►
From YouTube: IPFS Community Meetup - June
Description
Welcome to the IPFS Monthly meetup! We’re happy to be back this month with a meetup all about infrastructure. We hope you join us for talks from:
- Jeff Griffiths of Fission, to introduce the IPFS Operators working group
- Matt Ober of Pinata, to talk about how they’ve scaled Pinata
- Mike Godsey of Infura, to give a presentation on their new service
Participation in this event requires that you abide by the IPFS Community Code of Conduct, which you can read in full here: https://github.com/ipfs/community/blob/master/code-of-conduct.md
A
A
Wonderful
hello:
everybody
welcome
to
the
ipfs
community
meetup
tuesday
june
29th.
Welcome
welcome
couple
final
people
joining
in
so
I'm
gonna
talk
just
a
hair
slower.
A
Great
okay,
welcome
to
the
ipvs
meetup
for
tuesday
june
29th
cool,
so
a
few
reminders
if
you've
not
been
to
an
ipfs
meeting
before
we're,
obviously
very
excited
to
have
you
here.
This
is
being
recorded.
We'll
put
this
up
on
youtube.
This
event,
like
all
others,
are
abide
by
the
ipvs
code
of
conduct.
You
can
read
that
on
our
website.
Please
follow
those
those
rules.
A
Please
ask
any
questions
in
the
chat.
We're
going
to
be
going
over
a
few
different
talks,
we're
all
going
to
hang
out
afterwards
to
be
able
to
answer
any
questions
that
come
up,
but
you
will
be
muted,
so
questions
go
in
the
chat
we'll
get
to
them
in
an
orderly
fashion.
A
As
mentioned
this
video
will
be
going
up
on
the
ipfs
youtube
page,
as
do
our
past
meetings.
If
you'd
like
to
see
what's
going
on
in
the
ipf
ipfs
community,
that's
a
great
place
to
go
catch
up
and
hear
some
excited
people
talk
about
things,
they're
passionate
about,
and
if
you
yourself
are
interested
in
speaking
at
a
future,
ipvs
meetup
by
all
means
do
so.
You
can
email,
ipfest
dash
community
at
protocol.
A
Give
us
a
little
introduction,
we'll
figure
out
when
and
where
we
can
fit
you
into
the
next
speaker,
lineup
great,
so
we're
right
about
on
time.
I'm
very
excited,
let's
go
there.
So
this
is
our
agenda.
We
have
three
people
talking
jeff
from
fission,
matt
from
pinata
and
michael
from
infira
they'll,
be
giving
them
they'll,
be
giving
a
little
talk
on
on
what
they're
working
on
and
cool
things
in
the
d
web
and
ipfs
space.
A
So
let's
go
to
jeff
for
those
that
don't
know,
vision
is
a
big
player
in
the
d
web.
They
do
web
native
code
for
personal
data
sovereignty
and
encryption
and
authentication
and
offline
use
and
all
of
the
buzzwords
that
we
care
about
these
days
so
check
them
out.
If
you're,
interested
and
jeff.
Let
me
throw
it
to
you.
B
Thanks,
michael
thanks,
everyone
for
having
me
here,
I'm
jeff,
I
work
at
phishing,
I'm
the
head
of
product
there,
and
essentially
mike
that
was
a
great
introduction.
What
we
do
is
we
offer
web
native
layer
on
top
of
ipfs.
It
includes
things
like
personal
data,
encryption
and
authentication
and
edge
distribution
of
your
applications,
we're
at
fission.codes.
You
should
check
us
out,
join
our
discord,
etc.
The
real
reason
why
I'm
here
today,
though,
is
we're
an
ipfs
operator.
B
We
we
run
ipfs
infrastructure
and
we've
been
talking
to
a
bunch
of
the
other
people
in
the
ecosystem
that
also
run
ipfs
and
we're
getting
together.
As
a
group
we're
going
to
start
meeting
and
discussing
operator
sort
of
level
issues.
The
first
inaugural
ipfs
operatives
group
meeting
is
next
week,
tuesday
july
6
11
a.m.
Pacific
invites
have
been
sent
out.
Please
check
your
your
email.
B
If
you,
if
you
see
that
apologies
to
people
in
europe
and
asia,
one
of
the
topics
of
conversation
is
going
to
be
the
timing
of
the
next
meeting
and
how
it
can
be
friendlier
to
people
in
different
time
zones
and
that
kind
of
thing.
Other
ideas
that
are
on
our
agenda
for
the
first
medium
include
things
like
discussing
and
codifying
best
practices
for
operating,
ipfs,
nodes,
handling,
dmca
and
compliance
issues,
because
we're
actually
publishing
things
to
the
web.
B
Quite
often
I
know,
phishing
does
and
we've
run
into
these
issues
ourselves
and
then
best
practices
for
operating
ipfs
gateways
and
other
protocols.
So
if
you're,
bridging
from
ipfs
to
http,
for
example,
is
the
canonical
thing
and
a
whole
bunch
of
us
are
involved
and
pleased
to
confirm
attendees,
including
protocol
labs,
of
course,
fission,
pinata
and
fura
textile
gateway,
fm
apologies.
B
If
I've
missed
someone
we're
still
reaching
out
and
trying
to
get
those
people
in
for
this
first
meeting,
and
so
we
really
hope
this
becomes
more
widely
adopted
and
the
group
will
be
able
to
really
dig
into
some
of
the
discussions
that
we're
having
around
how
best
to
operate
ipfs
in
these
sort
of
these
larger
systems
and
also
participate
in
the
rest
of
the
ipfs
ecosystem.
B
A
Wonderful,
thank
you
so
much.
I
I'm
super
looking
forward
to
the
ipf's
operators
meetup.
So
if
that
might
be
of
interest
to
you,
I
would
encourage
you
guys
to
come
join.
It
should
be
a
great
conversation
to
be
had
next
up
matt
from
pinata.
They
are
a
number
of
things
in
ipfs
space.
The
easiest
way
to
use
ipfs
in
pinning
and
other
services.
So
matt
tell
us
what
you
got.
C
Okay,
can
you
all
see
a
nice
slide?
Deck
yep,
perfect
awesome
thanks
for
the
introduction,
michael.
So
my
name
is
matt
ober.
I
am
the
cto
and
co-founder
of
pinata.
We
are
an
ipfs
tool,
suite
pinning
service
I've
been
around
for
almost
three
years.
Now
I
think-
and
our
like
michael
said,
our
our
kind
of
catchphrase
is.
We
are
the
easiest
way
to
use
ipfs,
so
everything
we
do
is
kind
of
geared
towards
just
making
your
experience
as
a
developer
hassle
free.
C
So
today
I
wanted
to
start
have
a
talk
on.
You
know
how
we
scaled
from
a
very
small,
what
I
would
call
an
experimental,
hackathon
tool
to
the
global,
pinning
ipfs
infrastructural
service
that
we
are
today.
It's
kind
of
a
fun
little
journey
and
I
figured
it
might
be
interesting
for
some
of
the
people
in
the
space
all
right
so,
like
I
said
we
started
in
eth
berlin.
We
were
in
2018
a
proof
of
concept.
C
We
were
offering
things
up
as
a
hackathon
tool
and
we
provided
pretty
pretty
minimal
functionality,
upload
a
file
retrieve
it
from
a
gateway
yeah.
That
was
basically
it
so
during
etherland
we
went
around
spreading
the
word
about
pinata.
We
wanted
to
get
feedback,
see
how
people
were
using
our
system
and
then
under
the
hood
we
were
running
a
super
super
simple
setup.
C
Basically,
a
monolith
is
a
lot
of
you
might
know
this,
as
so,
we
were
running
everything
on
a
singular
machine
in
the
cloud,
so
one
machine
hosted
our
api
and
then
our
one
ipfs
node,
which
was
receiving
files
yeah
this.
This
also
out
acted
as
a
gateway
serving
content
through
the
ipfs
network
and
then
through
our
gateway.pinata.cloud
url
yeah.
So
this
is
kind
of
what
it
looks
like
everything
again
is
running
on
one
machine,
api,
node,
storing
content
and
then
distributing
it
around
through
the
network
and
the
gateway.
C
Shortly
after
we
launched,
though,
as
an
actual
product,
we
started
to
gain
traction
amongst
the
web3
community
and
with
that
traction
came
a
lot
higher
levels
of
usage.
So
we
click
quickly
recognized
that,
in
order
for
pinata
to
succeed,
we
were
going
to
take
what
we
started
off
with
as
kind
of
an
experimental
tool
and
turn
it
into
something
that
was
actually
scalable.
C
So
it
was
at
this
point:
we
actually
decided
to
take
pinata
from
an
experimental
side
project
to
something
which
we
would
begin
working
on
full-time
and
then
from
here.
We
we
had
some
challenges
that
we
faced.
You
know
scaling
from
this
proof
of
concept
to
an
actual
product,
and
I
want
to
talk
about
some
of
the
challenges
we
faced
and
then
how
we
overcame
them
as
an
engineering
team.
C
C
This.
This
helped
with
resources
for
a
while,
but
the
the
second
challenge
we
ran
into
was
going
to
be
downtime
when
you're
running
a
product
that
other
products
are
going
to
be
building.
On
top
of,
you
need
to
make
sure
that
everything
you're
doing
is
geared
towards
eliminating
downtime
from
your
infrastructure.
C
A
lot
of
this
stuff
is
may
seem
kind
of
obvious,
and
a
lot
of
this
stuff
is
actually
kind
of
solved
for
by
modern
cloud
providers,
but
starting
up
in
the
ipfs
space.
You
know
there
is
no
s3
for
ipfs,
there's
no
kind
of
managed
database
services,
we're
kind
of
building
everything
from
scratch.
So
doing
all
this
manually
was
kind
of
a
fun
process
that
we
we
went
through
as
an
engineering
team.
C
C
So
we
were
seeing
requests
come
from
everywhere
in
the
world
united
states,
south
america,
africa,
asia,
india,
australia,
europe,
like
all
of
these
all
of
these
continents-
and
you
know,
locations
around
the
world,
we're
all
trying
to
interact
with
one
region
that
we
had
in
europe,
which
was
quickly
kind
of
not
being
as
quick
as
we
would
have
liked
for
everybody
else
in
the
world.
The
users
in
say
australia,
for
example,
were
receiving
pretty
long
upload
times.
C
So
we
took
that
as
our
next
upgrade
priority,
because
we
wanted
to
make
sure
that
everybody
around
the
world
was
receiving.
You
know
equally
as
fast
upload
times,
so
our
solution
to
this.
Similarly,
to
how
we
scaled
out
in
one
region
with
multiple
ipfs
nodes,
we
then
scaled
out
to
multiple
global
locations.
C
So
we
rolled
this
out,
I
think
around
march
of
2020
and
then
since
then,
we've
been
continually
expanding
into
more
and
more
locations
and
as
of
right
now
we
should
be
serving
content
in
every
major
continent
of
the
world
through
our
network
of
host
nodes
and
gateways
and
then
yeah.
So
with
this
up
this
setup,
we
now
have.
C
Once
once
we've
chosen
that
node,
then
the
content
is
stored
on
that
node
for
long-term
storage
and
future
retrieval
on
the
network
and
speaking
of
retrieval,
retrieval
looks
pretty
similar
on
our
end.
But
a
little
slight
difference
here
is
that
when
the
user
request
comes
in
the
gateway,
then
is
going
to
fetch
data
from
the
closest
host
node.
C
C
What's
next
on,
our
agenda
is
going
to
be
a
focus
on
things
like
content
discovery,
even
faster
content,
uploads
downloads
things
like
making
sure
that
we're
gonna
constantly
be
increasing
our
rate
limits,
so
you
guys
can
upload
more
and
more
content
all
the
time
and
then
lastly,
we
wanna
hear
from
you
guys
as
well.
We
wanna
hear
what
you're
thinking
of
how
you're
thinking
about
things,
what
you'd
like
to
see
from
our
platform.
C
I
am
matt
ober
and
yeah.
If
anybody
has
any
questions,
I'm
happy
to
answer
them.
Michael,
are
you
wanting
to
do
questions
now,
or
are
you
wanting
to
do
those
at
the
end
of
this
session
in
general,.
A
I'll
say:
let's
loop
back
around
that
way:
we
don't
eat
up
too
much
time.
If
that's
okay,
yeah
perfect.
A
Wonderful
yeah,
last
but
not
least,
michael
from
inferior
they're,
the
dev
suite
for
the
distributed
web.
D
All
right,
hopefully,
everyone
can
see
everything
so,
as
as
michael
said,
I'm
michael
godzi,
I'm
the
gm
head
of
product
for
infuria
infira
is
a
developer
suite
for
all
things.
Web3,
our
bread
and
butter
are
ethereum
and
ipfs.
D
D
D
So
now
developers
that
have
been
experimenting
with
infura
developers
that
are
have
started
to
really
build
ipfs
into
their
applications
and
are
exploring
ipfs
as
a
really
meaningful
addition
to
how
they're
doing
data
storage
or
data
security
can
utilize
ipfs
at
the
at
the
ex
very,
very
high
level
of
quality
that
we've
established
with
our
ethereum
product
as
well.
D
So
you
can
head
to
inferior
dot,
io,
slash
product,
slash,
ipfs,
and
you
will
see
all
the
new
information
on
the
new
product
and
how
it
works.
It's
got
full
connectivity
into
our
dashboard,
which
I'll
walk
through
in
a
little
bit.
D
It's
a
highly
available
api
we've
built
really
amazing,
innovative
systems,
around
storage
scaling
broadcasting
data
across
the
network,
peering
management.
D
The
list
goes
on
and
on
and
on
the
the
back-end
infrastructure
that
makes
this
all
work
is,
is
pretty
brilliant,
and
so
it
has.
You
can
have
the
same
reliability
that
you
have
with
all
of
other
our
other
products
and
when
you're
using
ipfs
on
infuria
and
it
works
with
all
of
the
standard,
ipfs
libraries.
D
D
We
really
wanted
to
make
it
an
easy
way
to
scale,
but
also
an
easy
way
to
continue
experimenting,
so
we've
also
included
a
free
amount
of
of
access
to
the
product.
Still
so
this
is,
you
know,
this
is
a
huge
staple
of
our
platform.
Is
giving
people
the
space
to
experiment
and
and
as
you
can
see
the
you
know,
you
can
learn
all
about
the
pricing
directly
on
our
pricing
page.
D
So,
let's
hop
in
so
basically
you'll
go
to
inferior.io
log
into
your
dashboard,
which
I
am
already
and
then
you'll
see
an
all
new
item
on
the
left
bar
for
ipfs,
along
with
a
lot
of
the
other
awesome
networks
that
we
support
here,
you
can
learn
a
little
bit
more
about
the
product
and
and
get
some
information
about
how
to
get
started
a
lot
of
similar
information
to
what's
on
our
product
page.
But
these
links
are
super
helpful.
We
have
some
migration
documentation.
D
We
have
our
links
to
our
full
documentation,
which
I'll
give
you
a
quick
preview
of
in
a
little
bit.
So,
let's
get
started
so
first
we're
going
to
start
by
naming
our
project,
so
your
infuria
usage
and
your
dashboard
is
kind
of
organized
by
product
and
project,
and
so
this
allows
you
to
identify
different
use
cases
or
say
you
had
a
dev
environment,
a
staging
environment,
a
production
environment.
This
would
allow
you
to
kind
of
configure
all
of
those.
D
So
you
can
come
in
here
and
say
I
only
want
to
use
10
gigabytes
and
it
will
make
sure
that
you
don't
go
over
that
same
with
data
transfer
up
and
down,
and
then
we
have
some
additional
security
features,
such
as
limiting
access
which
will
help
you
control
access
to
your
api
and
make
sure
that
if,
if
someone
were
to
get
access
to
your
api
key,
it's
not
going
to
cause
you
damage
to
your
account.
D
So,
as
you
can
see,
I
have
a
terminal
pulled
up
here.
This
is
we're
gonna,
I'm
gonna
quickly,
walk
through
live
pinning
the
data
pinning
a
file
to
your
inferior
ipfs.
D
D
You
can
use
a
parameter
inside
of
the
add
method
that
will
allow
you
to
toggle
that
on
and
off,
but
for
the
purposes
of
this,
I'm
just
going
to
I'm
going
to
keep
it
on
so
we'll
just
do
that
and
there
you
go
so
super
simple,
but
what's
cool
is
let's
go
back
to
our
dashboard
and
we
can
now
see
the
file
that
I
just
pinned
in
my
data
explorer
when
I
pinned
it,
how
big
it
is
and,
and
then
you'll
get
some
you'll
get
some
real-time
information
about
your
pinning,
and
that
is
that
is
the
that.
D
That's
how
that's
how
it
works.
It's
super
easy.
It's
as
simple.
As
going
straight
to
this
url
you're
gonna
get
all
of
your
visibility.
You
can
have
multiple
projects,
you
have
our
the
support
of
our
amazing
support
team.
If
you
ever
need
help,
you
just
come
straight
to
the
support
panel,
which
is
directly
inside
your
dashboard,
and
then
you
know
select
ipfs,
and
we
can
help
with
pretty
much
any
issue
that
you
have
you'll
get
information
about.
Your
running
total
for
your
upcoming
bill.
This
is
not
gonna.
D
This
is
this
is
all
within
the
free
allotment,
so
we're
not
having
any
actual
billing
happening,
and
then
you
can
even
unpin
directly
from
the
dashboard
in
case
you
don't
want
to
get
charged
for
that
storage,
and
that's
it
it's
it's.
It's
really
really
awesome.
It
allows
you
to
really
scale
on
top
of
the
service
and
and
definitely
check
out
our
documentation
check
out
the
blog
posts
that
we
put
up
and
and
have
fun
experimenting.
A
Awesome,
thank
you
so
much
michael
and
matt
and
jeff
as
well
for
presenting
for
us
this
week.
So
that's
the
end.
If
we
have
questions,
please
post
them
in
the
chat,
we
can
hang
around
and
answer
them
for
those
who
don't
have
questions
or
are
finished,
please
see
you
next
week
or
next
month.
Rather,
we
have
twitter
youtube
and
the
social
medias
that
we
keep
updated
and
specifically
come
june
july.
8Th
a
little
bit
over
a
week
from
now
is
browser
3000
summit.
A
It's
a
hackathon.
If
that's
something
that
appeals
to
you
check
it
out,
and
it
would
be
wonderful
to
see
all
there
and
participate
cool.
Thank
you
so
much.