►
From YouTube: IPFS Weekly Call 2019-05-20 🙌🏽📞
Description
IPFS Newsletter: https://tinyletter.com/ipfsnewsletter
A
A
So
today
we
have
one
deal
and
he
is
going
to
tell
us
about
matters
dot
news
which
uses
which
is
built
on
top
of
IP
FS
and
we'll
learn
like
how
Madison
News
is
using
IP,
FS
and
we'll
learn
about
the
project
in
general.
So
before
or
Leo
begins.
Thank
you
very
much
clap
thumbs
up.
We
really
appreciate
the
people
who
take
a
time
out
to
share
their
hard
work
with
us
and
without
further
ado,
Gor
Leo.
Please
show
us
some.
You
could
be
getting
to
present
day
Thank.
B
You
Portia
thanks
everyone
for
coming
here
and
thanks
for
inviting
me
to
you,
there
Ricky
called
I'm
a
huge
admirer
of
what
the
work
ideas
coming
to
have
down
and
our
team
have
been
wanted
to
reach
out
to
the
deep
web
community.
So
this
is
a
great
chance
for
us.
Can
everyone
see
my
slides
now
we
had
yes,
three.
So
the
project
and
a
better
talk
today
is
a
project.
B
We've
been
working
on
for
more
than
Y
year
now
we're
working
on
the
digital
publishing
platform
and
we
wanted
to
be
human
distributed
and
copyright
supported
by
human.
We
mean
that
we
want
to
link
back
in
the
human
element
in
content,
discovery
and
I
will
tell
you
what
what
how
we're
trying
to
implement
that
and
with
the
human
element.
It's
naturally
a
distributive
way
of
discovering
the
content,
so
naturally
we'll
want
the
data
to
be
distributed
as
well,
but
the
other
thing
about
the
distributed.
B
B
Have
a
way
to
4/4,
they
also
to
get
paid.
So
that's
our
main
goal,
and
so
today's
dog
I
would
first
kind
of
goes
through
the
the
general,
the
digital
overview
of
the
prototype
we
have
now
and
then
I'm
going
to
talk
about
our
ultimate
vision
and
how
we're
trying
to
get
there.
So
you
one
second,
so
please
ask
any
questions
or
interrupt
me
anytime
during
the
talk.
B
So
this
is
the
front
page
of
our
website
that
the
main
platform
where
you
can
now
it's
it's
it's
in
Chinese,
both
in
traditional
Chinese
and
simplified
Chinese,
since
our
user,
now
our
Chinese
users,
but
we're
more
than
happy
to
add
in
English
support
once
they're,
more
interested
in
fight
by
other
English
users.
The
website
is
written
as
progressive
web
app.
It's
currently
it's
geared
towards
a
writer's
community.
So
it's
servicing
the
writer
we're
trying
to
figure
out
what
the
what
writers
need
and
try
to
kind
of
sharpen
our
our
platform
to
their
needs.
B
B
So
this
feed
is,
we
have
the
or
the
articles
with
the
newest
activity
and
we
have
one
minute
section
which,
where
we
have
their
daily
highlight-
and
you
can
also
click
on
this
tab-
which
you
can
see
the
activities
of
the
users
that
you
follow
and
you
have
a
Search
tab
and
on
the
sidebar
we
have
a
lot
of
editor
recommendations,
because
it's
still
very
small
community.
So
we
want
our
where
one
hour
you
to
see
the
best
content
in
a
platform.
B
B
Okay,
okay,
so
this
is
kind
of
the
overview
of
the
current
prototypes
out
there
without
a
little
bit
about
the
IPF
integration,
so
we're
using
nodejs
as
our
server.
So
we
fit
up
a
go
active
node
and
we
use
active
HTTP
client
to
connect
to
that
node
and
we
at
first
we
try
to
use
the
custom
mode
and
then
we
switch
to
single,
because
I
have
some
issues
with
the
cluster,
something
about
synchronizing,
the
the
hash
list
between
different
nodes,
and
we
also
add
to
active
s
at
HTML
bundle.
B
So
all
the
assets
in
the
HTML
is
four.
So
in
activist
network
we
also
store
our
metadata
as
CID
human,
even
a
schema
from
schema.org.
So
what
are
we
trying
to
do
here?
What
are
we
trying
to
achieve
with
with
the
platform
and
using
activist
edge
as
a
backbone,
so
that
the
problem
we're
trying
to
solve
is
that
after
the
internet,
we
see
a
room
of
content?
We
see
different
ways
of
describing
contents,
but
most
of
their
content
discovery
that
we
have
or
short
contents
or
such
as
micro,
blog
and
articles.
B
But
in
the
past,
where
a
lot
of
the
good
contents
are
long-form
they're
longer
than
articles
such
as
magazines,
newspapers
and
books,
those
competency
don't
really
have
a
nice
niche
in
a
new
ecosystem.
So
if
we
took
a
take
a
look
at
the
publisher,
the
traditional
publisher,
if
it
can
be
magazine
publisher,
they
can
be
newspaper,
publishers
or
publishers,
we're
actually
having
a
hard
time
between
the
publisher
and
the
writer.
Both
of
them
have
a
hard
time
staying
in
business
and
the
writer.
B
B
This
is
because
they're
how
the
the
company
khana
me
is
attention.
Economic.
Is
it
it's
built
on
the
clickbait
and
the
long
form
content
or
a
lot
of
times.
The
cube
content?
Is
it's
hard,
heartful
easy
to
find
and
the
heart
you
tied
into
this
attention,
economy
and
another
way
to
kind
of
use
this
product
run.
B
Is
that
if
we
somehow,
we
can
have
a
way
of
measuring
the
accessibility
of
different
contents
on
the
web,
and
we
can
plot
that
with
the
confidence
but
I
see
that
the
micro
blogs
and
blogs
and
articles
that
kind
of
web
native
you're
very
easy
to
find
those
things
by
searching
or
in
Google
or
in
other
platforms.
But
if
you
move
from
the
short
content
to
the
longer
content
to
newspapers,
magazines,
journals
and
books,
it's
actually
harder
and
harder
to
access
the
web.
B
So
we're
trying
to
solve
this
issue
only
one
hand
and
the
other
hand
of
the
issue
is
the
Internet
censorship,
so,
as
as
a
Chinese,
we're
very
familiar
with
its
problem,
because
the
censorship
is
a
huge
issue
in
China
and
this
Vida
is
actually
pretty
old
data
from
2011
for
the
past
few
years
worldwide.
The
censorship
issue
has
gotten
worse,
Russia
and
India,
and
Turkey
has
pretty
much
catching
up
with
China.
So
this
is
a
now
a
issue
of
global
wide.
So
what
so?
What
are?
B
What
are
the
solutions
we
are
kind
of
proposing
for
for
for
these
two
sides
of
the
same
problems?
So
first
want
to
talk
about
how
each
content
market
works
the
kind
of
structure
of
each
content
market
so
especially
for
their
larger,
the
bigger
content
such
as
magazines
and
books.
The
only
see
a
tiny
bit
of
people
in
the
market
are
writers,
let's
say
1%
and
most
of
the
readers.
They
don't
discover
the
content
directly
from
the
writer,
not
like
our
Facebook.
You
can
follow
your
friends,
but
for
books,
magazines,
most
readers
can
follow.
B
Don't
find
the
content
directly
from
the
writer
that
you
find
it
comes
in
through
curators.
The
curators
can
be
a
lot
of
different
worlds.
We
can
be
the
publishers,
as
we
just
talked
about
it,
can
be
a
mecca.
We
can
be
bookstores,
it
can
be
influencers
as
nowadays.
For
example,
people
might
discover
a
book
by
Bill
Gates
recommendation
just
like
that
and
this
to
say
that
the
cure
is
10%
and
the
reader
is
the
rest
of
their
89%.
B
So
this
kind
of
like
habit,
triangle
structure
and
if
you
think
about
how
each
reader
discover
the
accountants
it's
more
like
this
on
the
right
side,
each
reader,
they
probably
have
contacts
to
some
books
or
magazines,
influencers
and
friends,
and
each
of
those
people,
those
curators.
They
have
to
read
contacts
to
the
authors,
and
this
is
how
the
reader
can
discover
the
contents.
B
So
in
order
to
build
a
star
that,
if
distributive
and
at
the
same
time
the
user
cannot
or
organically
find
the
content
through
the
curator
we
actually
have
to
build,
a
data
structure
is
similar
to
the
struct
on
the
right
side.
This
is
the
human
connection
graph,
but
it's
also
what
we
want
to
be
viewed
in
in
the
data
structure.
B
So
this
take
a
look
at
how
this
structure
will
look
like
this
structure
is
basically
the
content
that
or
the
Merkel
forests
has
as
what
is
used
in.
You
know
a
lot
of
Ikea
stock
so
that,
for
example,
there
can
be
a
collection
written
by
curator
may
be
just
recommended,
recommending
a
bunch
of
articles
and
eBooks
certain
topics
and
this
curator.
She
he
or
she
probably
carries
an
article
and
books
and
another
article
and
the
other.
This
article
can
reference
other
articles.
It
can
review
this
book.
B
B
But
there
one
point
to
this
tag
is
that,
first
of
all,
we
need
different
type
of
the
edges
when
a
different
type
of
saying
that,
how
is
this
article
is
this
I
can
connect
to
this
one,
and
we
also
need
a
special
type
of
edge,
that's
kind
of
half-baked
in
copyright,
for
example,
in
a
case
of
book.
We
want
to
say
that
this
book
includes
these
three
chapters,
so
we
are
copyrighted
together
and
we
have
this
sense.
They
feel
the
same
access
control
layer
in
that
there's
a
same
case
with
a
journal
here
so
another.
B
B
Who
does
this
article
belongs
to
you,
and
we
also
have
to
want
to
have
a
bacon
twice
and
payment
information
where
I
say
that
they
also
want
to
say
how
much
do
I
want
to
fill
my
my
company
for
or
how
much
do
I
want
to
show
my
Mac,
therefore,
and
how
do
I
want
to
get
paid
with
it
Bitcoin
or
Assyrian,
or
transitional
payment
methods,
and
also
daytime,
but
for
each
edge?
So
we
want
to
have.
B
For
example,
if
they
recommend
and
promote
a
further
content
and
when
their
company
gets
sold,
they
should
get
part
of
the
profit
as
as
encouragement
of
their
tuition,
and
so
the
readers
can
now
follow
other
readers,
mostly
curators,
and
they
can
also
discover
content
by
a
following
this
content
back.
So
this
is
kind
of
the
the
idea
of
the
the
vision
of
what
the
final
data
structure
we
want
to
beaut
and
we're
basically
building
the
UI
to
allow
a
regular
to
build
a
structure.
B
So
in
this
case,
on
the
left
side,
we're
seeing
the
editors
our
mattress,
dot
news
platform
on
the
left
side,
you
have
a
WYSIWYG
editor,
it's
kind
of
the
normally
the
wick
editor
you
would
expect
and
on
the
right
side,
you
can
search
for
other
articles
and
you
can
just
add
them
and
connect
them
to
these
article.
You're
writing
and
you
can
drag
and
drop
to
to
organize
their
orders
such
and
such
and
on
the
right
side.
B
We
also
provide
other
ways
for
for,
for
kind
of
thing,
clarify
that
the
way
to
begin
the
attack
here
you
can
see
that
we
have
a
little
icon
here.
This
is
I,
so
after
kids,
like
icon,
you
basically
enter
the
article.
You
enter
the
editor,
but
we
this
current
article
already
collected
connected
on
the
right
side.
So
this
is
just
instead
of
just
a
prototype
with
how
we're
allowing
the
youth
attribute
the
content
that,
but
it's
already
proving
itself
to
be
very
useful.
B
For
example,
here
this
is
our
usually
using
them
content
attribute
serial
of
articles.
He
originally
wanted
to
publish
as
a
book,
but
then
he
want
to
kind
of
publish
an
article
off
to
another
article,
so
the
the
final
structure
view
viewed
in
our
platform
to
kind
of
look
like
this.
This
is
the
main
article
and
you
can
see
that
this
is
the
other
articles
that
this
is
these
articles
pointing
to
so
this
article
on
the
left
is
kind
of
the
top
of
the
deck
and
the
other
wives
are
there
on
the
bottom
of
the
deck.
B
So
this
is
kind
of
from
a
single
structure
than
the
eunuch
have
followed
on
the
order
on
the
email.
Already
on
our
use
case,
we
can
also
use
new
structure
to
kind
of
viewed
accountant
table,
which
is
also
the
kids
on
the
left
side,
but
on
the
right
side
is
that
you're
kind
of
traversing
from
them
button
will
be
back
to
the
top.
B
So
you
can
see
what
other
articles
are
also
in
which
structure
so
we'll
also
mention
that
we
also
want
to
use
the
structured
she
viewed
books
that
can
be
so
doing
a
traditional
wait
can
be
priced.
It
can
be,
you
can
view
110
percent
of
it
of
the
whole
book
as
a
sample,
so
this
is
kind
of
a
UI
that
we
optimized
for
this
use
case.
B
So
so
a
little
more
about
how
I
would
do.
We
want
to
view
this
tag.
How
do
we
want
to
our
you
that
you
view
that
that
currently
we're
prototyping
on
the
website,
because
it's
much
faster
and
also
more
flexible
and
also
faster
in
terms
of
the
users
experience
and
also
for
the
developers,
experience
and
also
we
can
iterate
on
that
very
fast
to
adapt.
Our
users
need,
but
eventually
we
want
to
have
those
one
have
website
Plus
app.
B
The
website
would
basically
be
the
bridge
to
the
distributed
web,
which
is
ipfs
as
a
backbone,
but
there
is
actually
kind
of
the
distributed
web.
We
have
s
known,
embedded
and
ideally
with,
and
you
say
run
note
because
we
will
have
to
use
some
kind
of
small
contract
to
do
the
dynamic
content
and
an
authorization.
So
on
the
website
side
we,
which
is
currently
most
of
our
efforts,
are
on.
B
It
will
be
first
optimized
for
the
readers
and
then
for
writers
and
then
curators
and
publishers,
and
it
will
be
a
kind
of
like
a
straightforward
but
yet
distributed
compatible,
meaning
that
what
kind
of
beautiful
structure
having
the
distributed
network
in
mind.
So
it
kind
of
works
as
a
reach
to
the
D
web.
So
we
we
expect,
at
least
in
the
short
term.
Most
of
the
traffic
will
be
on
the
website,
but
on
the
at
site,
which
we
just
started
to
experiment
with.
B
But
it
will
be
proving
itself
youthful
in
a
lot
of
special
use
cases
such
as
because
that
needs
anonymity
if
encryption
or
censorship
resilient
and
on
the
outside,
because
the
schemas
should
be
used
a
lot
of
different
projects.
It
has
to
be
coming
to
driven
how
we
know
how
we
define
the
price,
how
we
are
recording
the
the
authorship,
etc
and
also
on
the
outside.
It's
open
to
experiments
it
doesn't
does
not
need
to
be
as
production
ready
as
the
website.
B
So
this
is
kind
of
a
rough
timeline
of
what
we
have
down
up
to
now
and
what
we're
planning
to
do
in
the
next
few
months
for
the
community
fat
in
the
website
part
for
the
website
part
we
kind
of
start
in
2017
December,
because
the
end
of
that
year
we
started
out
with
just
a
normal
publishing
platform,
with
article
comments,
appreciation
which
is
kind
of
a
token
system
we
developed,
which
transfer
this
token
as
part
of
the
appreciation,
and
that
will
affect
the
articles
rankings
and
in
last
the
end
of
last
year.
B
So
now
user
can
publish
book
our
website
and
two
months
later,
on,
July
leave
here
we'll
be
rolling
out
paid
contents
which
we're
partnered
with
a
couple
of
different
publishers
after
that
will
be
kind
of
optimized
for
different
other
use.
Cases
such
as
magazine
and
bookmarks,
etc,
and
on
the
community
side.
After
we're
ready
to
chew
out
the
matoran
format
and
booklet
format,
we'll
be
pushing
for
two
waiters
will
be
needs
to
have
more
cures
on
website
to
help
our
readers
to
find
content
and
then
would
be
then
be
encouraging.
B
Us
to
do
self
publications
on
the
website
and
for
the
desktop
and
app,
which
is
that
they
actually
distributed
part.
We
just
start
experimenting
with
that,
and
it's
not
production
ready.
We
are
starting
to
experiment
with
ideas
plus
electron
tiers
as
a
desktop
and
then
activist
plus
react
native
as
as
the
app
the
first
step
we
want
to
do
is
simply
render
HTML
from
hash
and
then
which
add
the
free
articles
from
our
platform
to
the
app
and
also
we
were
working
with
china
designs
for
for
non
Chinese
speakers.
B
It's
kind
of
a
huge
Internet
Archive
for
Chinese
webs
website,
basically
Internet
Archive
for
for
Chinese
content,
but
it's
heavily
censored
by
a
Chinese
government
in
banan
China
and
after
that,
we'll
be
publishing.
Content,
allow
the
user
to
publish
content
from
desktop
another
unit
of
all
other
users
and
resolve
free
content
tags
after
that.
B
They
have
around
three
million
users
of
three
million
readers
in
in
Hong,
Kong,
Taiwan
and
Macau,
which
is
what
the
Chinese
premier
gasps
I've,
been
in
China
and
also
China
digital
times,
which
I've
mentioned
before
it
is
run
by
Berkeley
County
parallel
and
we
have
around
three
hundred
thousand
subscribers.
And
then
there
are
a
lot
of
other
kind
of
Chinese
big
Chinese
Institute
accounts,
which
are
a
lot
of
times.
Blocked
email
in
China
I
also
listed
the
subscribers
here.
They
also
actively
participating
in
producing
content
without
a
platform.
B
So
because
we're
kind
of
more
censorship,
resilient
and
also
we
don't
we
don't,
we
kind
of
serve
our
applications
through
their
needs
on
the
technology
side.
We
also
partner
with
directly
from
the
parallel
which
I've
mentioned
before
they
would
provide
the
Chinese
web
archive
floss
and
they
also
provide
some
technology
support
on
a
tour
integration
part
we
also
partner
with
Lyon,
which
is
a
block
chain
project.
We
work
a
lot
on
the
final
bill
is
very
similar
to
us,
so
we'll
be
partitioned.
B
We
work
together
on
how
to
integrate
webcam
and
how
to
integrate
small
contracts
into
that,
so
that's
kind
of
an
overview
of
their
of
their
project.
I
kind
of
rushed
through
a
lot
of
different
things.
So
there's
still
a
lot
of
challenges.
We
have
are
chilling
those
things.
First
of
all,
it's
kind
of
like
a
general
design
problem
we
just
which
I
was
getting
familiar
with
all
the
tools
available
in
the
Deep
Web
community.
So
there's
a
lot
of
problem
with.
B
How
can
we
choose
any
integrate
different
tools
and
how
do
we
position
our
self,
accompanied
on
the
different
will
adjust
our
BTB
or
or
or
what
textile
has
four
for
the
reactant
native
SDKs,
and
also
how
do
we?
How
do
we
avoid
creating
new
scheme
and
protocols?
How
do
we
reuse
existing
scheme
and
protocols,
and
how
do
we
create
a
dynamic
content
and
also
how
to
do
a
thorough
revision
access
controls?
B
Project
and
also
we're
thinking
about
ICO
Souls,
but
it's
kind
of
a
we
don't
want
to
kind
of
go
down
that
route
because
it's
not
of
a
hassle.
So
that's,
basically
all
I
have
from
me
and
you
can
you're
more
than
welcome
to
check
out
the
website,
although
it's
still
mostly
it's
scared
or
in
Chinese.
But
if
you
guys
have
any
interest,
we're
definitely
more
than
happy
to
add
being
English
Russians
as
soon
as
possible.
Any
of
you
have
any
questions.
A
You
very
much
for
such
a
comprehensive
presentation.
That
was
amazing.
We
are
running
over
time,
but
we
will
get
in
one
or
two
questions.
Yes,
Klopp
Klopp
clouds
awesome.
This
was
a
really
good
presentation.
So
if
you
have
a
question,
if
you
put
it
in
a
chat
that
would
be
great
and
we'll
get
the
Q&A
right
now.
Johnny
crunch
this
questions
from
johnny
crunch.
What
is
your
plan
for
identity
and
ACL
controls?
A
B
B
So
that's
the
that's
an
ID
part,
but
the
access
control
is
hotter.
We
we
do
not
want
to
have
an
encryption
access
country.
We
do
not
want
to
have
encryption
DRM,
because
that's
just
nasty,
so
we,
the
first
version,
is
just
a
schema
that
saying
what
surprised
and
what's
the
payment
method
and
leave
the
excess
country
to
the
application,
which
is
not
a
very
strong
application
access
control,
but
it's
kind
of
a
workable
version
right
here.
Does
that
answer
your
question.
A
B
That's
up
so
the
last
question,
so
the
code
of
their
platform
itself
is
not
open
source
yet
because
we're
just
still
adding
tests
to
that,
and
we
because
we're
not
expecting
any
PRS
now,
because
we're
just
designing
the
application
with
the
design
team.
It's
still
not
a
committee
driven,
but
the
other
side,
the
the
experimental
side,
the
desktop
and
and
the
apps
were
building
they're.
All
start
we
are,
we
are
rolling
out
the
API
schema,
which
is
only
one
side
of
the
schema.
B
A
Thank
you
very
much,
and
this
is
a
comment
and
I'll
read
it.
This
works
great
as
a
desktop
PWA
progressive
web
app
on
Chrome
on
Mac.
That's
so
one
of
many
use
cases
of
not
a
diet
news.
Thank
you,
Gourley.
Oh,
thank
you
very
much
for
your
wonderful
presentation
and
if
you
can
send
me
to
slide,
I
can
put
them
in
a
notes
and
we
will
definitely
be
in
contact.
Thank
you
very
much
and
thank
you.
Everyone
for
joining
the
IPF,
a
weekly
call
and
I
will
see
you
next
week.
Thank
you.
Bye,
bye.