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From YouTube: Decentralized Social Impact - Manu Alzuru
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A
First
of
all,
welcome
everyone
thanks
mark
for
inviting
me
here
super
happy
to
be
here,
presenting
what
we're
building,
what
we
call
decentralized
social
impact,
or
this
side
and
yeah
we're
gonna
talk
a
little
bit
about
the
infrastructure
that
we're
building
and,
first
of
all,
I
want
to
understand
who
trusts
the
current
traditional
system
that
we
live
in.
If
you
trust,
if
you
don't
trust,
please
raise
your
hand.
A
All
right
who
likes
to
be
part
of
the
wage
labor
system,
where
I
call
it
you
know,
basically
the
war
machine,
if
you
don't
like
to
be
part
of
that
system,
raise
your
hand.
A
Okay,
it
seems
that
not
many
of
you,
like
the
system
that
we
live
in,
do
any
of
you
trust
the
opaque
nonprofits
that
we
have.
If
you
don't
raise
your
hand,
okay,
well,
it's
very
clear
that
we
don't
really
trust.
What's
going
on.
B
Okay,
what's
going
on
here,
yeah,
I
just
got
wrong
again
so
anyways!
Yes,
I
got
rocked,
oh
god!
Oh
it's
getting
rough
here
there
you
go.
A
Okay
seems
we're
back
so
yeah.
We
saw
during
the
pandemic
that
you
know
there
was
kind
of
like
a
social
awakening
happening.
A
lot
of
people
started
to
to
realize
how
bad
our
current
system
is
and
that
we
don't
necessarily
need
to
trust
our
governments,
because
they
are
not
really
there
for
us
to
take
care
of
us
and
yeah.
Many
of
us
also
started
to
realize
that
we
wanted
to
be
more
in
touch
with
nature.
A
We
wanted
to
be
more
in
touch
with,
let's
say
the
universe
in
general
and
connected
more
to
the
inner
self
as
well,
and
we
saw
this
this
meme
coming
out
that
I've
been
talking
a
lot
about,
which
is
the
regen
movement
and
also
the
solar
panel
movement,
and
also
we
saw
a
new
renaissance
or
we're
seeing
a
new
renaissance
right
now,
a
lot
of
creators
all
over
the
world
are
basically
coming
out
with
their
creativity
and
using
it
for
funding
cool
things
around
the
world,
and
we
know
that
you
know
the
explosion
of
creativity.
A
Right
now
is
completely
decentralized
and
unstoppable,
and
the
pandemic
was
a
spark.
At
the
beginning
of
the
pandemic.
We
created
a
platform
that
was
essentially
allowing
people
to
request
any
type
of
offers,
any
type
of
I'm
sorry
any
type
of
help,
whether
it's
medical
help
or
any
type
of
help
in
general,
or
offer
any
type
of
help,
and
we
built
this
whole
the
whole
platform.
Without
raising
one
single
us
dollar,
we
have
over
1
900
individuals
from
all
over
the
world
just
contributing
time
and
what
we
were
building
this
platform.
A
A
Yeah
then
also
we
started
to
see
what
was
happening
with
nfts.
We
saw
that
a
lot
of
people
came
out
with
different,
let's
say
different
collections
that
were
starting
to
fund
social
impact.
We
saw
the
moonshot
bots
by
gitcoin
that
raised
over
three
million
dollars.
We
saw
also
the
carbon
drop
together
with
people
and
one
of
our
co-founders
as
well
and
yeah.
I
also
saw
what
happened
with
assange:
dao,
ukraine,
dao
and
so
on.
A
C
We
are
standing
at
the
forefront
of
an
evolution
of
creativity,
technology,
community
finance
and
social
consciousness.
Blockchain
technology
has
paved
the
way
for
nfts
which
have
ignited
the
democratization
of
the
creative
space.
This
new
era
in
the
digital
world
is
now
open,
transparent
and
unstoppable.
C
A
There
you
go
okay,
so
yeah.
After
that
you
can
select
different
social
costs.
You
can
broad
browse
social
costs
based
on
this
17
sustainable
development
goals,
but
the
united
nation.
You
can
select
any
of
those
and
then
basically
make
your
favorite
social
costs
and
then,
after
that,
when,
when
you
have
a
social
cost
already
selected,
that's
when
you
actually
are
able
to
start
posting
and
the
way
that
you
work.
It
will
be
the
following:
let's
say
you
upload
any
type
of
creation,
let's
say
pictures,
videos
or
any
type
of
media
digital
media.
A
You
write
your
title.
You
write
your
description
tags
for
this
comparability.
The
social
cost
is
already
pre-selected,
so
you
don't
even
need
to
think
about
it
or
you
can
change
it.
If
you
want
to
on
any
other
social
cost,
and
then
you
can
also
add,
collaborators
have
different
splits
and
yeah
essentially
decide
how
much
money
each
person
or
each
contributor
is
gonna,
be
getting
within
the
doing
good
protocol.
A
The
idea
is
that
a
minimum
of
five
percent
goes
to
a
social
cost,
that
the
creator
cares
about
and
yeah
they
can
select
whatever
parameters,
and
this
is
in
the
primary
market
in
the
secondary
market.
Also,
they
select
those
parameters
so
like
that
it
means
that
media
for
the
first
time
is,
it
has
the
possibility
of
always
funding
public
goods.
A
So
imagine
a
world
where
you
don't
need
to
give
any
money
out
of
your
pocket,
but
you
just
give
your
creativity,
you
give
your
content,
you
give
what
you
create
and
yeah
you
don't
need
to
have
any
cryptocurrency
in
your
wallet
or
anything.
We
we're
leveraging
did
technology
in
order
for
you
to
actually
have
complete
ownership
over
all
the
assets
that
you're
publishing,
and
here
is
just
a
test
of
what
I
what
we
publish
now.
A
I
want
to
show
you
also
all
the
things
that
we
have
done,
yeah
here,
for
example,
if
you
go
to
the
creation
page,
you
can
see
the
social
cost
that
is
being
supported
and
the
different
creations
are
supporting
that
specific
social
cost.
Here
this
was
if
barcelona
donations,
so
all
of
this
pictures
were
created
by
humans
that
were
that
went
to
the
event
in
barcelona.
They
just
took
pictures
and
they
outlawed
them
immediately.
A
These
were
creator
cards,
kind
of
like
pops
that
you
scan
them,
and
then
you
get
the
the
creator
card,
and
if
you
want
to
sell
that
creator
card,
it
will
fund
public
goods
all
the
time
so
there,
and
also
like
all
the
nft
ticketing
that
we
did
at
if
barcelona
also
had
five
percent
going
to
this
pool.
That
was
then
used
for
quadratic
funding,
which
also
I'm
going
to
show
you.
We
worked
together
with
the
ethereum
from
with
the
ethereal
foundation
to
bring
quadratic
funding
to
the
event.
A
So,
essentially,
what
we
want
at
doing
good
is
to
not
only
have
media
but
also
have
in
real
life
experiences
that
are
always
making
impact.
So
the
theorem
barcelona
event
was,
let's
say,
an
event
where
there
was
no
plastic.
There
was
also
we
collected
the
information
from
the
different
sponsors
where
they
came
from
and
so
on.
In
order
for
us
to
work
together
with
toucan
and
offset
the
whole
event
and
yeah
we
had,
we
had
over
2
200
people
that
came
to
the
event
and
with
every
ticket
sale.
A
As
I
said,
five
percent
went
to
this
pool
that
was
then
used
for
quadratic
funding,
so
yeah
doing
good.
Today,
you
can
see
it
as
a
platform
that
allows
you
to
collaborate
and
automate.
Let's
say
any
sort
of
any
sort
of
payment
is
sustainable
and
eco-friendly
in
the
way
that
things
get
actually
published
on
chain.
How?
Well,
basically
things
get
on
chain
only
when
there
is
a
buyer?
A
Only
when
there's
someone
actually
willing
to
take
that
specific
creativity,
the
idea
to
become
community
owned
and
curated
is
essentially
we're
planning
to
give
back
to
all
the
different
creators,
curators
and
also
the
social
causes
that
are
part
of
the
ecosystem.
In
order
for
them
to
also
have
ownership
over
over
the
platform,
and
then
the
receiving
and
storage
is.
The
idea
is
that
you
know
nfts
most
of
the
times
are
using
ipfs
in
order
to
store
the
data
of
the
nft.
A
However,
what
if
we
have
different
different
places
where
the
the
the
data
can
be
stored-
let's
say
falco
and
airwave,
and
so
on.
So
if
one
stops
working
or
is
or
maybe
has
some
issue,
you
can
have,
let's
say
other
places
where
the
data
is
available.
The
knock
code
tool
for
creators
was
many
of
you
might
know
currently,
like
most
of
the
most
of
the
collections,
usually
have
only
one
royalty,
meaning
that
you,
you
need
to
trust
that
person
that
is
going
to
be
receiving
the
royalty.
A
So,
for
example,
complete
openc
has
all
the
royalties
completely
of
chain.
They
are
not
on
chain
and
you
still
need
to
rely
on
open
seats
for
them
to
distribute
those
royalties
and
it's
right.
Now
we
are
in
one
network.
We
are
on
the
polygon
network,
but
we're
releasing
in
probably
two
weeks
three
weeks,
also
on
ethereum
and
a
couple
of
other
evm
compatible
change
chains
and
then
the
social
impact
transparency
is
well,
as
you
might
notice.
A
The
last
few
months,
a
lot
of
creators
have
been
saying
we're
going
to
donate
10
percent
to
x
costs.
But
how
do
we
know
that
they
are
actually
doing
that?
Well,
it
has
to
be
unchained
for
us
to
really
see
that
the
money
is
going
where
they
say
that
it's
supposed
to
be
going,
but
that's
just
the
very
very
beginning
of
what
even
impact
even
means
right.
Just
giving
money
doesn't
really
necessarily
mean
that
they're
creating
impact
and
I'm
going
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
it
in
in
a
later
slide.
A
The
socialize
and
connect
is
because
we
believe
that
everything
that
is
out
there
right
now
is
use,
focus
only
on
buying
and
selling,
and
that's
not
what
really
humans
want.
What
really
humans
want
is
to
connect
to
be
part
of
something
and
we're
seeing
it
already.
People
that
have
crypto
punks
they're,
going
to
the
they're
going
to
discord
and
they're
validating
that
they
have
a
crypto
punk
and
they
are,
they
say,
engaging
with
the
crypto
cryptocurren
community.
A
So
what
people
really
want
is
a
sense
of
belonging,
a
sense
of
being
part
of
something,
and
we
also
want
to
enable
that
within
what
we're
building
but
yeah.
As
I
said
before,
doing
good,
if
you
see
it,
it
looks
kind
of
like
a
let's
say
initially
as
an
nft
marketplace
and
also
as
a
social
media
app.
But
what
we're
really
really
focusing
on
is
in
the
protocol
and
the
protocol
will
enable
any
human
being
to
participate
in
the
decentralized
funding,
governance
and
quality
control
of
impact.
A
So
yeah.
The
idea
is
to
go
open
source,
create
an
sdk
that
anyone
can
integrate,
meaning
that
any
other
nft
platform
if
they
wanted
to
plug
into
the
token
curated
registry
of
social
classes,
they
can
and
also
yeah,
basically
launch
the
decentralized
social
impact
protocol.
The
sustain
the
the
united
nations
says
that
over
five
to
seven
trillion
dollars
are
needed
per
year
per
year
until
2030
in
order
to
achieve
the
sustainable
development
goals,
which
is
huge,
is
it's
it's
needed
quite
a
lot.
A
I
have
to
say
and
and
and
yeah
we.
We
are
not
coordinating
that.
There's
no
platform,
there's
no
place
where
we
can
see
how
that
money
is
being
distributed,
how
that
money
is
being
used
and
so
on,
and
where
it's
actually
going.
A
We
do
know
in
the
in
the
space
that
there
are
many
tools
that
we
can
use
for:
funding
public
goods.
We
have
quadratic
funding,
obviously
that
was
that
has
been
used
quite
a
lot
recently,
thanks
to
vitalik
and
git
coin,
also:
conviction:
funding
bonding
curves,
hybrid
attacks,
retroactive
funding
that
has
been
quite
popular
lately,
thanks
to
the
optimism
team.
A
Obviously,
airdrops
can
also
be
used
for
good,
and
there
there's
also
some
civil
resistance
mechanisms
that
can
be
leveraged
in
order
to
have,
let's
say,
more
democratic
decisions
and
then
obviously
their
doubts
are
focused
only
on
solving
those
specific
problems
that
we
might
have
like.
I
mentioned
before,
like
assange,
dao
and
so
on.
Ukraine,
dow
and
yeah
transaction
tax.
A
Imagine
that
every
time
that
there's
a
transaction
a
percentage
goes
to
a
pool
and
that
pool
might
be
governed
by
let's
say
dow
members
undecided
decided
to
distribute
that
the
money
into
different
social
causes.
Also
there
might
be
funding
rounds
with
leaderboards,
and
you
know
people
like
to
show
off
that
they
that
they
care
about
something.
A
So
we
might
leverage,
also
these
type
of
things
for
good,
also
there's
protocols
that
are
allocating
a
percentage
of
their
token
directly
directly
to
funding
public
goods,
and
another
thing
that
I
think
is
going
to
be
huge,
I
believe,
is
going
to
be
huge.
Is
the
social
signaling
with
nfts?
A
So
instead
of
you
having
a
monkey
picture
that
you
know
might
represent
how
much
wealth
you
have
spent
in
the
monkey
picture?
Why
not
having
another
type
of
media
that
actually
represents
the
good
that
you've
been
doing
for
this
world.
A
So
we
all
know
that
many
projects
are
building
different
pieces
of
the
puzzle
and
we
believe
in
plurality.
What
if
we
put
all
of
those
pieces
of
the
puzzle
that
are
being
built,
we
put
them
together
and
we
use
them
for
good.
A
Now
I
want
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
the
protocol.
What
is
it
that
we're
envisioning?
So
imagine
that
we
have
a
metadata,
the
metadow.
A
We
call
it
the
doing
good
now
and
then
in
that
doing
good
now
there
might
be
different
stakeholders,
whether
are
the
creators
that
have
been
already
on
board
different
communities
that
we
believe
are
aligned
with
with
our
values.
And
then,
after
that,
we
come
together
and
we
signal
and
decide
to
create
what
we
call
guilds
those
guilds.
Those
skills
are
essentially
focusing
on
any
humanitarian
cause.
It
could
be,
let's
say,
gender
equality
or
it
could
be
any
problem
that
we
might
have
any
emergency
and
so
on.
A
A
Is
that
instead
of
you
supporting,
let's
say
one
specific
social
cost,
you
support
their
costs
in
general
and
in
that
cost
in
general,
there's
people
that
actually
have
their
knowledge
on
how
to
distribute
their
funds
and
also
how
to
measure
the
impact
that
is
being
made
and
that's
what
we
think
it
should
be
the
way
of
doing
it.
So
yeah
we
have
the
guilds
and
then,
after
that,
after
we
build
the
kills,
the
guilds
start
to
build
a
treasury,
and
then
they
can
leverage
sustainable
fundings.
How
can
they
leverage
sustainable
funding,
doing
nft
sales?
A
People
can,
you
know,
give
nfts
to
those
to
that
guild
or
they
can
receive
also
direct
donations
or
even
capital
geopoo.
So,
instead
of
having
let's
say,
if
you
have
some
money
parked
on
ave
and
is
generating
some
yield,
you
can
decide
if
a
percentage
of
that
geo
gets
also
distributed
to
the
yield,
for
example,
and
then
also
reward
all
the
participants.
A
Then
we
have
something
that
we
call
impact
makers,
so
the
impact
makers
are
essentially
non-profits
ngos
or
whatever,
whoever
wants
to
make
an
impact.
They
come
to
the
guild
and
say
hey.
I
want
to
clean
the
beach
in
barcelona
and
the
guild
might
say.
Yes,
we,
like
your
idea,
you
have
the
right.
People
go
and
clean
it.
But
again,
as
I
said
before,
giving
money
to
social
projects
doesn't
represent
impact.
That's
just
the
very
very
beginning
of
what
impact
means.
So
then
we
have.
Yesterday
we
had
juan
talking
about
impact
verifiers.
A
What
we,
what
we
do
have
is
what
we
call
impact
reporters,
so
reporters
are
essentially
probably
the
same
person
that
that
requested,
the
money
plus
other
people
might
be,
journalists
might
be,
let's
say,
individuals
are
part
of
our
community
or
so
on.
They
can
create
reports,
so
they
can
come
and
see
yeah
man
who
actually
did
clean
the
beach
in
barcelona
record
that
that
I
did
that
and
upload
it
as
an
nft
right
and
that
and
that
basically
is
going
to
be
attached
to
your
persona
who
uploaded
this.
A
This
specific
creation,
then
okay,
then
after
you,
after
you,
let's
say
all
these
impact
reporters
have
uploaded
all
of
this
information,
the
guild
itself.
They
become
the
impact
verifier,
and
how
do
they
become
the
impact
verifier
by
signaling,
which
reports
they
believe
are
actually
fulfilling
the
fulfilling
the
need
and
yeah.
So
the
idea
is
here
to
have,
let's
say,
to
reward
impact
makers,
impact
reporters
and
the
whole
ecosystem
that
is
actually
funding
public
goods
so
yeah.
A
The
doing
good
protocol
is
going
to
be,
let's
say,
a
layer
that
is
going
to
be
plugged
to
the
doing
good
social
media
marketplace,
but
also
to
other
d5
and
web
free
protocols
and
also
as
well
with
other
marketplaces
and
yeah.
That's
basically
what
I
wanted
to
introduce
you
guys
today,
thank
you
so
much
for
being
here
and
if
you
want
to
connect
or
if
you're
interested
in
what
we're
building
please
reach
out,
scan
this
qr
code.
Send
me
a
message
and
yeah:
let's
build
together.