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From YouTube: Regen Mainnet LIVE! | $REGEN Token Economics
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A
C
C
The
token
economics
paper
with
yours
truly
and
yeah,
all
around
great
guy
and
and
garrett
who's,
been
an
advisor
to
the
project
for
quite
some
time
and
is
how
shall
I
say,
mathematically
inclined
and
and
also
just
pretty
deeply
in
the
sort
of
in
the
crypto
economics
and
sustainable
finance
worlds
to
have
a
quick
conversation,
and
my
hope
here
is
to
give
folks
first,
an
understanding
of
just
the
general
token
economics
of
region
ledger
right
as
a
proof
of
stake,
blockchain
and
how
that
all
works,
but
also,
I
want
to
go
a
layer
deeper
into
what
we're
hoping
to
innovate,
what
the
opportunities
are
for
sort
of
token
engineering
as
far
as
the
next
layer
up
around
carbon
credits,
maybe
green
bonds,
ecological
data.
C
Just
all
of
these
things
that
we
end
up
thinking
a
lot
about.
So
some
of
this
will
be
letting
everybody
know
here.
It's.
C
C
Some
of
some
of
this
will
be,
you
know,
sort
of
like
informational
out
to
the
community
in
case
there's
questions
about
what
the
token
economics
are,
and
some
of
this
will
be
sort
of
speculative
and
creative.
C
So
with
that
I
mean
first,
of
course
I've
been
I
loved
in
the
last
couple
of
sessions
how
people
were
yeah
just
getting
a
chance
to
introduce
themselves
so
now
that
I've
sort
of
framed
out
what
we're
going
to
talk
about
will,
would
you
mind
giving
us
just
a
brief
introduction
to
yourself
and
then
and
then
maybe
we'll
do
a
quick
round
like
that
and
then
we'll
I'll
pass
it
to
you
again
to
give
us
a
brief
introduction
after
we've
all
introduced
ourselves
to
the
token
economics,
so
will
mr
wills
all
take
it
from
here.
D
Sure
yeah
I'm
calling
in
today
from
northfield
massachusetts
overlooking
the
connecticut
river
valley.
I
met
gregory
on
the
shore
of
lake
champlain,
back
in
2010
at
a
slow
money
conference
and
we've
been
working
together
on
regenerative
agriculture
and
alternative
economic
projects.
Since
then.
So,
when
things
got
rolling
with
regen
network
in
2017,
I
joined
the
team
and
my
first
hat
was
the
economics
hat
yeah.
Maybe
I'll
just
keep
it
to
that
for
now,.
A
C
B
I
met
gregory
and
christian
and
will
in
what
is
apparently
2017,
but
I
really
thought
was
2016
at
the
assemblage
in
new
york
city
up
on
on
28th
street,
and
I
had
a
background
in
climate
finance
prior
to
my
tenure
in
crypto
land
and
the
biggest
problem
with
climate
finance
is
the
verifiability
and
the
auditability
of
claims
surrounding
literally
anything,
and
so
when
I
met
gregory
and
learned
what
was
happening,
I
was
you
know
very,
very
excited,
because
this
is
really
like
a
a
trillion
dollar
problem.
Yes,
what
is
this
cliff?
I
click.
C
B
I
was
deep
in
the
cliff
yeah,
so
my
first,
my
first
ever
startup
or
whatever
was
like
a
robo-advisor
for
sustainable
investments
and
and
kind
of
got
out
of
that.
Because
you
can't
really
it's
hard,
you
can't
you
can't
really
make
change.
You
have
to
trust
the
company
to
make
change
for
you
and
public
equity
or
private
equity
or
vc,
and
there's
no
way
of
knowing
that
they
do
anything
really
and
and
regen
kind
of
solves
that
problem.
B
So
I
you
know,
as
the
kids
say,
I
aped
aped
into
regent-
and
I
am
one
of
those
kids
and
andrew
shout
out
andrew
who's
in
the
the
audience
right
now
d,
gender
regen
both
definitely
both
definitely
both
but
yeah,
and
along
with
andrew
who's.
The
cio
for
a
very
large
family
office
is
who's
in
the
the
audience
today.
Has
we've
been
working
together
on
this
for
a
long
time.
C
Awesome
thanks
garrett,
so
yeah
I
mean
folks
know
me,
I'm
gregory
one
of
the
co-founders
and
and
and
recently
grand
poobah
and
benevolent
dictator
of
rnd
inc
or
as
or
ceo
whatever
you
want
to
say.
So,
just
a
brief.
You
know
window
into
my
passion
around
the
economic
side
of
things,
so
my
I
sort
of
dove
straight
in
after
my
undergraduate
degree
in
environmental
science.
C
I
dove
straight
into
the
permaculture
and
eco
village
world,
and
I
I
spent
a
lot
of
time
thinking
about
local
economics,
local
currencies,
working
on
and
and
most
of
my
sort
of
vocation
or
career.
The
way
I
made
money
for
almost
10
years
was
really
building
business
models
based
on
regenerative
agriculture,
regenerative
land
use
and
sort
of
landscape
transformation
and
and
really
at
the
sort
of
micro
scale.
What
does
it
take
for
a
business
to
operate
in
today's
economy
in
such
a
way
that
the
business
owner
is
profiting
through
regenerative
agriculture?
C
And
I
really
started
to
see
that
there
needed
to
be
a
systemic
transformation,
because
at
a
macro
scale
economic
incentives
are
not
aligned
with
ecological
regeneration
and
so
just
started.
You
know
thinking
what
would
it
look
like
for
every
stakeholder
in
the
economy
to
be
long
on
planetary
regeneration?
C
What
needs
to
be
true?
What
needs
to
be
true
for
all
of
our
incentives
to
be
aligned
for
for
the
commons
to
be
regenerating
for
soil
to
be
regenerating
for
agroecosystems
to
be
the
foundation,
for
you
know,
ecological,
thriving
and
also
our
you
know,
sustenance
as
as
a
species
at
a
local
scale
and
a
global
scale.
C
What
would
that
look
like,
and
you
know
and
regen
network
the
need
to
have
sort
of
systemic
intervention
and
to
underpin
that
systemic
intervention,
as
garrett
was
talking
about
with
verifiable
claims,
so
that
we
can
actually
check?
Who
is
saying
what
about
where
and
what
does
that
relate
to
in
terms
of
real
ecological
health
outcome?
That
needs
to
be
infused
and
imbued
into
our
economic
system,
and
so
ecological
sentience
needs
to
be
connected
to
our
our
economic
logic.
C
The
wisdom
of
ecosystems
needs
to
make
its
way
into
financial
transactions
and
monetary
systems.
So,
let's
just
take
a
a
walk
through.
I
think
we're
going
to
talk
about
a
couple
of
different
layers
here.
C
I
think
we're
going
to
start
out
on
sort
of
data
integrity
and
the
proof
of
stake,
blockchain
and
the
role
of
regen
tokens
and
the
the
token
economics
of
that
layer
around
trying
to
create
a
transparent
peer-to-peer
ecological
ledger
as
the
foundation
for
the
rest
of
what
we're
talking
about
so
will
do
you
want
to
just
take
us
on
a
quick
walk
through
the
token
economics
at
that
sort
of
base
protocol
level
of
what's
being
built
here.
D
Yeah
sure-
and
so
we
can't
talk
about
token
economics
without
talking
about
consensus
and
when
we
were
at
the
drawing
board
back
in
2017
and
2018
we
talked
through
you
know:
we've
talked
through
proof
of
authority,
we
talked
through
dual
token
systems,
a
staking
token
and
a
fees
token
we
talked
through.
Is
it
a
kind
of
static
or
dynamic
supply?
D
There's
a
lot
of
factors
that
go
into
all
this
once
once
we
came
in
with
the
the
cosmos
camp
and
we're
clear
that
this
was
the
the
community
and
blockchain
that
we
wanted
to
be
building
on.
We
decided
that
the
place
to
to
begin
was
just
just
go
with
go
with
the
economics,
that's
already
the
default
in
cosmos.
D
So
actually
I
just
to
share
one
one
link
here:
there's
been
some
debate
on
staking
rewards
and
you
know:
do
we
want?
We
use
the
term
inflation,
even
though
it's
it's
not
actually
inflation,
that
inflation
refers
to
prices
and,
like
the
prices
of
atoms,
have
been
going
up,
even
though
the
supply
has
been
increasing
and
so
there's
demirage
models,
there's
kind
of
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
ways
we
could
go
here,
but
what
we
focused
on
was,
let's
just
start
with
something
that
we
know
works.
D
That's
been
proven
in
cosmos,
so
so
we're
basically
a
fork
of
cosmos's
token
economics
right
now,
and
what
the
token
economics
paper
that
I
shared
earlier
looks
at
that
network
security
level.
Just
we
want
a
a
network
here.
That's
we're
really
going
to
be
able
to
to
trust
and
we'll
be
able
to
do
a
lot
more
novel
things
on
top
of
that,
once
once
that's
really
solid,
and
so
maybe
in
a
moment
here
we'll
get
into
some
of
the
exciting
possibilities
that
arise
on
top
of
a
solid
chain.
D
A
C
C
Data
layer
that
allows
for
sort
of
instantaneous
transaction
between
peers
and
sort
of
maintaining
consensus,
so
that
data
and
transactions
are
available
publicly
in
a
permissionless
network.
C
So
in
our
work
you
know
we
want
ecological
data
to
be
available
as
it
relates
to
claims
and
we
want
ecological
assets
that
are
linked
to
that
data
to
be
able
to
be
classified
through
the
metadata
into
you
know
what
they
are
and
what
the
data
is
that
supports
them,
so
that
the
market
can
price
their
value
and-
and
we
want
there
to
be
sort
of
a
high
availability
of
all
this
information,
meaning
omni
availability.
We
don't
want
it
to
go
down.
C
We
don't
want
a
situation
in
which
those
assets
or
that
data
actually
goes
down.
So
all
of
the
base
layer.
Incentives
are
around
that
data,
integrity
and
data
available
availability
and
the
regen
staking
token
essentially
incentivizes,
a
group
of
validators
and
other
participants
to
co-create
that
sort
of
that
base
layer
that
foundational
layer
of
data,
integrity
and
availability,
so
so
taking
a
step
back.
Is
there
anything
that
you
would
like
to
add
to
that
in
terms
of
just
proof
of
stake?
Token
economics
and
regen
networks
sort
of
token
logic
garrett.
B
C
Yeah,
so
to
reiterate
some
things
that
will
said
we
went
with
it's
sort
of
a
funny
thing
to
say,
but
we
went
with
a
very
conservative
approach
to
our
token
economics.
We
went
with
a
battle
tested,
tried
and
true
token
economic
structure
of
a
proof-of-stake
blockchain,
based
on
the
cosmos
sdk
that
we
had
data
about
the
performance
of
that
blockchain.
C
About
the
you
know,
governance,
availability,
uptime,
all
the
things
that
we
cared
about.
We
could
look
and
we
could
look
at
the
performance
of
the
cosmos
hub
and
other
hubs,
and
we
could
say
great.
We
have
actual
empirical
evidence
that
this
is
working
in
the
following
ways:
we're
going
to
use
this
and
then,
as
a
community
we
can
upgrade
parameters
and
the
key
parameters
we
can
upgrade
include
inflation
or
the
the
rate
at
which
block
rewards
are
produced.
C
We
can
set
minimum
fee
floors
and
and
other
things
like
that,
and
we
can
actually
even
just
without
even
if
we
go
beyond
parameters
as
well
was
saying
we
can
transform
the
token
economics
as
a
community
sort
of
we're
like
a
decentral
bank
as
a
community,
we
can
change
the
token
mechanics
and
incentives
to
best
suit
the
use
case,
and
I
think
at
this
stage
we're
as
a
community.
I
hear
a
lot
of
people
talking,
I'm
firmly
also
of
the
opinion
we
want
to
do
modeling
and
have
a
solid
engineering
approach
to
any
changes.
C
We're
going
to
make
part
of
why
we
have
the
token
economic
system
we
do
is
because
we
had
empirical
evidence
that
it
was
working.
So
we
wanted
to
be
sort
of.
You
know,
conservative
in
that
way
about
sort
of
testing
something
and
then
unrolling
it
out
into
the
world.
So
with
all
of
that
kind
of
encapsulated
now
I
want
to
get
sort
of
speculative
and
have
fun.
So
now
we
can
talk
about.
C
You
know
the
macro
like:
what's
the
transformation,
what's
the
economic
transformation
we're
working
on
what
what
does
having
this
public
ecological
ledger
up
and
running
that
we
just
launched?
What
does
that
enable?
What
is
that
going
to
enable
us
to
do
what
experiments,
what
new
asset
types
or
commons
management
tools?
What
new
new?
What
ways
can
we
innovate?
Token
incentives
on
the
next
layer
up
for
credits
and
other
assets,
and
maybe
what's
the
role
of
if,
if
you
know,
bonus
points,
if
you
can
weave
this
into
weave
ibc
into
your
answer,
so
go
ahead.
D
Okay,
sure
so,
if
we
think
about
where
blockchain
has
been
and
where
it
has
is
going
there's
if
we
look
at
market
cap
and
things
like
that,
certainly
layer,
one
is
very,
very
important
at
this
point
in
time,
but
I
think,
as
we
move
into
this
next
decade
of
blockchain,
we're
going
to
be
seeing
more
and
more
real
world
assets
living
on
chain
and
a
lot
of
the
market
cap
is
going
to
shift
over
there
because
we're
going
to
be
taking
kind
of
other
value
and
representing
it
on
chain
and
letting
it
interact
with
and
and
to
to
talk
to
ibc.
D
There
will
be
interoperability
of
a
lot
of
different
tokens
all
time.
So,
for
example,
if
anyone
in
the
cosmos
network
wants
to
tie
into
ecological
assets,
they
can
do
that
through
through
regen
ledger.
D
But
I
guess
to
talk
about
where
we
want
to
go
here.
We
started
regen
because
we
wanted
to
I,
I
guess,
finance
planetary
regeneration.
How
do
we
compensate
land
stewards
for
positive
outcomes
and
how
do
we
create
the
ability
to
track
shifts
in
ecological
health
and
then
tie
those
to
to
financial
arrangements
that
capitalize
regeneration?
D
So
at
the
big
picture
level,
that's
that's
what
we're
looking
to
do
here.
Maybe
I'll
pass
it
over
to
you
garrett,
and
then
we
can
turn
this
into
a
conversation
here.
B
Yeah
sure,
so
I
think
a
lot
of
this
is
getting
into
the
things
that
really
drew
me
to
regen,
because
I'm
very
biased
on
the
enterprise
solutions
that
region
offers
and
more
and
more
the
solutions
that
it's
going
to
offer
for
dao's.
B
I'm
very
impressed
lately
by
the
legislation
in
the
united
states,
in
particular
in
vermont
and
washington,
and
I
think,
wyoming,
one
of
the
w
places
that
is
letting
people
open
these
laos
and
it's
going
to
allow
for
people
to
to
set
dows
up
any
on
any
chain
and
talk
to
region,
and
you
know,
buy
up
land
on
whatever,
whatever
chain
they're
initially
on
and
then
work
with
regen
to
capitalize
off
of
that
land
and
then
take
that
land
and
the
claims
to
the
the
data
of
that
land
as
well,
and
then
use
it
to
do
all
of
these
really
incredible
things
like
collateralize
them
for
loans
or
stable
coins
or
or
whatever,
and-
and
that's
always
been,
I
think,
in
the
crypto
native
vertical
of
of
regen.
B
I
think
that
that's
what
I'm
probably
most
excited
about
in
using
the
regen
token
for
a
governance
function
around
surrounding
the
distribution
of
those
things
or
even
allowing
things
into
crypto
native
consortiums
and
so
on,
is
really
incredible,
because
if
you
look
at
the
state
of
the
current
defy
market,
it's
really
just
stable
coins
and
insane
wacky
tokens
and
the
ability
to
add
natural
capital
assets
to
that
in
order
to
like
round
that
out
is,
is
really
remarkable
and
then,
on
the
other
side
of
things
like
as
more
and
more
people
begin
to
use
the
platform
and
the
velocity
increases
from
the
use
of
data
and
like
linking
people
up
in
transactions
and
and
so
forth,
it
will
be.
B
You
know
I
mean
it's
extremely
powerful
for
for
people
to
be
able
to
do
that.
Sorry,
I
was
distracted
because
david
says
we
have
four
minutes
left,
so
I
didn't
want
to
take
up
too
much
time
but
yeah.
If
I
was
to
harp
on
ibc
it's
because
we're
going
to
be
able
to
take
natural
capital
assets
and
bring
this
entirely
new
asset
class
verifiably
to
d5
into
crypto,
and
that's
pretty
much.
B
The
coolest
thing
that
anybody
is
working
on
in
my
opinion,
like
nobody,
is
doing
that,
and
nobody
can
do
that,
because
region
science
is
like
like
a1,
perfect
or
whatever.
So
it's
it's
really
incredible
and
everybody
who's
here
right
now
should
is
like
very
incredible
as
well,
because
this
is
like
easily
the
most
innovative
thing.
That's
happening
right
now
in
this
market.
C
Fantastic
guys,
so
I
think
I'll,
just
sort
of
a
few
closing
or
concluding
remarks
so
foundationally.
C
We
need
to
connect
the
existing
world
of
sort
of
existing
monetary
and
finance
world
to
ecological
regeneration,
and
we
need
to
do
so
in
a
way
that
is
of
high
integrity.
C
We
need
data
availability,
we
need
to
align
incentives
around
real
ecological
outcomes
and
we
need
to
innovate
assets
and
contract
types
that
sort
of
make
a
realign
profit
with
public
goods
and
the
provision
of
public
goods
like
carbon
sequestration
and
water
quality
outcomes,
biodiversity,
stewardship
and
support
of
endangered
species.
All
of
these
things
are
just
their
imperatives,
they're
essential.
C
We
also
recognize-
and
I
think
we
didn't
really
talk
about
this
in
in
this
session-
so
much,
but
I
do
want
to
sort
of
flag
the
importance
from
our
perspective,
around
inclusion,
participation
and
and
justice,
and
how
important
it
is
to
have
indigenous
people,
landscapes,
themselves,
land,
small
holder,
land,
stewards
and
sort
of
plurality
in
the
global
south
of
people
who
are
actually
caring
for
the
landscapes
that
are
going
to
provide
the
regenerative
outcomes
that
we
need
as
a
planet.
C
Those
stakeholders
need
to
be
included
in
the
very
foundation
of
the
public
infrastructure
in
the
system
and
that's
currently
something
that
those
people
are
excluded
from
the
financial
system
as
a
whole.
They
don't
get
to
participate
in
governance.
They
don't
get
to
participate
in
decision
making.
C
They
don't
get
to
participate
in
an
alignment
and
upside
around
the
system,
actually
transactions
and
other
things,
and
that
is
something
that
is
foundationally
different
about
what
region
network
is
trying
to
do,
which
is
to
include
all
of
the
stakeholders
who
are
participating
in
the
public
network
in
the
public
ledger
and
the
system
so
that
we
essentially
have
society
and
and
ecosystems
represented
at
the
base
layer
of
how
all
this
is
happening,
and
you
know
I
just
sort
of
want
to
emphasize
that
point
as
we're
closing
things
out
that
that
that
design
tension,
that
is,
the
design
tension
that
region
network
was
born
out
of.
C
How
do
we
connect
with
efficient
markets
right
and
empower
efficient
markets
where
they're
needed,
so
that
assets
can
be
generated
and
traded?
And
how
do
we
preserve
and
expand
the
commons
so
that
people
are
participating
in
governing
their
their
communities
and
their
ecosystems
and
the
foundation
of
healthy
markets?
And
how
do
we
bring
the
two
things
together,
region,
network
and
region
ledger
and
our
token
economics,
our
these
are
our
best
attempt,
and
I
just
want
to
say
it's
going
to
be
iterative.
We
have
a
community
to
govern
this.
C
B
A
Well,
with
that,
we
should
plan
on
doing
it
again.
This
economic
framework
for
discussion,
I
think,
is
a
fascinating
one
and
we
really
just
scratched
the
surface
and
wanted
to
give
all
of
you.
A
debt
of
gratitude
for
being
here
and
sharing
with
us
want
to
get
people
excited
we're
about
to
move
into
science.