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From YouTube: Regen Mainet LIVE! | Regen Ledger Goes Live!
Description
Join us on Crowdcast
https://www.crowdcast.io/e/regen-mainnet-launch/2
A
Maybe
cephalopods
validators,
we
just
are
running
a
full
node,
just
like
everybody
else.
Ours.
A
C
B
Cool
well-
and
I
guess
gregory
will
be
joining
us.
Everyone,
we're
live,
hey
dave,
how's,
it
going.
C
B
Everyone
so
we're
just
about
what
a
little
less
than
half
an
hour
away
from
the
big
launch
event-
and
I
think
we'll
just
be
chatting
here
about
about
our
network,
about
what
we've
worked
on
so
far.
What
we'll
be
working
on
and
getting
ready
for
the
big
ball
drop
style
countdown.
When
we
get
a
few
minutes
away.
C
B
You
didn't
yeah,
maybe
I
should
just
take
a
minute
and
go
change
and
then
I'll
be
more
go
in.
B
Yes,
so
I
don't
like
it,
I
think
I
think,
for
this
segment,
though
we
should,
we
should
think
of
some
things
that
we
want
to
share.
Maybe
we
could
give
some
updates
on
where
we
are
in
terms
of
region,
ledger
development,
where
we
are
in
terms
of
cosmos,
skate
development
and
the
road
map
yep.
A
Okay,
so
hello,
everyone,
I'm
corey,
levinson,
I'm
the
technical
product
manager
at
regen
joined
the
project.
A
little
over
a
year
ago,
now
spent
a
lot
of
time
working
kind
of
both
between
the
blockchain
and
earlier
on
spending,
some
more
time
with
some
of
our
open
agricultural
work.
With
with
the
open
team
initiative
and
yeah.
A
As
of
the
last
several
months,
I've
been
really
leaning
in
a
lot
more
into
the
blockchain
side
of
things,
as
there's
been
a
lot
of
work
to
do
currently
living
in
central
california,
in
slo
county
in
a
small
town
called
creston.
There's
a
lot
of
vineyards
and
olive
grove,
deer
and
yeah
other
than
that
been
been
mostly
based
in
l.a
for
the
past
year,
but
yeah,
I'm
in
central
cali
for
the
for
this
portion
of
the
year.
So
far,.
C
Robert
hello,
everyone
I'm
robert
zarenpa,
so
speaking
here,
I'm
based
in
switzerland,
so
the
lovely
european
country
and
I
joined
the
region
about
last
summer
and
never
so
I
regret
that
decision.
It's
amazing
story,
amazing
project
and
hello
gregory.
So
there's
a
few
here
and
yes
since
then
there
were
so
amazing
initiatives,
projects,
discussions
met,
people,
enterprises
and
yes,
my
duties
here
at
regionals
engineering,
research
and
development,
and
I'm
very
grateful
that.
C
I'm
part
of
this
this
ship
and
we
are
going
to
change
the
world.
Are
we.
D
Yeah,
well,
I
would
love
to
ask:
ask
you
two,
a
couple
questions
sort
of
with
my
with
your
hat
with
my
farmer
hat
on,
so
I
would
you
know,
maybe
this
one
for
cory.
First,
I
would
love
if
you
would
take
a
moment
to
just
maybe
explain
what
regen
ledger
is
and
what
you
know
what
it
does
at
a
high
level
and
we'll
start
there
and
then
maybe
we
can.
A
D
D
A
Sounds
great
yeah
I
mean,
I
think
the
easiest
way
to
explain
like
regen
ledger
as
a
piece
of
software
is
to
break
it
up
into
two
core
components
that,
like
at
least
today.
A
Like
ecological,
relevant
functionality
is
carbon
credits
or
ecological
credits
on
chain
and
data
for
verification
and
auditing
of
ecological
state
at
a
super
high
level.
So
you
know
blockchains
people
talk
about
them
a
lot
as
things
for
representing
digital
financial
assets
for
representing
money
and
carbon
markets,
and
ecological
credits
are
no.
A
That
you
know
we
as
an
organization.
I
think
this
project
from
its
inception
has
seen
that
there
would
be
a
lot
of
value
for
building
financial
infrastructure
for
assets
that
represent
some
kind
of
ecological.
Like
value,
that's
been
that's
been
captured
or
generated,
and.
A
A
The
credits
were
triggered
to
be
issued
by
a
smart
contract.
Maybe
they
correlate
with
a
certain
project
on
the
ground
that
has
done
some
thing
for
carbon
sequestration,
but
it's
all
specifically
about
the
minting
of
these
assets
that
are
then
tradable
and
kind
of
like
liquid,
and
on
the
other
side,
you
have
this
data
module,
which
is
trying
to
think
of
and
aaron
can
speak
to
this
a
lot
more
detail.
What.
A
A
way
that
we
can
enable
and
allow
for
for
different
types
of
ecological
state
to
be
stored
and
registered
on
our
network
first
and
foremost,
as
as
a
kind
of
attestation
right,
because
we're
not
quite
at
the
point
where
we
have
all
of
the
oracle
science
worked
out
where
it's
like.
Oh
you
know,
all
we
need
to
do
is
just
plug
things
together
and
it's
like
it's
the
fully.
A
Maybe
some
that
you
don't
those
can
be
registered,
pointing
to
the
same
piece
of
land
or
to
the
same
general
area
and
can
be
connected,
then
to
the
issuance
of
credits
like
laid
down
the
line.
That's
I,
I
think,
maybe
a
nice
overview
of
like
the
main
components
of
in
terms
of
ecological,
related
functionality.
D
A
D
Great,
thank
you
corey
aaron.
Do
you
mind
speaking
a
little
bit
about
the
sort
of
data
model?
And
you
know
corey
is
talking
about
the
fact
that
there
is
no
sort
of
deterministic
just
sort
of
like
ecological
state
machine
that
you
can
just
say
you
can
just
ask
it:
what
is
the
health
of
the
soil
and
what
does
that
mean
about
its
carbon?
Like
that
doesn't
exist?
It
may
never
exist
it's
complex.
D
D
Can
you
talk
a
little
bit
about
our
approach
to
ecological
data
from
an
engineering
perspective
and
what
we're
trying
to
accomplish
maybe
talk
a
little
bit
about
rdf
and
yeah,
just
whatever
semantic
web
stuff,
just
what
what
is
inspiring
the
architecture
here
that
we
feel
like
we're
going
to
give
create
a
system
in
which
ecological
data
is,
is
appropriately
used
and
can
sort
of
build
intelligence
over
time.
B
Cool
there's
there's
a
lot
of
big
questions
in
there.
I
first
want
to
show
off
my
d5
for
earth
stroke
that
I
just
put
on
so
this
was.
This
was
sort
of
like
a
wild
and
crazy
model
that
that
there's
just
a
couple
in
circulation
and-
and
I
actually
designed
this
together
with
the
designer
and
it's
it's.
B
Yeah
and
so
there's
just
a
couple
of
these
of
these
t-shirts
in
existence,
and
I
was
told
that
they
weren't
the
best
but
they're
the
wild
and
crazy
version.
I
think
they're
pretty
cool
anyway
talking
about
data,
so
yeah
I
mean
you
said
it.
B
You
said
a
lot
of
things
in
there
and
I
think
I
think,
there's
sort
of
like
a
progressive
approach
that
we're
trying
to
take
to
how
we
represent
ecological
claims
sort
of
starting
from
the
status
quo,
which
is
just
so
you
know
who
or
or
maybe
you
don't
even
know
you-
you
trust,
a
single
entity.
B
You
know
you
don't
even
necessarily
know
who
in
that
entity,
but
but
you
know
you
know
that
you
trust
that,
as
you
trust
this,
this
certifying
body
and
you
trust
the
people
that
they've
certified
to
to
issue
credits,
and
so
the
first
level
is
just
simply
upgrading
that
system,
so
that
there's
basically
a
trail
of
digital
signatures
through
the
whole
system
and
actors
that
aren't
necessarily
sort
of.
B
Maybe
actors
that
are
farther
down
the
chain
can
start
developing
a
their
own
digital
identity
and
reputation
around
the
claims
they're
making.
So
so
I
think
that's
the
first
part
where
we're
starting.
B
I
think
it
has
been
an
idea
that
we've
had
since
the
beginning
is
that
eventually
there
could
be
some
sort
of
like
ecological
oracles
which
are
based
on
satellite
data,
which
is
pretty
you
know
widely
available,
and
it's
public
that
we're
using.
That
is
as
a
base
of
as
kind
of
like
an
anchor
of
truth.
B
You
know
in
reference
to
any
other
claim
you
know
so
say.
For
instance,
you
have
somebody
that's
on
the
ground
who's,
giving
more
granular
data.
You
still
in
all
cases
have
pretty
much.
All
cases
can
have
access
to
the
satellite
data
to
provide
like
a
a
backup
to
the
claims
that
are
made
on
the
ground.
So
if
you
know
satellite
only
has
a
certain
resolution,
you
know
10
meters
or
20
meters.
B
Maybe
there's
some.
That's
even
you
know
finer
grain,
but
you
still
can't.
Actually,
you
know
see
images
of
actual
plants
and
trees,
but
you
can
get
a
sense
and
if
there's
somebody
on
the
ground,
that's
making
claims
you
can
you
can
correlate
those
and
you
can
see
if
something's
a
reasonable
claim
or
not.
You
also
mentioned
kind
of
the
rdf
and
semantic
web
technology.
B
The
choice
we've
made
is
to
embrace
the
the
the
movement
to
have
structured
data,
so
so
data
that
is
is
semantically,
rich
and
and
self-describing,
and
you
know
that's
a
vision
that
the
w3c
had
since
the
you
know.
Basically,
the
world
wide
web
was
founded
and,
and
it's
largely
unrealized
in
terms
of
the
the
scope
of
the
vision
that
they
had.
You
know
20
years
ago,
when
they
first
conceived
of
this,
which
was
that
you,
you
know,
have
you
know
massive
interoperable
data
that
that
has
kind
of
semantic
meaning.
B
But
within
it's
been
successful,
we
could
say
it's
been
successful
in
certain
in
certain
fields,
for
instance
in
the
bot
in
biology.
I
think
it's
been
a
lot
more
successful
and
I
think
you
know
we
have
the.
We
have
the
belief
that
that,
in
the
ecology
field,
that
it
is
something
we
should
be
pushing
for,
so
that
there
is
sort
of
a
global.
B
Kind
of
data
network
so
that
we
can
understand
better,
what's
happening
on
the
earth
and
and
that
we're
better
able
to
manage
it.
So
you
know
if
we
have
semantically
rich
data
attached
to
carbon
credits,
for
instance
to
the
you
know
from
the
all,
through
the
process
of
creating
those
credits,
we
can
there's
a
lot
of
analytics.
We
can
do
on
on
those
assets
that
we
can't
necessarily
do
today.
That
can
give
us
a
better
ability
to
manage
our
our
planet's
health.
B
So
I
think
that's
kind
of
one
of
the
you
know
things
we're
aiming
towards
with
with
focusing
on
data.
D
Yeah
awesome,
thank
you
aaron,
so
I
would
love
there's
one
more
kind
of
component
piece
that
I'd
like
to
talk
about.
Maybe
robert
you
could
share
a
little
bit
about
the
groups
module
if
you
feel
comfortable.
If
not,
then
maybe
you
can
pass
the
baton
over
to
corey
or
aaron,
because
the
three
major
components
of
region
ledger.
D
You
know
within
a
short
period
of
time
after
launch,
obviously
we're
upgrading
to
these
three
modules
over
the
next
six
weeks
or
or
so,
but
the
third
core
component
is
governance
and
usability
so
that
so
that
people
can
actually
engage
with
the
blockchain,
which
has
been
sort
of
a
holy
grail
in
the
web
3
world.
It's
quite
hard
key
management
governance.
These
are
challenging
problems.
Could
you
talk
a
little
bit
about
the
groups
module
both
from
a
high
level?
Why
is
it
important?
C
C
So
currently,
oh,
we
have
by
us
as
region
as
we're
leading
the
that
part
of
the
development
for
the
whole
cosmos
community
and
why
this
is
important,
because
there
is
almost
no
successful
big
business,
which
is
like
a
performance
of
one
person.
There
is
always
a
company
organizations,
associations
and
as
humans,
we
generally
we
act.
As
you
know,
we
are
social
species
right,
so
there's
always
some
a
community
around
it
and.
C
A
governance
we
need
to
have
a
tool
for
that
and
the
group
module
is
like
first
very,
very
important
framework
which
can
which
allows
us
to
define
the
the
policies
that
define
people
accounts
users
and,
if
I
may,
like
from
that,
go
to
like
a
more
general
topic
of
the
governance
and
why.
I
think
this
is
only
at
first
step.
C
So
we
were
talking
about
like
this
financial
part
a
little
bit
and
esg
and
interesting
enough
today
we're
inside
the
cosmos
ecosystem.
We
had
like
a
small
discussion
about
the
governance,
so
the
governance,
in
my
opinion,
is
the
most
crucial
part
of
the
esg
right,
the
ecological,
social
and
governance
movement.
C
C
If
the
government
is
not
there
to
accept
to
facilitate
the
the
powers,
the
the
actions,
the
usability
of
of
our
markets,
of
how
the
world
functions,
yes,
then
we
will
not
transact.
We
will
not
move
forward
so
having
this
governance
modules
ready
for
enterprises,
communities,
groups
or
even
like
you
know,
administration
level,
country
level,
yes,
is,
is
the
number
one
requirement
to
to
have
this
regeneration
happening
in
a
more
efficient
way.
D
Yeah
great,
thank
you,
robert,
so
just
to
sort
of
take
a
step
back
and
we're
about
seven
minutes,
everyone,
seven
minutes
and
14
seconds
to
genesis
of
mainnet,
which
is
very
exciting.
So
pretty
soon
we're
going
to
be
spinning
up
a
screen
share
to
to
show
everyone,
the
full
node,
that's
connected
to
the
network,
so
we'll
actually
get
to
see
the
network
come
up
live.
I
I
think
it's
probably
a
good
moment
now
to
to
zoom
out
and
just
talk
about,
because
this
may
be
some
people's
first.
D
You
know
decentralized
network
launch.
So
what
is
happening
and
how
is
it
going
to
happen?
And
you
know
so.
I
think
I'll
just
do
a
little
bit
of
an
overview
there
and
everybody
here
can
chime
in
briefly
and
then
I
think,
yeah,
we'll
we'll
sort
of
move
into
the
next
phase
of
the
show.
We're
just
gonna
keep
this
room.
So
there's
no
hiccups
like
last
time,
okay,
so
mainnet.
What
is
it
what's
going
on?
What
does
it
look
like?
D
So
we
have
a
blockchain
that
is
about
to
come
into
being
in
a
decentralized
way.
That
means
that
r
d,
inc
and
and
vitwit
and
the
other
contributors
in
the
community
that
have
been
building
region
ledger,
which
is
this
distributed
ledger
of
ecological
data
claims
and
assets
right,
is
about
to
go
up
online
without
a
central
actor.
D
Really
it's
a
it's
a
community
of
validators
that
are
going
to
come
together
and
spin
up
their
nodes
and
as
soon
as
there's
enough
voting
power
up,
the
network
will
start
producing
blocks
and
it
will
be
alive.
It
will
be.
You
know,
a
living
machine
that
is
running
and
has
validator
nodes.
I
actually
think
on
every
single
continent.
I
think.
Besides
antarctica,
we
will
have
validator
nodes
everywhere,
so
that's
very
exciting.
D
So
corey
do
you
want
to
just
speak
briefly
about
yeah
about
you
know,
mainnet
launch
what
are
some
of
the?
What
what?
What
are
some
risks
like?
What
is
it
you
know
we're
doing
a
live
cast
of
this
kind
of
unprecedented
thing
I
mean.
Obviously,
people
have
live,
cast
network
launches
before
people
who
are
brave,
but
what
are
some
of
the
things
that
could
go
wrong.
What
has
you
biting
your
nails
about?
You
know
this
being,
you
know,
being
streamed
to
466
people
around
the
world
right.
A
With
with
my
filter,
I
would
just
want
to
check
in
that
the
stream
is
coming
in.
Okay,
can
you
guys
hear
me
all
right,
yeah.
B
You're
just
you're
coming
like
sometimes
you're
there,
sometimes
you're,
yellow,
and
sometimes
you
freeze.
A
Well,
I'll,
try
and
just
speak
to
this,
and
hopefully
the
audio
comes
through
okay
yeah.
What
has
me
biting
my
nails?
I
think
that
when
the
network
launches
right,
as
you
were
saying
it
launches,
when
there's
a
threshold
of
voting
power
live
on
the
network,
as
we
assume
will
happen,
there's
a
lot
of
once.
D
A
So
the
transactions
that
people
submit
beforehand
offline
to
kind
of
see
what
their
initial
stake
is
in
their
initial
voting
power,
we
limited
that
at
50,
000
regen
tokens,
but
once
the
network
is
live,
any
token
holder
can
stake
and
delegate
more
than
that
50
000
to
any
validator
that
they
want.
Well.
If
I
came
in-
and
I
said
great,
the
network's
live,
I
want
to
delegate
all
of
my
tokens
to
a
validator
in
miami
and
that
validator
in
miami
wasn't
online.
A
A
So
I
think
one
thing
that
we're
going
to
be
watching
is
seeing
not
just
does
stuff
come
online
and
start
running,
but
you
know:
does
it
take
a
little
bit
longer
for
things
to
get
to
a
point
where
it's
running
stably,
where
the
network
is
kind
of
just
feeling
like
operationally
smooth,
and
there
aren't
too
many
changes
in
the
network
like
pausing.
D
B
A
D
And
for
those
who
are
interested,
you
can
also
tune
in
we're.
Gonna
have
a
full
node
up
and
running,
which
is
tracking
the
blockchain
as
a
screen
share.
We
all.
You
can
also
go
to.
I
popped
into
the
chat,
region.anika.io
great
fantastic,
so
you
can
see
here
yeah,
you
can
see
the
countdown
everybody.
This
is
it.
This
is
it
this.
D
Is
it
so
we'll
get
to
see
when
and
and
there's
a
little
bit
of
a
pool
going
on
amongst
the
validators
we're
having
a
conversation
yesterday,
pre-launch
with
the
community,
people
were
putting
putting
some
bets
on
how
long
it
was
going
to
take
to
get
the
chain
up
and
running.
Several
people
thought
within
30
seconds.
Some
other
people
thought
it
might
take
three
minutes.
Some
people
were
more
conservative
and
thought
it
could
take
up
to
30
minutes
so
feel
free
to
ping.
D
In
your
chat
there
exactly
what
time
you
think
the
chain
is
going
to
come
up
and
running
and
you
know
no
promises
but
we'll
think
maybe
we'll
send
people
some
some
schwag
or
some.
You
know
you
so
aaron.
Maybe
I'll
dig
up
one
of
one
of
aaron's
defy
for
earth
shirts
or
something
and
send
it
to
the
winner
so
go
ahead
and
pop
in
your
estimates.
There.
D
Yeah
yeah,
I
think
we
should
so
yeah,
essentially
we're
going
to
see
how
long
it
takes
to
get
enough
voting
power
up,
and
that
means
how
many
nodes
are
up
and
running
as
we
get
going
and
if
everybody,
if
everybody,
if
all
the
validators,
are
up
and
running
spinning
their
nodes
up
right
now,
as
we
get
towards
get
towards
the
launch
moment,
it
could
happen
very
fast.
It
could
happen
really
quickly.
D
D
A
B
All
right
and
let's
see
you
can
see
which
validators
are
up.
D
A
B
B
Ten
yeah
yep
and
I've
seen
up
times
pretty
good.
Some
people
are
having
a
little
bit
of
trouble
with
uptime,
most
validators
at
90
percent.
D
D
That
was
fantastic,
go
go
region
community.
That
was
pretty
impressive.
So
now,
folks,
if
you've
got
regen
tokens
and
you'd
like
to
go
start
staking
and
and
helping
build
the
stake
you
can.
Also,
if
you
want,
you
know
memos.
If
you
want
to
send
out,
you
know
any
information
that
will
be.
You
know
in
the
sort
of
in
the
data
integrity,
layer
of
regen
network.
D
You
know
you
could
send
happy
birthday
region
messages
or
you
know
nothing
short
of
planetary
regeneration
in
your
memo
as
you're
doing
your
delegation
transactions
on
kepler.
So
now
everybody
is,
you
know,
go
go
get
at
it.
If
you
want
to
start
delegating
to
your
favorite,
validators
or
validator.
D
I
was,
I
forgot
to
bring
up
my
champagne
for
the
yeah
poor
me
for
me,
a
little
bit.
D
Thanks
robert
you're
holding
it
down
for
us
josh,
says
kepler
getting
up
shortly.
Awesome
well,
so
give
us
an
update
josh
when,
when
kepler's
all
all
ship
shape
wow,
I'm
just
I'm
a
little
speechless.
It's
it's
pretty
exciting!
So
for
those
of
you
who
don't
know
actually
how
impressive
it
is,
this
is
sort
of
like
you
know,
maybe
people
who
saw
the
first.
D
D
So,
although
you
know
it's
working,
it
did
take
a
lot
of
of
auditing
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
code,
a
lot
and
a
lot
of
social
coordination.
The
fact
that
50,
50
plus
validators
were
all
up
and
running
with
their
stake
had
their
machines
running
coordinated
for
this
time
doesn't
always
happen.
That
way.
Sometimes
networks
take
hours
to
finally
get
the
voting
power
to
get
up
and
running.
D
Yeah
yep,
it's
a
true
story,
so
the
cosmos
sdk
broadly,
I
think,
as
a
proof-of-stake
application
framework
is
securing
more
than
100
billion
dollars
worth
of
assets
and
tendermint
as
a
consensus.
Engine
even
is
even
more
broadly
adopted
and
is
used
in
private
consortium
chains
and
hyper
ledger
world
throughout
the
cosmos,
sdk
world
and
and
beyond.
So
we
are
definitely.
We
chose
the
cosmos
sdk
to
be
our
development
framework
because
it
is
so
well
tested
and
has
such
a
strong
community
of
support
and
yeah.
D
So
really
fantastic
to
see
this
come
online
so
quickly,
fedex
asks
when
ibc
yeah
I
mean
hopefully
pretty
shortly
right.
We
have
a
number
of
different
governance
upgrades
first,
I
would
say
win
transactions
and
then,
once
the
community
enables
transactions,
I
think
ibc
will
probably
be
short
on
the
heels
of
that.
D
For
those
of
you
who
don't
know
what
ibc
is
that's
inter-blockchain
communication
protocol
and
that
is
sort
of
the
beating
heart
of
the
the
approach
that
the
cosmos
community
has
taken
to
have
sovereign
application
or
community-specific
blockchains
that
can
communicate
with
one
another,
so
they
have
their
own
governance.
You
sort
of
solve
scalability
issues,
because
people
can
have
different
blockchains
running
on
different
computers
and
not
get
congested
as
sort
of
the
one
chain
to
rule
them
all
thesis
of
ethereum
and
others
get
quite
congested.
D
Noah
is
asking
about
not
being
able
to
stake
in
kepler
yeah.
My
apologies
for
jumping
the
gun
there
josh
was
just
saying.
I
think
they
have
a
little
bit
to
to
get
kepler
up
and
running
so
he's
here
in
the
chat
and
he'll.
Let
us
know
when,
when
kepler's
working,
if
you're
familiar
with
cia
cli,
you
could
start
doing
delegation
by
a
cli
and
josh
says
kepler's
up
all
right
fantastic,
so
you
might
want
to
refresh
josh.
Is
there
any
like
refreshing?
Maybe
dave?
Do
you
wanna?
Maybe
robert?
D
Do
you
mind
dropping
out
and
we
could
just
bring
josh
up
on
just
to
ex
you
know
explained
it
people
if
there's
anything
that
they
need
to
go
through
for
to
use.
Kepler
sure
sure
that's
that
awesome
dave.
Do
you
mind
popping
josh
into
the
in
into
the
stream
here.
D
A
C
Yeah
thanks
for
having
me
yeah,
absolutely
congratulations!
Oh
this
is
super
exciting.
We
just
got
the
web
interface
up
to
stake.
I
do
want
to
let
you
guys
know
that
right
now
we
have
a
very
tiny
issue
with
the
websocket,
so
you
are
able
to
stake,
but
typically,
when
your
staking
is
successful,
will
show
you
a
message
that
it's
successful,
whereas
now
it's
just
going
to
kind
of
keep
spinning
so
make
sure
you
kind
of
have
an
explorer
up
or
keep
a
lookout
for
your
transaction.
It
should
work.
C
It
just
keeps
spinning.
So
if
you
refresh
that
webpage
you'll
be
able
to
see
the
updated
balance
and
the
stake
balance
we'll
work
on
kind
of
figuring
that
out
as
soon
as
possible,
but
yeah
staking
works,
we
just
tried
it
and
yeah
it's
it's
super
awesome.
I've
been
really
excited
to
see
this
happen.
D
Awesome,
thank
you.
Thank
you,
josh
and
we'll
we'll
have
josh
on
a
little
bit
later
as
well
to
talk
more
about
kepler.
Other
things
happen
in
the
cosmos
ecosystem
and
just
the
intersections
with
regen
and
yeah.
I'm
just
curious.
Do
you
have
a
I
mean
it's
pretty
straightforward.
Staking
people
are
are,
are
are
pretty
good
at
it?
Do
you
have
like
do
you
want
to
just
pop
in
the
chat?
You
know
like
a
little
tutorial
link,
so
yeah
people
can
yeah.
C
Sure
thing-
and
one
thing
to
note
is
right
now,
because
we
have
the
low
transaction
fee
when
you
confirm
the
transaction
to
zero
or
you
will
have
to
choose
average
or
high
for
the
transaction
fee
for
the
transaction
to
actually
go
through.
So
that's
another
kind
of
thing.
You'd
have
to
be
aware
of
great
but
yeah
happy
to
kind
of
walk
through
I'll,
be
watching
the
chat,
answering
any
questions
and
kind
of
sending
resources
that
people
may
find
helpful
as
well.
D
Great,
so
for
those
who
didn't
catch
that
if
you're
said
when
you
set
your
fees,
just
set
them
for
medium
or
high,
just
to
ensure
that
your
transaction
goes
through
quickly
when
you're
executing
your
delegation
and
again,
if
people
want
to
put
this,
is
your
opportunity
to
just
sort
of
like
get
your.
You
know,
welcome,
regen
or
whatever
your
statement
is,
you
can
put
that
into
memos
and
those
will
all
be
available.
Maybe
we'll
do
a
little
compilation
of
the
different
memos
that
come
out
and
share
them
back
with
the
community.
As
you
started,.
D
Yeah
people
are
busy,
I'm
just
I'm
just
trying
to
look
back
up
through
here
and
see
what
the
estimations
were.
Did
anybody
get
estimate
10
seconds
anil
was
under
a
minute
alex
alex
d
at
stake
to
earn
10
seconds.
I
think
I
think
oh
there's
a
couple
10
seconds,
so
you
know
maybe
I'll
bob.
We
have
bob.
We
have
alex
d
yeah,
so
we
got
a
couple.
D
People
correctly
guess
the
the
time
to
get
the
network
up
so
maybe
maybe
alex
and
bob
can
ping
us
over
on
discord
in
the
staking
channel.
If
you
don't
mind
signing
up
and
just
like
waving
and
saying
hello
and
dan
can
take
your
information
down
and
we'll
we'll
get
you
guys,
some
t-shirts
sent
for
your
appropriate
guess,
pretty
pretty
awesome
pretty
spot
on
cool.
Well,
so,
let's
see
we're
about
10
past.
If
I
remember
correctly,
I
just
want
to
make
sure
we're
sort
of
keeping
on
time.
D
We
got
a
full
program
here,
so
yeah
we
got
about
10
15
minutes
left.
So,
let's
zoom
back
out.
D
Aaron
paul's
on
the
screen,
chair
yeah.
I
think
we
can
pause
on
the
screen.
I
think
I
think
people
people.
D
Totally
right,
so
what
do
you
think
the
first,
the
first
governance
proposal
is
going
to
be
any
guesses.
B
Well,
we're
hoping
to
have
a
software
upgrade
really
soon
after
after
launch
we're
working
hard
on
getting
the
0.43
release
of
the
cosmos
sdk
out
october
and
as
soon
as
we
get
that
out
the
door,
we're
planning
to
integrate
it
into
a
testnet
region,
ledger
test
net.
And
if
you
know
testing
goes
well
on
that
test
net,
I
will
be
putting
forth
the
governance
proposal
to
do
a
chain
upgrade
and-
and
this
would
actually
not
be
a
a
hard
fork
upgrade.
We
wouldn't
change
the
chain
id.
B
We
would
use
the
coordinated
upgrades,
upgrade
module
and
we'd
vote
on
a
height,
and
hopefully
everything
would
go
smoothly.
Just
like
we
saw,
and
it
would
be
maybe
down
for
a
minute
or
two
and
then
we'd
have
a
new
version
of
software
running.
D
Yeah,
I
remember
a
couple
of
these
coordinated
upgrades
that
we've
tested
were
under
a
minute
in
terms
of
downtime,
which
is
pretty
pretty
impressive,
so
is,
is
that
upgrade
going
to
include
the
groups
module.
B
D
Awesome
so
yeah,
okay!
So
that's
why.
D
What
do
those
things
open
up?
What
do
the?
What
do?
What
does
that,
like
sort
of
combination
of
groups
off
and
feet,
work
enable
that
we're
so
excited
about.
B
B
The
other
thing
that
we've
been
an
idea
we've
had
in
mind
is,
is
to
help
users
manage
keys
and
there's
a
project
that
we're
we've
sort
of
been
working
on
at
a
you
know,
relatively
slow
pace
compared
to
other
things,
but
that
we're
hoping
to
you
know
work
on
more
later
this
year,
which
is
called
keystone,
which
is
forced
here,
key
management,
and
it
intention
is
to
use
the
secure
enclaves
on
mobile
devices
for
basically
group
keys
authorization.
B
The
authorization
module
enables
a
bunch
of
cool
things
that
people
have
been
asking
for
for
a
while,
for
instance,
you
could
delegate
the
permission
to
some
other
some
group
of
keys
the
ability
to
vote
on
proposals.
B
So
you
can
keep
your
you
know
your
master
key
in
cold
storage,
for
instance,
you
can
delegate
to
kind
of
a
like
a
burner
key
to
to
vote
on
proposals
and
whatnot,
and
fee
grant
supports
with
that,
in
that
you
can
have
wallets
that
don't
actually
have
balances
that
can
make
transactions
and
those
transactions
are
delegated
by
other
accounts.
B
D
Talking
about
the
auth
module
here,
if
I,
if
I
remember
correctly
this,
the
auth
module
is
one
of
the
core
sort
of
non-negotiable
features
that
we
felt
a
layer
one
blockchain
needed
to
have
when
we
were
doing
our
initial
sort
of
user,
driven
design
and
and
the
reason
for
that
is
because
you
know
in
a
traditional
blockchain,
a
farmer
in
order
to
you
know
like
upload
some
data
or
be
involved
in
receiving
transactions
for
an
outcome
as
a
peer
on
the
network
would
need
to
be
able
to
manage
their
private
keys
and
never
lose
them.
D
B
Yes,
I
just
want
to
clarify
one
thing:
not
the
auth
module,
it's
the
authorization
module
and
the
short
version
of
that
is
office
d.
So
the
current
auth
module
focuses
on
authentication.
This
module
focuses
on
authorization
and
yeah.
I
mean
the
basic
way
it
works.
Is
that
for
any
action
that
you
that
one
account
can
perform
on
the
blockchain,
you
can
give
another
account
to
perform
that
same
action
as
your,
so
you
could
allow
and
you
can
place
limits
on
that.
B
We
have
different
authorization
types
in
the
sdk
and
this
is
an
extensible
system
so
that
you
can,
you
can
add
new
authorization
types.
B
So,
for
instance,
you
could
say
I'm
going
to
authorize
this
account
to
spend
up
to
100
regen
on
for
whatever
it
wants
to,
and
we
have
authorization
set
up
for
delegating
and
that's
actually
something
that
people
have
asked
about
like
hey.
Could
we
have
some
other
bot
or
service
that
manages
delegation
or
voting
or
some
trusted?
Third
party?
So
I
don't
know
if
that
kind
of
answers,
your
question,
but
that's
the.
D
Yeah,
that's
great,
thank
you
so
so
this
first
upgrade
is
going
to
be
pretty
significant.
The
the
one
the
last
missing
piece
from
our
sort
of
minimum
desirable
region,
ledger
blockchain,
would
be
the
data
module
correct.
So
we
have
credits,
live,
we'll
have
auth,
z
and
groups
and
fee
management
all
working
and
live,
and
a
lot
of
that
available
for
the
rest
of
the
cosmos
community.
D
We've
taken
a
very
sort
of
community-centric
approach
to
make
sure
that
our
tools
are
available
to
everybody
through
the
cosmos
sdk,
which
I
think
is
maybe
unusual
in
terms
of
how
teams
are
choosing
to
develop,
and
so
the
last
little
piece
is
going
to
be
the
data
module.
Is
that
correct.
B
Yep,
yes,
so
the
data
module
will
basically
allow
you
to
the
first
function
is
slide
anchor
data
on
chain
which
basically
provides
a
proof
of
time
stamp.
B
It
will
also
allow
you
to
store
small
amounts
of
data
and
to
also
store
signatures
for
pieces
of
data
on
chain
which
will
allow
you
to
use
basically
group
account
keys
and
authorizations
for
signatures,
and-
and
the
idea
is
that
this
would
be
first
link
to
the
issuance
of
credits
like
you
would
kind
of
put
the
metadata
or
a
credit
issuance
in
the
data
module,
but
eventually
the
whole
issuance
all
the
different
documentation
along
the
way
in
the
issuance
process,
which
would
be
tracked
with
the
data
module
things
things
in
the
issuance
process
would
would
mostly
probably
not
live
on
chain,
but
be
an
on-chain
anchor
and
possibly
signature
for
that
data,
so
that
you
know
we're
not
just
clogging
up
the
chain
with
a
bunch
of
verification
information,
but
it
is
securely
tracked
there,
and
that
also
allows
for
a
certain
amount
of
privacy.
B
If
there's
certain
documents
that
people
don't
want
to
make
public,
although
hopefully
you
know
people
choose
to
make
more
information
public
than.
D
Awesome.
Well,
that's
that's
great!
Thank
you,
so
I
would
love
it
just
for
a
brief
moment.
We've
sort
of
alluded
to
this,
but
maybe
corey.
D
If,
if
you're
interested
in
taking
this
to
start
and
then
aaron
could
could
color
things
in
a
little
bit
more,
would
you
be
willing
to
just
chat
a
little
bit
about
the
region,
region,
engineering,
team's
role
in
the
cosmos,
ecosystem
and
sort
of
stewardship
and
maintainership
of
the
cosmos
sdk,
and
you
know
just
what
we're
doing
there
and
and
how
that
relates
to
and
is
inspired
by
our
own
use
case.
A
Sure
I
mean
there's
a
there's,
been
a
definitely
an
important
part
of
all
the
work
that
we've
been
doing
since
I
joined
the
team
last
year.
I
think.
A
A
Kind
of
from
day
one
of
me
arriving
was
was
the
onset
of
a
formalization
of
that
of
that
relationship.
It
stems
from,
I
believe
it
was.
There
was
a
hackathon
prior
to
that,
but
not
only
that,
you
know
we
had
had
on
our
engineering
team
prior
ethan
frey
from
confio,
who
is
the
the
technical
lead
of
of
the
cosmologism
project
and
cosmology
itself?
Actually,
which
is
a
very
kind
of
you
know.
It's
known
in
the
cosmos
ecosystem
is
the
smart
contracting
platform
for
cosmos
based
blockchains.
A
You
know,
ethan
was
working
internally
with
the
regen
team
and
you
know
within
the
context
of
region
when
cosmology
was
sort
of
in
its
early
incubation,
and
so
we've
been
quite
connected
to
a
lot
of
the
the
technical
edges
of
of
where
cosmos,
sdk
and
cosmos
based
blockchain
have
been
going
for
for
some
time
and
this
year.
I
think
that
the
biggest
thing
that
our
engineering
team
was
involved
in
was
what
a
lot
of
folks
in
the
ecosystem
already
know
as
the
stargate
upgrade,
which
was
I
mean
in.
D
A
Not
something
that
we
were
actually
as
directly
involved
in,
but
our
team
was
very
much
kind
of
leading
the
charge
and
aaron
leading
the
vision
behind
the
whole
migration
to
use
protocol
buffers
for
the
serialization
format
as
well.
A
Much
more
seamless
integrations
for
third-party
developers
to
be.
You
know,
hitting
rpc
endpoints.
They
can
use
grpc
and
serialize
protobuf
over
the
wire,
so
just
leveraging
that
whole
setting
infrastructure,
which
is
you
know,
protovox,
is
an
open
source
project.
It's
been
in
development
and
led
by
google
for
a
long
long
time.
I
think
it's
really
leveling
up
a
lot
of
the
the
it
puts.
A
A
One
of
the
bigger
projects
that
we
were
involved
in
over
the
past
year
and
all
the
stuff
that
aaron's
been
speaking
to
earlier.
You
know
whether
it's
the
the
groups
module
or
the
authorization
module.
These
are
all
pieces
that
you
know.
We
know
we
need
regen
for
our
own
use
case,
but
in
realizing
that
these
are
larger
pieces,
that
the
broader
cosmos
ecosystem
is
wanting
as
well.
You
know,
we've
been
we've
been
grateful
to
be
able
to
do
that
development
work
directly
within
the
context
of
the
cosmos
sdk.
So.
D
Fantastic
yeah,
thank
you,
corey,
that's
a
great
context,
yeah.
So,
just
to
sort
of
summarize
in
you
know,
non-engineer
speak
a
lot
of
the
needs
that
we
had
for
a
layer,
one
blockchain.
D
It
turns
out
we're
common
pain
points
in
a
bigger
community
and
we
sort
of,
as
we
were,
contributing
to
try
to
make
the
cosmos
sdk
work
for
as
an
ecological
ledger
and
to
interface
with
smallholder
farmers
and
scientists
and
other
people
who
are
not
crypto
native
our
architectural
design
and
our
requirements
were
pretty
clearly
widely
useful
and-
and
I
think
the
cosmos
community
led
by
the
interchain
foundation,
sort
of
invited
us
to
to
take
that
vision
and
make
it
possible
and
accessible
possible
to
access
for
the
whole
community,
and
I
think,
in
a
way,
that's
slowed
down
our
engineering.
D
But
on
the
other
hand,
I
think
in
a
way
it's
I
hope,
the
quality,
because
we've
had
to
engage
with
a
bigger
community
and
there's
sort
of
we
there's
been
an
evolution
of
a
very
formal
review
process
and
a
lot
of
eyes
on
the
code.
That's
you
know,
sort
of
being
developed
and
bumped
out
which
has
its.
D
You
know
it
slows
things
down,
but
on
the
on
the
other
hand,
it
creates
a
very
rigorous
engineering
environment,
so
we're
you
know,
really
excited
and
grateful
to
be
playing
that
role
for
the
community
and
have
the
benefit
for
our
chain
of
you
know
the
layer.
One
solution
that
we
feel
like
is
the
most
appropriate
for
actually
weaving
together
this
network
of
stakeholders
who
need
to
have
accurate
data
about
ecological
states
in
order
to
issue
and
exchange
assets.
D
You
know
natural
capital,
soil,
carbon
biodiversity,
these
other
forms
of
value
that
we're
also
passionate
about
making
sure
that
there's
economic
recognition
of
does
require
a
lot
of
engineering
rigor
at
the
foundational
layer
of
how
the
how
this
all
takes
place.
So
you
know
aaron
and
corey.
I'm
super
grateful
for
your
guys's,
fantastic
leadership
and
work
on
the
engineering
side
and
the
rest
of
the
team
too.
Robert
amari
marie
some
new
folks
have
joined
recently
as
well,
tyler
and
and
andre
yeah
and.
D
The
whole
bit
with
team,
anil,
cto
and
and
atish
and
everyone
over
there,
just
such
a
fantastic
group
of
humans
right
who
are
applying
this
pretty
complex
and
esoteric
art
of
engineering,
distributed
systems
right
and
doing
so
in
order
to
bring
about
a
platform
for
a
thriving
planet.
So
thank
you
all
for
your
work
and
it's
really
meaningful.
I
think,
for
the
whole
world
regen
network
and
the
entire
cosmos
ecosystem.
So
thanks
so
much
for
your
fantastic
work.
I'd
love
to
just
see!
B
Yeah,
I
would
just
say
you
know
many
much
appreciation
to
all
of
all
the
people
that
made
this
happen.
I
mean
this.
Was
it
took
us
a
long
time
to
get
here?
B
We
started
back
in
2017
and
you
know
it
seemed
like
it
seemed
improbable
that
we
were
going
to
end
up
at
this
point
where
we
are
now,
but
a
lot
of
people
stuck
with
us
team
members,
many
supporters
in
the
community
in
the
cosmos
community-
and
you
know
I'm
super
grateful
for
all
the
people
that
stuck
with
us
over
the
years
and
believed
in
us
and
believed
people
pulled
it
off
and-
and
you
know
such
you
know-
high
caliber
people
too,
and
I
think
just
the
the
speed
with
which
and
the
and
the
smoothness
with
which
we
had
that
launch
definitely
speaks
to
that.
B
You
know
everybody's
just
really.
On
top
of
of
of
things,
the
developers
validators,
you
know
all
the
support
in
the
project,
so
yeah
much
gratitude.
D
Yeah
thanks
aaron
cory,
any
any
last
words
there.
A
Hey,
maybe
just
very
briefly
for
all
token
holders-
and
this
is
not
just
for
validators-
a
call
to
participate
in
this
network
is
live.
A
If
you
hold
the
gen
tokens,
then
you
are
a
part
of
our
governance
community
and
you
are
part
of
dictating
actually
go
and
the
software
upgrades
that
happen
and
also
you
know,
I
think
it's
worth
mentioning.
We
have
from
genesis
two
millions
in
the
community
spend
pool
for
governance,
so
there
are
funds
available
for
the
community
to
vote
on
the
dis.
The
distribution
of
take.
A
Participate
go
on
our
forum.
We
have
a
new
forum
at
forum.regen.network
and
yeah.
I
think
it's
been
a
great
journey
up
to
this
point
to
be
from
the
inside,
from
like
r
d,
inc
or
regen
network
development
working
on
this.
But
from
this
point
forward
there
are
a
lot
more
actors
in
here
and
so
looking
forward
to
seeing
all
of
the
other
folks
in
the
ecosystem
take
shape
and
participate.
D
Fantastic
and
thanks
josh
for
hopping
on
to
help
with
chatting
chatting
us
through
staking
and
there's
some
resources
in
there
for
folks,
corey
aaron.
Thank
you
so
much
david,
I'm
gonna
pass
the
baton
back
to
you,
so
we
can
move
into
the
next
session.