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From YouTube: Closing Keynote - Gregory Landua
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A
I'm
going
to
the
way
I'm
going
to
try
to
close
things
out
is
to
give
you
just
a
tiny
little
bit
of
information
about
myself
and
regen
network
so
that
you
have
a
sense
of
where
I'm
coming
from
right,
not
to
convince
anyone
or
to
sort
of
like
really
go
through
and
detail.
What
we're
trying
to
do,
but
to
give
everybody
just
like
a
little
bit
of
flavor
of
what
I'm
bringing
the
the
ancestry
or
lineage
of
thought,
the
the
ethical
foundation,
the
the
way
in
which
we're
trying
to
approach
things.
A
So,
just
a
little
bit
of
that
and
then
I'm
going
to
attempt
there
we
go
that's
what
I
wanted
everybody
to
be
looking
at
during
the
talk,
then
I'm
going
to
attempt
to
explore
what
I'm
calling
the
six
strings
of
the
regeneration
guitar,
and
these
are
the
tensions
that
we
need
to
be
able
to
harmonize
in
order
for
the
the
beautiful
thing
that
we're
trying
to
create
to
actually
harmonize
to
to
to
have
this
be
not
a
subprime
carbon
bubble
in
which
the
most
vulnerable
people
on
earth
are
rugged,
but
instead
to
be
a
real
transition
to
a
regenerative
finance
future.
A
Who
else
wants
to
see
a
regenerative
finance
future
awesome?
Who
else
is
a
little
scared
that
we
might
be
building
a
rug
machine
for
the
most
sensitive
people?
Okay,
great
you're,
my
people,
all
right
so
we'll
see
how
that
goes.
This
is
a
bit
of
an
ad-lib.
I've
been
trying
to
listen
to
the
different
tensions
that
have
been
brought
up
in
the
space
and
the
in
the
amazing
round
table
that
we
have
apologies
for
how
spicy
I
got
hopefully-
and
so
it's
it's
going
to
be
a
little
bit
of
a
co-creation
exploration.
A
A
So,
okay,
a
little
bit
about
me,
I
came
to.
I
came
to
this
community
that
we're
now
calling
web
three
from
working
on
agroecology
and
permaculture
with
smallholder
farmers
in
ecuador
and
nicaragua,
colombia,
peru.
A
So
that's
what
I
spent
my
life
doing
in
my
career
doing
and
then
in
2017
my
wife
gave
birth
to
a
beautiful
baby
boy
and
I
took
paternity
leave,
and
that
happened
to
be
the
same
time
in
april
that
the
crypto
markets
were
going
like
this,
and
I
was
lucky
enough
to
have
a
little
bit
of
bitcoin
and
a
little
bit
ethereum
that
I
had
put
on
a
credit
card,
which
I
think
I
just
paid
off
the
interest
of
like
a
year
ago
or
something
and
I
was
watching.
A
I
now
have
a
son
and
everything
is
that
much
more
real
after
a
life
I
mean
you
know,
I
don't
know
how
it
gets
much
more
real
than
having
a
life
dedicated
to
all
of
this,
but
somehow,
when
you
have
kids
it
like
it
amps
it
up
a
notch,
so
region
network
was
born.
Region
network
was
born
with
my
my
firstborn.
Essentially,
the
the
idea
behind
regen
network
has
always
been
to
create
a
sovereign
and
neutral
community-owned
space
to
originate
equal
value,
backed
by
ecological
health.
A
So
we
talk
a
lot
about
carbon
credits
and
and
energy,
accounting
and
and
all
of
this,
but
I
believe
if
you
abstract
it
all
the
way
down
to
its
essence,
what
we're
talking
about
is
creating
a
new
legitimacy
system,
a
new
legitim
legitimacy,
engine
for
ecological
health
and
ecological
regeneration.
So
we
need
to
quantify
things.
We
need
to
verify
things,
but
we
also
need
to
include
communities
in
the
process
of
verification.
I've
heard
several
people
up
on
the
stage
resonating
and
sharing
the
same
thing,
which
is
super
heartening.
A
So
so
that's
a
little
bit
about
me
and
my
journey,
and
you
know
just
a
tiny
smidge
of
what
region
network
is
attempting
right
to
become
a
neutral
sovereign
space
that
is
co-governed
by
land
stewards
and
scientists,
not
just
sort
of
genesis,
token
holders
in
an
initial
distribution,
but
instead
really
the
communities
that
are
convening
at
this
moment
that
need
to
have
hard
conversations
to
explore
what
legitimacy
means,
what
verification
means?
What
rigor
means?
What
value
is
so
that
we
have
that
space?
A
That's
you
know
that
that
space
of
the
full
life
cycle
of
origination
to
be
bringing
these
new
forms
of
value
into
the
marketplace.
So
that's
what
regen
is
up
to
a
little
bit
of
my
background.
So
what
are
the
tensions?
Let's
get
into
the
tensions?
This
is
the
fun
part.
This
is
the
fun
part
of
the
conversation,
tension
number
one
sovereignty
and
coordination,
there's
a
giant
tension
and
I
sort
of
want
to.
I
want
to
point
out,
for
instance,
the
that
amazing
talk
that
just
happened.
A
That
amazing
talk
that
just
happened
was
built.
There
was
this
rapid
expression
of
creativity
using
a
set
of
tools,
composable
tools
to
coordinate
energy
accounting,
wow
wow.
How
fast
did
that
happen?
How
amazing
is
it?
How
profound
is
it
so
there's
so?
Coordination
can
be
achieved
through
composability,
but
sovereignty
is
a
different
animal
right.
A
Sovereignty
requires
restraint
and
respect,
and
you
don't
presume
you
know
it's
sort
of
the
opposite.
You
know
these
are
tensions.
These
are
sort
of
I'm
trying
to
call
out
these.
I
believe
false
dichotomies,
but
they're
real
tensions
right
so
so
over.
Here
we
have
coordination
and
we
have
tools
like
composability
and
agile
development
and
we're
trying
to
break
down
walls
and
make
it
simple
and
easy
to
harmonize
the
agency
of
different
actors
and
just
move
and
and
and
ship
ship
ship
ship
and
that's
really
core
to
the
essence
of
web
3.
Somehow.
A
A
Right,
so
it
sovereignty
is
also
nested,
so
we
have
so
we're
building
some
dimensions
of
this
right.
So
I
have,
I
could
have
personal
sovereignty,
but
also
a
community
of
actors
could
have
sovereignty
together
about
what
they're
governing
and
how
they're
determining
things.
When
we
break
down
the
friction
of
sovereignty,.
A
A
A
And
I
guess
I
just
I'm
just
wanting
to
call
that
out
and
not
give
you
the
answer,
because
I
think
this
is.
This
is
like
a
living
question
for
our
movement
to
tune
to
and
to
harmonize
around
what
in,
in
a
specific
context,
what
is
the
right
tuning
for
that
tension,
and
I
have
beliefs
about
what
the
right
tuning
is
for
the
origination
of
ecological
assets
right
and
that's
how
we
inform
our
process
at
region?
Is
that
kind
of
exploration
of
that?
A
A
A
This
is
a
huge
one.
Isn't
this
a
huge
tension
right?
We
want
to
drive
liquidity
and
we
want
to
drive,
demand
and
ease
of
access,
and
we
want
market
actors
to
not
have
to
think
about
and
agonize
over
their
complex
procurement
of
carbon
credits,
and
they
just
want
to
press
a
button.
Please
just
tell
me
what
to
do
and
then
on
this
side
we
want
to
have
you
know
deep,
authentic
connection
with
specific
places
and
people.
We
want
to
know
that
the
money
is
going
directly
into
the
hands
of
the
of
the
land
stewards.
A
We
want
to
know
everything
about
the
specific,
renewable
energy,
credit
or
carbon,
offset
credit
or
in-setting
claim
or
esg
report,
and
we
want
to
have
a
relationship
with
it,
because,
if
anything
again,
maybe
we
live
in
a
world.
That's
optimized
for
fungibility
right
now,
and
because
of
that,
we
live
in
a
world,
that's
yearning
for
the
meaning
that
is
only
available
from
uniqueness
and
from
an
understanding
of
our
own
individual
and
community
place
within
that
uniqueness.
A
So
we're
all
yearning
and
searching
and
desiring
for
that.
So
to
me,
that's
what
I
that's
what's
so
exciting
about
nft
the
nft
boom
and
movement
as
experimentations
in
re-weaving
ourselves
into
relationship
with
one
another
through
through
that
non-fungibility.
So
this
is
another
one
of
our
tensions
right.
A
This
is
another
one
of
the
the
core
questions
that
we
as
a
movement
as
a
community
as
a
set
of
actors
really
need
to
be
contemplating
and
tuning
and
again
I
guess
my
proposition
is
that
there
isn't
going
to
be
a
universal
key,
that
we're
tuning
to
it's
gonna
be
different.
What's
the
song
we're
playing?
Who
are
the
people
we're
playing
it
to
what's
the
context?
Okay?
So
that's
string
number
two
of
the
tension
so.
A
String
number
three,
and
I
just
want
to
call
myself
out
here:
I
don't
even
know
what
string
number
three
is,
but
I'm
pretty
sure
there's
six
of
them
there
you
go,
let's
do
it
so
masculine
and
feminine
yin
and
yang,
dark
and
light.
It
doesn't
need
to
be
gendered.
This
isn't
this.
Isn't
this
isn't
gender?
A
This
is
the
the
you
know,
essential,
yin
and
yang
of
the
universe,
but,
interestingly
enough,
there's
always
like
the
little
bit
of
the
the
yin
and
the
yang
and
the
yang
in
the
yen,
and
it
and-
and
you
know,
that's
sort
of
the
meta
right,
because
every
one
of
these
is
is
a
you
know
is,
is
a
polarity
and
we
are
always
searching
for
the
third
thing
that
brings
them
together
in
in
harmony
that
we're
strumming.
So
in
the
movement
masculine
and
feminine
gosh.
There's
a
lot
of
dudes
in
here.
A
A
How
do
we
I
mean
both
express
the
feminine
inside
of
a
of
a
male-bodied
human,
and
how
do
we
accept
that
there's
so
many
dimensions
of
this,
but
also,
let's
just
land
that
question
and
how
are
we
as
a
movement
making
space
for
the
non-masculine
skills
and
needs
to
nurture
all
of
this
to
midwife?
All
of
this
into
being?
A
A
Meanwhile,
all
the
hard
work
is
happening.
Meanwhile,
the
real
thing
is
happening.
The
real
miracle
is
taking
place.
So
what
do
we
need
to
do
where
we
need
to
like
this
is?
This
is
how
it
expressed
that
tension.
How
how
do
we
need
to
be
as
a
movement
in
order
to
appropriately
channel
the
masculine
need
to
be
just
like
getting
the
thing
done
in
order
to
create
space
for
magic
in
order
to
nurture
the
magic
of
something
unique
coming
into
the
world
in
that
unique
birth
process?
A
A
A
A
So
what
happens
when
we
pro
you
know
so
so
so
going
back
up
a
string?
What
happens
if
we
program
the
social,
the
the
algorithm
of
risk
distribution
and
the
social
socialization
of
risk?
And
you
know
who
decides
who
decides
that
and
how
are
we
going
to
ensure
that,
if
that
isn't
appropriately
calibrated
to
the
situation
in
such
a
way
that
that
actors
that
are
currently
marginalized
and
vulnerable
and
happen
to
be
the
most
important
people
in
stewarding
the
regenerative
renaissance,
if
it's
out
of
calibration?
A
A
You
know
in
conversation,
I've
heard
him
just
explore
this
continuum
of
immutability
versus
mutability
and
say
the
question
really
is:
what's
the
level
of
mutability
and
the
process
to
mutate
that
is
safe
for
the
the
given
cyber
physical
system?
That's
being
designed,
so
it's
a
real
conversation
right,
it's
a
real
thing
to
tune.
A
What
are
we
choosing
to
automate
is
another
way
to
ask
that
question
what
gets
programmed
and
automated
and
we're
good,
and
we
trust
it
and
we,
you
know,
reify
our
behavior
patterns
and
our
assumptions
about
how
the
world
works
and
it's
just
on
autopilot
and
what
are
the
things
that
we're
like?
No,
no,
no.
I
need
a
real-time
live
wire.
You
know,
relationship
to
the
thing
that's
actually
taking
place,
so
that's
string,
number
five
who
wants
to
close
us
out.
A
Yes,
I
was
hoping
somebody
would
say
that
that's
it,
we,
I
think
we
actually
might
have
hit
the
six
so,
okay,
what
I
I'll
ask
a
set
of
questions
that
this
brings
up
that
I
think,
are
sort
of
the
foundation
of
the
refi
movement.
What
is
the
role
of
what's
the
right
rights
and
responsibilities
stack
for
any
given
resource
or
space
or
community?
A
A
I
think,
the
propensity
of
this
movement
right,
which
is
to
assign
like
property
to
program
and
assign
immutable
property
rights
and
use
the
blockchain
to
also
you
know,
on
the
positive
side
of
that,
to
get
a
lot
more
distinction
and
nuance
and
specificity
around
who
has
what
right
and
kind
of
unbundle
them
right.
So
I
think
there's
this
concept.
A
Perhaps
I
believe
we
might
discover
the
commons
on
the
other
side
of
private
property
by
being
very
specific,
about
specific
rights
and
responsibilities
and
unbundling
them
and
being
able
to
assign
them
flexibly
and
govern,
govern
them
flexibly.
And
you
know
the
question,
I'm
stealing
this
question
from.
A
Zubov
yeah,
who
decides
who
decides,
I
think
it's
it's
important
in
the
surveillance,
capitalism,
but
again
that's
a
commons
versus
private
property.
Did
we
just
get
all
of
our
data?
Just
was
privatized
into
the
hands
of
who?
How
for
what?
How
are
they
using
it?
Is
there
such
a
thing
as
a
data
commons?
How
do
we
govern
it?
A
Okay,
so
I'm
gonna
spend.
I'm
gonna
spend
three
more
minutes
on
this
one
and
then
I'm
gonna
open
it
up
for
five
minutes.
We
can.
We
can
dialogue
well,
four
minutes.
We
can
dialogue
and
then
I'm
going
to
use
the
last
minute
to
kind
of
just
like
wrap
us
up
and
hopefully
like
seal
it
into
a
good
space.
A
A
Commons,
who
here
is
familiar
with
eleanor
ostrom's
work,
hopefully,
hopefully
her
work
if
you're
not
raising
your
hand,
google
and
research
she's
nobel
prize
winning
economist
economist,
who
developed
a
framework
for
managing
commons.
A
I
have,
I
personally
have
the
belief
that
you
can
conceptualize
a
regime
of
pride,
private
property
and
markets
as
an
approach
to
commons
management,
and
that's
like
a
crazy
thing
and
a
bunch
of
commons
people
would
hate
me
for
saying
that,
but
I,
but
I
actually
think
you
can
you.
We
can
say
we're
going
to
we're
going
to
embed
market
mechanisms
and
private
property
rights
into
a
group
of
people
in
order
to
successfully
manage
a
common
pool
resource.
A
A
And
the
whole,
you
know
community
process
that
took
place
to
socialize
into
this
movement,
the
idea
of
commons
and
how
important
it
is
to
start
doing
research
to
start
doing
development.
So
in
a
lot
of
ways,
that's
the
one
I
feel,
like
we've
matured
the
most
on
of
that
of
this.
You
know
set
of
tensions
that
we're
we're
going
to
be
dealing
with.
A
I
just
went
past
the
five
minutes,
so
I'm
going
to
start
wrapping
up
so
everybody's
going
to
be
leaving
now
and
you're
going
to
be
going
back,
perhaps
into
a
normal
rhythm
or
maybe
you're,
just
going
to
be
going
to
another
conference.
A
It's
up
to
you.
I'd
recommend
getting
some
work
done.
If
you
can
I'd
ask
everybody
to
just
take
a
quick
moment
and
ask
yourself
which
of
those
strings,
are
you
taking
responsibility
for
tuning
and
how
so
just
think
about
that?
For
a
second
and
how
are
you
going
to
know
if
you've
hit
the
frequency
that
it
needs
to
hit
to
be
in
tune?
A
A
A
So
this
I'm
just
also
going
to
propose-
and
I
think
this
is
going
to
be
my
final
thought,
which
is
the
the
process
of
tuning
these
tensions
in
our
movement,
isn't
one
that
we're
going
to
just
like
handle
and
then
it's
going
to
be
done.
We're
going
to
have
to
grow
our
capability
and
capacity
to
be
managing
that
tuning
process
as
individuals
and
as
a
collective
in
an
ongoing
way
from
here
on
out.
A
So
with
that,
I
want
to
see
if
anybody
has
any
specific
burning
thing
that
they
need
to
say
right
now,
with
the
last
minute.
A
Well,
but
it's
important
sometimes
like
there's
a
lot
of
beautiful,
intelligent
people.
Many
of
you
have
at
least
as
much
capability
and
right
to
be
on
the
stage
right
now
sort
of
like
wrapping
things
up
as
I
do
so.
If
there's
something
that's
like
emergent
there,
I'm
I
wanna
make
sure
to
open
that.
B
How
do
you
see
the
region
movement,
especially
around
the
governor's
models
for
something
like
hyper
distribution
versus
very
tightly
localized
verticalized
stacks
for
solutions
right,
because
in
some
cases,
it's
very
appropriate
to
have
hyper
localization
tightly
thick?
In
other
cases,
you
might
want
to
have
very
wide
sort
of
distribution,
and
that
gives
you
the
strength
of
what
you
can
deliver
as
a
solution
as
a
community.
So
how
do
you
see
the
governance
models
today
in
terms
of
maturity
to
deal
with
these
scenarios?.
A
A
A
So
I
believe
that
we
need
to
have
open,
open,
composable
tools
that
allow
any
community
to
create
the
state,
machine
and
consensus
about
the
things
that
they
need
and
want
at
the
lowest
cost
possible
with
the
highest
security
possible
and
not
enforce
people
not
try
to
coerce
or
force
cajole,
or
you
know
any
of
those
other
adjectives,
people
onto
a
coordination
system
that
doesn't
make
sense
for
their
context,
and
we
do
need
global
coordination
systems
and
trust
systems
that
sort
of
that
that
nest
together
in
some
way-
and
I
I
happen
to
believe
that
you
really
need
to
think
about
like
ultimately
that
this
question,
I
think
is-
is
needs
to
boil
down
to
what
the
in
a
proof
of
stake
system
at
least
or
proof
of
authority.
A
A
That's
wanted
right,
and
so
I
think,
there's
a
lot
of
opportunity
for
us
as
a
movement
to
be
quite
generous
in
ensuring
that
the
right
people
are
maintaining
that
that
very
deep
level
of
sovereignty,
because
I
think
we
can
interoperate
and
coordinate
with
you
know
with
this
technology
as
we
think
about
using
ibc
or
other
sort
of
cross-chain
systems
to
interoperate.
So
with
that,
I'm
super
grateful.
Thank
you
all
and
go
tune.
Your
guitars,
oh.
Actually,
there
was
one
more
line.
I
was
going
to
say
this
right
at
the
beginning.