI,
so
I,
just
like
in
a
140
characters,
is
so
much
so
much
information,
jam-packed,
very,
very
cool
I.
Think
that's
awesome.
Super
happy
surprised
to
hear
that
and
apparently
other
other
large
philanthropy
philanthropists
have
even
given
them
a
shout-out
because,
like
this
is
baby,
this
is
an
actual
big
thing.
Yeah.
C
B
Using
Google
Docs
for
people
to
be
able
to
track
it
and
kind
of
having
people
actually
involved
in
and
looking
at
the
and
I'm
sure
it's
more
than
that,
but
like
almost
three
hundred
thousand
likes
on
there
66
and
thousand
three
trees.
Seventy
sixty
eight
thousand
retweets-
and
this
is
going
out
all
around
people
are
now
aware
of
this,
and
so
it's
just
it's
bringing
more
attention
to
a
lot
of
things
that
we're
working
on
and
that's
you
know
the
community
that
we're
in
is
working
on
so
I
think
it's
it's.
A
I
like
it,
even
though
the
markets,
obviously
still
down
since,
like
the
kovat
hit
and
everything
it
one
thing,
no
one
can
really
deny
is
that
the
they're
like
narrative
for
Bitcoin,
like
the
reason
like
Bitcoin
exists
in
the
first
place,
has
become
more
apparent
to
the
general
public.
I
have
had
people
reach
out
to
me,
who
are
just
like
traditional
finance,
guys
never
wanted
to
talk
about
Bitcoin,
even
in
2017
and
now
they're,
like
hey,
like.
What's
up
with
that
Bitcoin.
A
But
it's
the
first
time
since
probably
early
2018,
right
before
the
bubble
pop
that
I've
had
people
coming
out
of
the
woodwork
and
asking
about
it
and
I've
talked
to
other
people.
You
just
said
you've
had
that
happen
to
you
too
and
I'm
sure
other
people
watching
this
or
listening
on
the
archive
like
they're,
probably
seeing
it
as
well
so
I
think
that's
one
positive
that
comes
out
of
this,
and
also
in
the
u.s.
A
at
least
they
announced
these
stimulus
packages,
but
then
they
have
they're
slow
as
to
distribute
the
money
like
it's
so
hard
from
the
distribute
and
they're.
Finally
talking
about
like
digital
dollars
without
ever
saying
a
blockchain,
even
though
everyone
interpreted
it
like
that,
but
I
think
it's
it's
pushing
forward.
I
think
like
the
importance
of
blockchain
and
digital
money,
whether
it's
on
a
blockchain
or
not
I,
think
I.
Think
all
the.
A
C
A
B
A
Is
a
big
charity
poker
game
to
benefit
Cove
in
nineteen
yesterday
and
basically
like
Charlie
Lee,
a
Peter
McCormick
Charlie
Shrem
ran
the
owner,
like
all
these
big
crypto
names
were
just
playing
poker
with
like
regular
people,
so
it
was
kind
of
like
more
crypto
mainstream
version
of
like
the
we
had
a
charity
poker
tournament
on
one
time.
Just.
B
B
B
A
B
A
ninja
for
Kobe
Mikey
yeah,
there's
something
that
I,
don't
that
I'm
working
on,
because
we
have
a
don't
really
want
to
go
into
too
much
detail,
because
it's
not
there
yet
and
there's
still
a
lot
of
work
to
do,
but
essentially
because
we
have
a
lot
of
connections
in
China
in
Canada
right
now,
where
I
am
and
kind
of
in
general,
the
u.s.
decided
that
it
was
going
to
block
some
of
these
shipments
from
the
3m
masks.
B
Although
I
think
something
was
was
I
think
they
came
up
to
an
agreement,
but
I've
been
contacting
people
in
China
and
trying
to
get
some
donations
of
max
masks
being
sent
to
Canada
and
basically
clear
the
customs
and
being
able
to
donate
them
within
our
local
communities
or
where
I
live
anyways
local
community
as
well
the
local
hospital
network.
So
if
we're
able
to
do
that,
what
I'm
trying
to
do
I-
don't
want
to
say
a
number
on
air,
but
trying
to
get
like
a
substantial
amount
of
masks.
B
A
Awesome
I
actually
left
the
cave
today
to
go
to
the
store.
This
is
the
first
time
I
went
out
and
close
to
a
week
and
since
Trump
made
the
announcement
finally
saying
master,
ok,
I'd
say
like
75%
of
the
public
had
masks
on
I
was
pretty
impressed
myself
included,
but
yeah
you
guys
are
doing
cool
stuff.
We
talked
about
the
liquid
chain
and
kovacs
which
it's
coming
guys.
The
apk
for
the
mobile
and
desktop
I
know
we
wish
it
would
have
been
out
sooner,
but
it's
coming.
We're
testing
it
internally.
A
B
A
So
I
just
want
to
let
you
guys
so.
First
of
all,
I've
been
doing
these
things
called
tile
talks,
Thomas
cow,
the
CTO
of
liquid
apps,
you
guys
probably
all
heard
of
them
but
I-
think
the
guy's,
a
freakin
genius
I,
look
at
him
like
Yoda,
but
it's
really
hard
to
kind
of
pick
his
brain
and
really
understand
what
goes
on
in
there.
A
So
I
started
doing
these
things
called
Tao
talks
and
basically,
what
they
are
is
I've
been
having
weekly
phone
calls
with
Tao
for
literally
an
hour
every
single
week
and
out
of
that
hour,
if
not
you're
frozen
I.
Think
so
I
don't
know
if
you
could
hear
me,
but
out
of
those
our
conversations,
I
I
picked
it
apart
and
I,
edit
them
down
into
like
three
to
like
five
minute
videos
that
I've
been
sharing
with
you
guys.
A
A
Try
to
get
them
to
explain
things
until
I
understand
it,
and
if
you
could
explain
so
I
understand
it
then
I
edit,
all
of
that
stuff
down
into
a
bite-sized
bit
for
you
guys,
but
the
reason
I
brought
that
up
is
because
the
most
reason
what
I
did
was
on
something
called
liquid
docker,
which
is
like
a
decentralized
containerized
docker.
Where
you
could.
Basically,
you
could
run
regular
software
in
a
distributed
way
across
DSPs.
A
You
could
watch
the
video
to
get
an
understanding
of
what
that
is,
but
the
reason
I
brought
that
up
is
because
another
project
called
D,
Web
OS
nation
just
launched
a
front-end
for
it,
and
liquid
docker
is
actually
going
to
be
the
backend
for
D
web
at
some
point
in
the
future.
But
let's
get
into
D
web
real,
quick,
because
I
probably
can't
give
a
great
introduction
on
it.
Since
I
haven't
been
building
on
it,
I'm.
A
C
B
So
do
you
ever
is
kind
of
the--.
I
guess
a
brainchild
of
another
one
of
the
brainchild
of
al
Hertzog,
as
well
as
steven
fox
and
a
couple
of
other
people
who
some
people
might
be
familiar
with
with
bank
or
liquid.
That's
like
there's
a
lot
of
integration
with
those
people
and
d-boy.
The
web
is
kind
of
the
brain
child
behind
creator.
B
For
you
to
provide
liquidity
to
it
and
essentially
decide
what
your
token
is.
Gonna
do
and
it's
super
easy
as
using
Google
firebase.
The
settlement
layer
is
on
EOS,
so
it
is
on
the
blockchain,
but
the
actual
lock-in
and
all
the
process
is
is
super.
Super
simple,
create
your
own
login
password
can
be
anything
you
want
so
you're,
not
linked
by
or
you're,
not
you're,
not
contained
by
the
EOS
parameters,
and
then
you,
you
know,
within
your
own
little
web
page
yeah
I
can
see
that
you
have
one
right
there.
What.
B
Is
gonna
be
and
what
it's
gonna
do
and
people
can
then
come
in
and
and
as
a
like
you're
a
content
creator.
You
now
make
your
token
available.
People
come
in
and
buy
your
token
and
you
can
give
them
incentives
for
why
they
would
want
to
do
so,
and
it's
all
ridiculously
easy
like
stupid,
easy
so
within
the
first
I
think
two
or
three
hours.
We
had
something
like
50
tokens
that
were
created
because.
B
The
other
thing
is
that
you
can
so
you
can
set
the
rate
of
I,
don't
know
if
the
term
is
right
because
rate
of
allowance,
so
let's
say
in
your
case,
you've
got
three
dollar
mark
market
cap.
You
put
a
percentage
when
you
created
your
token
and
that
percentage
is
going
to
be
taken
from
your
market
cap.
Every
I
think
it's
every
month,
every
exam
I
think
and
then
it's
gonna
be
sent
to
you.
B
So
as
the
content
creator
you
get
paid,
the
operator
gets
paid,
the
marketers
get
paid
and
it's
all
ingrained
within
the
system,
and
when
you
create
your
own
token,
you
choose
those
parameters,
kind
of
where,
where
that's
gonna
be
an
effect
of.
If
you
choose
zero,
your
token
ends
up
being
a
stable
coin,
because
then
none
of
that
liquidly
is
being
handed
out
every
week
and
anybody
who
provides
liquidity
can
extract
that
liquidity
and
any
any
given
time
because
it's
theirs,
it's
it's
pretty
cool.
B
A
B
A
When
I
was
in
Israel
for
the
DAP,
hackathon
back
in
November,
I
spent
a
lot
of
time
with
I/o,
and
that
was
the
first
time
he
like
kind
of
told
me
about
D
Web
and
like
what
his
vision
was
for
it.
And
it
definitely
goes
a
lot
deeper
than
I.
Think
like
what
you're
seeing
on
like
the
US
nation,
D
web
portal
or
even
on
the
D
website.
But
it's.
A
It's
done,
but
it's
gonna
be
really
cool,
and
with
these
community
tokens
you
could
basically
give
them
different
types
of
utility
and,
like
third-party
developers,
could
build
on
top
of
the
D
Web
and
add
like
more
ways
to
give
a
token
utility.
So
you
think,
like
I,
think
one
of
the
first
features
that
they'll
have
is
just
like
what
they
had
with
creator
Rico,
where
it's
like
kind
of
like
patreon,
where
you
could
have
like
a
think
of
a
blog
where
certain
posts
are
hidden
and
the
only
way
you
could
see
them
is.
A
If
you
have
X
number
of
tokens
like
whatever
your
token
may
be,
and
they
make
it
super
simple
to
create
a
token
and
have
it
have
liquidity
but
yeah
so
check
that
out.
It's
a
D
web
de
web
iOS
nation,
dot,
IO
or
the
D
website.
Let's
see
what
that
is
here:
D
web
de
web
dot,
IO.
Let's
continue
on
everyone's
near
about
the
block
one.
We
have
one
more
topic
before
block
1
anything
going
on
with
the
WPS
a
little.
B
Quick
update,
so
we
we
talked
about
this
last
week
briefly,
but
if
you've
been
following
the
the
smart
contract
for
the
WPS
has
been
going
through.
A
full
professional
security
audit
that
is,
is
essentially
completely
made
some
modifications
we
made
some
optimizations.
We
also
took
the
time
to
add
some
features
that
were
requested
by
the
community
within
the
channels.
B
A
Oh
first
thing
very
high-level
block
one
public
blockchain
engagement
expands
plans
to
begin
Yost
voting
in
may.
20
20
is
the
first
time
so
they've
talked
about
voting
before
we've
gave
them
we've,
given
them
hell
for
it
before,
like
kind
of
for
bringing
it
up,
they
brought
up
with
the
first
time
in
2018.
They
talked
about
voting.
They
talked
about
governance
back
then,
and
then
they
talked
about
it.
A
A
B
A
I
guess
that's!
The
first
part
is
that
they
gave
this
a
name
I,
don't
think
whenever
they
announced
the
EOS
New
York
hires,
that
they
had
the
name
or
that
they
announced
the
name
public
blockchain
engagement
division.
So
it's
a
new
division
within
block
one
that
I,
don't
think
was
public
before
and
you
said
it's
what
Kevin
Rose
Rick
and
maybe
some
of
the
other
people
I,
don't
yeah.
B
There's
two
more
people
that
I
know:
there's
work
and
buddy
or
no
it's
already
working
dick
buddy
is
dick
I,
don't
know
if
there's
anybody
else
and
I
apologize
if
I'm
missing
anybody
else,
but
yeah
you've
got
the
the
old
Oz
New
York
crew,
that
as
that
has
joined
block
one,
and
we
all
know
that
yes,
New
York
was
like
a
champion
and-
and
you
know
huge
community
leader
in
terms
of
communication
and
we're
really
seeing
in
that
shine
within
a
very
very
short
period
of
time
already
at
block
one.
You.
A
Think
about
who
the
best
communicators
were
around
like
the
first
year
to
two
years
of
the
main
net
and
like
Rob
and
like
cypher
glass
were
really
good
at
video
like
we
did
everything
he
owes
together
and
then
his
cypher
glass
videos
he
did
like
he
was
great
at
that,
but
as
far
as
written
content,
nobody
did
better
like
written
updates
than
the
EOS
New
York
team.
They
had
a
great
newsletter,
a
weekly
newsletter
of
all
of
the
es
updates.
A
A
B
B
Thank
you
to
the
people
that
have
been
building
on
Yaya's
over
the
last
two
years,
so
that
is
very,
very
cool.
Obviously,
96
million
tokens
is
the
largest
single
toker
token
holder.
That
would
be
participating
in
in
may
net
voting,
it's
a
it
always.
It
obviously
will
shift
rankings.
It
will
obviously
impact
dilution.
It
will
obviously
impact
and
photo
pay,
and
so
it's
really
interesting.
Not
only
do
they
say:
they're
gonna
do
it,
but,
like
you
said
earlier,
this
is
the
first
time
that
they
actually
commit
in
a
way
to
1/8.
B
B
Everything
outside
of
EOS
as
well.
Do
you
think
he
also
just
came
up
with
the
a
different
way
of
calling
it
but
everything
outside
of
the
EOS.
If
this
is
ingrained
in
the
system,
there's
nothing
special.
It's
a
way
to
reduce
inflation
until
I
line
token
holders
and
incentives
on
the
on
the
network.
The
network
operators,
the
token
holders
the
stake
holders,
and
essentially
it
just
makes
it
a
the
blockchain
itself,
more
performant
at
a
lower
cost,
much
much
much
lower
cost
I.
Don't.
A
I,
don't
have
the
tweet
in
front
of
me,
but
Colin
talks
crypto.
He
said
something
publicly
about
it
and
brought
up
exchanges,
and
so
there's
this
misconception.
That
exchanges
like
just
vote
for
every
like
they,
they
just
kind
of
do
their
own
thing
and,
like
that,
there's
all
these
little
tiny
token
holders
that
they're
using
their
tokens
for
like
please
just
retell
that
story
about
the
whales
I
want
to
hear
about
the
whale
is
Eve
I,
don't
know
the
whales.
C
C
B
B
This
is
like
so
we're
talking
about
people
that
are
oh
geez
in
the
crypto
space,
we're
talking
about
people
that
invest
in
Bitcoin
early
on
that
made
massive
fortunes
and
yeah
and
the
theorem
and
our
hedging
and
actually
head
to
their
deaths,
buying
into
Yas,
because
they
bought
into
the
vision
because
they
agreed
that
it's
an
amazing
product
and
so
you've
got
very
few
individuals.
I
guess
hand
selected
a
few
like
you
can
name
them.
B
You
can
count
them
on
your
hands
of
individuals
that
have
to
carry
a
vast,
disproportionate
amount
of
heels,
and
so
those
people
are
reachable.
Like
those
exchanges,
you
know
know
who
those
people
are
just
like
within
our
money
pool.
There's
a
couple
of
people
on
there
that
that
make
up
the
largest
portion
of
our
money,
pool
I,
know
them
they
reach
out
to
us.
B
I
know
who
they
are,
and
so,
when
they're
not
happy
with
the
decision
that
we
make
or
when
they're
questioning
decisions
that
we
make
or
when
they
would
like
us
to
make
certain
decisions
they
reach
out.
We
have
communication
with
them.
There's
nothing
different
with
the
exchanges.
These
are
just
large
token
holders.
The
majority
of
them
are
large
charlatan
holders,
they're
known
tart,
token
holders.
They
use
the
exchanges,
because
the
exchanges
provide
a
service,
they
provide
security,
they
provide
insurance
that
provide
an
ease
as
well
that
provide
liquidity.
A
B
Block
one
said-
and
this
is
the
interesting
part
right
so
block
one
said:
there's
no
and
I'm
paraphrasing,
but
there's
no
real
difference
between
an
exchange
and
a
proxy
or
or
our
mining
pool
or
or
eásá
nation.
What
we
need
to
ensure
is
that
the
token
holders
on
the
exchanges
or
that
the
exchanges
make
it
very
much
proactive
and
open
and
transparent,
that
the
tokens
on
the
exchanges
belong
to
the
exchange.
At
that
point,
that's
how
the
the
keys
work
and
that
those
tokens
will
be
used.
B
However,
the
exchanges
believe
is
vast
in
in
order
to
grow
the
network,
and
so
as
long
as
that
that
proactive
statement
is
there
I
guess
that
the
consented
informed
proxy
there's
no
difference
between
that
our
proxy,
your
proxy,
any
other
proxy,
because
their
exchanges
doesn't
make
them
different.
They
are,
however,
because
there's
just
obviously
they
have
them.
They
have
us
if
they're
still
alive
they're,
they
have
the
the
the
presence
that
other
and
companies
or
organizations
don't
have.
So
they
have
a
larger
stake
to
have
more
people
there,
but
that's
not
necessarily
back
there.
B
Usually
the
first
point
of
entry
for
anyone
coming
into
into
the
ecosystem.
They're
also,
usually
the
first
point
of
entry
when
government
regulation
or
any
kind
of
legislation
has
any
question
or
want
to
go
towards
facilitating
any
kind
of
future
endeavors
within
the
crypto
space.
The
exchanges
are
there,
so
Brendon
is
is
saying
publicly,
and
he
said
this
before
that.
Voter
rebates
are
part
of
the
system.
They're
good
and
the
exchanges
are
part
of
the
system,
they're
good.
They
eat
they
fulfill
roles.
As
long
as
everybody's
aware
of
what
they're
doing,
there's
nothing
bad
so.
A
I
did
those
notes.
We
we
anticipate
staking
rewards,
may
become
a
core
component
of
our
approach,
with
the
rewards
allocated
toward
research
formation
and
funding
of
us-centric
initiatives,
and
then
they
follow
that
up
with
the
EOS
foundation.
So
what
they're
going
to
do
is
as
a
token
holder,
with
a
hundred
million
votes.
A
Well,
I
skip
the
part
that
says
they're
not
going
to
participate
in
the
reward
proxies
at
first,
so
starting
in
May
they're,
just
gonna
vote
for
nothing
in
return,
but
they're
they're,
stating
it
now
that
in
the
future
they
do
plan
to
accept
voter
Awards,
which
means
like
the
block
producers
who
are
getting
these
votes
from
them
are
somehow
going
to
be
sharing
in
the
block
rewards
with
block
one
now.
What
are
they
going
to
do
with
those
block?
A
Awards
is
they're
going
to
self-fund
different
initiatives
and
the
one
that
they
brought
up
here
is
the
EO
spawned
a
ssin,
which
is
something
that
different
iterations
of
it.
The
iou's
dow
foundation,
like
whatever
we
called
it
in
the
past,
like
this,
is
the
different
iteration.
It's
probably
its
own
thing,
even
though
it
has
the
same
name,
but
this.
A
A
Crypto
has
a
foundation
behind
it,
tezo's
being
one
of
them
ethereal
foundation
being
a
huge
one
and
what
they
usually
provide
is
communication,
transparency,
marketing,
which
is
like
the
three
things
that
everyone's
been
craving
and
the
es
foundation
is
going
to
be
funded
through
voter
rewards,
which
I
think
is
going
to
be
really
cool,
because
it's
like
self
funding
block
one's,
not
even
funding
the
es
foundation.
It's
self
funded
through
the
EO
psychosis.
B
To
clarify
doesn't
say
that
the
foundation
will
only
be
funded
by
border
rewards.
It
says
that
the
voter
rewards
would
be
would
help
essentially
fund.
So
we
don't
know
what
the
budget
of
the
foundation
would
be.
We
don't
know
if
it's
gonna
be
100%
funded
by
a
board
of
rewards
or
if
there's
gonna
be
external
funding
from
globe
and
what
I
mean
external
I
mean
internal
to
block
one
or
even
external
somewhere
else.
B
A
B
Is
it
I
do
not
know?
What
I
do
know
is
that
it
says
the
public
blockchain
engagement
division
is
actively
researching
and
developing
a
model
for
potential
EOS
foundation,
in
conjunction
with
other
organizations
and
ecosystem
participants,
to
support
the
advancement
of
the
EOS
public.
Launching
so
from
that
I
can
I
read
that
the
foundation
is
perhaps
not
fully
defined
yet
and
that
they
will
work
with
whoever
in
order
to
fully
define
what
might
be
like
mm.
A
A
What
was
I
gonna
say
Oh,
what
star,
with
the
voter
proxies
so
I
think
some
of
the
top
ones
are
paying
like
2.9
percent,
but
it
varies
like
a
lot
of
them
around
2%.
So
if
block
one
had
a
hundred
million
votes
and
if
they
were
able
to
get
that
same
API,
which
we'll
probably
get
into
why
they
couldn't
1%
APR
on
a
hundred
million
tokens
is
like
two
and
half
million
dollars
at
today's
price,
so
that
would
be
enough
to
fund
the
es
foundation.
Now
tell
everyone
why
that
isn't
going
to
be
the
case.
B
B
But
then,
if
we
look
at
a
hundred
million
EF,
the
block
one
has
we're
not
really
gonna
be
calculating
in
a
percent
APR
for
a
couple
of
reasons.
One
is
nobody's
paying
or
block
one
isn't
paying
people
they're
paying
themselves
they're,
taking
the
rewards
and
then
they're
funding
themselves
right.
So
it's
not
an
APR
that
they're
offering
upwards,
but
also
if
you
wanted
to
calculate
an
API
on
a
hundred
million
EOS,
because
it's
so
large
that
you'd
be
having
a
like
a
tiny,
tiny,
tiny
APR.
Otherwise,
so
you've
got
two
ways
to
do
it.
B
One
is
here's
a
hundred
million
EOS
Eve
I'm,
putting
in
your
pool
and
an
EVE
says
great
I've
got
five
hundred
to
EOS
Daly,
to
allocate
with
my
tool
well
now
I'm,
giving
you
five
hundred
EOS
for
your
one
hundred
million
vote,
so
I'm,
giving
you
a
0
y
0
Z,
whatever
percent,
or
it's
the
alright
here's,
here's
a
hundred
million
EOS
and
I.
Don't
care
about
the
APR
or
sorry.
The
other
way
is.
If
you
now
need
to
figure
out.
A
B
A
A
Now
they
put
out
a
tweet
today,
I
think
it
is
this
morning
where
I'll
pull
it
up
on
the
screen
where
they
announced
the
actual
Apr
percentages
and
I
I
did
a
retweet
of
it
earlier,
but
for
anyone
that
didn't
see
it
so
bye
Nance
put
out
the
tweet
today
by
Nance
ads
vos
to
customized
locked
saving,
7-day
lock
up
you
get
6%
APR
on
your
EOS
30-day
term.
8%
APR
on
your
EOS
I
can
see
it
here,
I
think
I
have
so.
A
A
Okay,
so
everyone
was
hating
on
not
everyone.
A
couple
people
hated
on
this
saying,
like
I'll,
continue
voting
through
like
yo
this
nation,
proxy
and
and
just
so
the
way
the
right
way
to
vote,
like
everyone
thinks
that
you're
gonna
convince
people
to
change
behaviors.
But
the
fact
of
the
matter
is
that
there's
40
million
tokens
already
sitting
on
Finance
right
now
and
they're
not
getting
paid
a
lick
of
incentive,
so
I
think
what's
happening.
Here
is
now
they
have
40
million
tokens
on
finance.
A
B
Well,
so
they've
got
a
recipe,
that's
running
right
and
so
they're
able
to
then
they
get
rewards
from
the
ecosystem
and
then
they're
essentially
able
to
give
those
rewards
out.
And
then
how
do
you
set
up
your
8%
APR?
Well,
you
just
calculate
I've
got
let's
say
access
to
500
deals
per
day
if
I
want
to
give
that
full
500
to
EOS
and
I
wanted
to
offer
8
percent
APR
how
many
people
could
stake
in
my
pool.
It's
super
simple
calculation.
You
make
the
calculation
say
all
right.
B
You
can
offer
it
to
the
first
million
Yas
and
for
so
for
14
days,
lock-in
up
to
a
million
Yaffe's,
but
then
they
lock
it
per
person.
I
think
for
this
one
they
say
a
hundred
thousand
yes
max
a
month
per
person,
I'm
not
too
sure
on
that.
So
maybe
correct
me,
but
then
they
just
figure
out
how
much
they
can
provide
and
they
offer
the
the
APR
in,
but
that
matches
the
the
numbers
that
they
have
access
to.
I.
C
C
A
A
B
B
B
A
C
A
B
A
Bitfenix
is
off
there
just
giving
a
range
of
0
to
3
percent,
so
this
is
theirs
is
more
in
line
with
what
most
voters
are
used
to
from
the
just
like
to
reward
proxies,
but
I
think
the
biggest
reason
I
am
super
bullish
about
these
staking
rewards
on
the
largest
major
exchanges
is
because,
as
soon
as
Queen
base
added
baking
for
their
users
for
tezo's,
all
of
the
sudden.
All
of
these
people
started
like
being
interested
in
tezo's
because
it
was
so
simple
to
understand,
like
people
that
aren't
building
on
tezo's.
A
It's
been
like
that
for
a
very
long
time,
I
like
you're,
not
supposed
to
not
your
keys,
not
your
wallet,
but
a
lot
of
people
do
and
don't
you
want
those
token
holders
to
have
incentive
to
continue
holding
their
token
and
that's
what
this
provide
them
in
on
Finance,
it's
six
percent
APR
for
just
seven-day,
lock.
Ups,
at
a
time,
so
you
still
have
decent
liquidity.
A
I
mean
you
have
a
seven
day
to
lay
on
your
liquidity,
but
that
you
don't
have
to
have
it
all
locked
up
at
any
given
time
and
I
think
it's
a
great
service
to
offer
and
the
fact
that
they're
promoting
it
so
like
a
month
or
two
ago,
like
they're
fighting,
yes,
essentially
I.
What
were
they
fighting
it
about?
I,
forget
and
I.
Don't
think.
B
B
They
published
that
last
week
on
on
EOS
and
or
about
EOS
and
then
quickly
the
same
day,
people
reached
out
and
a
look
you've
got
this
wrong
way
and
they,
you
know,
they've
been
open
to
making
those
changes,
making
those
corrections-
and
they
have
just
people-
are
spending
24/7,
365
and
Yeo's.
Of
course,
they
will
know
more
than
somebody
who's.
You
know
maybe
know
spending
as
much
time
and.
A
A
I
used
an
example
of
like
generating
gos
DT
against
my
EOS
and
then
taking
that
EOS
DT
I
could
swap
it
for
like
quick,
like
do
a
hop
to
get
to
coinbase
dollar
USD
C,
and
then
there's
like
ways
to
get
6%
APR
on
those
stable
coins
with
like
flexible
withdraws.
What's
your
favorite
yield
opportunities
and
all
of
blocks
like
it
hope
might
be
on
the
ice,
but
maybe
not
as
far
as
like
define
earning
yield.
What's
your
favorite,
my
prayer,
Ilan.
B
I,
actually,
don't
do
any
not
as
I
personally
I
prefer
personally
prefer
having
the
liquidity,
I'm,
okay,
with
not
having
the
APR
and
remain
having
the
tokens
under
my
control,
that
is
my
personal
preference.
I.
Think
going
back
to
what
we've
been
saying,
one
of
the
things
that
I
I'm
so
bullish
about
is
just
more
opportunities,
more
different
options
for
the
token
holder
at
the
end-
and
this
is
one
of
the
things
people
like
what
we're
moving
towards
the
systems
that
we
had.
You
know
that
we
currently
have
in
the
old
world.
B
B
You
know
mining
pools
and,
and
the
hybrids
like
us,
where
maybe
it's
not
as
high
of
an
IPR,
but
you
know
that
we're
putting
sweat
equity
in
it's
just
more
options
and
so
like
for
me
personally,
I
just
keep
my
tokens
liquid
or
in
my
case
I.
Keep
them
on
a
cold,
cold
storage.
That's
what
they're,
not
necessarily
as
a
liquid,
but
that's
my
personal
preference.
No.
B
A
B
A
C
B
C
B
A
B
I
met
him
in
Rio
and
and
we
actually,
we
took
a
bus
up
to
the
Chrysler
redemptor
Christ
redemptor
and
we're
jamming
in
the
bus
whatever,
but
we
got
to
spend
a
lot
of
time
together
over
the
couple
of
days
in
Rio
and
he's
gotta
be
one
of
the
nicest
most
down-to-earth
super-chill,
just
really
really
beautiful
human
being
just
super
nice.
Guys,
I'm
really
happy
for
him.
But
this
is
a
great
opportunity
and
I
think
it's
a
really
good
hire
for
for
block
one.
So.
A
Maybe
they're
bringing
on
community
people
like
they
brought
on
yes,
New
York.
They
brought
on
mentioned
some
other
ones.
Mark
woods.
I
mentioned
him.
He
was
hired
back
in
I,
don't
know
October
November
and
not
now
another
community
leader
and
I
wanted
to
point
this
out.
I
hope
I'm,
not
putting
him
on
the
spot
here,
but
I
I'm
gonna
do
it
anyway.
I
looked
at
his
profile,
so
you
can
see
on
his
Twitter
profile.
A
He
updated
it
because
he's
now
the
director
of
engineering
at
voice
director
of
the
global
engineering,
mobile
engineering,
yeah
he's
not
great
Glee
and
he's
not
a
VP
of
Engineering.
Okay,
so
founder
of
es
Israel,
it
doesn't
say
former
founder,
but
are
you
ever
a
former
found
there
like?
If
you
walked
away
from
her
I
guess
we
still
own
stake,
you're
still
a
founder.
Is
that
how
you
kind
of
yeah.
B
A
A
B
A
B
The
preparation
for
the
show-
oh
man,
I,
have
a
lot
to
talk
about
what
what's
the
next
thing
actually
so
talking
about
hires
some
other
interesting
be
want
jobs
posted
recently,
and
what
do
you
think
of
that?
So
I
don't
know
if
you
want
to
share
it
on
screen.
I
do
essentially
you've
got
trading
systems,
financial
services,
financial
services,
financial
services,
all
about
crypto,
blog
trading,
crypto
block
training.
What
do
you
think
that
could
be?
Is
that.
B
A
B
A
A
A
Well,
this
guy,
this
guy's
job
says
not
this
guy.
This
girl,
this
potential
person
they
want
is
they
want
him
to
head
up
the
crypto
trading
team
yeah,
which.
B
C
A
B
A
A
A
A
Lot
of
topics
to
touch
all
right
well
skip
the
voice,
so
I
noticed
on
the
LinkedIn
whenever
I
looked
at
her
and
is
announcement
that
they
have
like
seven
or
eight
employees
at
voice
now.
So
it's
not
just
salah
and
Hearne
and
they've
got
like
a
talent
like
recruiters.
It
looks
like
they're
starting
to
bid
off
to
HR
team
all
right
next
topic.
People
need
to
stop
bitching
or
making
excuses
about
expensive
cpu
on
the
main
that,
because.
B
A
Had
my
Rex
ran
up
yesterday,
I
had
to
I
had
to
renew
my
Rex
rental
every
thirty
days,
I
renew
my
thing:
I
rent
like
point
zero,
five
or
whatever,
yes,
I
spend,
and
this
time
I
looked
at
as
on
blocks.
It
said
one
yose
gets
you
6500,
yose,
rented
in
Rex.
That
is
insane.
What
was
the
ratio
before
I
dose
so.
B
C
B
If
the
reason
why
you're
saying
that
you're
not
providing
see
viewer
that
your
user,
your
users
aren't
able
to
transact
on
EOS,
is
because
of
the
cost
of
sees
you,
it's
like
I
lack
it's
a
complete
garbage.
It's
complete
and
I'll,
even
one-up
that
and
say
that
there
are
no
solutions
out
there
and
I'll
give
a
big
shout
out
the
jin-tae
and
charm,
where,
if
you're
not
sure
how
much
you
need
there's
this
automated
resource
management
system
called
charm
that
will
like
just
give
us
a
certain
amount
of
kiosks.
B
So,
instead
of
you,
for
example,
you
mentioned
you
know,
I
put
0.1
Yas
in
racks
and
I
get
you
know
in
this
case,
you'd
be
getting
6650
EOS.
Well,
you
might
not
be
using
up
to
six
350
euros
worth
of
CPU
per
day
and
so
you're
kind
of
in
a
way
wasting
like
you
could
have.
You
could
have
put
in
less
than
0.1
yasai
at
any
given
time.
B
Well,
charm
takes
care
of
that,
for
you
actually
monitors
your
usage
and
ensures
that
you
always
have
the
amount
that
you
need
without
having
more
than
what
you
need,
so
that
your
cost
will
be
even
lower.
So
you
have.
Nobody
has
any
excuses
if
the
if
the
sole
excuse
is
the
CPU
is
too
expensive,
it
is
complete
and
utter
and
garbage
us
through
our
mining
pool.
We
do
something
silly,
like
thirty
thousand
transactions
per
day.
B
B
At
that
yeah
examine
that
yeah
so
and
again
like.
If,
if
then,
your
limitation
is
well
actually
I
have
a
million
users,
and
now
it's
becoming
through
pre
hid.
Well,
if
you
have
a
million
users
that
are
actually
transaction,
you
should
be
able
to
find
a
business
case
on
the
how-to.
Yes
for
that,
so
it's
just
like
your
CPU
cost
should
just
be
a
part
of
your
your
operating
expenses.
B
A
A
B
To
add
to
that,
it's
not
that
we
have
12x
is
that
each
transaction,
certain
types
of
transactions
cost
twelve
times
less,
let's
just
more
optimize.
On
top
of
that
over
time,
the
blog
producers
have
added
more
CPU,
better
infrastructure,
better
Hardware,
better
way
of
communicating
the
architecture
as
well.
So
we're
looking
at
like-
and
this
is
the
number
I
think
you
want
to
put
up-
is
what
is
the
actual,
the
the
multiplier
of
how
cheap
it
is
compared
to
what
it
was
before
that.
A
A
Let's
shout
some
dabs
man,
there's
there's
a
lot
of
builders
out
there,
let's,
let's
give
them
a
little
bit
of
attention
so
that
they
get
like
the
beta
testers
that
they
need
or
that
they
need.
So,
let's,
let's
call
it
the
first
one
who
is
a
block
booster
I,
am
there
in
the
top
twenty
one,
but
I'm
not
super
familiar
with
them.
But
you
said
you,
you
know
the
guy.
He
spoke
great
he's
seemed.
He
said
he's
from
California
yeah.
C
B
Its
grabber
from
EOS
rapid
American
guy,
moved
out
to
Hong.
Kong
has
been
based
out
of
Hong
Kong
now
for
I,
don't
know
how
long
it's
got
a
dev
team
over
there
and
they've
been
building
on
some
stuff.
They
were
actually
in
Rio
for
the
yells
community
conference.
They
came
out
big
shout
out
to
Carter.
They
were
working
on
some
projects
there
that
they
that
they
displayed
and
that
they
showcased,
but
this
latest
one
is
a
zoom
alternative,
called
k-chat
I,
don't
know
too
much
about
it.
Just.
B
C
A
That
was
so
whenever
I
first
saw
it.
I
was
like
this
isn't,
like
sense,
did
something
like
I,
don't
know
if
it
was
all
on
on
the
blockchain
or
not,
but
they
had
like
a
one-to-one
video
chat
feature
whenever
they
launched
so
I
wasn't
sure
of
like
what
the
differentiating
factors
were.
Then
I
realized
that
they're
gonna
have
conferencing
cause
I,
think
up
to
five
or
six
people
is
I.
Think
someone
said
so.
This
is
cool
and
I
just
wanted
to
point
out,
because
it's
a
it's
a
blog
producer
to
the
top
twenty
one.
A
That's
that's
producing
like
development
that
they're
developing
things.
You
can
see
them
and
you
could
touch
them
and
use
them.
So
a
lot
of
times,
if
you
don't
like
see
something
tangible
from
these
blocked
news
producers,
especially
if
they
don't
even
speak
your
language,
for
example,
some
people
think
they're
not
doing
anything.
I
just
want
to
point
out
this
team
because
they're
clearly
building
something,
even
if
it
is
early
just
gonna,
I'm.
B
Gonna
paraphrase
here
they
plan
on
supporting
five
person.
Video
calls
in
the
next
version,
because
apparently
from
user
interviews,
that's
about
75,
it's
about
the
75th
percentile
of
meeting
size
is
that
the
five
people
I
also
I'd,
sent
you
something
talking
about
they're
gonna,
open-source
I,
think
the
SDK
so
that
other
people
can
build
on
hold
on
just
putting
it
up
in
the
pulling
it
up.
In
the
background,
where
do
they
see
that
sorry,
you
can
avoid
right.
A
B
A
B
A
One
actually
is
a
cool
story
behind
it,
because
we
in
the
intro
I
talked
about
how
you
guys
weren't
even
voting
for
yourself
with
your
own
proxy
and
the
team.
We're
about
to
pull
up
on
the
screen
is
who
actually
got
your
votes,
that
Yun
voted
yourself
for
with
the
u.s.
nation,
proxy
and
they're
kind
of
a
competitor
in
some
ways,
with
running
a
like
a
liquidity
pool.
Basically,
you
want
to
kind
of
give
the
TLDR
on.
C
B
So
equal,
that's
pretty
cool
concept
by
the
Argentine
team,
so
we
talked
about
I
think
it
was
last
week
on
the
show,
Yeltsin
nation
released
X
nation.
You
released
a
while
back,
but
explanation
gives
you
the
possibility
of
creating
a
liquidity,
pools
and
they're,
always
paired
dmt
to
something
else.
B
So
you
create
whatever
you
know
the
antisense
token
dnt
two
taps
open
whatever
it
is
with
yes,
with
every
X,
it's
essentially
putting
EOS
to
whatever
other
pair
and
again
same
concepts
will
go
back
to
the
show
last
week
same
concept,
where
you
can
add
your
own
liquidity,
that
kind
of
feeds
the
defy,
and
it's
just
you
know
it
starts
the
chain
of
reaction.
So
big
shout
out
to
take
your
Argentina
for
that.
So.
A
Just
another
liquidity
pool
I
think
the
more
liquidity,
no
more
options.
The
better
yeah
I'll
slide
over
my
notes
here
so
that
you
can
see
Joe
Lewis
shared
this
in
the
everything
he
has
chat.
This
the
only
reason
I
knew
about
it
was
just
highlighting
nation.
He
saw
this
transaction
today.
They
took
yourself
out
of
your
own
proxy
and
replaced
yourself
with
Argentina
yeah,
so
I
think
that's
a
really
awesome
thing
because,
like
I'm
I
think
I
made
a
joke
at
the
beginning
of
the
show.
B
Be
in
the
process
with
the
number
one
right
now,
yes
yeah,
so
we
do
have
a
proxy
to
nation.
So
again,
if
we
go
back
to
you
know
that
offering
the
choices
we
consider
our
my
name
school
to
be
a
hybrid,
it
is
by
far
it
is
not
the
highest
APR,
but
we
do
obviously
then
participate
in
the
ecosystem
in
different
ways.
We
do
provide
tons
of
sweat
equity,
and
so
you
know
every
little
vote
that
we
get
helps
and
we
like
to
share
that
with
with
other
peoples
as
well.
So
you
also
nation.
B
Never
you
know
sells
we
don't
charge
for
for
the
votes.
Essentially,
people
can
the
beneficiaries
of
our
votes
get
to
keep
100%
of
the
reports,
and
we
wanted
to
showcase
the
yellow
Argentina
of
that.
We
appreciated
that
the
work
that
they've
been
doing,
and
so
we
removed
ourselves
be
in
first
position,
doesn't
really
change
very
much
and
we
sent
the
folks
there
away
so
yeah
big
big,
shout
outs
at
yes,
argentinos
again,
we
met
them.
I
met
the
MONUC
on
a
couple
of
occasions,
but
met
again
in
Rio,
they're,
really
good
developers.
A
A
B
A
Talking
about
vigor
the
other
coda
action
here
for
vigor
as
I'm
a
custodian
on
the
deck
is
we
need
Delphi
Oracle's
to
feed
the
videos
price,
so
I
think
there's
only
like
two
or
three
bps
feeding
a
price
to
the
Delphi
work
right
now.
So,
if
any
bps
are
out
there,
I
want
to
be
incentivize
with
some
big
we're
looking
to
get
the
platform
into
production
soon
and
we
Merkel's.
B
A
B
B
A
C
A
B
B
A
A
B
A
B
A
A
A
A
You're,
the
only
one
that
you
could
do
it
Alex
it
up
letter,
I'm
gonna,
get
now
YouTube's
gonna
shout
out
there,
so
last
episode,
Alex
couldn't
do
it.
No!
No
one
knows
the
old
ending
anymore
because
it
I
think
it's
been
so
long.
Now,
since
Rob
did
it
with
me
that
it's
I
guess
hit
or
miss
you,
do
it
right
there?
Okay,
let's
do
it
so
until
next
time,
I'm
Zach,
Oh,
I'm
Eve
the
hose,
and
this.