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From YouTube: Status - Jarrad Hope at 2019 Istanbul Offsite
Description
Jarrad Hope presents the vision and plans for status.im for 2020
The presentation was shared at the Status offsite in September 2019 in Istanbul
A
And
like
last
year's,
been
pretty
pretty
tough
but
I
think
we
should
give
us
that
was
a
pretty
big
pat
on
the
back,
like
basically
one
of
the
first
sort
of
AI
CEOs
in
2017,
and
now
we
run
security
audits
and
we're
well
on
the
track
were
actually
delivering
on
our
whitepaper
promises
and
we're
actually
one
of
the
first
high
schoolers
to
actually
even
do
that.
I
mean
that's
very
mr.
limited
what
their
process
sir,
come
on.
Guys.
A
Thinking
about
future
direction-
and
you
know
I
mean
like
I'm,
always
kind
of
dreamy
and
stuff
like
that.
So
just
bear
with
me:
it'd
probably
go
that
way
a
little
while,
but
I'll
try
and
bring
it
down
to
future
directions,
but
I
feel
before
I
stop
talking.
I
can
show
you
like
a
bunch
of
YouTube
videos,
you
guys
so
you
know
get
into
that
now.
A
So
if
you're
not
familiar
Jordy
Berliner
is
this
amazing
guru
is
like
brilliant
identity,
internal
truce,
but
the
reason
he's
doing
it
is
because
he's
won
some
independence
of
Catalan
from
Spain
right,
and
he
genuinely
believes
in
this
and
is
basically
his
life
mission.
If
you
haven't
mentioned
this
to
him,
just
prepared
for
like
two
hours
of
just
non-stop
talking
is
very,
very
passionate
about
and
he's
very,
very
passionate
about.
A
So
and
basically
it's
kind
of
crazy:
they
try
to
hold
a
referendum
independently
and
they
even
used
ipfs
right,
but
the
problem
is,
as
Spain
basically
blocked
all
the
idea
vest
proxies,
and
so
nobody
actually
used
the
technology
or
not
as
many
people
access
to
it
unless
you
knew
how
to
access
five
units
directly.
So
you
know
we're
working
on
status
and,
like
we
have
things
like
in
Europe.
This
is
not
good
enough
like
there
is
no
half
measures
with
this
stuff.
A
So
it's
just
kind
of
crazy,
like
these
people
actually
can
benefit
from
having
this
infrastructure,
and
you
can
build
institutions
like
voting
on
top
of
this
stuff
and
they
can
access
it
from
their
phones
in
a
decentralized
manner.
You
know,
and
when
we
have
things
like
ultra
light,
beam
and
mesh,
that's
the
massive
thing
then,
even
if
they
shut
off
the
internet,
these
people
can
still
coordinate
with
community
money.
Community
law
and
that
kind
of
thing
is
anyone
familiar
with
a
guy
called
Amir
top
and
you're
talking
yeah.
A
So
so,
for
those
who
don't
know
this
guy
is
a
hardcore,
crypto,
cyberpunk
and
a
guy.
He
calls
himself
like
a
warrior
scholar
and
he's
huge
on
Bitcoin.
But,
more
importantly,
is
he
actually
goes
into
into
Syria
and
works
on
the
actually
he
fights
on
the
frontlines
of
against
Isis,
necessary
thing
and
the
reason
he's
doing.
That
is
because
he
believes
in
a
new
independent
nation,
that's
being
bought
for
Java.
A
So
if
literally
like
2
million
people
that
are
trying
to
establish
a
democracy
in
the
nicest
Caliphate
and
there's
basically,
the
same
story
like
I
saw
both
of
them
in
Barcelona
recently,
and
they
linked
the
oneness
infrastructure
right.
They
need
to
centralize
infrastructure
because
they
can't
established
institutions
without
it
being
hostile,
possibly
taken
over
and
in
this
actually
with
force,
and
not
just
like
blocking
incident.
B
B
B
B
A
B
B
C
C
Instead,
the
opposite,
Duras
consolidated,
bringing
the
country
closer
to,
unlike
Maduro
chavez,
wasn't
charismatic
and
beloved
leader
in
the
90s
he
burst
on
consolidating
the
sites
across
the
country.
He
blamed
government,
corruption
and
then
israel's
elite
for
the
economic
inequality.
His
populist
message
resonated
with
the
country's
poor,
who
eventually
helped
bring
the
power
the
key
moment
in
his
presidency.
In
2004,
when
oil
prices,
surged
Venezuela's
petroleum,
dependent
economy
started,
moving,
Chavez
went
on
to
spend
billions
from
the
profits
on
social
welfare
programs
for
the
poor.
C
He
subsidized
food,
improved
the
educational
system,
built
an
enviable
health
care
system
and
reduced
poverty
by
more
than
half.
These
programs
certainly
helped
the
poor,
but
they
served
a
purpose
for
Chavez
as
well.
In
order
to
be
reelected,
he
didn't
keep
these
millions
of
poor
Venezuelans
had
so
he
rigged
the
economy
to
do
just
that.
He
didn't
scale
back
from
Israel.
Our
dependence
on
oil
is
under
strain
spending
like
to
a
protest,
which
meant
all
of
these
programs
would
be
impossible
to
sustain
if
oil
prices
fell
after
Chavez
is
dead
when
Maduro
took
office.
C
Is
he
a
big
successor?
That's
exactly
what
happened?
Oil
prices
plummeted
in
2014,
Maduro
failed
to
adjust.
Hyperinflation
has
made
medicines
and
food
that
were
once
subsidized
unaffordable
for
Venezuelans
poor
now
make
up
about.
82
percent
of
the
population
like
Chavez
Maduro
has
also
raped
the
economy
to
keep
himself
in
power,
but
this
time
it's
not
benefiting
the
poor
he's
exploited.
A
complex
currency
system
put
in
place
by
Chavez
Maduro
said
the
official
exchange
rate
Ambani
bears
for
the
US
dollar,
but
only
as
friends
and
allies
have
access
to
this
rate.
C
In
reality,
the
Venezuelan
currency
has
become
basically
us
most
Venezuelans
get
their
dollars
in
the
black
market,
where
the
rate
is
about
12,000
volibear
per
dollar.
The
military,
which
got
complete
control
of
food
supply
for
Maduro
2016,
is
reportedly
profiting
off
this
constant
crisis.
They
imported
food
of
Maduro
special
occurrence
rate,
sell
it
on
the
black
market
for
a
massive
product
so
for
military
generals
and
political
allies
of
Maduro.
The
crisis
has
offered
a
lucrative
opportunity
which
has
helped
Maduro
stay
in
power.
The
international
community,
including
Argentina,
condemned
dealers,
the
u.s.
C
A
I'll
talk
about
this
is
heavy
stuff
right,
but,
like
I'll
talk
a
bit
more
about
that,
I
don't
know,
but
the
one
thing
when
I
do
want
to
make
about
this
particular
video
is
that
economic
sanctions
are
kind
of
brutal,
like
they
punish
an
entire
population
for
like
a
small
handful
of
people,
it's
kind
of
joke
and
there's.
This
is
idea
for
excellent
voice
and
loyalty,
and
the
cost
of
exiting
for
the
population
is
just
too
high
and
we
need
to
lower
that
cost
as
much
as
possible.
A
A
What's
interesting
about
favelas
in
general,
like
basically,
these
kind
of
grown
communities
and
burns
like
urban
areas
is,
if
you
go
back
six
generations
in
America,
motus
of
those
vibrant
cities
looked
exactly
the
same.
They
were
doing
exactly
the
same
thing
you
crazy
little
huts
to
start
with,
and
in
like
you
eventually
build
up
until
you
have
skyscrapers
from
point
from
the
developed
world.
A
We
just
assume
that
you
have
like
these
developmental
planners
and
you
have
like
massive
loans,
and
you
can
just
build
these
things
right
and
all
of
the
solutions
to
this
sort
of
stuff
by
YouTube.
Trying
this
old
piece
of
stuff,
particularly
in
Mumbai,
is
to
bulldoze
everyone's
mutts
huts
and
then
build
a
joint
complex
there,
which
they
can't
afford.
So
you
constantly
push
the
ball
further
and
further
out
anyway.
That's
a
whole
other
topic.
D
Designed
by
urban
planners,
but
you'll
notice,
parts
of
the
city
that
don't
look
like
the
rest,
see
the
difference.
The
people
who
live
in
these
parts
in
the
city,
with
the
clean
lines
and
well
thought-out
design,
are
called
people
of
the
asphalt.
The
people
who
live
in
these
parts
of
the
city
are
called
people
of
the
hill.
Even
though
the
people
of
the
asphalt
and
the
people,
the
hill
live
closely
intertwined
throughout
the
city,
they
live
in
vastly
different
lives.
These
informal
communities.
D
D
B
B
D
2008,
the
city
of
Galle
was
ready
to
take
over
the
lawless
territory.
This
simple,
the
special
tours
of
police
officers,
entered
the
favelas
and
drive
up
a
they
call
this
process
to
pacification,
but
this
is
tricky
really
fast.
There's
been
this
big
discussion:
United
States
about
police
brutality,
but
Brazil
is
on
a
whole
different
level
when
it
comes
to
police
violence.
D
D
D
D
A
A
But
essentially
it's
an
ultimatum
that
citizens
have.
You
basically
have
three
choices
at
the
end
of
the
day,
it
also
works
with
consumers
and
producers.
That's
right,
one
is,
if
you
don't
like
what's
happening,
you
can
exit,
usually
that's
kind
of
a
last
resort
more
commonly.
You
want
to
issue
your
voice
and
try
to
change
things
and
ask
the
government
to
do
these
sort
of
things
or
you're
loyal
and
you,
you
know
you're
kind
of
past
the
videos
like
you
know
whatever
it's
like
in
that
commute
so
much,
which
is
the
majority
of
people
right.
A
So
the
progression
is
usually
royalty
voice
and
then,
finally,
but
as
you
can
see,
the
cost
of
voice
alone
can
be
incredibly
high
like
this
is
when
you
start
putting
your
own
body
your
life
on
the
line
in
the
streets.
If
it
gets
violent
and
exit,
is
it's
pretty
impossible?
Like
I
mean
Venezuelan
subletting
from
Venezuela,
you
know
people
have
been
doing
pretty
sick
right
now.
So,
like
it's
true,
like
people
do
next
and
what's
really
interesting
about
like
chains.
A
Is
this
right,
like
you
could,
literally,
if
an
ideology
or
a
certain
group
of
people,
I
won't
go
on
to
participate
in
the
the
overarching
ideology,
they
can
take
everything
and
they
can
just
for
it
and
they
can
just
go.
Do
their
own
thing.
Imagine
if
we
took
this
technology
and
we
put
on
with
all
devices.
A
If
you
could
do
that,
and
then
it
gives
these
people
the
option
to
exit-
and
he
reduces
the
cost
of
exit,
II
I-
don't
know
how
much,
but
it
seems
like
a
lot
so
so
that's
kind
of
like
why
this
kind
of
matters
at
least
to
me,
and
certainly
the
question
I,
asked
myself
and
kind
of
why
I'm
in
this
room
is
like
what
if
we
could
provide
the
tools
and
infrastructure
in
a
quote,
unquote
complete
package
to
basically
help
these
people
thrive,
to
helping
to
coordinate,
to
build
their
own
institutions
their
own
ways
of
putting
their
rent
money
right
like
each
of
not
all
these
people
going
to
want
to
theory
and
by
the
time
they
get
access
to
a
very,
is
going
to
be
more
expensive,
the
more
they
probably
going
to
one
of
their
own
currencies.
A
Like
many
nations
have
their
own
currencies
and
if
we
could
give
them
this
package
or
we
can
help
tailor
these
solutions,
then
we
can
also
participate
in
their
success.
All
right
we
did,
we
can
I,
don't
know
how
that
looks
exactly,
but
it
seems
a
lot
better
than
doing
contract
work
for
broad
contract
work
for
corporations,
and
then
these
things
just
never
materialize
right.
A
So
I
think
this
needs
to
be
said.
This
idea
and
like
I,
was
trying
to
think
of
an
analogy
to
try
and
connect
this
to
like
some
of
the
tech
stuff
and
the
myths
I
could
really
think
of.
This
is
like
well
hands
right.
Did
the
smartphone's
like
we
could
actually
win
communities
and
then
maybe
one
day
they
turn
into
nations.
Who
knows.
A
We
don't
even
have
to
be
that
good
at
it
right.
The
Copenhagen
consensus
think-tank,
along
with
Cambridge
University
I,
came
up
with
this
really
interesting
paper
and
they
basically
realized.
Well.
They
believe
that
roughly
a
0.1
percent
reduction
in
transaction
costs
will
control
my
quadruples
that
country's
wealth
right.
That's
literally
the
difference
between
Argentina
and
Switzerland,
and
that's
some
nuts
right
I,
don't
know
if
it's
true
or
not
but
like
we
could
probably
lower
transaction
costs
and.
A
I've
known
other
things
like
good
way,
if
we
do
that,
and
then
we
connects
these
communities
like
I,
don't
know
through
some
kind
of
atomic
swaps,
but
in
Chains
and
essentially
to
the
global
financial
infrastructure,
and
you
can
imagine
these
favelas
create
their
own
currencies,
their
own
coins.
We
connect
them
to
like
a
master,
blockchain
or
whatever,
and
then
all
of
this
wealth
and
capital
flow
and
more
importantly,
it
doesn't
get
lost
right.
A
So
this
is
one
of
the
issues
with
like
putting
these
donations
and
dumping
money
into
these
things
is
because
it
just
kind
of
like
disappears.
It's
like
a
bucket
bill,
all
these
holes
in
it.
But
if
you
had
this
money
infrastructure,
the
money
would
flow
in
and
it
would
be
within
that
currency
and
perhaps
it
moves
out
into
the
Fiat
kind
of
things
like
that
book.
Oh,
if
flows
back
into
the
river
came
from.
A
They
believe
that
digital
ecosystems,
it
could
account
for
more
than
sixty
trillion
dollars
in
revenue
by
2025
right
and
most
companies
haven't
really
even
caught
on
to
this
idea
of
doing
this
kind
of
ecosystem
platform
stuff
so
like
way
kind
of
a
little
too
early,
but
we're
poised
for
it
right
and
if
we
get
this
technology
right,
it's
gonna
be
huge.
I
hope.
A
This
is
kinda
like
the
section
was
talking
about
or
any
kind
of
like
red
tape,
and
you
get
this
with
cryptocurrencies
like
as
long
as
you
have
internet
access
and
a
way
to
transmit,
you
can
transmit
as
much
as
you
want
without
really
any
needs.
Mater
is
kind
of
getting
into
money.
Transmitters
can,
they
believe,
can't
reduce
poverty
by
theoretically.
A
Actually,
a
lot
of
them
are
very
aligned
with
like
level
X,
so
the
United
Nations
is
kind
of
on
our
side.
With
this
right,
they're
like
yes,
they
should
be
reached.
Yes,
mr.
bee
privacy.
Yes,
everyone
should
have
the
ability
to
participate,
like
governance
of
people
right
and
actually
made
a
bunch
of
slides.
For
this
thing,
all
this
stuff,
but
I
won't
go
through
it
all,
because
it's
kind
of
tedious
not
really
at
the
point.
A
A
So
the
question
is
like:
why
should
anyone
believe
us
right,
like
I'm
talking
about
going
to
these
people
who
obviously
provide
you
lose
infrastructure?
But
why
should
they
believe
us?
Why
should
they
have
of
this
technology
like
we
can't
even
capture
value
for
ourselves
at
the
moment,
so
we
can't
any
improvement
concept.
A
So
what
would
be
amazing
is
if
we
could
actually
build
an
associate
economic
system
right
and
what
I
mean
by
that
is
a
social
and
economics,
a
model
of
this
economy.
We
want
to
be
able
to
basically
deliver
the
cash
value
and
creampuffs
steering
for
supply,
because
if
we
can
do
that,
then
we
can
say
hey.
This
is
a
template
that
we
think
that
works.
We
know
that
and
we
start
like
we're
going
to
build
it
all
ourselves,
I'm,
going
to
use
all
this
technology
from
other
people.
A
A
Talking
about
here
is
it's
kind
of
a
little
political,
it's
kind
of
more
tongue-in-cheek,
like
it's
actually
getting
real-world
adoption.
Currently,
the
community,
the
community
is
the
nerd
little
bubble
and
their
cronies
fighting
around
right,
but
we
know
actually
talking
about
how
we
can
get
boots
on
the
ground
and
make
real
will
change
and
the
third
foundation
isn't
wrong.
Like
I
think
this
ends
up
approach
is
really
great,
because
they're
trying
to
get
more
pervasiveness
in
this
sort
of
stuff.
A
But
for
us
it's
kind
of
difficult
right
like
we
built
like
we
build
status,
we'll
try
to
get
messenger
to
begin
with
right,
well,
messenger
right
and
he's
to
three
things
that
they
promised
didn't
get
delivered,
and
we
happen
to
build
on
those
promises.
So
we're
kind
of
stuck
right
link
up
the
application
is
pretty
good.
It's
getting
better
by
the
tail
like
the
v1
is
incredible,
like
they've,
never
stuff,
that's
being
changed
and
sense
of
like
offloading
the
JavaScript,
but
we
need
to
start
taking
all
more
infrastructure.
I
talked
about
this
in
example.
A
What
was
kind
of
interesting
is
you
can
basically
model
this
infrastructure,
or
at
least
the
economic
and
the
network
and
be
mechanisms
actually
have
multiple
mechanism
interactions,
and
you
can
you
can
start
iterating
along
this
model
before
you
get
to
the
implementation.
I'm,
not
saying
that
the
implementations
loop
isn't
important,
because
you
learn
a
lot
during
that,
but
if
we
can
do
better
planning-
and
we
have
a
better
theoretical
understanding
of
how
these
systems
are
going
to
interact
with
each
other
I
think
it's
a
little
concrete
like
we
want
to
do
that-
never
consented
ization.
A
We
want
to
have
a
good
tiller
network.
We
want
to
have
like
all
of
these
different
things
interacting,
but
we
don't
know
how
they're
going
to
interact
like
berries
and
some
really
amazing
work
on
this
sort
of
finance
side
and
it's
understanding
how
the
capturing
value-
and
this
is
just
like
the
same
idea
but
like
on
steroids
right
and
so
this
is
idea
called
complex
adaptive
systems
and
it's
like
modeling
frameworks
around
this.
A
So,
if
you're
a
light,
client
like
you're
above
all,
device
and
you're
out
in
like
a
3G
connection,
then
your
data
is
at
a
premium.
Your
battery
is
their
premium,
your
resources,
so
you're
probably
going
to
be
in
leisure,
but
that
doesn't
mean
that
when
you
come
home
you
plug
it
into
into
the
wall
and
your
own
life
by
then.
A
A
For
me,
like
statuses,
are
super
at
like
yo:
you
have
these
like
three
core
functionalities.
This
is
kind
of
how
we
were
giving
the
messaging
right.
Now.
It's
like
your
messenger
browser
or
wallet.
That's
a
good
thing,
but
if
you
look
at
little
Liberty
applications
today
like
grab,
go
Jack,
who
they're
all
essentially
becoming
these
cigarettes,
they're
trying
to
replicate
what
we
shot
did
and
if
you
look
at
how
they're
all
operating,
how
actually
will
generating
revenue
most
of
them
comes
from
delivery.
Ubereats
is
actually
when
the
corner
of
uncle
send
amok
right.
A
D
B
B
Now
attending
this
UI
are
some
other
things.
Clockwise
from
the
top
left
is
the
problem,
nothing
you.
They
are
just
a
way
to
access
to
user
settings.
Next
up
our
category
filters
telling
them
all
involve,
will
hide
certain
windows
say
you
might
be
just
chance
at
the
moment,
interacting
with
jobs
wallet.
Just
like
that,
you
can
find
chance.
You
live
with
a
browser,
easy
kind
wallace.
We
can
take
them
back
on
it
anytime.
This
makes
managing
and
personalizing
this
view
much
easier.
B
A
A
A
A
Exactly
sure
that
we
might
be
working
more
closely
with
Lee
down
on
that
I'm
not
sure
embark
is
going
to
be
setting
up
these
community
initiatives
and
helping
one
of
those
initiatives
will
hopefully
be
sharing
economy.
That
I
mean
it
doesn't
have
to
be
I'm.
Just
this
is
my
suggestion.
I
mean
one
of
the
oldest
repos
in
status.
I
am
is,
is
a
one
called
move
and
a
generalized
market
framework
who's
like
that's.
A
Why
I
started
that
and
we
need
to
rebuild
the
marketing
team
right,
so
this
is
kind
of
like
the
high
levels
of
direction
for
everybody
yeah,
and
this
I
think
is
pretty
much
everything.
So
so
it's
a
kind,
a
little
back.
You
know
it'd
be
great
if
we
could
create
this
open
source
to
associate
social
and
economic
system
and
basically
create
chains
for
other
people
and
deploy
them
I'm,
not
saying
they're.
Doing
this
or
I'm
saying
this,
the
big
picture.