►
From YouTube: Status Principles Seminar #02 Inclusivity
Description
In the second chapter of this 12 part series, join status' core contributors as they discuss and debate to which degree they uphold the project's principles enumerated here: https://our.status.im/our-principles/
A
A
So,
just
briefly
talking
about
status,
so
when
I
say
started,
I
don't
just
mean
the
app
I
also
mean
stored
organization
and
everything
in
this
sort
of
the
universe
and
all
the
people
in
it
kind
of
like
the
state
of
us,
so
the
stairs
Republic
upstairs
network,
whatever
you
want
to
call
it
and
I.
Think
company
and
product
are
sort
of
Mississippi
mental
models
Yalu
on
status.
He
was
suggesting
something
like
instead
think
of
it
as
a
Dow
or
a
public
good,
but
whatever
so.
A
You
use
that
sort
of
this
other
thing,
which
is
not
the
company.
It's
not
the
product
per
se,
so
fair
and
white
good
access,
just
simple
things
like
the
fact
that
the
work
some
sort
of
old
devices
and
across
multiple
languages,
and
it's
all
not
just
for
first
world
users
with
Apple,
iPhones
or
sort
of
privileged
accounts
or
passports
or
whatever
it
might
be.
It's
also
worth
noting
here
that
access
is
not
passing.
This
is
the
same
thing
it's
like
running
and
using
of
study
and
contributing
to
status
these
views.
A
So
this
was
alluded
to
in
the
previous
seminar,
but
it's
sort
of
being
usable
for
norm
experts
and
not
non-threatening,
but
also
for
us
as
contributors
and
power
users,
and
that
we
don't
sort
of
dumb
things
down.
But
it
you
can
actually
sort
of
expose
all
the
things
that
that
we
need,
or
people
might
want,
and
also
things
like
kind
of
basic
stuff.
But
software
compatibility
and
these
kinds
of
things.
So
you
don't
have
to
increase
stuff
in
order
to
use
ourselves
social
inclusivity.
So
essentially,
I
can
courage.
A
You
people
to
participate,
and
one
way
you
can
think
of
this
is
as
kind
of
rings
in
the
water
or
you
have
activation
letters.
So
as
you
get
more
and
more
invested
in
status
that
you
get
closer
and
closer
or
you
invest
more
and
more
time
and
energy
and
so
on
into
it-
and
it
might
start
very
simple,
but
then
instead
of
this
is
sort
of
a
to
get
closer
to
some
kind
of
core
whatever
that
is,
and
it's
worth
going
back
to
the
company
product
thing
that
right
now.
A
It's
kind
of
this
thing
where
we
have
coca
dippers
and
then
we
have
consumers
the
mass
audience
whatever.
And
if
you
have
this
sort
of
more
fluid
model
in
mind
and
you
reduce
price
to
entry,
you
would
still
have
this
difference
in
terms
of
participation,
but
it
might
seem
like
the
same
thing,
but
it's
not
and
this
one
idea
of
like
this
one
990
rule.
A
So
if
you
have
a
subreddit,
maybe
one
person
creates
a
post,
nine
people
comment
and
then
90
people
read
and
having
mist
of
mental
model
that
you
have
different
forms
of
participation.
But
it's
sort
of
more
fluid
and
it's
finished
less
in
terms
of
diving,
deeper
into
status
and
not
just
you're
hired
or
not
hired
kind
of
thing,
and
this
is
really
one
job
and
self-interest,
and
just
thinking
about
one
way,
you
think
about
responsibility
that
it
sort
of
the
power
to
do
something
so
good
that
they
like
to
do
something
and
do
something.
A
If
everyone
has
the
power
to
do,
there's
some
sort
of
basic
questions.
I
might
be
insane
to
ask
yourself
how
many
people
have
you
person
on
board
how
many
stuff
open
problems
have
you
identified
and
created
that
other
people
can
look
at
and
contribute
to
solving
how
many
people
have
you
helped
in
status
or
online?
A
More
generally,
and
so
one
simple
way
of
doing
this
and
getting
people
to
invite
people
like
reaching
out
the
hand
to
dive
deeper
in
terms
of
participation,
is
to
give
people
that
concrete's
calls
to
action
and
people
to
dive
deeper
and
these
three
very
simple
things
like
just
installing
status
or
reporting
a
bug
or
whatever.
It
might
be.
We're
very
sort
of
simple
straight
actions.
A
Interoperability,
so
since
this
will
have
a
clear
and
well
understood
interface-
and
this
is
a
very
general
concept,
so
both
in
a
sort
of
organizational
level,
but
also
when
it
comes
to
calls
in
the
fact
that
we
are
part
of
the
if
you're,
a
microsystem
and
people
who
contribute
to
whisper
protocol
but
and
also
an
hour
application
protocol
should
be
so
have
a
claim
to
face.
Other
people
can
use
it
and
it's
really
useful
and
and
used
by
other
people
that
are
not
just
status,
coca,
deer
boost
or
whatever,
and
it's
not
nice.
Little
Network.
A
Educational
efforts,
so
really
this
is
what
what
this
means.
That
is
just
that
we
put
time
money
energy
into
people
learning,
and
this
is
very
much
sort
of
a
bottleneck
for
cryptid
option
in
general
and
I
would
even
say
for
not
just
sort
of
for
people
outside
of
cochlear,
which
will
also
add
status
in
terms
of
us
understanding.
A
These
ideas
and
I
think
rocking
this
new
paradigm
where
growth
kisses
it
like
intuitively,
understand
these
things,
because
it's
it's
new
and
it's
not
the
same
as
as
we've
seen
before
and
sort
of
what
does
it
mean
and
what
does
it
imply?
And
this
requires
effort
in
terms
of
learning
about
them.
Understanding.
A
Principles,
pairing
so
openness
and
inclusivity.
We
talked
about
this
before
Adam
brought
up
some
good
points.
I
think
that
when
we
think
about
its
of
having
a
big
contributing
Network,
it's
not
the
same
thing
as
traditional
hiring,
and
if
you
look
at
the
cost
of
having
a
larger
code
ribbon
of
network
its
cost
of
people
yeah,
we
can
boil
it
down
to
like
money,
so
coordination
costs
and
there
may
be
some
noise
in
a
chat
room
somewhere
and
you
can
think
of
sort
of
coca
tea
recess
as
more
stewards.
A
In
the
last
twenty
years,
we've
seen
this
little
proof
of
concept
called
Linux
and
what
they
have
is
they
have
around
a
thousand
monthly
active
contributors,
and
then
they
have
twelve
attendants.
That
act
as
kind
of
stewards
for
different
components
or
maintenance
for
different
parts
of
the
code,
and
then
you
have
roughly
one
leanness,
that's
sort
of
how
they
organize.
A
With
Shou
folks
here
so
if
we
mr.
inclusivity
and
so
what
a
clear
buckler
means
and
we
execute
on
it-
relent
to
see
another
week
to
week
or
month
by
month
basis,
it's
literally
the
same
thing
as
mass
adoption
of
fear.
It's
not
much
different,
sir
another
shower
foot
so
before
we
can
have
mass
adoption
where
mass
adoption
means
Southie
like
millions
of
people,
we
need
some
intense
microd
option
and
it
is
quote
bye-bye
Y
Combinator,
that's
better
to
have
few
people,
love
you'd
and
a
lot
of
people
liking.
A
You
and
in
terms
of
perhaps
for
this
one
way
it's
or
to
look
at
status
quo
contributors
first
and
that's
what
the
lobster,
if
your
community,
that's,
why
moving
to
status
switch
more
and
more
people
are
doing,
which
is
amazing,
it's
so
important,
but
then
also
launches
of
different
community
and
things
like
Devcon
attendance
and
so
on.
But
you
can
also
look
at
it
a
different
way.
A
I
use
seventeen
Miss,
Lee
or
sort
of
alternative
in
terms
of
specific
communities
have
very
strong
needs
for,
let's
say
sense
of
resistance
or
sort
of
they
might
not
have
bank
accounts
whatever,
and
this
this
sort
of
a
parallel
track.
It's
also
very
interesting,
and
so
it's
worth
a
try.
Tension
is
key
here
that
wants
people
such
dope,
stuff
participating.
That's
will
stay
on
because
otherwise
you
don't
you
have
haven't
actually
found
like
something.
That's
valuable,
long-term.
A
Inclusivity
in
continuous
and
if
you
think,
of
status
as
more
of
a
network,
then
the
value
that
we
generate
is
literally
in
this
org
network.
Its
ecosystem
is
market,
and
if
this
value
is
proportional
to
the
amount
of
contributors
and
then
what
is
it?
What
is
and
what
is
the
number
of
could
use
we
have
now
when
last
month
we
we
don't,
have
really
good
insight
in
this
quantity
importance
of
continued
dimetric,
so
we
can
sort
of
succeed
and
fail
on
a
sort
of
high
enough
granule
or
time
line.
A
So
we
understand
how
we
doing
here,
yes
or
some
bullish
aims
with
cedar
things.
So
we
really
don't
know
how
well
we're
doing
on
this
from
and
whatever
they
mean,
but,
as
is
sure
we
have
marketing
metrics,
and
we
know
some
key
top
commits
this
on,
but
we
don't
have
it
sort
collected
in
one
place.
You
know
understandable
format,
so
we
can
actually
action
on
it,
which
is
really
what
you
want.
A
You
want
these
metrics
to
be
clear
and
it
should
be
clear
when,
when
we're
failing-
and
that
leads
so
we
can
such
a
mix
and
make
make
some
steps
more
inclusive.
Also,
almost
all
our
work
is
not
incentivized
any
kind
of
open
form,
and
that
is
just
starting
to
be
be
barely
useful
enough
for
us
to
rely
on
it.
I
think
we're
just
about
over
the
hump.
Now
we're
very,
very
close
to
it.
A
B
So,
what's
unclear
for
me,
is
in
the
first
in
the
in
the
first
slide,
share
and
widespread
axis
Oscar.
Are
you
postulating
that
it
does
work
on
many
old
devices
and
languages
and
that
we
do
have
not
so
not
first
world
users,
or
are
you
postulating
them,
but
actually
that
we
should
be
ashamed
of?
The
fact
that
this
is
the
commander.
B
A
B
I
guess
the
thing
that
comes
across
heavier
to
me
and
I'd
like
to
hear
other
people's
thoughts
on
this.
Is
that
I,
like
the
fact
that
you
didn't
approach
this
from
the
from
the
classic
identity
politics
point
of
view
about
inclusion
and
and
the
warm
and
fuzzy
stuff
about
us
being
humans
together,
but
actually
the
manifestation
of
the
products
that
is,
that
we're
building?
C
Guess
we
could
have
a
very
light
client,
not
in
an
imino
of
the
blockchain
stuff,
node
stuff,
but
in
a
meaning
of
the
application,
the
smaller
application
that
runs
in
older
devices
and
does
maybe
don't
support
everything,
but
just
the
essentials.
So
maybe
it's
it
doesn't
have
a
so
pretty
UI
because
it,
the
libraries,
are
more
limited
in
older
Android.
C
So
I
think
this
should
be
interesting
because
some
people,
as
Oscar
said
they
don't
have
access
to
latest
devices
with
Android.
Seven,
eight
nine,
don't
know
what
is
the
latest
version
of
Android
but
or
iOS.
They
have
all.
Only
older
devices
that
usually
has
are
even
recycled
from
first
countries.
So
that's
something
to
think
about.
Maybe
we
could
have
our
web
status
that
works
anywhere.
D
B
I
made
afraid
if
we
look
at
the
history
of
we
list
the
history
of
stay
with
chaplains,
not
even
talk
about
the
wallet
or
drowsy
I
mean
you
know,
IRC
function
for
years
and
years
and
years,
and
just
a
really
really
simple
messaging
messaging
client.
So
can
we
imagine
doing
the
very,
very
stripped
down
and
just
you
know,
text-based
version
of
status
for.
B
D
A
C
B
I
guess
I
guess
the
big
question
that
I'm
asking
myself
is
yeah.
We,
where
we're
sort
of
at
war
with
with
operating
systems
and
stores
and
Julian,
has
proposed
the
idea
of
extensions
and
we're
looking
at
ways
that
we
can
build
features
that
that
that
we
want
to
have
that
app
stores,
wouldn't
necessarily
approve.
Should
we
consider
some
browser-based
version
of
what
it
is
that
we're
doing,
or
is
that
just
a
totally
insane
thought
of
having
you
know
plug
in
so.
E
I
mean
so
I
think
one
thing
you
have
to
think
about
me
if
I'm
wrong
on
this,
but
like
we
were
looking
at,
you
know
essentially
gaps.
They
can
broadcast
over
whisper
broadcast
messages
over
whispered,
different
types
of
applications.
You
know
like
gas
extraction,
is
one
example.
I
think
the
biggest
reason
for
that-
and
this
is
more
of
like
I-
think
something
that
goes
on
the
wall.
D
H
A
One
thing
I
would
love
from
these
seminars
in
general
is
if
we
could
focus
on
like
problem
identification,
I.
Think
it's
great
that
especially
ups
of
deficits.
All
we
want
to
solve
these
problems
and
talk
them
through,
but
in
terms
of
the
group,
that's
here,
and
it
was
a
you
seen
a
time
most
efficiently
actively.
Maybe
it's
useful
to
focus
of
problem,
identification
and
stead
of
adding
added
to
it,
and
then
we
can
see
if
this
is
real
problem
can
actually
solve
it.
A
H
People
yeah,
so
it's
like
kind
of
a
recurring
problem
for
many
people
like
some
people
are
complaining.
They
cannot
build
status,
mobile
status
destined
for
you
know
it
Terry.
They
are
following
the
instruction,
but
it
just
so
many
so
many
pieces
that
it's
very
hard
and
it
sometimes
it's
super
crazy
issues.
E
Yeah
I
could
I
like
from
firsthand
experience.
I
mean
I've.
Only
I
haven't
tried
to
build
status
desktop,
but
I
looked
at
the
github
repo
for
it.
You
know.
That's
like
personally.
I've
worked
other
repos
just
out
out
there.
It,
for
example,
to
my
crypto
repo
is
just
an
electron
repos,
just
really
JavaScript,
not
much
else.
It
was
pretty
easy
to
dive
into
get
working.
That
is
desktop.
There's
a
good
amount
going
on
it's
not
necessarily
accessible
to
the
average
developer.
It's
requires
a
little
bit
of
specialization,
I.
Think
right.
E
B
I'd
like
to
I'd
like
to
ask
oxy
a
question
about
this,
so
you're
sitting
there
and
listening
to
all
the
nerd
discussion
going
on
and-
and
you
spent
some
time
at
consensus
and
now
you're
here
with
us
at
status.
How
do
you
see
studio
fitting
into
into
this,
with
education
and
and
inclusivity,
and
and
and
making
these
things
more
accessible?
Actually,.
I
Sure
so,
I
think
from
my
perspective,
one
of
the
things
that
we
should
do
in
order
to
sort
of
make
education
via
status
in
line
with
our
principles,
I
think,
is
to
have
much
more.
One
of
the
things
we
can
do
is
to
have
much
more
community
driven
contribution
into
the
content
itself
around
education,
that's
one.
The
second
thing
is
I,
do
think
in
terms
of
making
it
accessible
to
as
many
people
as
possible,
which
again
it's
a
little
bit
different
than
the
model
that
we
follow.
I
In
addition
to
that,
making
the
access
to
it
from
a
design
perspective,
I
think
it'll
be
very
important
to
make
it
easy
to
navigate
easy
to
search
easy
to
find,
but
also
available
on
various
platforms
available
geographically
throughout
as
much
as
possible,
and
you
know
this-
this
is
something
actually
we
run
into
a
consensus
around.
For
example,
you
know
translations
into
other
languages,
or
you
know,
access
by
geography
and
things
like
that.
B
That
so
I'd
like
to
get
Sean,
if
you
still
online
into
this
and
give
him
a
chance
to
talk
about
the
advocacy
program,
because
we
have
this
whole
issue,
we're
starting
to
build.
You
know:
contribution
links
and
contribution
portals
and
and
Sean.
How
do
you
see
the
advocacy
program
enabling
us
to
get
more
computer
contributors
and
and
and
to
be
more
inclusive.
J
Yeah
that
the
the
right
now,
the
idea
around
the
advocacy
program
is
essentially
just
one
mechanism
of
essentially
taking
a
more
passive
community
and
kind
of
taking
them
on
this
journey
of
you
know
becoming
more
familiar
with
with
our
values
and
with
the
product
and
then
eventually
getting
to
the
point
where
yeah
they
can
contribute
in.
You
know,
non-technical
ways,
yeah
in
a
host
of
different
mechanisms
and
then
essentially
all
becoming
mouthpieces,
and
you
know
themselves
I,
guess,
representing
status
and
in
building
their
own
communities
around
it.
So
yeah
right
now,
the
thunk.
J
The
idea
around
the
advocacy
program
is
essentially
to
try
and
turn
a
hundred
thousand
Twitter
followers
that
we
might
have
or
all
of
our
telegram
people
are
our
telegram
channel
and
actually
giving
them
mechanisms
to
become
more
active
participants
and,
ideally
becoming
contributors.
Maybe
not
you
know
contributors
to
this.
The
extent,
though,
become
core
contributors
that
might
not
be
feasible,
but
you
know
being
able
to
contribute
whether
that's
a
translation
network.
A
So
I
could
hear
it
in
my
eye
him
in
my
tears
when
they
respond
in
English
and
people
could
hear
it
back
in
Chinese,
which
is
tool
that
human
uses
and
all
it
requires
is
one
bilingual
user,
like
a
translator
and
some
so
tooling,
I
mean
it
is
for
for
a
bunch
of
languages
and
I
mean
it's
just
these
types
of
things
that
they're
like
there's
a
lot
of
things
we
can,
we
can
imagine
doing
the
town
hosting
conferences
and
unsent
as
well.
Just
in
terms
of
possibilities
for
multi
locale
kind
of
real-time
collaboration,
so.
B
A
B
Take
the
opportunity
to
thank
everybody
for
the
localization
efforts
that
I've
seen
happening.
It's
been
amazing
to
watch
us
spread
out
our
language
footprint
and
to
have
that
working.
I.
Think.
That's
also
a
point
that
we
can,
that
we
can
expand
upon
is,
is
is
being
more
multilingual
not
only
in
our
application,
but
with
our
with
our
communications
outward.
K
K
Yeah,
what
about
I
was
talking
to
all
about
this
last
week
about
the
possibility
into
a
completely
hostile
environment
and
seeing
what
the
building
blocks
are.
Parameters
look
like
to
up
and
run
status
from
a
place
like
that
say
in
Gaza
or
Palestine,
with
a
group
of
in
a
type
of
hackathon
or
a
group
there
to
see
exactly
what
it
would
take
to
you
know,
get
something
up
and
running
there
that
they
would
see
is
useful
and
keep
it
running.
K
L
B
M
L
L
B
Good,
so
let's
put
that
as
an
action
item
carry
that
to
explore
those
alternatives,
how
we
can
reach
out
into
into
other
communities.
So
we
can
stress
test
stress
test
our
our
applications
for
people
who
are
less
technologically
savvy
and
and
more
technologically
challenged
either
in
the
infrastructure
in
the
environment
or
the
devices
that
they're
using.
L
B
B
B
A
A
H
H
L
B
N
Trying
to
attract
diverse
profiles
and
again
we
are
not
doing
with
a
lot
of
other
in
brackets
tech
companies.
We
are
doing
recently
when
we
have
a
lot
of
females
and
that's
not
a
good
thing,
but
I
don't
see
us
having
enough
outreach
in
areas
that
are
not
classical
for
hiring
so
saying
the,
for
example,
I
would
love
to
have
more
people
join
in
status
from
Africa
from
Asia
from
South
America.
We
do
have
a
piston
gods
mm-hmm.
N
N
I
wouldn't
want
to
even
know
what
people
are
from.
To
be
honest,
that's
not
the
part
of
it
because
I
do
like
I,
do
have
access
to
the
data
and
I
see
it
I'm
feeling
like
there's,
probably
some
ways
that
we
are
imagined
in
the
like:
whatever
we
beholder,
how
do
we
know
if
a
person
in
another
area
that
we
don't
have
anybody
come
from
will
be
able
to
use
it?
There's
a
bit
about
making
other
people
the
things
that
we
say
and
we
do
accessible
outside
of
I?
N
G
You
know
on
what
this
kind
of
applications
could
do
and
I
think
stuff
is
right
that
that's
for
a
a
lot
of
perspectives
that
were
missing.
It
are
other
people
used
the
software
in
in
different
Middle
East
countries
or
disease
in
Africa
resistant
in
Latin
America.
We
is
not
just
about
you
know
argument,
so
it's
just
perspective
that
we're
missing
it.
Only
someone
who
was
actually
living
in
there
was
a
very
good
experience.
There
actually
understands
the
all.
B
O
O
To
figure
out
the
best
way
to
express
how
to
spell
status
can
benefit
the
community
because,
like
you
mentioned
the
view,
there's
a
lot
of
it
going
on
right
now
in
Latin
America,
like
political
economics
and
people
trying
to
find
freedom
and
economical
freedom,
of
course,
right
and
there's
a
lot
of
issues
like
also
Ricardo,
mentioning
like
how
they
can
use
status
if
they
don't
have
the
the
latest
poems
or
latest
Android
versions,
right
or
iOS
versions.
So
what
I've
been
seeing
is
that
maybe
we
can
engage
by
doing
the
mesh
networks.
P
O
If
we
want
them
to
use
stainless
right,
so
we
have
to
bring
first
of
all
all
the
resources
and
for
me,
the
most
important
one
is
education,
education
about
this
technology,
even
if
not
even
just
about
blockchain
technology,
but
just
how
technology?
What
Emily
can
benefit
you
if
you
use
it
because,
even
though
we're
like,
for
example,
Mexico,
we
are
a
very
important
country,
we
do
use
a
lot
of
technology
and
these
resources,
but
we
still
lack
a
lot
of
educational
about
technology
at
schools.
O
Universities,
just
like
the
the
private
universities,
are
the
ones
that
get
all
these
conference
or
workshops
about
technology,
but
not
the
public
ones
right
so
just
to
go
back
a
few
months
ago,
we
were
present
a
couple
of
universities
in
Mexico
City.
They
were
actually
public
schools
where
they
opened
their
doors
for
us
that
that
don't
usually
happen.
O
They
don't
like
they
don't
know,
said
like
external
conferences,
without
any
approval
from
the
government
or
that
kind
of
stuff,
but
we
were
able
to
do
to
be
to
be
present
there
and
talk
about
stators
and
blockchain
ethereum,
and
they
were
all
like
pumped
up.
You
know
all
the
students
they
were
like.
Okay.
This
is
what
we
can
do
with
this.
This
is
what
they
can
benefit
is
this
is
the
new
possibility
for
a
new
change
of
austerity,
economic,
economical,
I'm,
sorry
or
politics,
no
or
Commerce,
so
so.
B
So
I'd
like
to
ask
a
question
to
everybody
on
the
basis
of
that,
without
you
feeling,
like
I'm
cutting
you
off
swallow,
what
are
the
things
that
I've
been
thinking
about?
Is
you
know
we
we
have.
We
have
our
ghosts
installed
where
we've
done
our
blog
and
we've
talked
about
maybe
doing
other
language
installs.
We
have.
We
have
a
blog
happening
in
Chinese
thinking
about
doing
one
to
the
Korean
community.
B
How
does
everybody
feel
about
the
idea
of
having
our
status
just
being
multilingual
that
all
this
was
happening
not
only
in
English
but
in
all
other
languages
on
the
blog?
This
is.
Do
you
guys
feel
like
that
would
be
a
more
inclusive
way
to
approach
it
rather
than
segmenting
us
into
individual
language
based
portals
I.
O
O
You
know
and
it's
very
to
understanding
language
and
that's
something
that
I've
been
seen
when
I'm
when
I'm
sure
in
like
the
Spanish
books
that
I
translate
for
for
us
to
sure
it
for
like
American,
community
or
spanish-speaking
community,
they
actually
engage
with
it
and
they
like
it
and
they
get
this
knowledge.
And
they
actually
tell
me
like
hey.
Thank
you
for
sharing
these
knowledge
in
Spanish,
because
there's
a
lack
of
information
in
my
language
and
I
don't
find
any
resources
right,
cool.
B
So
Kerri
can
we
put
that
as
an
action
item
in
combination
with
people
opps
and
with
and
with
the
advocacy
program
that
we
look
out
is
that
we
can
expand
our
our
linguistic
presence,
with
the
blog
and
with
the
townhall,
and
these
different
things.
I
think
that
would
be
a
really
great
place
that
we
could
sink
our
teeth
into
I'd
like
to
move
on
and
ask
Rajani.
J
Real
quickly,
just
on
the
one
thing
I
just
wanted
to
add
is
you
should
also
be
very
mindful
of
like
the
platforms
that
I
guess
the
community
already
exists
on.
So
if
we
look
at
a
neighbor,
for
example,
in
Korea,
it
is
you
know,
by
far
the
biggest
blogging
platform
in
in
that
region
and
I
think
that
I
think
definitely
trying
to
create
more
of
our
blog
content.
B
F
B
E
This
is
just
a
quick
observation
by
me
in
general,
like
pretty
ignorant
as
far
as
like
diversity,
issues
go
and
like
how
to
drive
diversity
and
things
like
that.
But
I
can't
help
but
notice
that,
with
a
skin
in
the
game,
3
there's
like
six
I,
think
there's
six
people
they're
all
white
guys
right
so
I'm,
not
I.
L
B
One
of
the
interesting
things
about
the
skin
and
began
again
experiment
based
on
my
conversations
with
with
Carrie
and
Steph
and
other
people
at
people.
Ops,
is
that
there's
a
perception
that
you
have
to
like
have
a
certain
amount
of
money
to
have
skin
in
the
game
and
I
think
we
can
probably
do
a
better
job
of
expressing
the
people
that
you
can
participate
at
any
level
Oscar.
You
know
you
can
have
five
dollars
or
ten
dollars.
You
know
we're
not
all
making
the
same
here
at
status.
K
K
A
lot
of
a
lot
of
you
know
details
about
how
things
work,
but
overall,
you
can
get
lost
in
trying
to
find
out
what
you're
doing
in
the
first
place
like
to
be
able
to
stay
focused
on
an
idea
of
with
all
these
technologies,
and
all
these
things
is
very
difficult.
It's
it's
more
easier
to
believe
when
you
go
to
a
group
of
people
in
a
country
and
say
what
are
you
doing?
Why
are
you
doing
this
because
I
want
to
know
tools
that
change
the
world?
Okay,
cool?
So
do
I?
K
How
do
I
do
that?
Here's
how
you
do
that,
whereas
otherwise
we
get
into
these
all
these
different
mix
things.
You
know
all
these
principles
that
add
up
to
what
you
know
I
feel
like
there's
another
layer
on
top
of
this.
That
could
be
very
simple
that
when
you're
talking
to
people,
they
also
you
know-
oh
you're,
a
communist,
oh
you're,
an
anarchist.
Oh,
you
know
you
find
a
common
belief
that
helps
people
aligned
in
a
thinking
and
then
they're
willing
to
put
for
effort
in
the
learning,
because
the
goal
is
the
same.
L
B
In
this
series
of
seminars,
there's
also
a
little
bit
in
the
air
about
us
finding
a
mission
statement
and
I
don't
want
to
go
into
that
in
this
part
of
the
seminar,
but
it's
definitely
somewhere
where
I
think
that
we
can,
we
can
be
inclusive,
is
in
finding
finding
a
mission
statement
along
the
lines
that
Ned's
talking
about
that
is
simply
translatable
and
simply
you
know,
cross-cultural
and
cross
lingual,
and
things
like
that.
It's
also
somewhere
I
think
that
we
can
do
some
great
work.
I
really
like
seeing
what's
happening
in
grassroots.
B
C
There
is
also
the
thing
about
interoperability
that
kind
of
touches
this,
because
interoperability
means
that
in
past
messenger
companies
like
I
see
q
and
M
Sen
and
our
a
Oh
L
they
competed
for
their
user.
For
example.
What's
up,
we
chat
they,
their
users
are
their
products.
So
you
know
in
our
side
we
did.
The
user
is
not
our
product,
so
we
can
have
our
user
using
another
application,
for
example,
fork,
and
this
fork
can
communicate
with
all
these
status.
C
Our
skin
cannot
even
be
stay,
just
may
be
missed,
implement,
shet
and
starts
talking
with
status
users.
So
for
this
inclusivity,
maybe
we
can
have
another
Forks
that
are
made
out
by
stages
to
present
we
Hayes
another
culture.
Maybe
I
stay
to
spark
for
latinoamérica.
Maybe
it's
different
the
way
the
design
and
the
user
interface
is
different
for
them
because
they
like
that
way.
So
that's
that
that's
not
another
powerful
tool
we
have
to
which
interval
in
therapy
sorry
inclusivity,
because.
F
B
K
Think
we're
only
as
accessible
is
our
creating
it
at
the
moment.
I
think
it
would
be
really
interesting
to
see
first
in
our
own
organization
what
people
need
or
what
they
think
is
important
and
then
finding
the
balance
there
and
then
testing
that
in
the
real
world
and
going
even
like
Ricardo,
said
I,
don't
know
Asia
or
Latin
America
and
see
how
they
with
this
base
would
would
change
and
shift.
Things
would
be
most
optimum
for
their
solutions,
because
who
are
we
to
decide
what's
best
for
anybody
else?
K
L
B
K
No
I,
don't
think
so.
I
think
that
if
we
want
to
act
in
a
kind
of
I,
don't
know
decentralized
manner
or
with
a
decentralized
design
system,
we
should
agree
on
that
and
then
test
it
for
ourselves.
It
doesn't
make
sense
that
we
say
we
are,
and
then
we
have.
You
know
things
in
place
that
determine
what
other
pianning
can't
use
so
I
think
it
goes
against
our
principles.
C
So
if
you
think
about
forking
a
client's
in
nolde
messenger,
for
example,
we
have
always
MSN
Messenger
Plus.
That
was
a
Hackett
version
of
the
official
client.
That
was
against
the
rules
of
the
use
of
the
terms
users
terms.
But
everyone
was
using
it
because
it
has
a
lot
of
better
features.
And
so
maybe
we
should
incentivize
the
forking
incentivize,
the
customization
of
our
clients,
because
people
will
naturally
do
it.
B
B
K
P
That's
definitely
the
way
this
space
in
the
decentralization,
then
anything
that's
been
successful
in
decentralization
works
and
that's
how
all
the
block
chain
networks
currently
work.
Is
you
build
a
protocol?
Then
you
have
reference
implementations
of
that
protocol,
which
people
can
then
fork
and
build
in
whichever
way
they
want
to.
So
as
long
as
you
adhere
to
the
protocol,
you
can
do
whatever
you
want.
P
Status,
implementation
to
then
work
on
the
same
protocol,
so
we
either
need
to
figure
out
how
to
make
that
easy
or
or
be
that
little
bit
torn
right,
Bitcoin
bit
Torrance
the
exact
same
way:
there's
many
implementations
of
sharing
and
using
torrents,
but
it's
all
following
the
same
protocol.
Cerium
is
the
same
way
with
it's
multiple
implementations.
How
do
we
do
the
same
thing?
P
We
just
we're
building
the
reference
implementation
of
using
whatever
we
call
the
status
protocol,
and
then
people
can
do
whatever
the
hell
they
want
with
the
status
reference
implementation
to
then
change
it
the
way
they'd
like
to
have
it,
because
we
can't
do
it
all.
We
don't
have
the
resources
or,
if
we
do,
we
need
to
then
like
allocate
those
resources
appropriately,
but.
G
Communication
for
a
lot
of
different
applications,
well
just
a
protocol,
the
reference
where
the
protocol
needs
to
be
specified
very
clearly
and
separately
from
the
reference
implementation.
So
anyone
can
read
it
and
then
create
their
own
software
that
interacts
with
that
network.
So
in
that
sense
it
becomes
that
it
becomes
a
platform
really
that
people
can
build
things
on
top
of
it,
not
just
that,
so
that
they
can
build
form
for
a
mobile
app.
That's.
B
A
Yes,
yes,
thank
you,
Ron
for
participating,
I.
Think
it's
been
really
awesome
to
see
everyone's
a
contributor
perspective.
I
would
love
it
if
we
could
continue
this
on,
discuss
and
also
people.
This
hack
EMD
links,
you
can
sort
of
add
stuff
to
wall
of
shame
and
so
on,
and
ideally
I'd
like
it.
If
we
could
get
some
more
input
on
the
world,
shame
and
then
we
can
swim,
use
it
to
prioritize
it
and
start
to
attack
it
and
attach
it
to
our
OPRS
and
discussion
in
Prague
I
guess
for
specific.