►
From YouTube: Community Update Webinar | May 22, 2018
Description
An intro to Regen Network: A blockchain project for ecological regeneration. Hosted by Regen Network COO Christian Shearer, CEO Gregory Landua, CTO Aaron Craelius, and Operational Strategist Brian Weinberg.
Connect with our community 👇
• Website: https://www.regen.network/
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• Medium: medium.com/regen-network
• GitHub: https://github.com/regen-network/regen-ledger
• GitLab: https://gitlab.com/regen-network/regen-ledger
• LinkedIn: linkedin.com/company/regen-network
• Reddit: reddit.com/r/regen_network
A
Hi
everybody
I'm
really
inspired
to
see
59
participants
on
this
webinar.
That's
brilliant
thanks
for
showing
up
I
just
wanted
to
sort
of
set
the
tone
for
our
conversation
today.
We're
really
excited
to
first
sort
of
set
the
stage
for
for
what
we've
designed
and
why
and
then
really
get
in
to
the
nitty-gritty
and
allow
people
to
ask
some
questions
and
dig
into
what's
on
your
minds
and
hearts.
A
Setting
the
stage
for
this
I
think
the
the
question
that
we've
been
asking
ourselves
is:
is
there
a
way
to
create
a
platform
where
the
transactions
and
the
economic
exchanges
are
all
aligned
with
ecological
regeneration
and
what
makes
those
conditions
possible
and
we've
sort
of
delved
into
that
that
question
over
the
past
year
and
region
network
is
what's
emerged
and
you'll
notice.
We
have
a
strong
focus
on
trust.
A
We
really
want
to
build
a
network
where
we
can
trust
that
ecological
regeneration
is
happening
somewhere
in
the
planet
and
create
opportunities
for
people
to
reward
and
exchange.
Based
on
that
that
trust,
and
with
that
I'm
gonna,
pass
it
over
to
Christian
who's.
Gonna,
walk
us
through
this
introduction
to
region
Network.
Thank
you,
everybody
for
coming.
B
Awesome
thanks
a
lot.
Gregory
really
appreciate
it.
Thanks
Alissa
for
the
introduction
as
well
yeah
thanks
thanks
everybody
for
joining
this
webinar.
We
are
regen
network,
we're,
building
a
firm
through
which
we
can
understand
ecological
state
on
the
planet
and
build
a
contracting
network
contracting
system
that
people
can
incentivize
land
managers,
farmers
around
the
world
to
start
implementing
practices
that
actually
shift
the
planet
towards
more
health
and
regeneration.
That's
what
we're
working
for
here,
balance
sheet
for
the
earth
so
before
I
dive
into
a
slideshow
I
want
to
just
mention
a
couple
things.
B
B
Unfortunately,
the
way
that
this
webinar
works
is
we're
not
going
to
be
actually
be
able
to
hear
your
voice
asking
the
questions,
but
we
want
to
take
your
questions
we'll
try
to
get
to
as
many
of
them
as
we
can,
and
also
at
the
top
of
your
screen
or
wherever
you're,
seeing
my
image
on
the
screen
right
now.
You
can
go
up
there
and
minimize
it,
which
I'm
going
to
do
now,
so
that
you
can
just
see
the
full
slideshow
that
is
up
to
you
all
right.
B
Let's
see
mine
doesn't
seem
to
want
to
do
that.
There
we
go
alright,
so
my
name
is
Christian
Shearer
I
come
from
an
ecological
agriculture
background.
I've
been
working
about
the
past
15
years
on
ecological
agriculture,
permaculture
and
regenerative
agriculture
realms
about
15
years
ago,
I
started
the
project
called
the
Ponyo
project
in
northern
Thailand.
We
bought
basically
a
defunct
orchard
mango
orchard
in
northern
Thailand
and
started
building
multi
Multi
strata,
agroforestry
systems.
B
There
started
building
earth
and
buildings
and
built
up
community
and
became
a
permaculture
education
center
I
started
teaching,
permaculture
design
and
then
about
five
years
into
that.
I
met
Gregory
land
way,
who
was
just
on
the
screen
and
and
three
other
really
amazing
designers,
and
we
teamed
up
together
to
form
terrigenesis
international.
The
company
started
as
a
ecological
agriculture,
design,
firm
doing
broadacre,
multi
enterprise
agriculture
systems,
and
over
time
we
started
shifting
our
approach
to
more
working
with
natural
products.
B
Companies
we've
had
the
real
privilege
to
work
with
amazing
companies
that
that
already
have
all
organic
ingredients,
all
Fairtrade
ingredients
and
are
asking.
How
is
it
that
we
can
do
even
better
than
that?
How
is
it
that
our
products
can
actually
be
making
the
world
a
better
place,
not
simply
making
it
a
little
less
bad
or
quite
a
bit
less
bad
than
the
other?
B
And
so
it's
kind
of
from
that
angle
that
we,
that
this
project
that
regen
network
was
really
born
so
before
I
dive
into
the
blockchain
and
technicalities
and
how
we
will
that
into
how
we've
been
working.
I
want
to
just
make
sure
that
everyone
on
this
call
has
a
sense
for
the
potential
of
regenerative
agriculture
on
this
planet
in
this
time
of
quite
dire
ecological
activity
activity.
B
So
so
a
big
way
that
the
the
language
and
the
dialogue
around
climate
change
and
the
degradation
of
the
planet
has
been
has
been
framed
by
the
media
and
other
organizations
and
the
general
public
is
around.
We
need
to
approach
it
through
making
a
lot
more
efficiency
in
our
in
our
in
our
economic
systems.
We
need
to
switch
to
LED
light
bulbs
and
you
know
which
are
80
percent
90
percent
more
efficient
than
incandescent
bulbs.
We
need
to.
B
We
need
to
retrofit
our
factories
in
our
manufacturing
systems
so
that
they
so
that
they're
75
percent
more
efficient
than
they
used
to
be,
and
we
need
to
all
drive
electric
cars,
so
we're
not
burning
fossil
fuels
and
all
of
these
approaches
are
super
important.
I'm,
not
saying
that
we
shouldn't
do
that.
They
are
they're
part
of
the
puzzle
to
solve
the
climate
change
and
degenerative
challenge
that
we're
currently
facing.
B
But
the
United
Nations
declared
that
if
we
hold
a
carbon
dioxide
concentration
concentration
levels
in
the
atmosphere
above
350
parts
per
million
that
and
that's
going
to
lead
to
what
they
describe
is
probably
catastrophic
effects
for
coming
human
civilization.
Unfortunately,
we've
overshot
that
number
already
we're
at
408
parts
per
million
and
so
from
a
carbon
specific
angle.
We
need
to
do
more
than
become
efficient.
We
need
to
do
more
than
reduce
our
emissions
into
the
atmosphere.
We
need
to
be
sequestering
carbon
out
of
the
atmosphere
and
back
into
biological
biological
systems.
B
So
it's
a
combination
of
all
those
all
those
effects
and
ecological
agriculture
and
biological
systems.
All
the
way
in
which
we
can
sequester
carbon
out
of
the
atmosphere
and
create
an
incredible
multifunctional
benefit
from
that.
So
the
way
that
works
is
whenever
we
build
topsoil
or
whenever
we
grow
plants.
The
topsoil
and
the
bodies
of
those
plants
are
made
up
with
primarily
water
and
carbon,
so
that
carbon
came
from
the
atmosphere.
B
Essentially
so
the
more
topsoil
we
build,
the
more
carbon
we
pulled
out
of
the
atmosphere,
more,
the
more
forests
we
grow,
the
more
carbon
we've
grown,
pulled
out
of
the
atmosphere,
I
think
Eric
tones
Mayer
in
his
book.
The
Carbon
Farming
solution
said
that
if
we
can
engage
40%
of
the
world's
agricultural
systems,
it's
a
real
regenerative
agriculture.
If
we
can
incentivize
that
in
some
way,
then
we
have
the
opportunity
to
pull
ourselves
not
just
below
350
parts
per
million
but
to
but
to
pre-industrial
levels
of
carbon.
B
So
I
want
to
make
sure
that
it
that,
for
me,
the
story
is
not
about
carbon
I
want
you
to
know
and
talking
about
carbon,
because
it's
a
big
talking
point
in
the
world
right
now,
but
the
story
is
really
about
regeneration.
I'm,
really
wanting
to
see
the
watersheds
around
around
this
planet.
My
watershed
right
here
that
in
the
Teton
in
Teton,
County
being
revived
and
revé
revitalized,
the
more
biodiversity,
more
economic
well-being
for
the
people
in
the
place,
the
more
more
habitat
for
the
for
the
endangered
species
that
live
here.
B
That's
what
we're
really
after
and
the
carbon
sequestration
is
really
just
a
positive
effect
of
of
those
actions.
So
so
as
we're
as
we're
exploring
how
we
can
start
to
stimulate
this,
this
shift
the
shift
from
degenerative
practices
in
the
on
the
planet
towards
more
regenerative
practices.
There's
a
couple
tools
that
are
super
important
and
this
is
where
the
blockchain
comes
in.
This
is
where
the
emerging
technology
comes
in
that
we're
currently
experiencing.
So
one
thing
we
really
need
is
ecological
state
verification
and
I'm
going
to
switch
the
next
slide,
real,
quick.
B
Just
to
show
you
what
I'm
talking
about
the
ecological
state
verification
means
we
can
take
any
particular
piece
of
land
and
understand
what
is
happening
on
that
land
right
now.
We
need
to
understand
a
baseline.
The
baseline
data
of
what's
understand,
what's
happening
so
in
this
image.
You're.
Seeing
here
on
the
left
side
of
the
screen
is
kind
of
the
baseline
data.
This
was
actually
a
project
that
terrigenesis
has
worked
on
down
and
down
in
Barbados
a
very
degenerated
piece
of
land.
B
We
understand
what
was
happening
currently
at
the
time
and
another
part
of
ecological
state
verification
is
understanding
how
that
land
changes
over
time.
So
if
that
land
manager
was
in
some
way,
incentivized
to
shift
their
practices
towards
something
other
than
that
degenerative
practice,
then
they
could
move
towards
a
regenerative
future,
one
that
has
a
lot
more
topsoil,
one
that
has
a
lot
more
biodiversity,
one
that
has
habitat
for
animals
and
clean
water.
B
So
we
need
to
understand
ecological
state
verification
and
then
the
second
piece
that
we
need
to
build
is
that
we
need
some
way
for
that
land
manager
to
actually
be
incentivized
to
make
those
ships.
You
know
farmers
around
the
world
are
working
working
very
hard
to
produce
the
food
for
this
for
this
planet
and
without
the
right
incentives.
There's
really
no
reason
for
them
to
shift
their
focus,
they're,
focusing
on
producing
their
products
and
making
them
making
the
money.
That's
gonna,
get
there
put
their
kids
through
school
and
feed
their
families.
B
So
we
believe
ecological
state,
verification
and
the
right
incentives
are
the
key
to
shift
this
planet
towards
your
generation
and
that's
what
regen
network
is
working
to
build.
So
here's
an
example
of
how
that
might
look,
we're
gonna
be
we're
going
to
be
stewarding
the
process
of
building
a
set
of
ecological
state
protocols.
One
of
those
protocols
might
be
a
methane
protocol
that
that
kind
of
measures
the
amount
of
methane
coming
off
a
piece
of
land.
B
This
image
right
here
is
a
photo
from
Indonesia
and
rice
farmers
growing
rice
in
paddy
systems,
which
are
water,
water,
grown
rice
systems.
The
unfortunate
thing
about
water,
water,
paddy
rice,
paddy
systems
is
that
they
produce
a
lot
of
methane.
So
with
the
right
incentives,
these
farmers
might
be
happy
to
switch
to
what
we
call
Hill
rice
or
dry
land
rice.
B
Paddy
cultivation
to
hill
rice
cultivation
will
receive
a
reward
of
$100
an
acre
that
hundred
dollars
an
acre
is
enough
to
incentivize
those
farmers
to
say
you
know
what
that
hundred
dollars
egg
would
be
would
be
well
received
by
a
family
and
it's
worth
shifting
towards
trying
he'll
rise
towards
joint
dry
rice.
So
through
an
application
like
that,
we've
created
incentives
for
the
farmers.
The
Indonesian
government
is
now
able
to
make
claims
about
reducing
their
methane
emissions
and
moving
towards
their
international
climate
commitments,
and
the
planet
as
a
whole
is
better
off
because
of
it.
B
We
unlock
an
incredible
amount
of
incredible
amount
of
use
cases,
some
of
which
we
know
and
understand,
are
very
excited
about,
and
some
of
which
I'm
sure
will
emerge
over
time.
The
the
three
companies
that
are
listed
on
the
screen
here
are
some
of
the
companies
that
we've
been
chatting
with
about
about
working
on
protocols
and
serving
some
of
the
needs
for
their
organizations.
So
let
me
just
quickly
share
with
you
how
nori
ether,
risk
and
savory
Institute
might
employ
the
might
employ
region
network
and
our
in
our
protocols.
B
Nori
is
building
a
carbon
drawdown
marketplace,
nor
is
connected
with
corporations
and
organizations
that
want
to
buy
what
they
might
consider
a
higher
quality
carbon
credit,
nor
he
calls
them
carbon
drawdown
credits,
and
so
they
have
the
connections.
They've,
they've
they're
going
to
be
able
to
sell.
They
actually
already
have
people
lined
up
to
purchase
these
carbon
drawdown
credits.
What
they
need
regen
network
for
is
for
the
verification
that
this
this
carbon
was
actually
taken
out
of
the
atmosphere
and
pulled
into
biological
systems.
B
So
through
our
ecological
state
protocols
that
we
could
Co
develop
with
nori
around
carbon
sequestration,
we
can
meet
that
need
for
them.
Either.
Risk
is
a
etherium
based
insurance
company.
They
have
smart
contracts
up
on
the
etherium
block
train
and
one
of
their
products
is
a
crop
insurance
crop
insurance
product.
B
B
If
you
could
verify
the
verify
ecological
outcomes
on
very
specific
pieces
of
land
about
whether
that
hail
storm
wiped
out
their
crop
or
whether
that
tornado
actually
hit
that
specific
piece
of
land
and
not
the
neighboring
piece
of
land,
that
would
allow
us
to
reduce
the
cost
of
our
insurance
and
make
much
more
much
more
specific
and
and
accurate
payments
to
the
right
people
when
their
crops
are
lost.
So
there's
huge
implications
for
reinsurance
as
well
in
terms
of
trying
to
reinsurance
is,
is
basically
insurance
for
insurance
companies.
B
So,
when
you
think
about
a
place
like
Dallas
Texas
and
the
big
flooding
that
happened
in
Dallas,
a
reinsurance
company
might
be
might
be
motivated
to
create
incentives
for
the
land
managers
all
around
around
the
Dallas
watershed
to
to
enact
changes
to
their
land
management
practices.
That
would
reduce
the
amount
of
flooding
in
Dallas
and
through
ecological
agriculture.
We
know
that
if,
if
land
managers
increase
their
soil
organic
carbon
by
one
percent,
meaning
they're
going
from
you
know,
you
know
conventional
agriculture
has
about
half
a
percent
soil,
organic
carbon
or
1%
organic
soil,
organic
carbon.
B
It
could
have
increased
it
to
2%
or
3%
on
their
land
for
every
1%
increase
of
soil.
Organic
carbon
every
acre
holds
50,000
gallons
more
water
retention
capability.
So
if
we
could
be
doing
that
as
across
the
whole
Dallas
watershed
area,
we
could
significantly
reduce
the
risk
of
flooding
and
outs.
Reinsurance
companies
would
would
love
to
invest
into
that
and
that
just
makes
their
companies
more
profitable,
so
savory
Institute
for
anyone
who
hasn't
heard
of
savory
they're
working
on
verified
holistic
grazing.
B
We
could
verify
the
carbon
that
they're
sequestering
the
water
quality
increases
that
they're
having
the
biodiversity
increases
that
their
that
their
practices
are
making.
Amongst
other
things,
so
so
a
huge
benefit
to
savory
and
to
the
world
and,
of
course,
to
the
farmers
to
the
farmers
could
get
paid
for
the
benefits
of
the
that
we're
seeing
so
another
another
use
case
that
I'm
incredibly
excited
about
and
I.
B
Think
as
it
has
a
huge
potential
to
to
move
the
climate
conversation
forward
is
the
is
the
is
the
work
towards
achieving
sustainable
development
goals
and
the
climate
Accord
commitments.
So
175
countries
around
the
world
have
have
ratified
the
Paris
climate
agreement
and
have
committed
to
reducing
the
amount
of
emissions
they're,
putting
into
the
atmosphere
and
to
sequestering
a
sort
of
certain
amount
of
carbon
out
of
the
atmosphere
in
into
biological
systems
by
by
2050
the
the
platform
that
regen
network
is
building,
it
improves
on
the
approach
in
a
couple
different
ways.
B
One
is
when
you
put
a
smart
contract
up
on
a
region
network
that
is
based
on
outcomes.
The
idea
is
like,
let's
take,
let's
make
a
concrete
example
here:
let's
take
the
country
of
Portugal,
for
example,
just
to
just
to
pull
one
name
out
of
a
hat.
The
country
of
Portugal
could
create
a
smart
contract
up
on
the
region.
Network
ledger
that
says
for
any
farmer
within
the
country
of
Portugal,
that's
verified
to
have
sequestered
carbon
through
their
agricultural
practices.
Using
these
specific
protocols
will
receive
a
reward
of
25
euros
per
ton
of
carbon.
B
What
what's
exciting
about
this
is
two
things
in
my
mind.
One
is
its
outcome
based,
so
the
government
of
Portugal
is
not
spending
money
on
anything
that
might
produce
positive
outcomes,
they're
only
spending
money
and
that
money's
only
released
when
the
outcome
is
actually
verified
by
the
network
in
a
very
transparent
and
trusted
way.
The
second
thing
that's
exciting
about
this,
for
me,
is
that
anybody
within
the
country
or
Portugal
in
this
case
can
participate.
B
So
that's
a
that's
a
a
a
vineyard
that
has
you
know:
50
acres,
that's
never
before
participated
in
carbon
credit
programs,
but
now
could
sign
up
on
a
region
that
and
have
their
have
their
practices
verified
and
if
they
are
in
fact
sequestering
carbon
and
they
would
receive
the
ward
from
the
reward
from
the
Portuguese
government.
This
could
be
a
small
1
Acre
farm,
where
this
could
be
a
10,000
acre
ranch.
B
Anybody
who's
interested
in
participating
can
participate,
that's
very
different
than
than
the
current
model
of
carbon
credits,
so
outcomes
based
and
participation
is
broad,
all
right,
so
so
really
quickly.
The
the
five
core
elements
towards
the
system
that
region
network
is
building
to
make
this
happen
is
a
distributed.
Ledger
technology,
we're
building
on
blockchain,
share
shared
language,
ecological
state
protocols,
ecological
contracts
and
a
decentralized
governance
for
the
whole
for
the
whole
system.
B
Let
me
dive
into
each
one
of
those
just
just
briefly,
and
then
we'll
meet
up
with
other
events
as
a
team
and
go
into
question
and
answer.
If
you
have
deeper
questions,
so
we're
building
region
ledger
one
of
the
most
common
questions
we
get
asked
from
people
is:
why
don't
you?
Why
aren't
you
just
building
this
on
top
of
aetherium?
It
already
exists.
It's
already
proven
people
really
respect
it
and
there's
a
couple
answers
for
that.
As
of
right
now,
the
etherium
blockchain-
and
you
know
less
so
than
Bitcoin,
but
still
is
very.
B
Energy
intensive
there's
that
there's
a
big
there's,
a
there's,
a
plan
to
shift
to
proof
of
stake
rather
than
proof
of
work,
but
as
of
right
now
it's
still
running
on
a
proof-of-work
model.
That's
that's
not
really
in
line
with
what
we
want
to
build.
We
want
to
build
something:
that's
very
energy
efficient,
so
by
building
our
own
blockchain,
which
we
are
building
on
top
of
the
tenement
consensus
engine.
B
We're
able
to
do
to
set
we're
able
to
set
for
us
set
the
levels
of
the
number
of
verification
nodes
that
we
want
on
them
on
the
network,
so
that
allows
us
to
incredibly
reduce
the
amount
of
energy.
That's
used
just
for
the
validation
portion
of
the
blockchain.
There's
number
of
other
reasons.
Why
the
why
the
tender
mints
model
fits
our
domain-specific
approach
better
than
better
than
aetherium,
and
that
the
second
one
that
comes
to
mind
for
me
is
just
the
price
the
the
cost
of
a
transaction
on
a
theorem
has
now
gotten.
B
The
second
thing
we're
doing
is
building
a
language
called
the
series
language.
This
is
a
domain-specific
language,
that's
built
specifically
for
ecological
state
protocols
and
ecological
contracting
contracts.
So
one
of
the
things
that
we
hope
that
happens
from
this
is
that
it
creates
a
very
easy
to
use.
You
know,
potentially
even
drag-and-drop
contracting
user
interface
for
people
that
are
wanting
to
interact
with
the
system.
B
It's
a
ultimate
goal
to
make
it
as
easy
as
that,
so
ecological
state
protocols
are
kind
of
at
the
center
of
what
we're
building
I've
mentioned
them
a
bit
already,
eventually,
there'll
be
a
broad
set
of
ecological
state
protocols,
and
the
role
that
regen
network
is
playing
in
the
production
of
those
protocols
is
more
like
a
facilitator
of
a
conversation.
We're
getting
them
started
right
now.
B
We
have
a
group
of
PhD
scientists
that
are
working
on
the
kind
of
the
minimum
viable
protocols
to
start
out
the
process,
but
in
the
long
run,
region
region
Foundation
will
be,
will
be
stewarding
a
conversation
that
invites
the
academic
community,
the
scientific
community
and
anyone
else
in
that
wants
to
help
help
us
upgrade
these
protocol.
So
over
time
they
just
iteratively
become
better
and
better
and
better.
B
Simply
from
remote
sensing
data
from
trusted
satellite
data
alone,
as
we
get
into
more
complexed
protocols
like
carbon
sequestration,
we're
going
to
we're
going
to
have
to
invite
in
a
lot
more
voices
into
the
conversation
about
how
to
do
that
really
really
well
ecological
contracts.
I've
mentioned
quite
a
bit.
This
is
the
functionality
that
allows
anyone
from
an
individual,
a
philanthropist,
Foundation
corporation
or
a
government,
to
write
a
contract
that
that
incentivizes
farmers
and
land
managers
to
shift
towards
the
ecological
outcomes
that
they
want
to
see
in
the
world
and
decentralized
governance.
B
So
the
region
consortium
is
a
is
a
consortium
of
known
actors
from
the
nonprofit
world
and
from
the
corporate
world
who
have
have
applied
to
be
a
part
of
the
governance
model
of
region
network
and
are
known
to
have
been
players
that
have
really
deeply
leaned
into
the
sustainability
and
regeneration
movement
up
until
now.
So
what
we're?
What
we're
looking
for
here
is
not
an
anonymous.
B
C
B
Are
kind
of
co-owning
the
ledger
itself
and
and
doing
the
governance
for
the
foundation.
This
the
region
consortium
will
govern
the
ledger
and
elects
the
Board
of
Directors
for
the
foundation
in
the
in
the
medium
term.
So
just
to
go
back
over
that
real
quick
distributed.
Ledger
technology,
shared
language,
ecological
state
protocols,
ecological
contracts
and
decentralized
governance
are
kind
of
the
five
core
elements
to
regen
ledger.
B
Each
of
those
could
have
their
own
webinar
and
probably
multiple
to
dive
into
the
details,
but
I'll
kind
of
leave
it
at
that
for
now,
who's
who's
kind
of
Stewart
nests
into
the
world
we've
pulled
together
a
really
engaged
and
impassionate
team
of
people
from
the
both
from
the
development
space,
from
the
engineering
space
and
from
the
ecological
agriculture
space.
To
really
bring
this
bring
this
project
into
motion
or
hope,
and
our
need
is
that
we
build
a
really
broad
network
of
players
to
help
make
this
happen
and
that's
that's.
B
What
I
would
like
you
to
take
from
this
from
this
slide
shows
that
I'd,
like
you
to
join
the
network,
there's
a
few
different
ways
that
you
can
do
it.
One
is
join
the
conversation,
so
we
have
a
public
riot
channel.
We
have
a
public
telegram
channel
we'd
like
you
two
to
join
the
conversation.
There
ask
questions,
get
involved
really
lean
in
to
help
us
see
things
that
we're
not
seeing.
Currently.
B
The
second
way
that
you
can
join
the
network
is,
if
you
have
an
organization
or
a
company,
that's
interested
in
being
part
of
the
region
consortium.
You
know
contact
us
about
that.
Maybe
we're
the
ultimate
vision
is
that
we
have.
You
know
a
hundred
five
hundred,
a
thousand
a
thousand
different
groups
in
the
consortium
all
helping
to
govern
and
steward
this
model
forward,
and
the
third
way
is
that
we've
just
opened
a
token
sale.
So
if
anyone
out
there
is
interested
in
participating
in
our
fundraising
effort,
we'd
love
to
have
your
participation.
B
So
at
this
point,
I
would
like
to
invite
back
Gregory
land
way.
The
CEO
of
regen
network
back
into
the
fold
and
I'd
like
to
invite
Aaron
Crais
Elias,
who
is
our
chief
technical
officer,
and
we
want
to
take
questions
from
the
group,
so
I
believe
Brian
Weinberg,
who
does
partnerships
with
our
we'll,
be
reading
the
questions.
D
B
D
B
D
To
at
least
some
degree
yeah-
and
you
know
just
to
call
up-
there's
been
some-
you
know
everybody
on
this.
This
chat
and
participating
is
an
expert
in
their
own
way.
So
you
know
we
welcome
you
in
this
conversation
as
peers,
we're
all
learning
together
and
we
need
you
to
help
work
on
such
a
such
a
project.
B
I've,
you
know
that
is
such
an
awesome
point.
I
mean
one
thing,
one
thing
that
people
often
say
when
they
first
check
out
a
website
and
hear
about
our
project.
Oh
you're,
a
carbon
credit
project
and
I
want
to
be
so
clear
that
carbon
credits
are
not
what
we're
doing
carbon
drawdown
is
exciting
to
us
and
interesting
to
us.
But
that's
not
what
we're
trying
to
do
here
we're
trying
to
regenerate
the
planet.
B
You
know
ecosystems
really
becoming
viable
and
vital
again
communities
becoming
resilient
again
people
beginning
to
make
a
living
from
agriculture
that
really
serves
their
families
in
their
communities.
You
know
our
our
our
ecological
systems,
being
vibrant,
our
waterways
being
healthy.
Are
our
students
being
strong?
That's
what
we
want
to
see
and
if
we
do
that.
Well,
then,
the
carbon
sequestration
just
follows
totally.
D
So
you
know
the
reason
why
we
cut
the
presentation
short.
You
know
we
could
go
to
many.
We
could
take
two
hours
three
hours
for
this
presentation
and
for
all
that's
gone
in.
We
want
to
have
this
dynamic
discussion,
so
let's
jump
right
in
to
the
first
questions:
the
first
two
from
Richard
Madras
and
Fernanda
Ibarra
they're,
quite
similar,
so
I'm
going
to
package
them
together.
The
question
is
about:
how
does
the
verification
process
you
speak
of
work?
D
What's
the
auricle
process
for
your
database,
the
process
of
verification
and
the
tech
that
you're
using
to
verify
this
looks
like
Aaron
raised
his
hand,
as
you
know,
and
so
I
think
that
I
saw
him
raise
an
hand.
Anybody
who
wants
to
take
this
question:
let's
let's
address
it
for
Richard
and
Fernanda.
Why.
A
E
Sure
I
can
take
a
crack
at
it,
so
we're
gonna
be
starting
with
satellite
imagery
as
the
basis
or
for
the
verification
protocols
that
we're
creating.
But
the
idea
is
to
create
an
open
architecture
so
that
anybody
can
kind
of
codify
the
algorithms
that
are
used
for
verification
using
different
data
sources
and
so
that
those
can
be
run
on
a
public
infrastructure.
A
public,
compute
infrastructure,
I
connect
it
to
the
ledger.
So.
A
A
So
in
some
cases
you
know
we're
sort
of
using
this
publicly
available
satellite
information
at
the
moment
that,
as
sort
of
like
this
larger
overarching
consensus
that
this
is
happening,
you
know
there's
daily
updates
of
what's
happening
in
the
world
that
that
is
publicly
available,
that
we
can
sort
of
use
as
anchor
data.
And
then,
in
addition
to
that,
in
order
to
find
out
more
details
about
what
happened
in
terms
of
the
carbon
cycle
or
biodiversity
or
hydrological
cycle
on
a
landscape.
A
We're
creating
a
framework
whereby
people
who
are
executing
or
issuing
smart
contracts
can
basically
adjust
and
run
protocols
to
their
level
of
robustness
or
authentication,
and
what
that
means
is,
if
you
need
a
third
party
to
actually
go
out
and
physically,
take
a
soil
sample
to
test
against
a
baseline
and
that's
the
robustness
of
your
use
case.
That's
something
that
our
architecture
can
service.
However,
if
if
all
you
need
is
sort
of
the
satellite
proof,
the.
A
Sense
then,
the
mini
smoke
on
contracting
situations.
That
is
enough,
and
so
it's
really
context
specific
how
robust
the
verification
needs
to
be,
but
we're
building
the
open
architecture
for
many
different
levels
of
verification
to
coexist.
Because
really,
we
feel
like
that's.
That's
the
intervention
point
to
open
up
a
whole
new
landscape
of
opportunities
to
be
valuing
ecological
regeneration
in
many
different
ways.
You
know
I'm,
not
just
carbon
credits
like
Christian
was
saying,
although
those
can
run
is
unlikely.
Those
will
be
quite
a
robust
methodology
when
we're
working
with
our
friends
at
nori.
A
We're
really
talking
to
them
about
up
levelling
the
amount
of
trust
that
exists
in
biological,
carbon
stocks
and
Mike
I
was
noticing
my
comp
from
the
noble
Research
Institute,
which
is
an
amazing
organization,
was
talking
about.
You
know
the
durability
and
longevity
of
the
carbon
storage.
So
these
are
places
where
we
really
are
partnering
with
other
protocols
to
be
able
to
run
and,
however
robust
do
you
need
the
verification,
that's
something
that
can
be
run
on
top
of
region
network.
E
Think
I
would
I
would
just
say
that
it's
it's
pretty
complex
and
probably
a
lot
more
complex
than
we
can
go
into.
You
know
in
this
call,
but
there's
definitely
question
we'd
like
to
this
we'd
love
to
discuss
further
on
on
our
riot
chat
channel.
Anybody
wants
to
you,
know
kind
of
learn
about
all
the
different
details
that
we're
thinking
about,
because
there's
definitely
a
lot
of
different
pieces
and
they're
very
context.
Specific
and.
A
Check
the
white
paper
out,
it
may
answer
some
of
your
questions
and
then
dive
in
with
us
and
and
ultimately
this
is
a
decentralized
approach,
so
we're
we're
trusting
in
collective
intelligence
in
order
to
bring
this
forward,
we're
not
trying
to
say
that
we
have
a
proprietary
protocol
that
will
rule
them
all
we're
trying
to
say
that
this
takes
a
whole
community
of
people
developing
many
different
ways
of
verifying
what's
happening
on
the
ground.
In
order
to
generate
that
trust.
Okay,.
D
A
The
there's
going
to
be
we're
asking
our
first
round
of
funders
and
and
other
folks
who
are
participating
in
the
token
sale
to
place
some
of
their
tokens
into
rewards
and
the
foundation
itself
will
also
have
a
substantial
reward
to
sort
of
create
that
first
incentive
for
different
types
of
ecological
regeneration,
namely
we're
very
interested
in
soil,
carbon
sequestration
and
and
helping
accelerate
innovation
and
verification
in
that
realm.
So
that's
sort
of
I
think
that's
a
good
answer
for
now
and
we
can
dig
into
it
deeper
on
the
riot
channel
or
in
person.
B
D
We'll
post
a
link
to
those
channels
in
the
chat
function
now
so
that
you
have
ready
access,
you
can
go
ahead
and
jump
into
the
conversation
there,
they're
quite
Lively.
So
the
next
question
is
from
Manuel,
muscari,
yellow,
I,
hope,
I'm,
saying
your
name
right.
Why
not?
Some
didi
POS
face
blockchain
like
AOS
or
a
Liske.
A
Yeah
so
I
mean
I'll
answer
briefly
and
then
pass
it
over
to
Aaron.
So
we
are
using
essentially
a
delegated
proof
of
stake
system,
we're
not
interested
in
using
a
different
public
chain
infrastructure,
because
we
actually
feel
like
it's
important
for
the
trust
and
verification
to
have
a
community
of
actors
governing
the
system
that
are
actually
specifically
dedicated
to
ecological
domain
and
outcome,
verification
and
payments.
So
I'm
going
to
pass
it
over
to
Aaron.
A
To
give
you
the
the
more
technical
perspective
of
why
we've
chosen
tender
mint,
which
is
a
really
powerful
consensus
engine,
but
in
general
we
feel
like
the
our
ability
to
craft
our
governance
that
reflects
the
creating
a
decentralized
ecological
ledger
is
really
one
of
the
primary
reasons
why
we
didn't
use
one
of
the
alternatives
to
aetherium.
So
it's
a
public
existing
public
chain,
so
Aaron
would
do
you
have
any
additions
to
that.
Would
you
like
to
speak
to
why
we've
decided
to
move
forward
at
this
stage
with
tinder
Minh,
so.
E
I
actually
think
you
covered
it
pretty
well,
I
think
a
lot
of
it
is
around.
Governance
at
Endermen
allows
us
to
have
a
permission,
validator
set
and
and
that
functionality
is
basically
already
built.
We
don't
have
to
deal
with
the
consensus
layer
and
we
can
build
their
own
blockchain
on
top
of
that
and
have
jamayne
specific
functionality.
E
You
know
given
given
some
of
the
things
that
have
happened
with
public
changes,
and
you
know
in
particular
the
the
hacks
and
bugs
and
pre
large
smart
contracts
and
etherium.
We
do
think
that
having
some
answer
to
governance
is
important
and
like
regular,
he
was
saying
that
if
that
governance,
you
know
a
governess
was
a
conversation,
a
huge
conversation
that
we
had
I.
Neither
said
that
the
position
that
we're
taking
may
be
a
bit
controversial.
C
E
That
really
care
about
ecological
regeneration
as
their
purpose,
so
it's
sort
of
a
distributed
trust
system,
maybe
in
contrast
to
a
fully
trust
list
system,
which
is
the
idea
of
a
public
chain,
but
there's
also
a
kind
of
scalability
and
compute
up
our
concerns
that
we're
thinking
about.
So
we
actually
want
to
be
able
to
run
these
ecological
state
protocols,
which
some
of
them
involved
a
pretty
substantial
amounts
of
geospatial
computation
data
analysis.
You
know
running
machine
learning,
classifiers.
E
We
want
to
be
doing
that
essentially
on
chain,
or
we
say
like
almost
on
chain,
meaning
that
maybe
one
or
two
nodes
will
run
the
actual
computation,
but
because
there's
we
essentially
know
which
organizations
are
running
each
of
the
nodes.
We
can
use
an
audit
process
and
the
challenge
process
to
ensure
that
even
if
one
or
two
nodes
run
a
very
expensive
computation
that
there's
pretty
high
level
of
trust
of
that
computation,
it's
accurate.
You
know
there
will
be
record
as
you
can
audit
and
go
back
in
history.
E
There's
a
social
kind
of
reputation
component
involved
in
doing
computations
in
maintaining
the
trust
of
those
state
protocols
for
the
actual
contract
contracts
themselves,
which
in
you
know
monetary
rewards
all
the
notes
will
validate
those
computations,
but
there's
also
a
difference
in
the
media.
See
there
could
be
a
challenge
window
for
the
state
protocols.
That's
longer
and
contracts
themselves
would
be
more
immediate.
So
there's
there's
some
specific
needs.
We
want
to
address
regarding
just
the
complexity
of
the
computations
that
we
want
to
to
on
chain
that
we
can't
do
with
an
existing
public
change.
E
E
You
know
so
that
we
can
look
at
what
the
needs
are
of
users
of
the
system
and
try
to
adjust
transaction
fees
to
really
incentivize
use
and
then,
with
tender
mint
we
can
have
a
limited
set
of
validator
nodes.
We
can
put
a
requirement
that
they're
all
using
renewable
energy,
which
we
intended
to
so
there's
a
number
of
things
we
can
do
in
terms
of
energy
efficiency
and
I
saw.
That
was
one
of
the
questions.
Yeah.
D
E
You
know
so,
even
if
you're
unproven
of
stake,
if
you
have
enough
nose,
it's
still
a
pretty
high
energy
footprint
with
with
the
tender
MIT
model,
it's
a
known
set
of
validator
nodes.
Now
any
other
node
could
participate
and
be
like
a
read-only
node.
We
can't
really,
you
know,
stop
that
and
we
don't
want.
So
we
want
it
to
still
be
a
public
data
chain,
but
basically
and
tender
Menaul
that
each
node
knows
the
basically,
the
public
keep
all
the
other
nodes
and
knows
which
notes
allow
in
the
consensus
process.
E
You
can
have
a
bit
of
you
can
use
the
the
compute
power
that's
available
on
those
nodes
more
efficiently.
You
know
modern
CPUs
have
four
CPUs,
but
you
know
four
cores,
but
a
blockchain
would
generally
only
require
one
of
those
course.
So
why
not
find
a
way
that
you
can
use
those
other
three
cores
and
all
the
nodes?
And
you
can
still
have
a
blockchain,
still
have
what
I'm
going
to
show
you
to
trust
but
be
more
efficient.
D
Awesome,
thank
you.
The
next
question,
I'm
gonna,
continue
to
wrap
as
many
people
into
the
questions
as
I
can
because
there's
so
many
questions
here
and
you
know
if
we
don't
get
to
them
in
the
next
13
minutes,
then
you
know
please
post
these
questions
in
our
telegram
or
a
riot,
but
we
really
want
to
be
in
this
conversation.
So
then
the
next
question
is
sort
of
like
how
do
I
get
involved
like
how
does
one
try
out
region?
Network
people
are
asking
from
a
farmer
perspective
in
northern
Kenya.
A
Great,
so
thanks
for
her
asking
we're
at
this
stage
we're
just
a
little
bit
pre
pilot
and
so
we're,
that
is
to
say
we're
working
with
a
couple
of
pilot
farms
right
now
to
be
pushing
data
and
working
on
verification
methodologies
and
we're
building
sort
of
the
digital
infrastructure.
But
we're
not
in
a
place
to
do
a
large
sort
of
international
pilot.
A
What
this
looks
like
in
the
field
in
order
to
create
verification
methodologies
and
push
smart
contracts
between
users
so
engage
with
us
on
riot
and
we'll
be
in
touch
in
the
next
month
or
so
was
sort
of
a
user
discovery
process
where
we
can
start
leaving
people
in
to
be
being
part
of
beta
testing
and
pilots.
So
that's
on
the
sort
of
youth
side.
A
If
you
want
to
be
a
user
and
participate
in
helping
create
this
this
platform
with
us
on
the
investor
side,
if
you're
a
United,
States
accredited
investor,
you
can
engage
with
us
to
participate
in
our
ongoing
presale,
which
is
open
right
now
and
if
you're
international,
according
to
your
own
country's
legal
perspective
around
you
know
what
pre-purchasing
a
utility
token
looks
like
from
your
jurisdiction.
You
can
participate
with
us
based
on
on
your
legal
jurisdictions,
rules
and
so
I'm,
just
to
be
clear.
A
We're
issuing
our
tokens
as
a
security
in
the
United
States,
because
it
is
a
speculative
investment.
You
know
you're.
Basically,
people
are
speculating
on
when
this
platform
is
vibrant
and
fully
operational.
The
cost
of
the
token
will
be
higher
than
it
is
now.
When
it's
just
sort
of
gambling
on
on
the
team
and
the
technology
and
the
community
to
pull
it
together,
and
so
we
really
want
people
to
think
carefully
about
if,
if
that
kind
of
investment
is
for
them,
and
and
if
it's
legal
in
their
whatever
jurisdiction,
you're
you're
investing
from
to
participate.
A
B
D
Yes,
awesome
and
kind
of
an
another
related
question
is
what
steps
should
researchers,
what
are
the
protocols
short-term
and
medium-term
protocols
that
you're
developing?
In
addition,
the
cover
crops
in
no-till
and
what
are,
if
you're,
a
researcher
you
know
how
can
you
help
engage
with
these
ecological
protocols?
This
is
from
owen,
kortner
awesome.
A
Well,
thanks,
oh
and
yeah
we'd
love
to
have
a
broader
and
deeper
engagement.
I
mean
the
the
functional
answer
is
get
with
us
on
riot
and
then
we
can
start
linking
you
into
the
working
group.
So
what
we've
done
and
I'll
pass
this
on
to
you
in
just
a
second
Aaron,
to
talk
about
the
different
working
groups
that
we
have
operating,
but
basically
we'd
love
to
invite
you
into
the
ecological
state
protocol
working
group,
the
science
group
there's
an
international
team
of
scientists
working
on
things.
E
So
I
this
is
something
that
we
haven't
100%
launched
yet,
but
we're
we're
kind
of
doing
the
we're
trying
to
set
up
these
working
groups
where
we
can
have
basically
public
engagement
in
each
of
the
sub
projects
within
our
projects.
So
there'd
be
a
working
group
around
regen
ledger
and
the
smart
contracting
frameworks.
E
Correct
isn't
maybe
he's
here
but
he's
not
here
in
the
panel,
but
he's
leading
off
that
part
of
the
project
and
I
can't
really
comment
on
specifically
what
other
subgroups
that
he
has
planned
are
and
then
there's
going
to
be
some
front-end
app
development,
and
you
know,
as
these
things
evolve
with
our
own
internal
development,
we'll
be
posting
them
on
our
social
media
channels,
and
we
wanted
to
create
a
way
that
basically
people
can
be
looped
into
the
development
that
they
can.
If
they
want
to
collaborate
with
us
or
they
have.
You
know,
design
considerations.
E
They
want
to
make
sure
that
we're
thinking
about
you
know
hopping
into
one
of
these
working
groups,
which
should
basically
be
a
regularly
scheduled
video
call.
That's
posted
on
the
get
lab
project
that
you
could
jump
in
on
and
then
Araya
channels,
specifically
for
that
period,
that
that
would
be
the
way
that
people
can
get
involved
with
the
development
just.
B
To
speak
to
a
couple
of
the
early
kind
of
Minimum
Viable
Product
protocols,
we've
mentioned
already
no-till,
no-till
verification,
as
well
as
cover
crop
verification.
Those
are
those
are
like
what
Gregory
called
low-hanging
fruit
in
terms
of
verification
protocols,
but
they're
also
super
exciting.
On
the
other
hand,
I
mean
they're,
not
they're,
not
that
agroforestry
Polly
cultural
systems
that,
like
a
lot
of
us
dream
about
in
ecological
agriculture
space,
but
if
we
can
incentivize
farmers,
you
know
in
the
Midwest
the
United
States
or
you
know
in
the
in
the
big.
B
You
know:
monoculture
realms
of
this
planet
that
are
growing
in
with
conventional
agriculture
to
shift
towards
no-till
practices.
That's
a
big
deal
for
the
planet.
So
even
though
that's
a
low-hanging
fruit,
and
not
quite
as
exciting
to
some
of
us,
it's
got
incredible
application
and
hundreds
of
thousands
of
acres
there
that
are
possible,
maybe
even
millions
of
acres
that
are
possible
used
cases
for
those
for
those
protocols.
B
I
think
one
of
the
other
early
adopting
protocols
that
we're
looking
at
is
a
verification
of
rotational
grazing
of
cattle,
because
the
shift
from
from
just
general
grazing,
in
a
space
to
the
frequent
moving
of
cattle
over
landscape
is
a
is
a
profoundly
huge
shift
in
terms
of
the
impact
on
the
impact
on
the
planet.
Going
from
a
incredibly
degra
Tori
pattern
to
an
actually
regenerative
pattern,
I
think.
A
So,
if
you're
working
on
an
ecological
state
protocol
like
holistic
grazing,
like
savory
I'm
talking
to
them
in
a
couple
hours,
maybe
some
of
you
are
in
the
call
with
us
or
Noble,
or
you
know
the
green
America
working
group
or
the
regenerative
organic
certification.
There's
a
lot
of
people
doing
really
great
work
and
we're
not
trying
to
out-compete
you
building
a
better
protocol,
we're
trying
to
build
a
platform
where
your
protocol
can
run
and
help
achieve
smart
contracting,
seamless,
frictionless
payment
for
and
rewards
for
ecological
services
and
functions.
B
And
even
the
creation
of
that
protocol
is
a
contribution
to
the
Commons,
because
then
it's
made
open-source
everyone
else
can
see
it.
They
can
comment
on
it,
upgrade
it
and
over
time
we
it
through
an
iterative
process
just
make
it
better
and
better
and
better
so
I
love
having
the
groups
like
the
ones
that
craigers
just
mentioned,
leaning
in
and
working
on.
That's.
D
Awesome
I'm
gonna
go
ahead
and
ask
another
question:
I
know
that
we're
sort
of
right
on
the
right
on
the
hour
or
one
more.
So
this
question
is
related
to
the
use
case
of
the
XR
n
token.
How
are
the
fees
going
to
be
decided
by
the
nodes
in
the
transaction
fees
and
how
do
you
encourage
adoption
and
guarantee
contracts
in
the
system
have
value
in
US
dollars
from
Michael?
So.
A
A
So
it's
used
so
that
people
so
that
the
the
validator
nodes
can
get
paid
for
running
validation
and
computation
and
farmers
can
get
paid
for
data
and
all
of
these
other
things.
So
that's
the
main
usage
is,
is
just
in
all
the
transactions
that
are
taking
place
to
sort
of
create.
What
we
think
the
emergent
property
of
this
is
the
ecological
regeneration.
But
this
is
an
ecological
knowledge
platform.
Essentially
so
there's
a
marketplace
is
the
short
answer:
how
do
these?
How
are
fees
assessed?
A
What
do
the
fees
need
to
be
in
order
to
you
know
incentivize
the
computation
and
validation
happening,
so
it's
a
flexible
and
dynamic
system,
we're
not
having
a
single
set
fee
or
something
like
that.
So
that's
the
that's
the
short
answer.
Erin
can
give
a
more
a
more
technical
and
detailed
answer
and
how
that
parlays,
we
probably
don't
have
time
for
that
happy
to
chat
more
and
if
you'd
like
this
is
treated
in
some
detail
in
the
white
paper.
A
How
do
we
make
it
so
that
people
can
get
paid
in
whatever
currency
makes
the
most
sense?
Well,
one
of
the
nice
things,
and
one
of
the
reasons
why
we
chose
tender
mint
is
because
it's
part
of
an
ecosystem
connect,
sort
of
an
interchain
universe
connected
by
cosmos,
which
is
about
to
come
online
next
month,
which
allows
us
to
whitelist,
they're,
cryptographic,
tokens
and
currencies,
which
means
that
way.
A
Basically,
we
can
create
a
scenario
where,
whatever
the
the
currency
of
choice
for
a
farmer
is
to
actually
execute
a
smart
contract
so
that
that
money
is
flowing
in
you
know
something
that
makes
sense
like
US
dollars
or,
or
you
know
euros
or
whatever
it
might
be.
We
can
engineer
the
system
so
that
the
smart
contract
is
actually
executed
in
the
currency.
That
makes
sense
for
the
land
steward
or
the
farmer,
and
the
fees
are
getting
taken
out
of
that
in
the
X
or
in
token.
A
So
that's
the
quick
and
dirty
of
it
and
I
think
I'll,
just
sort
of
conclude
by
I'm
overwhelmed
and
grateful
that
everybody
showed
up.
We
had
over
80
folks
at
the
peak
of
things
and
just
really
excited
to
be
building
a
community
with
all
of
you
and
that's
what
it's
going
to
take
so
hasta
la
to
him
that
asean
siempre
and
I'll
pass
it
back
over
to
Brian
too
and
Christian
and
Aaron
if
they
have
any
parting
words.
So
thank
you.
It's
just.
D
Wanted
to
say
that
we
answered
18
questions,
we
have
20
more,
that
we
haven't
answered.
So,
let's,
let's
make
it
a
point
to
take
this
conversation
to
riot.
There's
a
lot
of
great
chat.
That's
happening
around
our
protocols
around
wire.
You
know.
Why
could
how
could
we
be
using
hollow
chain
or
what's
our
take
on
hollow
chain
who
owns
the
data
farmer
identity?
D
You
know,
however,
we.
What
are
the
constraints
put
in
place
to
prevent
gaming,
so
you
guys
are
really
spot
on
asking
all
the
questions
that
we've
been.
You
know,
wracking
our
brains
with
the
last
few
months
answering
and
getting
clear
on
and
we'd
love
to
have
you
part
of
the
community
join
us
on
riot.
Thank
you
so
much
for
joining
and
if
there's
anything
we
can
do
to
support,
please
let
us
know
so
Christian
any
any
parting
thoughts.
Yeah.
B
Just
just
connecting
with
us
I
mean
there's
the
online
ways
of
connecting
with
us,
but
we're
also
going
to
try
to
be
present
as
many
of
that.
As
many
of
the
you
know,
crypto
events
that,
as
we
can
we're
we're
kind
of
limited
by
you
know,
are
where
we
are
physically
gated
in
the
world,
I'm
traveling
over
to
Europe
and
then
in
the
next
month,
gonna
be
an
Amsterdam
for
a
couple
events
gonna
be
in
Zook
Switzerland
for
a
couple
events:
I'd
love
to
connect
with
people
at
those.
B
At
those
events
at
Krypto,
Valley
and
the
TechCrunch
place,
it
will
certainly
be
at
Def,
Con
and
and
then
we
have
that
webinar
coming
up
on
Thursday
as
well.
So
we
for,
for
legal
reasons
we
need
to.
We
need
to
segregate
the
US
accredited
investor
communication
from
the
international
investor
communications.
Those
are
technically
two
different
sales.
So
if
there's
any
US
and
credited
investors
who
are
interested
in
diving
a
little
more
deeply
into
the
kind
of
the
token
mix
of
the
project
on
Thursday.
B
At
the
same
time,
we
have
another
webinar
that
kind
of
dives
into
that
so
yeah.
Well,
you
could
you
can
probably
find
the
information
in
the
chat
there-
maybe
Alissa
there-
okay,
great
so
I'm,
not
looking
at
the
chat,
but
if
and
if
you
lose
it
if
this
closes
reach
out
to
us
on
riot,
we
can
give
you
that
information
again
thanks
everybody
for
your
time
really
appreciate
it.