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From YouTube: Gainforest: Radical Transparency - Sharfy Adamantine
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A
A
A
The
natural
world
is
deteriorating
in
rates
unparalleled
in
human
history,
as
you
can
see
right
now
here
this
is
open
source
data
from
satellite
images.
This
is
just
google
earth
and
from
2003
from
1984
to
2020,
you
can
see
the
the
deforestation
happening
just
like
wildfire
or
like
cancer.
As
you
can
see,
it
just
keeps
happening,
and
some
of
this,
these
deforestation
is
illegal
deforestation
and
some
are
actually
legal
deforestation
in
order
to
clear
land
for
cattle
and
crops.
A
This
is
a
crisis
not
just
for
us
in
paris,
but
it's
also
a
crisis
for
the
indigenous
peoples.
We
need
to
remember
that
the
indigenous
peoples
are
the
people
who
have
lived
in
these
lands
for
years
and
years
and
they
are
struggling
to
protect
their
homes.
A
It
is
a
humanitarian
crisis.
500
million
people
live
in
these
forests
and
in
order
to
protect
their
land,
they
are
under
threat.
Miners
kill
indigenous
leader
in
brazil,
during
invasion
of
protected
land.
A
We
were
in
game
force
was
in
paraguay
earlier
this
year.
This
is
the
grand
chakra
region
and
we
have.
This
is
an
image
that
we
have
captured
using
our
drone
data
on
the
left.
You
can
see
the
national
rainforest,
the
national
protection
of
it's
protected
by
the
paraguay
national
park.
Sorry,
and
on
the
right,
you
see
legal
deforestation.
A
A
A
A
Right
now,
third-party
mrv,
monitoring,
reporting
and
verification
is
manual
and
expensive
people
go
on
the
ground
to
measure
tree
data.
They
literally,
as
you
can
see
on
the
left.
There
measure
the
diameter
of
the
trees
to
figure
out.
You
know
what
is
the
amount
of
carbon
that
is
stored
in
there.
We
take
three
metrics
underground,
take
samples
of
the
species
and
we
put
them
into
a
bunch
of
equations
to
estimate
the
carbon
stock,
and
this
is
how
we
fund
the
protection
of
our
rainforests,
it's
extremely
expensive
and
it's
inaccessible
for
many
projects.
A
We
need
to
make
sure
that
our
donations
are
linked
to
results
and
results
based
payments
require
monitoring,
reporting
and
verification
right
now,
25
billion
public
funds
are
reserved
for
results-based
payments,
but
the
claims
are
slow,
we're
missing
trust,
we're
missing
transparency
and
in
the
blockchain
world
we
are
really
great
at
transparency.
So
let's
leverage
that
and
let's
figure
out
how
to
make
funds
accessible
to
local
communities.
A
As
an
extension
to
what
I
was
saying
earlier,
this
is
the
cost
of
carbon
credit
accreditation
in
percentages.
The
blue
bar
at
the
bottom.
You
can
see
right
there.
The
project
cost
is
how
much
actually
goes
into
the
project.
Verification
and
validation
takes
a
huge
chunk
of
that
as
well,
and
there's
always
intermediaries
in
the
in
the
middle
brokers,
bank
fees,
they
take
up
a
huge
amount
and
when
you're
donating
to
these
projects,
you
want
to
make
sure
that
you
get
the
most
impact
for
your
money.
A
I've
been
talking
a
lot
about
carbon
for
the
past
couple
of
minutes
and
in
web
3.
We've
talked
a
lot
about
carbon
carbon
credits.
How
do
we
get
them
on
chain?
How
do
we
create
a
marketplace
for
them
and
how
do
we
store
liquidity
for
them?
But
carbon
is
only
one
part
of
the
equation,
as
you
can,
as
you
have
heard
in
the
sounds
that
I
have
showed
earlier,
there
is
also
biodiversity
that
we
have
to
take
into
account.
A
You
have
to
take
into
account
the
clean
water
that
is
provided
or
the
recreation,
or
even
just
the
aesthetics,
being
able
to
imagine
yourself
or
going
to
these
forest
areas
and
being
able
to
see
the
animals,
so
it
also
controls
flooding
it
cools
down
our
temperatures,
there's
just
so
much
more
to
the
equation
than
just
carbon.
So
how
do
we
actually
take
into
account
all
of
these
other
variables?
A
A
So
in
game
forest
we
link
donations
directly
to
impact
donations
and
in
order
to
measure
this
impact,
I
will
talk
to
about
how
the
donations
in
a
bit
in
order
to
measure
the
impact
we
use
satellite
based
data
as
a
first
layer.
This
is
accurate
to
10
meters
per
pixel
drone
based
data,
which
is
accurate
to
50
centimeters
per
pixel
and
field
based
data,
which
is
the
manual
collection
and
taking
photos
of
the
trees.
A
A
A
These
are
low,
cost
drones
and
we
train
the
people
on
the
ground,
these
communities,
to
figure
out
how
to
use
these
drones
and
to
be
able
to
have
our
on
ground
monitoring
data
we
as
another
form
of
of
on
ground
data.
We
also
have
a
mobile
app
to
digitize
the
tree
and
it
detects
three
species.
It
estimates
the
diameter
at
breast
height.
A
A
Well,
we
store
our
donations
in
an
escrow
account.
So
if
I'm
a
donor-
and
I
want
to
donate
to
the
gain
for
his
platform,
the
money
is
actually
not
sent
directly
to
the
communities
it's
held
in
this
intermediary
escrow
account
and
is
only
given
out
every
month
or
every
couple
of
months.
It
depends
on
the
project.
A
These
donations
are
captured
in
an
impact
certificate,
so
once
we
know
verify
we
once
we
have
verified
that
impact
has
actually
happened.
Then
the
the
donor
gets
an
impact
certificate
where
you
actually
show
the
value
beyond
carbon.
You
get
to
see
biodiversity,
water
metrics
as
metadata,
and
the
amazing
thing
about
these.
A
We
created
this
for
our
project
in
paraguay
right
now.
Everything
looks
great,
it's
green.
If
we
find
out
that
something
has
happened
to
the
project,
the
image
changes.
This
is
a
dry
image
if
there's
wildfire.
Hopefully
we
never
get
to
use
this,
then
you,
you
see
that
the
fire
is
that
the
project
is
burning
down.
A
And
all
of
our
methods
is
decentralized,
we're
moving
towards
decentralized
sciences.
Everything
is
open
source
data.
So,
if
anyone
wants
to
fact
check
to
us
everything
is
you
know,
open
source.
You
get
to
see
our
platform,
we're
really
up
for
transparency
and,
let's
research
together,
we're
also
semi-finalists
for
the
rainforest
x-prize,
with
a
collaboration
with
labdao
and
eth3,
we're
also
looking
for
community
leaders
as
advisors.
A
So
if
there's
anyone
on
the
ground
that
would
like
to
represent,
who
knows
someone
who
would
like
to
represent
the
communities
that
we're
trying
to
help
please
come
and
join
us?
We
empower
local
communities
with
technology
to
measure
one
of
their
valuable
assets
nature.
A
A
A
All
of
this
is
stored
on
the
blockchain,
so
we
get
to
see
the
associated
vera
carbon
credit
id.
These
are
the
vari
carbon
credits
that
you
actually
get
from
toucan
right
now,
when
you're
buying
tokenized
carbon.
This
is
these
are
the
actual
projects,
and
one
of
the
things
that
are
very
interesting
is
that
some
of
these
datas,
some
of
these
projects
have
shape
files
which
you
can
upload
into
our
platform.
A
This
one
is
a
very
interesting
one,
because
it's
pointing
to
the
desert
as
a
reforestation,
redd
project.
You
should
not
be
showing
a
shape
file
of
the
desert,
but
there
are
some
that
are
pretty
good.
This
one
is
in
brazil,
it's
all
green,
it's
great
another
one
in
congo.
Some
of
them
do
not
have
complete
data
available,
so
they
have
pdf
files.
You
can
go
on
to
the
vera
website
and
actually
see
all
of
this
yourself.
A
A
Let
me
show
you
how
we
analyze
this.
We
also
have.
So
these
are
analysis
in
progress,
but
we
also
have.
A
We
also
try
to
identify
potential
issues
such
as
the
baselines
or
whether
these
projects
are
actually
doing
what
they're
supposed
to
do,
whether
they're
actually
protecting
the
rainforest,
because
when
you
issue
carbon
credits,
it
is
based
on
the
premise
that
you
will
store
these
carbon
and
be
able
to
protect
the
rainforest.
So,
let's,
let's
make
sure
that
that's
actually
what's
happening.
A
So,
as
I
said,
we've
had
a
partnership
with
restore,
and
this
is
one
of
those
projects
that
I
showed
you,
and
this
is
one
650..
As
you
can
see
here,
it
looks
like
it's
definitely
being
protected.
There's
deforestation
right
around
it!
So
additionality-wise!
You
know
that
this
project
is
actually
being
protected.
A
A
And
if
you're
interested,
this
is
the
associated
vera
project
as
well
as
all
of
your
pdfs.
If
you
would
like
to
research
on
it
yourself,
but
enough
about
that,
let's
figure
out
how
we
actually
can
donate
and
have
real
impact.
A
A
A
A
So,
let's
monitor
that
project
site,
we'll
let
this
load
for
a
bit
and
I'll
just
scroll
down
yeah.
So
this
is
the
the
project
site
that
I'm
talking
to
that.
I
told
you
about
forest
cover
in
2012.
A
Estimated
baselines
estimated
forest
covers
as
long
as
the
estimated
force
cover
is
above
75
percent.
Then
we
will
release
the
funds
up
to
them
and
all
of
our
data
is
stored
on
ipfs.
This
is
the
raw
data
raw
analysis,
so
everything
is
open
source
you
can
edit
and
you
can
see
all
of
our
algorithms
and
as
also
as
a
reward,
you
get
to
see
your
recent
the
recent
wildlife
cameras.
This
is
one
that's
really
one
of
my
favorites.
It's
of
a
a
capybara.
A
A
Let
me
show
you
the
thank
you.
A
Let
me
show
you
the
nf
trees,
so,
depending
on
how
much
you
choose
to
donate,
you
can,
if
you
only
donate
to
small
amount,
we
want
to
make
this
accessible
for
everybody.
If
you
want
to
donate
just
a
small
amount,
we
give
you
a
satellite
image
as
a
as
a
donation
receipt.
You
also
get
to
see.
You
know
data
subscription
to
the
sentinel
too
yeah.
This
is
just
if
you
want
to
donate
five
dollars
or
something,
but
as
you
donate
more
and
more
for
our
biggest
owners,
we
airdrop
them.
A
You
get.
You
know
the
capybara
as
a
this
is
also
a
video
actually
so
they're,
not
just
they're,
not
just
images.
Nfts
can
be
more
than
than
images,
so
that
would
be
for
higher
donors
and
again
the
nfts
that
I
showed
you
above
as
well
as
updated
metadata.
These
are
dynamic
nfts.