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From YouTube: Pixel by Pixel: Building NFT Communities
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A
Thank
you
so
much
for
joining
us
today.
At
the
nft
house
we
have
an
incredible
lineup
of
panelists
for
you,
some
of
the
greatest
community
builders,
I
would
dare
to
say
in
the
nft
space
I'm
going
to
let
them
introduce
themselves
because
I
will
not
do
them
justice
if
we
started.
Let's
end
with
pontus.
B
Yeah,
so
my
name
is
pontus.
I've
been
doing
nfts,
I
think,
probably
for
the
best,
the
better
part
of
this
past
year,
but
been
in
crypto
for
the
better
part
of
this
decade.
I
would
say
I
currently
do
bd
and
partnerships
at
oloplex,
which
is
an
nft
infrastructure
company
on
solana.
A
C
A
D
A
D
A
Amazing
so,
as
I
said,
an
amazing,
lineup
and
really
interesting
sean
as
well,
that
you're
kind
of
coming
from
the
artist
and
curator
perspective,
and
I
think
in
nfts
we
all
find
ourselves
dabbling
in
different
things
right,
because
you
know
you
might
be
working
for
one
platform
in
one
capacity,
you
might
be
a
collector
as
well.
You
might
be
a
creator,
so
pontus
tell
us
a
little
bit
about
the
kind
of
community
that
you're
building
specifically
at
holoplex,
and
how
do
you
view
community?
Because
I
feel
like
in
web
3
we're
not.
A
B
Yeah,
so
I've
helped
build
a
couple
communities
in
like
the
nft
space,
and
I
think
particularly
what
strikes
me
is
that
it's
taken
this
idea
of
communities
being
like
very
insular
and
concentrated
in
one
particular
part
of
the
world,
whether
that's
your
city
or
your
particular,
like
town
and
just
kind
of
exploded
it
out
and
so
suddenly,
like
the
communities
that
we
find
ourselves
in
are
very
truly
like
in
every
sense
of
the
word
international
and
it's
international.
B
But
you
don't
know
that,
and
so
at
olaplex,
one
of
the
things
that
we
kind
of
see
and
also
help
the
artists
that
use
our
platform
as
well
from
like
from
that
perspective,
is
understand
how
to
spread
the
artwork
and
the
creations
that
they're
kind
of
generating
on
a
day-to-day
or
a
week-to-week
basis,
but
also
cultivating
really
strong
connections
with
their
collectors
and
other
artists,
because,
ultimately
like
what
it
comes
down
to.
A
Yeah,
no,
absolutely,
I
think,
that's
right
and
then
kind
of
like
expanding
on
that
a
little
bit
sean.
I
I
was
I'm
a
member
of
the
palm
community
right
when
the
demon
hurst
drop
happened.
A
I
got
one
yes
so
like
there
was
like
you
know,
I
I've
kind
of
like
been
a
part
of
that
community
have
been
kind
of
watching
that
grow
as
well
from
the
kind
of
artist
and
curator
perspective
perspective.
Like
does
that
change?
How
you're
approaching
things
at
palm?
Do
you
think
that
gives
you
like
additional
insight
and
and
kind
of,
especially
in
in
that
space
like?
How
are
you.
D
So
I
will
say
that,
like
at
palm
because
palm
is
completely
new,
I
think
there's
their
challenges
associated
with
that.
When
I
came
on
board,
there
were
no
members
of
of
the
community
team.
I
was
like
the
first
member
of
the
community
team
and
most
people
had
only
known
about
palm
because
of
the
hearse
drop.
D
That's
hard
it's
hard
to
have
all
of
those
people
in
one
community
and
kind
of
like
give
them
all
of
the
things
that
they
need,
and
so
I
think
that's
that's
the
that's
the
big
struggle
that
we're
dealing
with.
D
That's
the
big
struggle
that
I'm
dealing
with
as
head
of
community
because
it's
hard
to
serve
all
those
different
people,
because
there's
there's
overlap
sometimes
and
quite
frankly,
I
had
an
developer
relations
person
that
then
decided
he
wanted
to
go
work
for
a
dao,
and
so
you
know,
because
we're
a
new
network
part
of
what
we
need
are
people
building
on
that
network,
so
developers
are
super
important
and
so
now
I'm
trying
to
find
a
new
developer
relations
person
to
fill
that
role.
D
But
I
think
that
overlap
is
is
is
is
something
that
is
consistent.
I
think
in
web3
I
think,
there's
a
lot
of
overlap.
What
I'm
seeing
a
lot
of
is
artists,
also
becoming
collectors,
and
so
I
think
it
it
makes
it
harder
to
serve
all
of
those
different
personas
in
one
one
core
community
yeah.
A
D
Think
that's
what's
so
exciting
too
about
web3
right,
I
think
for
a
time
in
web
2.
Even
when
you
think
about
creating
a
product,
there
were
very,
very
clear
lines
between.
You
know
I'm
going
to
design
it
and
then
you're
going
to
build
it,
but
we're
never
going
to
talk
about
it
ever
ever
ever
and
I'm
a
developer.
So
I
don't
touch
design
and
I'm
a
designer.
So
I
don't
touch
code
and
that
has
all
sort
of
gone
away
and
those
lines
like
you
said,
have
blurred
and
I
think
that's
what's
so
exciting
about
web3.
A
And
it's
beautiful
and
we're
seeing
that
in
the
nft
space
right
I
mean
even
some
of
the
the
sessions
that
we've
had
today
where
bailey
was
like
talking
about
poetry
and
we
had
developers
in
there
and
everything
yeah.
We
found
ourselves
in
this
like
cultural
revolution.
I
like
to
think
now.
A
Charles
with
project
galaxy,
is
slightly
different,
almost
because
everything
that
you
do
is
about
community,
and
I
mean
I
don't
mean
to
be
clever
when
I
say
that
because,
like
obviously
community
is,
is
the
kind
of
founding
pillar
of
everything
nfts,
but
project
galaxy
literally,
is
about
kind
of
like
you
know,
it's
social,
inherently.
A
What
challenges
do
you
have
there
like,
and
you
can't
say
none
because
they're?
Definitely,
but
you
know,
and
what
have
been
kind
of
some
of
the
interesting
challenges.
What
are
things
that
have
come
up
that
you
maybe
didn't
necessarily
expect.
C
Right
so
for
project
galaxy,
we
are
we're
a
tooling
company,
we're
infrastructure
we
provide,
especially
for
the
first
eight
months
when
we
started
after
we
started
project
galaxy.
We
would
be
more
focused
on
developer
relations
as
an
infrastructure
company.
We
want
to
work
with
more
organizations
and
dolls
brands
and
it's
more
like
a
b2p,
a
b2,
a
p2p
protocol
to
protocol
infrastructure.
C
So
it
was
a
challenge
at
the
beginning
when
we
tried
to
build
our
own
community,
because
you
don't
expect
business
clients
to
be,
you
know
interacted
to
to
interact
with
your
community
like
users
or
investors,
but
later
we
find
out,
you
know
we're
not
just
we
can
leverage
some
some
of
the
features
we
have.
For
example,
they
drive
their
users
to
use
they.
C
They
use
project
galaxy
to
offer
something
for
their
community,
because
we
we
provide
a
tool
for
them
to
build
their
community
right,
leverage,
on-chain
credentials
and
nfts
to
build
their
loyalty
programs.
So
users
are
interacting
with
galaxy
platform.
So
and
then,
last
year
december
we
had
an
event
called
end
of
year.
C
2021
end
of
year,
rave,
we
united
12
different
protocols,
for
example
perpetual
protocol
year
finance,
alpha
finance
and
those
are
d5
protocol.
Each
one
come
up
with
one
task
and
and
finishing
all
tasks.
If
I
finish,
each
task
will
give
you
one
credential
based
nft
from
that
protocol.
If
you
complete
10
out
of
12,
you
will
be
able
to
forge
them
into
a
a
galaxy,
an
ft.
The.
B
C
Called
galaxy
girl
in
ft
and
a
lot
of
people,
it
was
crazy
about
it
and
it
also
drived
a
lot
of
users
to
their
protocol
and
turns
out
starting
from
there
we
started
to
see
you
know:
that's
the
way
we
can
build
our
community,
because
we
are,
you
know
interacting
with
the
community
of
those
protocols,
but
also
eventually
convert
them
into
our
nft
holder.
That's
how
we
did
it.
Yes,.
A
That's
interesting,
I
think
gamification,
especially
for
a
developer
audience
can
be
super
fun
and
engaging
what
about
and
kind
of
open
question.
What
other
approaches
have
you
taken
that
you've
seen
to
be
really
really
successful?
You
know,
is
it?
Are
there
particular
campaigns?
Is
it
about
consistency
like?
What
do
you
think
are
the
kind
of
the
big
wins
that
you've
seen
with
some
of
the
approaches
that
you've
taken
we're.
D
Creating
a
lot
of
content-
and
I
have
been
pushing
my
team
like
even
though
you're
on
discord,
certain
things
will
bubble
up
if
they
bubble
up,
let's
create
a
blog
post.
Let's
you
know,
do
a
video
to
show
people
how
to
do
it.
We
do
twitter
spaces
and
we're
taking
the
audio
from
twitter
spaces
and
editing
that
and
creating
a
podcast.
So
we
are
just
churning
out
a
lot
a
lot
of
content
to
try
to
kind
of
like
meet
people
where
they
are
as
well,
because
there's.
D
A
lot
more
outreach
then
also
the
space
is
just
so
noisy
you're
competing
with
everyone,
and
you
know
when
I
first
started.
I
heard
that
discord
beep
in
my
sleep
at
one
point:
it's
just
it's
insane,
so
yeah
there's
a
lot
of
competition,
and
so
I
think,
where
we're
sort
of
focusing
is
creating
a
lot
of
content
to
try
to
reach
people.
It
seems
to
be
working
so
far.
Yeah.
A
B
I
was
going
to
say
one
of
the
ways
that
we
kind
of
approach.
It
is
an
emphasis
on
collaboration.
B
I
think,
as
someone
who
has
like,
before
committing
to
discord
nitro
like
having
to
join,
leave,
join,
leave,
join,
leave
discord
servers
because
you
hit
the
100
cap
is
like
something
that's
very
true
and
like
the
idea
of
like
waking
up
in
the
middle
of
night
to
like
phantom
things
is
like
probably
something
a
lot
of
people
in
here
can
relate
to,
but
you're
you're
fighting
for
attention,
and
I
think
it's
important
for
for
brands
and
businesses
and
projects
and
teams
that
are
building
in
web
3.
B
B
We
find
artists
that
are
very
proficient,
in
maybe
say
one
medium
or
very
outspoken
and
love
to
drive
twitter
spaces,
and
we
encourage
them
either
monetarily
or
through
exposure
through
our
platform
or
in
other
ways
to
go
out
and
find
like-minded
individuals
or
individuals
that
they
feel
that
they
should
be
putting
up
and
promoting
and
encourage
them
to
find
ways
to
to
collaborate,
whether
it's
generating
some
new
piece
of
one-on-one,
artwork
or
running
their
own
kind
of
competitions
or
whatever.
B
And
for
me
that's
been
particularly,
I
guess
effective,
not
from
the
perspective
of
like
how
do
we
drive
more
people
to
using
olaplex
which
by
like
just
happens
by
proxy,
but
more
so
just
making
sure
that
these
artists
are
feel
like
they're
represented
and
feel
like
they're
supported,
and
I
think
from
the
like
previous
panel.
I
was
visiting
here
for
the
past
hour.
Someone
mentioned
this
idea
of
mental
health
and
I
think
it's
something
that's
grossly
under
like
yeah.
B
It's
not
talked
about
nearly
enough
and
it's
something
that
we
value
quite
a
lot,
and
I
think
that
it
has
to
come
from
finding
support,
building
your
own
support
network
within
the
communities
that
you're
involved
in,
because
it's
not
always
gonna
like.
We
don't
have
the
answer
to
everything.
We've
landed
a
lot
of
things,
but
some
people-
maybe
just
do
it
better,.
A
Yeah,
I
think
I
I
love
that.
I
think
it
is
a
rising
tides
type
of
thing.
You
know
we
all
work
on
different
types
of
projects.
We
work
with
different
communities,
but
ultimately
creating
value
that
can
be
universal
is
actually
what
we
should
all
be
driving
towards
and
I
think
the
projects
that
do
that
are
successful
and
we
we
see
that
time
and
time
again.
No,
that's
that's
fantastic.
A
B
At
this
point
and
seen
a
lot
of
different
pitches
and
pitch
competitions
are,
like
everyone
kind
of
knows
about
them,
and
I
think,
like
in
the
the
traditional
sense,
it's
always
kind
of
been
like
you're,
pitching
to
a
vc
or
you're,
pitching
to
someone
who's
going
to
potentially
give
you
access
to
something
else,
and
one
thing
that
I'm
particularly
proud
of
our
community-
and
I
like
stress
that,
because
it's
not
our
team
is
that
every
week
we
drive
open
pitches
through
the
olaplex
twitter,
and
so
we
run
twitter
spaces
where
different
communities,
whether
it's
an
nft
project,
one
of
one
creators
or
artists,
collectives
sit
on
a
panel
of
three
and
anyone
that
has
an
old
like
storefront
can
go
up
and
basically
promote
what
either
what
they're
doing,
whether
it's
they
have
a
live,
auction
or
or
not,
and
basically
tell
the
community
and
these
three
community
panelists.
B
What
it
is
that
they're
up
to
and
at
the
end
of
the
whole
thing.
Those
panelists
ultimately
end
up
voting
on
one
particular
person
and
then
we
as
a
company
feature
them
on
our
storefront
for
a
week
until
the
next
open
pitch,
and
that's
probably
like
my
favorite
way,
because
it's
it's
it's
all
about
community
community
community
community.
A
That's
awesome,
and
even
for
discovery
bills,
even
for
you
personally
right
about
as
a
pleasure
so
like
you're
like
oh,
that's,
brilliant,
like
digging
a
bit
more,
very
cool
and
sean.
What
about
you?
Is
there
any
kind
of
like
campaign
or
something
that
you
you've
done
at
pam,
that
you've
just
been
really
proud
of.
D
Yeah,
so
we
have
something
called
the
creator
engagement
program
and
what
we
do
is
there's
no
there's
just
a
form
that
the
creators
in
our
community
can
fill
out
and
what
we
do
is
we
find
opportunities
to
amplify
them
across
the
palm
ecosystem.
D
So
that
starts
with
a
blog
post
and
featuring
them
on
twitter
spaces
featuring
their
work
across
all
our
socials,
but
also
I
coordinated
with
emily
and
we're
showing
some
of
those
artists
here
and
it's
like
you
know,
it's
just
a
matter
of
trying
to
give
them
amplify
their
work
and
give
them
opportunities
to
be
seen.
D
I
think,
at
the
end
of
the
day
I
always
say
the
only
way
to
support
an
artist
is
to
buy
their
work,
and
so
I
do
have
something
in
mind
where
we
will,
as
a
part
of
that
program,
purchase
a
piece
of
that
artist's
work.
We
haven't
gotten
it
in
place
yet,
but
that's
something
that
we're
doing
for
now
that
I
think
just
really.
A
A
Amazing,
that's
really
exciting
and
ashan
said
after
the
session.
If
you
get
a
chance
pop
upstairs
there's
an
installation
that
pam
have
kindly
put
together
for
us
final,
I
could
sit
and
chat
to
you
all
day.
To
be
honest,
I'm
learning
so
much.
This
is
brilliant
final
question.
A
You're
all
part
of
other
communities
as
well.
I
assume-
and
one
of
the
things
I
always
love
to
do
is-
is
ask
you
what
other
communities
either
you're
part
of
and
you
enjoy
being
part
of,
or
do
you
think,
are
just
doing
a
really
really
great
job
of
kind
of
building
and
supporting
the
folks
they're
in.
C
D
When
I,
when
I
joined
this
space,
I'm
relatively
new
to
the
space,
I
came
in
during
what
I
called
the
clubhouse
time
when
everyone
was
locked
in
their
in
their
house-
and
you
know
nobody
could
go
anywhere
and
everyone's
just
listening
to
clubhouse
started
to
see
all
his
conversations
around
nft.
So
it's
been
about
a
year,
but
as
someone
with
an
entrepreneurial
sort
of
mindset,
I
personally
was
not
seeing
as
much
diversity
as
I
would
have
liked.
D
So
I
started
a
newsletter
called
the
black
chain
and
the
goal
around
that
is
to
amplify
the
work
of
women
and
lgbtq
and
bipoc
folks
in
the
space
and
one
of
the
funny
things
is,
you
know
community's
been
great.
D
I've
featured
so
many
people
across
the
ecosystem,
but
actually
never
met
them
in
real
life,
and
so
I
walked
in
here
and
three
of
the
first
people
that
I
saw
were
people
that
I
featured
in
the
newsletter,
but
I'd
never
met,
and
so
for
me
that
was
just
sort
of
like
a
full
circle
moment
of
just
like.
Yes,
this
community
can
exist
not
just
online
but
also
irl.
So
that's
that's.
C
Well,
I
would
say
if
we
talk
about
nft
communities,
I'm
personally,
the
holder
of
cool
cats
they're
doing
a
good
job,
but
but
but
in
general,
in
my
opinion,
I
feel
like
all
nft
communities
is
about
the
same
in
general,
the
the
call
to
action
you
know
how
they
built
their
community
usually
is,
you
know,
maybe
identify
their
long-term
objective
and
then
break
it
down
to
short-term
goals,
and
then
they
always
have
call
to
actions
in
their
community,
which
is
great,
and
I
see
I
see
95
of
the
top
and
ft
projects
doing
this
all
day.
C
I
feel,
like
you
know,
speaking
of
in
general,
I
feel
like
solana.
Community
is
doing
very
well,
especially
at
the
depths
we
see
in
different
events,
they're
they're,
very
young
and
they're,
very
energetic.
We
see
a
lot
of
new
devs.
They
started
to
on
solana
instead
of
east,
it's
a
very
interesting
trend,
but
yeah.
That's
what
I
feel.
A
B
Love
our
devs
and
we
love
all
the
all
the
products
on
there
yeah
I
mean
I
think
for
for
the
sake
of
brevity,
instead
of
going
into
to
all
the
various
monkeys
and
apes
that
projects
represent,
and
I'm
probably
a
part
of
as
well
the
the
people
that
are
building
as
like
cliche.
As
that
sounds
like
anyone,
that's
putting
a
foot
forward
and
saying
hey,
you
know
what
maybe
we
should
make
a
dao
or
hey?
Maybe
we
should
start
an
nft
project,
or
maybe
we
should
like
do
something
about
this.
B
One
particular
issue-
and
I
heard
that
there
was
this
one
protocol
that
does
credentials
that
maybe
we
can
use
to
get
into
like
our
small
coffee
shop
right.
Those
are
like
the
people
that
are
putting
their
set
their
their
themselves
forward
and
out
there
like,
and
even
if
they
fail
in
dramatic
fashion
and
rug,
us
all
like
that's
fine,
because
at
the
at
the
end
of
the
day,
they
probably
have
encouraged
someone
else
to
either
save
that
project
or
go
out
and
make
their
own.
A
Totally
fortune
favors
the
bold
right
exactly
well,
listen
like
I
said
I
wish
we
had
another
six
hours
to
have
a
chat.
If
you
do
want
to
chat
to
our
speakers,
you'll
stick
around
for
a
little
bit
and
folks
can
ask
you
questions.
Thank
you
so
much
pontius
charles
and
sean
for
joining
us
today
and
yeah
big
round
of
applause.
Please.