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From YouTube: Deep Dive on DataCap and Core Concepts
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A
For
those
of
you
that
don't
already
know
me,
my
name
is
deep.
I
am
often
around
in
the
falcon
plus
ecosystem
side
of
things.
You
may
have
seen
me
from
the
biblically
governance
call
recordings
and,
of
course,
available
and
reachable
on
falcon
slack.
If
you
have
any
questions
or
want
to
discuss,
farcoin
plus
is
unique
because
it
adds
this
layer
of
social
trust
to
a
network.
A
That's
otherwise
like
trustless
to
incentivize,
like
useful
storage
and
leveraging
the
network
in
good
and
useful
ways
so
that
we
can
help
falco
and
effectively
deliver
its
value
and
its
mission
in
becoming
a
data
store
for
humanity's
most
critical
information.
So
how
does
that
actually
work?
So
far,
complex
itself
was
inspired
in
some
way
by
dr
ostrim's,
noble,
willing,
noble
winning
work
governing
the
comments
based
on
which
a
set
of
principles
were
defined.
A
I'm
just
going
to
chat
about
these
briefly
and
I
think
zx
might
discuss
them
a
little
bit
in
his
presentation
later
on
as
well.
But
these
are
the
seven
principles
that
were
originally
defined
in
the
fip
through
which
falcon
plus
is
actually
established,
which
is
zero,
zero,
zero.
Three,
if
any
of
you
are
interested
in
going
to
look
at
the
falcon
improvement
programs,
repo
and
checking
out
the
original
write-up
that
drove
the
actual
development
of
falcon.
A
The
seven
principles
are
a
decentralization
diversity.
So
this
is
both
in
terms
of
geographic
representation,
but
also
use
cases.
It's
also
types
of
people
and
perspectives
and
different
interaction,
points
that
are
coming
into
the
ecosystem,
transparency
and
accountability.
So,
as
falcon
is
a
blockchain,
we
can
track
actions
and
messages
on
the
chain
and
using
that
to
ensure
that,
like
things
are
actually
executing
in
a
way
that
we
can
confirm
that
the
trust
is
being
rewarded
with
follow-up
is
good
and
an
important
thing.
A
A
The
idea
that,
like
everybody
here,
has
the
ability
to
flag.
If
something
isn't
really
working,
if
something
isn't
going,
the
way
it
was
supposed
to
go,
it's
important
in
maintaining,
like
a
longer
term
balance,
limited
trust
earned
over
time.
As
we
discuss
a
little
bit
more
about
the
core
mechanisms
that
drive
firepoint
plus.
A
So
the
core
mechanism
is
that
and
I'm
just
going
to
read
this
out-
and
this
phrase
will
not
make
sense
to
many
of
you
at
the
moment,
and
my
hope
is
that
at
the
end
of
this
talk,
this
will
make
sense
to
you.
So
we're
going
to
start
writing
this
out
just
so.
You
have
sort
of
the
overview
and
then
we'll
dive
into
different
portions
of
this.
As
so,
you
can
understand
and
break
this
down
and
see
how
the
different
components
really
come
together.
A
In
fact,
one
plus
so
root
key
holders,
notaries,
clients
and
miners
interact
through
the
spending
and
sorry
to
the
allocation
and
spending
of
data
caps,
no
trees,
retrieve
data
cap
in
batches
and
allocate
it
to
trustworthy
clients
that
spend
the
data
capture,
fund,
storage,
deals
and
monies
that
receive
data
cap
receive
a
10x
boost
to
the
quality
adjusted
power
for
the
storage
space
offered
in
such
deals,
which
increases
a
blocked
reward
share
in
the
network.
A
So,
let's
get
into
this,
what
exactly
is
data
gap?
This
is
a
question
that
I
certainly
get
almost
every
single
week,
and
data
cap
itself
should
be
defined
as
a
novel
resource
that
exists
within
the
file
code
network
clients
that
use
data
cap.
Sorry,
clients
that
receive
data
cap
can
use
it
to
make
storage
deals.
So
what
that
actually
means
is
when
a
client
is
negotiating
with
a
miner
today.
That
often
happens
based
on
like
a
price
like
valued
in
falcon,
but
data
cap
can
also
be
seen
as
a
resource
that
can
be
used.
A
That
is
exchanged
for
the
service
of
storing
data
on
behalf
of
the
miner,
for
that
particular
client
and
as
data
cap
is
actually
used
from
that
particular
client
address,
it
is
consumed.
So
it
is
like
a
one-time
use
from
like
the
client
address
the
client
wallet
as
it's
being
leveraged,
to
store
useful
information
onto
the
network,
and
then
mine
is
that
receive
data
cap
for
the
amount
of
storage
that
they're
providing
corresponding
or
to
measure
it
with
the
data
cap.
A
That's
coming
in,
for
it
there's
an
adjustment
to
their
presence
on
chain
effectively
and,
and
so
what
ends
up
happening.
Is
miners
today
measure
their
roi
or
the
expected
rewards
in
the
network
by
looking
at
their
presence
on
that
network,
because
that's
defining
for
how
likely
they
are
to
win
block
rewards
over
time
and
with
data
cap?
What
ends
up
happening
is
for
the
amount
of
space
that
a
miner
is
dedicated
to
a
deal.
They
get
a
10x
quality
multiplier
effectively
for
having
served
this
deal
so
they're
grossly
incentivized
to
distort
these
particular
clients.
A
A
Clients
use
it
effectively
as
a
way
in
which
they
get
paid
to
get
the
service
of
storage
and
miners
receive
data
cap
from
clients
effectively
that
ends
up
boosting
their
quality,
adjusted
power
and
therefore
their
long-term
rewards
in
the
network
over
time,
it's
just
a
number,
and
so
how
does
it
actually
work?
You
see
you
see
this
complex
sort
of
diagram
at
the
bottom,
let's
dig
into
like
each
of
these
little
boxes
and
how
it
actually
flows.
A
So
the
set
of
stakeholders
that
I
cited
right
at
the
start
with
root
key
holders
and
one
of
these
clients
and
miners
interact
with
the
allocation
and
spending
a
data
cap.
So
there's
at
least
four
there,
which
is
root,
key
holders,
notice,
clients
and
miners,
and
then
the
fifth
one
which
is
very
important
stakeholder
is
the
actual
governance
community,
which
could
even
be
you
so
for
the
first
one
root
key
holders
so
root
key
holders
act
as
executors
for
decisions
that
are
actually
made
by
the
governance
community.
A
They
are
tactically
signers
to
a
multi-stake
wallet
which
has
the
power
to
grant
notary
status
and
grant
data
cap
to
someone
that
has
been
given
notary
status,
as
well
as
the
power
to
remove
no
trees
and
we'll
be
chatting
about
notice
next.
But
what
you
should
know
about
root
key
holders
is
that
they're,
the
ones
that
actually
execute
decisions
that
are
being
taken
by
the
governance
community
on
chain
in
a
timely
manner,
so
they're
the
the
follow-up
effectively
of
conversations
that
happen
to
build.
A
This
trust,
whether
that's
through
on
that's
through
like
github
issues
or
conversations
that
happen
in
our
governance
calls
or
on
slack
when
decisions
are
being
made
by
this
community.
The
root
key
holders
are
the
ones
that
are
actually
responsible
for
bringing
that
on
chain
and
ensuring
that
there's
a
representation
of
that
on
the
blockchain.
You
can
read
more
about
the
rookie
holder
role
at
the
specific
link
below.
A
So
let's
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
node
race.
Notaries.
Are
you
know,
in
a
way,
a
very
critical
sort
of
core
building
role
for
the
falcon
plus
program
and
are
responsible
for
like
the
key
sort
of
mechanism
that
exists,
which
is
like
giving
data
cap
to
clients
that
are
worthy
of
using
that
data
capital
make
deals?
A
How
that
happens
is
that
clients
will
reach
out
to
notice
to
say
hey.
I
have
this
particular
use
case.
I
am
using
filecoin,
for
whatever
reason
it
may
be:
that's
valuable
to
the
world.
It's
public
open
data
that
could
be
retrievable
by
anyone.
It's
useful
and
I
want
to
bring
it
onto
the
network
and
so
ask
me
whatever
questions
you
need
of
me
and
give
me
this
data
cap.
So
I
can
put
data
onto
the
network
easily,
and
so
the
role
of
the
notary
is
to
say.
Okay,
great
makes
sense.
A
But
the
intent
here
is
that
they
ensure
that
the
allocation
of
data
cap
that
they're
making
goes
to
parties
that
are
worthy
of
that,
because
they're
about
to
receive
a
much
cheaper
storage,
much
lower,
friction
to
move
storage
onto
the
falcon
network
and
use
that
and
ensure
that
it's
not
being
misused
or
sort
of
given
excessive
leverage.
Anyway,
because
it
is
a
pretty
important
lever
that
exists
within
the
network.
A
There's
also
a
set
of
like
operational
guidelines
and
auditing
expectations
for
people
that
serve
as
notaries
and
so
of
course
complying
with
that
as
part
of
their
role
and
their
set
of
responsibilities
as
well,
and
so
you
might
be
asking
like
how
does
one
even
become
a
notary?
So
we
actually
have
14
notaries.
Today
we
went
through
a
notary
election
process
right
at
the
start
of
this
calendar
year
and
we're
about
to
go
through
our
second
one
more
on
that
during
the
community
governance
section
of
today's
conference.
A
But
yeah
nurtures
is
selected
through
this,
like
nerdy
election
process,
which
includes,
like
writing,
a
fairly
lengthy
application,
which
is
reviewed
and
graded,
based
on
a
set
of
criteria
that
are
maintained
actually
by
the
community
itself.
So
the
community,
one
of
the
things
that
the
community
works
on
is
editing.
A
These
criteria,
editing
the
rubrics
through
which
applications
are
graded,
and
so
based
on
that
notaries
is
selected
in
in
as
objective
manner
as
possible,
based
on
factors
that
we
as
a
community,
have
sort
of
agreed
as
good
indicators
of
somebody
that
can
truly
serve
the
network
almost
altruistically,
but
also
more
generally,
in
that
they
are
stakeholders
of
falcoin
oftentimes.
This
is
as
simple
as
also
holding
filecoin
and
knowing
that,
like,
as
the
network,
does
better,
it's
likely
that
the
value
will
go
up.
A
Cool
clients,
so
this
one,
some
of
you
are
probably
a
little
bit
more
familiar
with,
but
a
client
is
one
of
the
participants
in
the
demand
side
of
the
falcon
network.
A
The
client
in
the
fireclan
plus
ecosystem
specifically,
is
typically
looking
to
store,
open,
publicly
available
and
retrievable
data
onto
the
network
and
has
received
data
cap
from
a
notary
through
an
application
to
that
notary.
A
A
If
you
haven't
already
done
this
and
you're
a
minor,
that's
looking
to
store
data
cap,
but
just
in
general,
minor
participating
in
the
falcon
plus
ecosystem
is
typically
someone
who's,
also
self-selected
themselves
into
being
on
the
filecoin
plus
registry.
So
there's
actually
a
page
which
has
like
a
list
of
miners
and
that's
driven
by
a
markdown
file
in
the
client
onboarding
repo
of
falcon
plus.
So
if
you're,
a
miner
you're
watching
this
session,
you're
interested
in
storing
deals
from
verified
clients
are
looking
to
make
verified
deals.
I
would
say
head
over
to
that.
A
Last
the
file
coinplus
governance
community,
so
this
includes
people
that
are
in
the
previous
sections
as
well,
so
there
may
be
no
trees,
clients,
minors
and
other
interested
members
of
the
community.
That
certainly
includes
you,
if
you're
here
watching
today
and
you
might
be
asking
like
what
is
the
role
of
this
particular
part,
or
this
set
of
stakeholders
and
and
the
role
is
effectively
to
help
drive
this
program
forward,
come
to
meetings,
understand
different
perspectives.
A
Talk
through
different
complexities
talk
through
different
issues.
We
have
a
ton
of
interesting
things
that
we
need
to
work
through
together,
like
governance
is
a
pretty
challenging
aspect,
especially
when
it
comes
to
this
a
system.
That's
this
complex
and
has
such
a
interesting
problem
of
like
building
trust
in
a
restless
world
in
a
way,
and
so
you
know
all
sorts
of
topics
ranging
from
like
what
is
fine
in
terms
of
clients,
storing
data
with
themselves
or
how
should
we
ensure
the
data
cap
is
reaching
all
geographies
in
the
world?
A
How
do
we
ensure
that
there's
enough
data
cap
reaching
all
geographies
in
the
world?
What
parts
of
the
program
do
we
want
to
standardize
on?
Like
what
parts
of
the
program
do
we
want
to
allow
nuanced
solutions
for
so
an
interesting
topic
that
we'll
be
discussing
in
today's
governance
call
is
like
how
do
we
serve
clients
that
are
bringing
like
massive
data
sets
to
falcon
plus?
So
that
includes
like
things
that
are
like
greater
than
500
tabi
bytes.
A
Basically,
so
if
a
client
has
like
a
massive
public
data
set
in
the
pebby
byte
scale
and
is
interested
in
showing
that
on
the
network-
and
we
as
a
community
believe
that
that's
you
know
worthy
use
case
of
alkaline
and
we'd
be
excited
to
support
it.
Then
how
do
we
actually
like
distribute
data
capita
scale?
And
how
do
we
actually
audit
that
the
client
is
complying
with
what
they
said?
They
would
be
what
are
ways
in
which
we
can
actually,
you
know,
move
forward
in
terms
of
transparency.
A
This
is
like
the
first
time
anybody's
like
thinking
about
these
problems
at
this
scale,
and
so
it's
a
pretty
exciting
set
of
things
to
talk
through
and
so
we'd
be
more
than
excited
to
have
more
people
in
the
room
and
the
way
in
which
you'd
participate
in
that
is
by
joining
the
falcon
plus
channel,
of
course,
on
falcon
sack,
that's
a
a
public
channel.
So
as
long
as
you're
in
pogba
on
slack,
you
should
be
able
to
search
it
and
join
it.
Participating
in
the
community
governance
calls
those
happen
every
other
tuesday.
A
We
actually
rotate
the
time
zones
for
those.
I
don't
remember
off
the
top
of
my
head
exactly
what
they
are,
but
if
you
take
a
look
at
the
falcon
community
events
calendar,
you
can
add
that
to
your
calendar
and
the
intent
is
at
least
one
of
every
two
calls.
A
You
should
be
able
to
join
depending
on
where
you
are
in
the
world,
so
it
might
be
really
late
at
night
or
it
might
be
really
early
in
the
morning
for
you
and
if
that's
inconvenient,
sorry
we're
trying
to
you
know
of
course
shepherd
a
lot
of
different
time
zones,
but
we
have
adjusted
it
so
that
there's
like
a
staggered
sort
of
like
one
in
the
morning,
one
in
the
evening
for
most
people,
and
so
you
should
be
able
to
join
one
of
them.
A
A
So
if
you
actually
go
to
the
falcon
channel
on
youtube,
there
should
be
a
playlist
that
just
has
like
all
the
governance
calls
so
far,
or
at
least
a
subset,
because
we
only
started
doing
that
a
couple
of
months
ago,
and
this
will
probably
be
on
the
falcon
youtube
channel,
of
course.
A
But
the
governance
call
that
we're
going
to
have
later
on
in
this
summit
will
also
be
there,
and
the
intent
is
to
continue
doing
that,
because
we
want
to
build
a
store
and
historic
tracking
effectively
of
how
we're
making
decisions
as
well,
and
so,
if
you're,
just
catching
up.
A
It's
never
too
late
to
stop
check
out
the
playlist
watch,
some
of
the
recordings
and
then
come
join
us
at
the
next
call,
which
will
happen
in
like
two
hours,
if
you're
still
here
or
in
two
weeks
and
the
last
bit
I'd
flag
is
even
if
you
know,
you're
not
able
to
make
it
to
the
calls
or
you're
just
watching
in
the
channel.
The
actual
way
in
which
decisions
get
pushed
mostly
is
through
the
conversation
and
discussion
that
happens
in
the
notary
governance
depot.
A
A
All
the
way
from
like
dispute
resolution,
audit
tracking
to
some
of
the
topics
we
discussed
around,
like
supporting
larger
data,
sets
and
figuring
out
better
models
of
like
distributing
data
cap
and
so
feel
free
to
just
go
to
the
repo
read
on
some
of
the
issues
themselves.
Leave
your
thoughts
in
comments.
Oftentimes,
we'll
see
people
do
a
conjunction
about
that,
as
well
as
participating
in
the
on
post
channel
to
ensure
that,
like
active
conversation,
is
happening
across
all
these
fronts.
A
Okay.
So
what
I
want
to
do
is
go
back
to
this
diagram
now,
because
we've
talked
about
a
bunch
of
different
words
on
this
thing,
but
now
we
need
to
make
sure
that
it
actually
makes
sense.
So
we
talked
about
the
root
key
holders,
which
are
the
executors
of
information.
That's
actually
happening
on
chain
the
notaries
that
are
different
issues
in
the
network
that
are
actually
allocating
data
cap
to
like
clients
that
they
believe
are
worthy
of
that
data
cap.
A
And
so
you
can
see
the
fets
and
approves
requests
coming
in
from
a
client
and,
as
a
result,
data
cap
is
being
allocated
to
the
client
and
then
clients
take
that
data
cap
and
have
it
as
associated
with
like
a
wallet
desk
and
when
making
a
storage
deal
from
that
address.
Their
data
cap
effectively
is
deployed
and
that
incentivizes
a
miner,
because
a
miner
receives
a
10x
quality
multiplier.
A
So
you
understand
the
core
sort
of
mechanism
that
drives
falcon
plus
and
then
the
last
bit,
I
would
say,
is
the
blue
box
that
we
didn't
talk
about
until
just
the
very
end,
which
is
the
community
governance
aspect
which
includes
the
defined
rubric
through
which
noders
are
actually
selected.
A
So
every
time
we
have
an
election
cycle,
the
notary
applications
are
parsed
and
scored
against
this
rubric
and,
as
a
result,
you
know,
n
number
of
notaries
are
selected,
and
then
that
goes
to
the
root
key
holders
who
actually
sign
that
onto
the
chain
and
so
again.
There's
the
benefit
of
this
being
on
a
blockchain,
of
course,
is
that
everything
is
being
written
as
a
message
somewhere
to
a
block
and
and
can
all
be
detected,
that's
sort
of
what
the
the
bottom
third
of
this
diagram
represents
cool.
A
A
That's
been
published
on
docs.com.io,
which
is
of
course,
always
a
work
in
progress
if
you've
got
suggestions
and
thoughts
on
that,
please
feel
free
to
open
up
an
issue
or
make
an
improvement
directly
in
pr
it
and
I'll
be
sure
to
take
a
look
and
integrate
the
the
improvements
that
you
might
have.
A
There's
the
client
onboarding
repository,
which
we
haven't
really
talked
about,
and
so
I'll
just
spend
a
second
on
that
the
client
onboarding
repository
is
also
the
one
by
the
way
where
the
miner
listing
is
so,
if
you're
a
reminder
that
once
you
get
onto
that,
you
want
to
head
over
there
and
look
for
miners
at
md,
but
that
repo
is
sort
of
the
central
flow
of
like
applications
so
like
in
this
diagram,
where
we
have
this
dotted
box
like
this
dotted
box
sort
of
happens
in
that
repo.
A
So
all
of
that
can
be
seen
in
this
repo
in
case
you're
curious,
but
also,
if
you're,
a
client.
That's
looking
to
apply
for
data
cap
this
this
and
the
docs
are
probably
where
you
want
to
start
and
they'll
point
you
sort
of
in
the
right
direction,
which
often
times
will
be
what's
in
the
last
bullet
here,
which
is
the
falcon
plus
registry.
So
if
you're,
actually
a
client
that
wants
to
go
get
data
cap
today,
the
first
path
is
to
go
to
this
site
called
verify.glyph.io.
A
You
and
last
just
mentioned
on
the
previous
slide
as
well,
which
is
the
notary
governance
report.
So
this
is
sort
of
the
central
community
governance
and
notre
dame
repo,
where
we
do
a
bunch
of
decisions
and
discussion
around
how
the
program
itself
is
evolving
but
also
where
elections
are
run
from,
as
well
as
like,
where
we
do
a
bunch
of
the
dispute
resolution
stuff,
and
so
this.
This
repo
is
all
the
hot
topics
of
falcon
plus.
A
If
you
want
to
go
see
what
the
open
conversations
are,
if
you
want
to
participate
in
shaping
the
program,
that's
where
I
head
over
to
check
out
the
open
issues
and
make
sure
to
read
through
some
of
the
readme
that
might
help.
That's
also
where
we
have
some
descriptions,
especially
around
like
the
root
key
holder
role
and
the
nurturing
role
in
much
much
greater
detail
than
I
covered
today.
A
So
if
you're
interested
in
reading
a
little
bit
more
about
the
specifics
of
the
operational
responsibilities
and
the
roles,
then
please
feel
free
to
check
that
out
as
well
and,
of
course,
feel
free
to
reach
out
to
me.
I'm
deep
kapoor
on
the
falcon
slack.
If
you
have
any
questions,
certainly
available
on
the
falcon
plus
channel,
that's
probably
the
fastest
way
to
get
a
hold
of
me.