►
Description
Originally recorded during the Lisbon Hack Week from May 21-25, 2018.
A
It's
great
to
see
everyone
here
and
to
be
back
in
this
place
after
two
years.
A
huge
thank
you.
First
of
all
to
de'vide
who's
been
working
tirelessly
to
organize
this
and
where
everything
grew
from
yeah
again,
he
was
gonna,
hang
out
with
Federer.
That
was
like
what
two
weeks
ago
or
three
weeks
ago
and
then
suddenly
everybody's
flying
around
the
world
to
to
get
over
here
and
to
our
events,
team,
who
really
pulled
a
ton
of
this
together.
A
A
A
So
everyone
can
take
a
nap
and
it's
okay,
yeah
will
do.
Maybe
that's
me
just
talk
about
why
decentralizing
the
web
and
why
working
on
Internet
infrastructure
is
important
and
you
know
we're
going
as
a
species
through
a
very
weird
time,
things
50
years
ago,
when
we're
very
different
from
today
in
terms
of
how
humans
operated.
They
didn't
have
these
like
crazy
super
computers
in
our
pockets.
They
couldn't
like
look
up
everything.
They
couldn't
talk
to
their
loved
ones.
A
You
know
at
a
moment's
notice,
they
couldn't
call
each
other,
they
couldn't
coordinate
at
that
degree
and
so
on,
and
things
are
gonna
be
way
different,
50
years
from
now
in
our
lifetimes,
which
is
crazy
to
think
about.
It's
really
hard
to
predict.
What's
gonna
happen
in
the
future,
and
so
this
what
we
got
out
of,
like
a
you,
know:
crazy
technology
explosion
that
we're
writing
and
less
crazy
rocket
with
the
internet
with
the
admin
of
the
Internet
and
the
admin
of
computing.
A
We
got
this
incredible,
like
applications
platform
that
we
can
just
write
a
bit
of
code
ship
it
through
the
internet
and
then
grant
people
superpowers.
It's
pretty
crazy.
The
ability
of
you
to
sit
down
and
think
about
something
and
say:
wouldn't
it
be
cool
if
people
could
do
X
and
then
just
start
writing
it
and
then
ship
it
and
now
suddenly
you've
like
patched
the
OS
that,
like
people
deal
with
and
suddenly
now
people
can
do
X.
It's
pretty
amazing,
and
you
know
these
are
kind
of
sort
of
pretty
old
graphs.
A
I
guess
is
ghost
of
2015,
but
you
know
the
Internet
users
are
growing
a
lot.
This
is
like
mobile
phone
users,
I
think
it's
mobile
phone
for
the
description.
It's
not
actually
users
there's
a
lot,
that's
more
than
than
people
on
the
Internet
yeah,
so
mobile
subscriptions
to
ad
number,
the
world's
population.
So
that
means
you
know
many
people
have
multiple,
but
still
a
crazy,
crazy
projected
growth.
This
also
don't
graph,
but
you
know
it's
not
the
same
all
over
the
world.
A
There's
a
lot
of
places
where
this
isn't
the
case
and
we're
in
this
weird
time
where
we
are
so
powerful
that
we've
now
that
we've
acquired
these
crazy
superpowers
and
this
amazing
application
platform
and
a
lot
of
people
in
the
world
are
not-
and
this
is
gonna.
This
is
a
crazy
divergence
that
either
we
work
on
fixing
now
or
it's
gonna
be
really
bad
for
a
lot
of
people,
and
so
we
have
this
amazing
nervous
system
that
we've
built
over
the
last.
You
know
50
years
or
whatever,
but
it
could
fragment.
A
So
this
is
even
though
it
feels
so
permanent
and
so
like
such
a
big
part
of
our
lives
and
and
how
could
the
internet
ever
possibly
go
away,
it
could
actually
fragment
in
a
very
serious
way
and
we're
already
seeing
the
beginnings
of
nationalization
of
the
internet,
where
different
nations
have
different
kinds
of
main
platforms
that
they
go
to,
where
all
of
there's
the
social
networks
live
and
so
on,
and
so
this
amazing
communications
worldwide
sharing
thing
is
now
getting
split.
Now
this
could
get
worse
so
in
any
kind
of
intense
global
conflict.
A
Countries
wouldn't
want
to
allow
all
sorts
of
traffic
from
other
potential
combatants
and
so
right
away
like
we
would
split
this
amazing
communications
network
and
so
think
of
all
the
people
around
the
world
that
you
have
those
relationships
with
and
you
communicate
daily
with,
or
you
know,
in
a
weekly
basis
or
whatever
and
suddenly
not
being
able
to
talk
to
them
anymore,
like
just
kind
of
overnight
kind
of
thing.
So
that's
the
kind
of
thing.
That's
that's
at
stake.
A
So
luckily,
though,
code
is
data,
and
what
this
means
is
that
we
can
again
grant
superpowers
by
just
writing
software
and
in
some
cases
you
can
use
software
to
bootstrap
hardware.
So
this
is
what's
for
me.
The
most
interesting
thing
of
the
Bitcoin
explosion
is
that
a
bunch
of
software
within
with
incentive
structures
which
are
kind
of
like
human
software,
the
Bitcoin
network
Butcher
a
bootstrap.
This
amazing
massive
network
of
computers
just
doing
this
crazy,
hashing
thing
right.
So
that's
kind
of
useless
work,
but
maybe
you
could
do
something
better
with
that.
A
Maybe
you
can
get
connectivity
to
to
spark
all
over
the
world,
so
at
PLO
we
think
a
lot
about
this
pipeline
of
going
from
ideas
through
specs
through
code
getting
to
computers
and
then
becoming
like
getting
superpowers
and
a
lot
of
what
we
do.
You
know
a
number
of
things
have
gotten
all
the
way
over
here
and
people
are
using
it,
but
not
really
end-users.
A
Yet
our
stuff
is
not
that
polished,
and
so
we
have
a
ton
of
stuff
in
the
ideas,
inspect
or
ideas
on
code
parts,
and
if
we
want
to
have
a
real
difference
into
in
all
this
world,
we
have
to
land
a
lot
of
stuff.
We
have
to
get
it
shipped
it
through
the
through
a
lot
of
the
pipeline.
So
I
think
you
know
think
about
about
during
during
the
week,
but
again
with
a
code
is
date
idea.
This
gets
really
cheap.
A
So
imagine
if
you
had
to
build
the
entire
telephone
network,
like
you
know,
Bell
and
a
bunch
of
other
telecoms
have
to
do
or
imagine
you've
had
to
build
the
internet
from
scratch.
That's
really
expensive
alternative
hardware.
Now
we
can
just
primarily
focus
on
on
software
and
have
huge
impact
in
the
world.
So.
A
Think
about
platforms,
so
I
think
that
we
got
really
lucky
with
the
web,
where
it
emerged
out
of
science
groups
who-
and
so
it
was
military
funded,
but
science
groups
that
wanted
that
had
a
lot
of
good
aspirations
for
the
world
and
the
structure
for
the
Internet
got
laid
out
before
commercial
interest
came
in.
So
we
we
lucked
out
here
because
it
kind
of
locked
in
to
be
you
to
be
open.
That's
not
happening
in
mobile.
So
Mobile
is
it's
a
pretty
lockdown
platform
and
you
can't
easily
ship
a
lot
of
stuff.
A
Iot
is
even
more
close
than
that,
although
I
guess
technically
well
with
all
the
vulnerabilities,
this
might
be
more
open.
You
know
like
ship
anything,
but
but
what's
gonna
happen
with
things
like
machine
learning
and
you
know
AI
and
so
on
and
VR.
These
probably
are
gonna,
be
super
close
platforms.
So
this
this
great
idea
of
the
internet
being
open
and
that
everyone
can
participate
in
it
and
everyone
can
write
whatever
they
want
and
ship
it
to.
A
A
That's
a
an
issue
and
we've
seen
we've
just
seen
the
tip
of
the
iceberg
of
this
kind
of
stuff,
with
the
Cambridge
analytic
as
things
and
so
on.
That
could
potentially
get
much
worse.
So,
there's
a
whole
problem
of
how
do
we
allow
people
to
have
these
things
securely
in
a
way
that
they
govern
how
how
that
information
gets
shared
and
distributed
so
self-governance?
The
big
deal
also
permanence.
So
a
lot
of
this
stuff,
people's
expressions
and
people's
you
know
think
of
all
the
amazing
things
on
YouTube.
A
You
know
being
wiped
out
potentially
in
the
future,
when
you
know
YouTube
changes
its
business
model
and
doesn't
what
a
one
I'm
gonna
monetize
that
stuff
anymore.
So
if
we
don't
archive
all
this
stuff
in
a
way,
that's
you
know
high
fidelity,
then
we're
always
just
gonna
have
like
this
weird
distorted
copy.
With
software
we
should
be
able
to
just
archive
things
things
forever.
I
did
rely.
A
Identity
is
gonna,
be
a
big
deal
when
going
to
that
too
much,
but
I
think
we're
getting
to
a
point
where
we're
using
these
devices
to
identify
ourselves
in
a
whole
bunch
of
situations
and
again,
that's
completely
owned
by
other
parties.
So
if
they
want
to
lock
you
out
in
some
way
they
can
so
we
need
a
very
strong
push
towards
self
sovereign
identity.
There's
really
good
projects
out
there.
A
It's
just
you
know
they
need
a
need
effort
that
wouldn't
be
nice,
if,
like
you,
controlled
the
data
of
your
applications
instead
of
the
other
way
around
that'd
be
nice.
So
we
really
live
in
in
this
kind
of
world,
where
these
groups
have
the
data
and
then
sometimes
one
of
them
like
disappears,
and
you
get
a
notice
telling
you
hey.
You
got
like
30
days
to
copy
all
your
data
and
you
get
this
link
dump
of
text
files,
and
now
you
have
to
keep
what
do
you
do
with
that?
How
is
that
useful
right?
A
So
imagine
imagine
if
these
applications
worked
a
lot
like
your
text,
editor,
which
was
written
30
years
ago
or
more
and
just
always
works,
and
you
know
always
works,
there's
patches
and
so
on,
and
people
working
on
it,
but
you
can
grab
a
copy
of
the
text.
Editor
keep
it
in
your
computer
and
it
works
and
like
you
can
still
use
it.
So
why
you
know
if
something
as
complicated
as
a
text
editor
like
VI
or
an
operating
system
like
you
max,
why
can't
you
have
that
be?
A
Why
can
you
have
like
something
as
simple
as
you
know,
like
SMS
messaging
or,
like
you
know,
internet
messaging
be
archived
in
the
same
way
and
on
the
same
level
of
control.
So
we
are
kind
of
victims,
victims
of
the
web
2.0
world,
where
it
was
hyper
centralization
in
like
the
addressing
caused
all
of
these
groups
to
make
it
really
like.
A
So
yeah,
let's
go
towards
this
kind
of
thing,
there's
also
the
problem
with
that
a
bunch
of
information
gets
destroyed
or
lost
by
when
somebody
like
just
changes,
a
point
link
somewhere
it
sort
of
in
terms
of
things
like
break
whoops,
but
in
some
cases
there's
real
censorship
in
the
internet
on
there's
real
to
to
destroy
information.
So
in
the
past
we've
had
these
kinds
of
things
happening.
My
not
favorite
the
anti
favorite,
the
the
burning
of
the
of
the
library.
A
This
connect
stuff
can
happen
again
so
today,
the
majority
of
our
science
and
and
all
our
science
data
and
all
our
social
networks
and
all
of
our
messages,
and
so
on,
sort
digitally
in
pretty
unsafe
media
that
you
know
if
it
isn't
powered
consistently
and
moved
to
new
media.
It
just
will
automatically
degrade
and
it
won't
be
readable
anymore.
So
this
is
kind
of
like
the
future
of
all
the
digital
data,
unless
we
find
reliable
ways
of
archiving
and
safeguarding
it.
So
paper
is
surprisingly
more
durable
than
hard
disks.
A
A
That
Facebook
has
like
all
of
your
thoughts,
all
of
like
the
machine
learning
based
analysis
and
like
psychological
profiles
of
people,
like
you
know,
bad.
A
bad
government
of
a
country
could
like
sort
by
like
likely
to
oppose
our
positions
and
then
just
you
know,
get
the
top
1%
of
those
people
and
ship
them
out
of
the
country
or
worse.
So
that's
like
possible
with
the
information
right.
So
this
is
why
this
kind
of
stuff
matters
in
a
in
a
broken
Internet
we're
looking
at
fragmented
Internet.
A
Then
these
kinds
of
abilities
of
being
able
to
have
communication
and
collaboration
platforms
that
work
offline
becomes
a
really
big
deal
if
most
of
your
applications
break
when
you
can't
talk
to
the
backbone.
Imagine
if,
like
something
happens
to
the
internet,
suddenly
nothing
works,
and
so
we
have
this
amazingly
good
period
of
time
now,
where
we
could
be
working
on
making
this
kind
of
stuff
work
really
well
like
just
being
able
to
have
things
like
Google,
Docs
and
messages,
and
so
on.
A
All
of
the
think
of
like
a
top
10
applications
you
use
daily
and
make
sure
that
those
are
offline,
capable
that
that
you
can
use
them
and
you
can
control
the
data
and
you
can
control
the
code.
So
that
know
if
the
service
provider
disappears
or
you
just
can't
talk
to
the
service
writer
anymore,
you
can
still
use
this
stuff.
You
can
still
use
these
applications
yeah.
Just
you
know
whenever
you
work
with
your
computer
and
so
on.
A
Just
think
about
what
fraction
of
your
daily
life
is
mediated
by
the
Internet
in
some
way
like
directly
or
in
the
background
like.
If
you
go,
have
food
somewhere.
Probably
all
of
the
logistics
and
supply
chain
management-
stuff
that
got
the
food
to
your
table.
A
lot
of
it
is
probably
running
on
internet
things,
so,
let's
bring
it
back.
So
that's
a
lot
of
problems
like
the
video
ask
me
for,
like
you
know.
Why
is
this
important?
Well,
that's
why?
A
In
many
cases,
the
you
know
at
least
the
software
part
of
personal
computers
was
designer
Park
by
like
less
than
100
researchers,
which
is
crazy
to
think
about
all
of
the
stuff
that,
like
seeded,
Apple
or
Microsoft,
and
so
on,
build
by
less
than
a
hundred
people.
So
yeah,
let's,
let's
decentralize
the
web,
Matt
came
just
in
the
nick
of
time
and
the
and
you
know,
there's
a
bunch
of
stuff
that
you
know
about.
A
Let's
try
and
work
on
these
problems
and,
let's
you
know,
I
wanted
to
take
stock
for
a
moment
on
all
the
different
things
that
we
are
doing,
there's
really
a
lot.
We
we
probably
generate
more
projects
per
day
than
we
have
been
with
to
think
about,
let
alone
work
on,
and
so
there's
nothing
like
go
up
if
s
JSI
PFS
liquid
up
here
that
has
like
20
sub
small
projects,
peer
pad
I
press
companion,
which
is
awesome
by
the
way
like
being
able
to
just
like
more
and
more
inches
like
in
the
background.
A
Does
its
thing-
and
it's
in
this
great
IP
Fez
desktop-
is
that
the
current
name
and
things
like
multi
formats
I
feel
Li,
like
the
research
group,
the
CRT
T's
event
that
we're
gonna
have
tomorrow,
there's
really
a
ton
of
stuff
going
on,
and
so
I
think
I
want
to
urge
everybody
this
week
to
just
kind
of
take
all
of
that
stuff
and
put
it
away
and
just
focus
on
one
thing
that
you
care
about
I
just
find
one
or
two
things
that
you
think.
Oh,
this
is
broken.
A
This
should
be
fixed
or
I
want
to
be
great
if
we
could
make
X
and
like
just
focus
on
that
one
thing
working
it
and
polish
it
and
get
it
to
ship.
So
I
think
we
are
really
good
at
starting
things
and
working
on
things,
but
not
as
good
at
like
polishing
and
shipping
really
reliable
stuff
and
that's
a
transition
that
we
need
to
go
through
as
a
whole
whole
group-
and
so
you
know
this-
these
are
I
sorted.
Those
by
most
commented
on.
A
A
If
they
were
full
of
holes,
they
wouldn't
have
gone.
So,
let's,
let's
think
of
that
these
days
and
and
really
get
to
really
reliable
polished
stuff
and
so
that
that
I
want
to
again
place
the
emphasis
on
that
and
the
focus
on
that
this
week
we
have
a
little
time.
You
know
two
three
days,
but
that's
plenty
of
time
to
to
work
on
one
component
and
ship
it.
You
know
something
something
like
a
Bluetooth
transport
for
Lippi
tp-link.
A
That
might
be
cool,
and
you
know
so
there's
like
a
new
era
of
exploration
and
let's
make
sure
that
when
the
new
people
in
Mars
get
there
actually
have
Internet
applications,
they
can
rely
on
as
well
as
we
can
here.
Cool
and
I
think
wait
is
this
man.
This
is
a
gif,
no
I
know
gif,
that's
one
more
I'll
just
show
it
to
you,
yeah,
whatever
I'll
turn
it
out
later,
it's
a
gif
of
a
plane
being
built
and
yeah.
That's
that's
a
that's
it
they're
more!
Yes,.