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A
And
that's
the
end
of
our
presentation,
no
I'm
kidding
so
again:
decentralized,
storage,
Network,
that's
what
we're
building
and
I'm
Mark
Collier,
and
this
is
Paulina,
and
if
you
want
to
go
to
the
next
slide-
and
we
also
have
a
number
of
team
members
that
couldn't
make
it
here
today,
they
have
actually
been
toiling
away.
A
Building
the
solution,
while
we've
been
here
having
all
the
fun,
although
we
may
have
one
of
them
pop
up
here
in
a
minute
as
a
last
minute
guest
who
just
arrived
this
morning,
but
when
I
talked
to
a
lot
of
my
friends
about
what
is
keeping
them
up
at
night.
One
of
the
things
that
I
always
hear
is
people
are
always
worried
about.
You
know
central
banks
right
you've
probably
heard
this
before
so
the
central
banks
that
keeps
other
people
up
at
night.
That
doesn't
keep
me
up
at
night
control
of
money.
A
Someone
else's
problem
to
worry
about
what
keeps
me
up
at
night
are
Central
clouds,
and
this
is
a
real
problem,
because
if
you
look
at
all
the
amazing
decentralized
apps
that
people
are
building
here
this
week
and
been
building
for
years
way
too
many
of
them
run
on
Central
clouds
run
on
AWS
Azure.
All
this
data
that's
being
generated.
A
It
ends
up
on
S3
and
we
think
that
that's
not
a
great
a
great
answer
right
if
you're
going
to
have
decentralization,
but
every
one
of
those
apps
is
ultimately
dependent
on
one
or
two
clouds
somewhere
in
the
world
that
can
cut
off
your
access.
That's
not
very
decentralized!
Actually
cloud
and
Amazon
particular
is
one
of
the
greatest
forces
of
centralization
in
the
history
of
technology.
A
So
we
want
to
do
something
about
that
and
if
you
just
to
put
it
in
perspective
for
a
minute,
Amazon's
revenue
last
year
was
over
half
a
trillion
dollars,
which
is
more
than
these
70
countries.
Gdp
combined.
So
you
know,
some
of
these
countries
have
been
to
the
World
Cup.
Some
of
them
probably
even
won
the
World
Cup.
A
But
if
you
look
at
the
perspective
here,
Amazon
is
just
massive
and
one
of
the
reasons
why
we
have
to
be
working
on
solutions
to
make
this
problem
better
is
because
all
of
you,
all
of
us
we're
generating
more
data
all
the
time
and
a
couple
of
years
from
now
we're
going
to
be
having
180
zettabytes
of
data
just
generated
from
all
the
apps,
all
the
activity,
all
the
things
that
we're
building
and
that's
just
going
to
keep
ending
up
on
S3.
A
If
we
don't
build
something
better,
and
so
we
want
to
build
Monopoly
resistant
storage.
You
hear
a
lot
about
censorship,
resistance
and
civil
resistance.
It's
all
important,
but
if
we're
not
Monopoly
resistant,
we're
ultimately
never
going
to
get
out
of
this
centralization
hell
that
we're
stuck
in,
and
there
are,
of
course,
other
Storage
Solutions
out
there
that
haven't
gotten
as
much
traction
as
we
would
like,
and
so
we've
been
looking
at
that
trying
to
understand
that
better.
A
So
we
can
figure
out
what
we
can
build
to
address
this
problem
and
actually
provide
an
alternative
to
the
monopolists
in
the
oligopolis
and
as
an
example.
Some
of
the
other
storage
networks
that
are
decentralized
they've
built
a
very
big
footprint,
but
the
the
actual
adoption
on
those
those
Footprints
is
less
than
five
percent.
So
we've
been
really
taking
a
close
look
at.
Why
is
it
that
even
decentralized
developers
keep
picking
S3,
keep
picking,
AWS
and
paulina's
going
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
what
we've
found.
B
End
user
interviews,
what's
current,
like
in
a
lot
of
decentralized
storage
options,
are
the
four
fundamentals
of
storage
not
like
one
or
two
of
them,
but
they
are
all
together
failing
to
have
all
four
leads
to
poor
development
experience,
and
that's
pretty
much
the
reason
while
people
keep
on
using
Amazon
or
any
other
web
2
Solutions,
because
it
has
four
and
having
four
pretty
much
means
to
have
performance.
It
means
fast
reads
and
writes,
but
also
resilience
to
avoid
data
loss
or
transfer
interference.
B
I
already
said
and
most
importantly,
availability
to
actually
be
able
to
both
read
and
write
at
pretty
any
time
needed.
So
having
those
four
fundamentals.
Nails
makes
sense
and
after
that
it
makes
sense
to
add
a
blockchain
layer
on
top
of
it
to
kind
of
unite
of
Both
Worlds,
and
that's
what
we're
trying
to
do
here
with
on
Machina.
We
use
near
blockchain
under
the
hood,
and
it
enables
users
to
have
a
ledger
immutable
ability,
decentralization
open
source
and
also
transparency
to
yeah.
Actually,
it
enables
us
to
create,
most
importantly,
an
incentive
for
those
data.
B
Centers
who
used
to
previously
compete,
compete
with
each
other.
Now
they
can
cooperate
and
yeah.
That's
the
approach
that
we
built
with
on
Machina.
We
build
storage,
first
blockchain,
second,
adding
the
best
of
Two
Worlds
together,
and
we
also
try
to
not
jeopardize
the
user
experience,
because
our
goal
here
is
to
build
not
only
the
performance
storage
but
also
the
one
that
is
simple
to
use,
because
Simplicity
is
the
key
and
what
we're
targeting
here
is
to
build
it
as
simple
as
possible.
B
So
just
five
HTTP
words:
it's
a
get
put
post,
had
delete
and
maybe
a
little
bit
of
documentation
to
show
you
what
parameters
you
have
to
put
in
it,
but
that's
pretty
much
it
and
yeah
we're
secured
by
near
blockchain.
We
love
near
as
near
blow
rights,
decentralized,
Federated,
problem,
public,
private,
key
infrastructure
that
we're
about
to
use
in
this
product
and
yeah
actually
near
will
allow
this
million
people
who
have
near
accounts
already.
B
A
Now,
right
so
I
believe
Jonathan
Bryce,
our
co-founder
is
going
to
join
us.
He
he
got
on
a
5
a.m
flight
this
morning,
so
he
could
make
it
so
I'm
glad
you're
here
and
show
us
about
the
demo.
C
All
right,
thanks
for
for
having
me,
join
you,
let's
I'm,
going
to
stand
on
this
side.
Actually,
okay,.
B
C
So
what
what
we're
going
to
run
through
here
is
a
very,
very
simple
web,
app
that
we
built
as
kind
of
a
sample
to
show
what
you
can
build
on
top
of
this
simple
API.
C
An
important
thing
to
remember
is
that
simple
can
be
very
powerful
and
and
simple
is,
is
a
great
way
to
build
fundamental
infrastructure,
because
then
you
let
everyone
else
put
it
together
to
build
what
they
need.
So
this
is
a
demo
app
that
we
built
and
you'll
see.
Paulina
is
logging
in
here
with
her
near
test.
Net
account
right,
looks
like
this
process
that
you
see
everywhere
requests
some
limited
permissions
when
she
connects
this
signs.
C
B
C
All
right,
so,
very
simple.
You
know
this
is
basically
a
very
simple
kind
of
web-based
file
browser
that
we
put
together
here,
that's
built
on
top
of
of
this
API,
but
as
I
was
saying,
you
know,
simple
can
be
powerful,
so
let's
drop
into
the
command
line
here
and
and
show
a
little
bit
of
what
what's
possible
with.
C
If
you
just
start
putting
some
of
these
HTTP
requests
together,
this
very
simple
rest
API:
why
don't
we
go
ahead
and
list
your
account
first,
just
to
see
that
we
are
we're
talking
to
the
same
network.
C
So
now
now
Paulina
has
put
the
near
CLI
on
her
laptop,
so
she
has
a
different
key
for
this
one
of
the
things
that
I
love
about
this,
this
decentralized
Federated
public
private,
key
infrastructure
through
near
is
such
a
rich
and
awesome
identity
model
for
all
kinds
of
applications,
and
it
to
me
it's
like
so
much
better
than
than
other
blockchain
options
out
there,
and
so
she
has
a
key
on
her
laptop.
She
has
a
key
in
this
browser.
C
Now
she
can
go
revoke
those
through
her
near
account,
so
it's
great
power
and
security
and
control
in
the
user,
but
you
can
also
start
to
put
these
together.
So
it
looks
like
you've
got
a
a
little
shell
script
here
that
has
an
iterator
and
it's
going
to
zero
index.
10
container
puts,
and
so
why
don't
you
run
that
and
yep.
C
Okay
and
what
this
is
doing
is
this,
you
know
just
command
line
scripting
here
it's
running
a
bunch
of
rest
commands.
Maybe
we
just
go
back
up
and
and
look
at
our
our
account
again
now
we
have
10
containers.
We
can.
C
C
And
we
see
this
here
so
different
interfaces,
all
stateless
all
talking
against
this
API,
you
can
see
it's
very
fast
and-
and
you
can
keep
continue
to
build
these
together
so
one
one
example
that
in
my
background,
running
data,
centers
we're
always
managing
logs
and
we're
managing
transaction
data
and
you're
rolling
that
up
and
you're
archiving
it
and
you're
you're
zipping
it
and
you're
moving
it
around,
and
so
we've
created
a
a
kind
of
a
sample
archive
here
that
has
a
thousand
text
files
in
there
and
it's
going
to
drop
those
into
a
few
containers
here.
C
Now
we're
doing
this
over
my
phone
because
we
couldn't
get
the
the
the
the
the
network
functioning
up
here,
so
it
might
take
a
little
longer
than
than
ideal,
but
we'll
we'll
see
some
activity
happening
still
in
a
second.
C
If
we
go
back
to
the
presentation,
then
this
this
diagram
shows
the
way
that
this
is
set
up.
You
know,
there's
a
storage
chart
out
there
and
right
now
we
have
one
that
is
a
test
net
Shard
that
has
this
simple
API.
On
top
of
it
all
of
the
authentication
and
security
around
that
is
through
those
interactions
with
the
near
blockchain,
and
because
of
that,
these
shards
are
immediately
Federated.
Those
shards
can
grow
across
different
data
center
providers
across
different
node
operators.
The
security
lives
in
the
near
blockchain.
C
So
this
is
already
a
really
awesome,
powerful
setup
and
then
again
because
of
that,
because
of
that
decentralization
that
Federation
the
near
account
model
and
this
clean
API,
you
can
build
very
powerful
apps.
On
top
of
it
absolutely.
C
Of
JavaScript
files,
all
of
the
interactions
from
that
point
are
between
this
laptop
and
the
back-end
storage
Network
secure
by
near
so
this
isn't
going
through
a
web
server.
The
web
server
never
sees
her
keys.
The
web
server
never
sees
her
data.
All
of
this
is
happening
directly
in
that
communication.
So
let's
go
back
to
the
all
right.
B
C
I
can't
even
see
them
all,
so
you
know
this
very
simple
kind,
of
example,
of
what
you
can
do
with
this
type
of
infrastructure,
again
get
put
post
head,
delete
five
verbs,
build
great,
apps
and
I'll
hand
it
back
to
Mark
to
wrap
it
up
here.
It.
A
I
think
S3
was
originally
the
simple
storage
service
and
people
were
really
drawn
to
that
when
it
was
started
and
it's
become
a
lot
more
complex.
So
we're
bringing
simple
back
but
simple
is
powerful,
yeah,
it's
beautiful
if
I
do
say
so
myself,
so
we
have
a
really
easy
to
use
cool,
API,
very
clear
documentation.
The
UI
we
showed
you
was
this
JavaScript,
that's
stateless,
so
that
it
remains
on
your
machine
at
all
times.
But
there
are
many
ways
you
can
build
your
own
app
using
that
same
technology
and
integrating
with
our
apis.
C
B
Actually,
looking
for
lots
of
feedback
and
we're
open
to
everyone
come
and
try
it
out,
it's
close,
though
so
this
is
basically
leads
to
our
website
with
a
form
where
you
can
sign
up
and
yeah
we're
looking
for
feedback
vegan
for
your
use
cases,
please
please
sign
up,
but
please
remember
as
well.
That
is
only
a
test
net,
so
we're
looking
for
feedback,
so
we
actually
can
build
a
really
really
good
production
Network
that
everybody's
happy
with
very
simple,
very
nice,
but
yeah
sign
up,
follow
us
what's
next.
A
Yeah,
so
this
test
net
that
we've
built
we're
going
to
continue
to
expand
it,
make
it
bigger
more
regions
so
that
the
testing
can
be
even
more
robust,
but
next
in
the
roadmap
is
really
decentralizing
node
operations.
So
we
are
looking
for
people
that
want
to
operate
nodes
that'll
be
happening
later
this
year
and
we
really
want
to
keep
onboarding
more
and
more
developers
to
help
us
build
it.
A
This
you
know:
building
Monopoly
resistant
storage
is
going
to
take
like
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
help
and
a
lot
of
input
and
whether
you're
a
node
operator
developer
or
just
the
app
developer
that
wants
to
use
it.
We
want
to
hear
from
you
and
get
involved,
so
we
make
sure
we
we
build
the
right
kind
of
storage
and
then
once
we
have
a
big
footprint
around
the
world,
we're
actually
going
to
be
able
to
geofence
your
data.