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From YouTube: W17 Sampo WG: Check-In Question - Conversation, Projects Updates, Treasury Policy & Proposal Update
Description
The Sampo working group develops and grows the value of the economic layer of the Token Engineering Commons. It aligns this micro-economy with the TEC mission and the collective success and individual benefit of its token holders.
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A
Of
the
token
engineering
commons,
like
that,
there's
like
these
different
layers
of
the
commons-
and
this
is
the
economic
layer,
and
so
our
our
focus
here
is
really
about
helping
to
develop
this
economy
with
primarily
a
lot
of
what
we're
focused
on
is
helping
the
commons
to
build
out
new
services,
we're
kind
of
like
an
incubator
in
that
sense,
but
we
also
do
a
bunch
of
other
stuff
nate's
going
to
talk
about
and
a
little
bit
later
today
about
the
treasury
work
that
we're
doing
out
of
this
working
group
too,
and
if
anybody
needs
to
turn
down
the
music,
you
can
always
just
right
click
on
that
little
orange
and
white
circle
and
there's
like
a
little
volume
control
there.
A
A
So,
let's,
let's
see
if
we
get
here's
auntie,
hey
auntie,
welcome.
A
So
I
know
that
e
m
is
not
going
to
be
able
to
make
it
today.
She
she
had
some
issues
with
a
family
friend
and
so
just
want
to
give
her
the
shout
out,
because
I
think
she's
going
to
be
watching
this
later
so
hope,
you're
doing
okay,
it
am.
A
A
Yeah
good
so
welcome
vlad
yeah.
I
I
the
the
other
thing
I
didn't
mention
is
on
mobile.
It's
a
little
bit
different,
but
you
figured
it
out
vlad.
Do
you
want
to
just
give
a
a
little
intro
like
tell
us
about
yourself
like
who
you
are
how
your
interest
in
the
tec.
B
Well,
actually,
I'm
brand
new
to
web3
been
do
been
looking
into
it,
for
maybe
four
or
five
months
at
the
most
I
fairly
well
adapted
high
concept.
You
know
high
level
concepts
of
what's
coming,
simply
because
I'm
an
author,
I've
written
near
term
sci-fi
where
I've
been
looking
at
pre-singularity,
futuristic
trends
and
what's
coming
with
a
bunch
of
things
coming
together,
so
I've
I've
looked
at
crypto
and
how
it
factors
in
that
way.
B
But
as
far
as
when
you
actually
hand
me
the
tools,
I'm
a
caveman,
I
you
know,
I
don't
know
what
to
do.
With
this
former
series,
seven
holder
license
broker
in
the
u.s.
Let
that
all
lapse.
But
so
when
you
talk
economic
concepts
with
me,
I'm
not
going
to
be
a
complete
neanderthal
there
and
honestly,
I
don't
know
what
I
really
want
to
do
out
of
this
other
than
I'm
here
to
learn
a
little
bit
and
I
kind
of
think
outside
of
the
box
more
than
just
a
little
bit.
B
So
if
there's
something
I
can
add
to
maybe
help,
you
know,
give
you
a
new
way
of
looking
at
something
that
gives
you
guys
that
do
have
the
tools
to
figure
out
how
to
make
it
work,
a
new
way
to
look
at
something
I'll,
pipe
up,
save
my
piece
and
then
shut
up,
and
you
can
do
with
it.
Whatever
you
want
other
than.
A
We've
all
been
there
and
actually
for
most
of
us.
It
wasn't
that
long
ago,
so
and
and
and
most
of
us
are
still
very
much
in
the
learning
mode,
so
you're
you're
very
welcome,
and
it's
great
to
have
you
here
so
richa
welcome.
Okay,
let's
go
ahead
and
get
started
actually
vlad.
We
have
a
tradition
here.
Can
you
see
my
screen
there
where
it
says
sample
meetings?
A
A
Okay,
okay,
can
risha,
can
you
can
you
read
it?
Okay,.
D
Okay
sample
develops
the
economic
layer
of
the
token
engineering
commons.
The
sampo
working
group
develops
and
grows
the
value
of
the
toke
of
the
economic
layer
of
the
token
engineering
commons.
It
aligns
this
micro
economy
with
the
tc
mission
and
the
collective
success
and
individual
benefit
of
its
token
holders.
A
So
today
I
wanted
to
take
a
little
bit
more
time
with
something
that's
personal,
but
actually
is
directly
directly
related
to
some
of
the
stuff
that
I'm
I'm
thinking
a
lot
about
in
terms
of
sample
and
overall
tc,
and
the
reasons
why
we're
here
individually
personally,
so
I'm
gonna
turn
down
the
music
just
a
little
bit
for
myself.
Okay,
so
so
the
question
is
tell
us
about
an
experience
that
was
personally
meaningful
for
you
and
helped
form
your
understanding
of
who
you
are
okay.
A
Let
me
just
repeat
that
tell
us
about
an
experience
in
your
life
that
was
meaningful
and
help
form
your
understanding
of
who
you
are,
and
I'm
going
to
kick
this
one
off.
I
don't
usually
kick
it
off,
but
I
want
to
kind
of
set
the
tone,
because
I
I'd
love
it
if
you
could
kind
of
go
a
little
bit
deeper
on
this
today.
A
My
story
happened
when
I
was
like
pretty
much
right
out
of
school,
and
I
was
I
was
working
in
china
in
in
beijing
and
had
been
there
for
a
couple
years
and
ended
up
getting
reposted
back
to.
I
worked
for
a
trade
association
that
helped
us
businesses
in
china,
and
I
got
after
two
years.
I
got
pulled
back
to
the
to
the
states.
A
I
was
in
washington
dc,
and
so
I
was
working
there
and
I
had
a
project
that
I
was
assigned
to
which
was
working
with
amaco,
a
big
big.
You
know
petroleum
company
and
they
were
trying
to
set
up
some
some
polypropylene
plants
in
in
china.
So
I
was
like
given
this
task
of
like
doing
a
market
research
project
in
in
china,
and
I
was
like,
I
think,
22
or
something
like
that,
pretty
young
and
and
actually
when
I
was
over
there
doing
some
of
the
research.
A
That's
when
tin
on
mon
the
gentleman
square
massacre
happened.
It
was
just
like
a
couple
weeks
before
that,
so
I
was
there
for
all
that
stuff
and
that's
that's
a
whole
other
story.
Sometime.
If
you
give
me
a
beer,
I
will
tell
you
that
story,
but
that's
not
this
story,
so
this
story
was
that
I
was
I'd,
come
back
from
the
whole
10
on
one
thing
and
was
trying
to
get
this
project
wrangled.
You
know
at
age
22
or
whatever
I
was
23.
A
and
I
was
seriously
in
over
my
head,
like
I'd,
never
done
anything
like
this
before,
and
it
was
kind
of
crazy
that
I
had
been
given
this
this
job
and
I
there
was
a
point
where
perfect
mood
shift
in
the
music.
There
was
a
point
where
I,
the
the
thing
was
falling
apart.
The
whole
project
was
just
falling
apart,
like
the
I'd
like
anyway,
there
were
some
data
problems,
and
I
just
remember
being
so
depressed.
A
I
went
outside
it
was
in
dc
and
I
sat
down
on
a
bench
and
I
was
just
like
what
am
I
gonna
do
and
it
started
raining
so
then
I'm
just
sitting
there,
I'm
like,
oh,
my
god,
you're
like
what
next
and
right
at
that
moment
a
pigeon
pooped
on
my
shoulder.
A
And
I
just
had
to
laugh
and
for
some
reason
that
poop
was
kind
of
a
wake-up
call,
because
it
was
like
a
little
sign
that
the
universe
had
a
sense
of
humor
and,
like
things
were
going
to
be
okay
and
in
fact,
actually
things
were
okay,
I
went
back.
You
know
it's
not
like
that.
That
next
day
things
magically
turned
around
but,
like
things
did
turn
around,
the
project
was
done.
It
worked
out
great.
A
It
was
tough,
it
was
hard
work,
but
that
little
episode
gave
me
a
sense
of
belief
in
myself,
like
that,
I
could
overcome
hardship,
something
that
was
really
difficult,
that
I
I
had
it
within
me
to
stick
with
it
and
and
overcome
that.
So
that's
that's
my
story
and
because
this
is
welcome
kryptozak,
so
because
this
is
a
little
bit
more
in-depth
than.
A
Hey
so
cryptozec
I'll
I'll
repeat
the
question:
it's
tell
us
about
an
experience
that
was
meaningful,
particularly
meaningful
to
you
and
helped
form
your
understanding
of
who
you
are,
and
so
I
just
went
pretty
deep
with
mine
so
rather
than
just
pass
it
off
to
somebody,
I'm
just
going
to
ask
first
if
anybody
is
ready
to
go
and
would
be
willing
to
go
next
and
then
after
this
we'll
just
you
know,
I
just
want
to
give
people
time
to
just,
but
but
after
this
we'll
have
we'll
you
can
pass
it
around.
A
B
C
Okay,
all
right
go
ahead,
go
ahead!
I'm
on
you.
B
Anyway,
mine
was
kind
of
a
series
of
unlucky
events
that
kind
of
got
me
where
I'm
at
I
went
in
and
decided
to
go
into
the
banking
sector
right
before
a
big
downturn
with
the
the
first
bush
administration
and.
B
B
So
I
don't
have
to
tell
you
what
was
right
around
the
corner
there
and
I
went
oh
wow,
okay,
fine,
maybe
you
know
I
should
you
know
see
what
I
was
you
know
got
out
of
that
moved.
You
know,
did
a
little
more
sales
work
and
then
I
decided
you
know
what
I
really
need
to
understand
more
about
the
stock
markets
and
how
they
work.
So
I
decided
quit
the
sales
gig.
B
yeah.
You
got
to
see
exactly
how
that
went
for
me,
and
so
I
was
sitting
in
late
2008
early
2009.
I
really
can't
tell
you
for
sure
which
it
was,
but
it
was
right.
After
the
lehman
brothers
fiasco,
speaking
to
a
client
the
reserve
had
crashed,
the
reserve
was
a
money
market
fund
that
had
been
around
made
it
through
the
great
depression
been
around
over
a
hundred
years.
B
B
I
had
an
87
year
old
man
in
new
york
city
with
2
million
dollars,
his
entire
life
savings,
which
2
million,
sounds
like
a
lot
of
money
to
some
folks.
It's
not
if
you're
living
in
new
york
city
and
it's
all
you've
got
to
live
on
and
you're
87,
and
I'm
telling
you
it's
going
to
be
two
years
before
you
can
get
it
back.
I'm
hearing
a
grown
man
crying
on
the
phone
and
I'm
telling
him
that,
yes,
contractually
they
were
obligated
to
give
him
his
money
within
24
hours
of
notice.
B
B
I
did
not
like
being
that
guy.
I
did
not
like
being
in
that
position.
I
decided
at
that
point.
I'd
been
looking
at.
You
know,
folding
up
selling
off
everything
and
bolting
up
out
of
the
place
long
before
that,
but
I
came
home.
I
told
my
wife,
I
said
you
know
by
2010
we're
making
the
break
we're
moving
up
to
minnesota.
B
B
B
This
will
have
bounced
back
as
well
and
I'll
finally
be
in
the
position
to
know
what
I'm
doing
and
I've
done
it.
This
taught
me
that
I'm
finally,
in
a
spot
where
I
don't
have
to
work
just
to
keep
the
lights
on,
and
I
can
afford
to
stick
with
it
and
sometimes
being
able
to
stick
with
it
and
ride
out
the
rough
patches
makes
all
the
difference
and
the
secret
to
being
able
to
stick
with
it
and
ride
out.
B
A
Okay,
thanks
vlad
very
interesting
who
who
would
like
to
go
next.
C
Okay
yeah,
so
I
think
one
significant
meaningful
decision
that
I
made
two
years
ago
was
to
start
dancing.
I
was
kind
of
interested
in
it
and
then
the
back
of
my
mind
thought
it
was.
C
It
looked
really
fun
and
looked
really
cool
and
I'm
super
happy
that
I
I
made
the
steps
to
start
taking
dance
classes,
because
it's
helped
me
learn
how
to
connect
with
people
and
so
many
more
new
and
exciting
and
different
ways
other
than
just
like
intellectual
ways,
and
talking
about
like
what
I
do
for
okay,
instead,
like
you,
can
connect
with
people
just
through
like
eye
contact
or
movement
or
smiling,
and
and
that
is
something
to
kind
of
get
a
better
understanding
of
kind
of
how
people
operate.
C
People
want
how
the
world
works
is
not
all
possible.
Emotion
is
a
very
big
role
into
it,
and
I
I've
made
a
lot
of
friends.
Have
this
very
immediate
conversation
with
these
friends
that
I
met
through
dancing,
and
I
I
probably
wouldn't
have
it
in
my
traditional
work
form
except
yeah
that
started
to
dance
at
a
significant.
E
I
can
go
real,
quick
I'll
make
it
quick
when
I
was
17.
This
is
the
most
kind
of
meaningful
experience.
I've
had
in
my
life,
who
taught
me
who
I
was
was
I
had
lost
my
uncle
to
suicide
and
it
kind
of
wrecked
my
entire
family
and
seeing
them
go
through
depression
and
addiction,
and
all
these
things,
as
a
result
of
that,
I
had
to
really
step
up
and
kind
of,
you
know
pick
up
the
pieces
if
you
will
and
it
showed
it
showed
a
lot
that
you
know
you
can.
E
You
know
because
it's
you
know
it's
a
huge
loss,
but
it's
made
a
lot
of
things
better
for
me
and
my
family
in
general,
so
yeah,
just
one
of
those
things
now
pass
it
on.
A
Wow
wow,
thank
you
for
sharing
that
man,
okay,
who
who
would
like
to
go
next.
D
I
guess
I
can
go
next,
I
think
for
me
it's
been
a
theme.
That's
just
been
consistent
throughout
my
life,
but
it's
been
sort
of
a
similar
theme,
so
I
was
born
in
india,
but
I
I
moved
when
I
was
about
seven
years
old
to
canada.
D
After
my
dad
passed
away,
my
mom
had
some
family
in
canada
and
yeah
kind
of,
like
at
a
very
young
age,
had
to
figure
out
how
to
especially
essentially
adapt
to
a
whole
new
environment,
culture
and
all
that,
but
then
also
like
just
being
in
canada,
moved
around
a
couple
times
and
then
I
think
I
just
kind
of
got
the
hang
of
it
and
really
enjoyed
kind
of
owning
it
too.
D
So
more
recently
about
two
years
ago,
I've
just
started
living
in
different
places
as
I
as
I
work
remotely,
and
I've
kind
of
stayed
in
mexico.
Now
morocco,
thailand,
a
little
bit
in
portugal
as
well
and
going
to
try
out
nepal
later
this
year.
So
I
think
for
me
it's
just
it's
been
like.
The
lesson
here
has
been
be
adaptable
to
change
and
kind
of
go
with
the
flow
as
well.
A
F
Okay,
well,
the
one
of
the
latest
more
meaningful
moments
I
had
was
probably
about
two
or
three
years
ago.
I
have
a
cousin
who
has
down
syndrome
and
she
got
leukemia.
F
F
A
Thanks
auntie
thanks
for
sharing
kojak
and
bear
who
would
like
to
go.
F
Yeah,
I
can,
I
can
go
well
for
me.
This
experience
was
when
I
was
like,
I
think
15.
I
was
like
in
mexico,
and-
and
it
was
my
first
it
was.
It
was
the
time
that
I
was
gonna
move
to
canada
to
to
study
for
the
first
time,
so
it
was
also
like
my
first
travel
by
myself.
Yeah.
I
just
remember,
like
being
you
know
these
mixed
emotions.
I
was
excited,
of
course,
but
also
really
really
scared.
Like
I
didn't
really
know
english.
F
I
was
sad
of
living
like
my
family
and
my
country,
yeah
and
yeah.
It
was
just
like
a
like
a
mix
of
emotions
and,
and
the
experience
was
basically
that
you
know
on
the
airport.
I
I
took
the
flight
from
from
mexico
city
to
to
toronto,
and
when
I
got
there,
I
I
had
like
an
hour
or
two
two
hours
to
do
a
connection
for
my
next
flight
and
you
know
like
everything
that
could
go
wrong.
Like
went
wrong.
F
You
know,
like
you
know,
like
the
huge
line
for
the
immigration,
then,
with
my
english,
it
was
really
hard
to
communicate
and-
and-
and
I
just
remember
like
you
know-
I
like-
I
knew
that
I
couldn't
miss
my
flight.
You
know
I
just
didn't
know
how
to
tell
people
that
you
know
so.
I
was
just
like
trying
to
communicate.
F
However,
I,
however,
I
could,
and
and
and
yeah
just
trying
to
to
keep
myself
calm
then
also
like
I,
my
my
luggage
kind
of
got
lost
for
some
time,
so
you
know
I
I
just
try.
I
took
longer
to
get
it
and
when
I
finally
did
the
door
for
the
for
the
flight
was
like
on
the
other
side
of
the
airport
and
the
toronto
airport
is
huge,
so
you
know
I
just
I
just
had
to
like
run,
and
you
know
I.
F
It
was
like
a
pretty
pretty
intense
experience
for
me.
You
know
like
my
first
it
was.
It
was
like
my
welcoming
to
to
canada,
but
also
kind
of
like
kind
of
like
a
moment
for
me
to
realize
of
what
I
was
stable
and
capable
of
doing
as
well.
You
know
like,
after
doing
that,
I
just
realized
like
whoa
I
I
went
through
all
of
these
and
and
I
was
actually
able
to
to
make
it
work
right
to
to
overcome
it.
F
So
I
was,
I
was
really
really
proud
of
that
then,
and
that
that
kind
of
like
was
the
like
the
beginning
of
of
this
kind
of
feeling
that
I
have
that
when
these
things
can
get
complicated
like
I
still
try,
I
can
I
look.
I
go
like
into
like
a
focus
mode
and
I
really
concentrate
in
what
I
have
to
do
and
I'm
able
to
handle
things
things
will.
So
that's
something
I
really
appreciate
now
that's
and
I
think
it
kind
of
like
started
with
that
moment.
F
A
A
D
10
30
at
night,
maybe
it's
almost
11
o'clock
at
night
out
here
and
I'm
I've
been.
I
mean.
A
Yeah,
it's
it's
I'll,
tell
you
what
it's
yeah,
it's
just
not
coming
through,
so
I
mean
it's
very
spotty.
We
hear
you
and
then
it
kind
of
goes
away,
so
we're
gonna.
How
about
this
we'll
do
the
updates
and
then
we'll
do
the
updates,
and
then
we
will
I'll
check
back
with
you
after
the
updates
and
see
if
your
audio
has
stabilized
at
that
point.
A
Okay,
gene
welcome,
wow!
I
don't
want
to
put
you
right
on
the
spot,
but
we
are
just
wrapping
up
a
check-in
process
and
the
question
is
the
prompt
is
tell
us
about
an
experience
that
was
meaningful
and
help
form
your
understanding
of
who
you
are,
and
so,
if
you
would,
if
you're
up
for
answering
that,
that
would
be
great
if
you'd
like
me
to
check
back
after
we
do
the
updates
in
just
like
a
couple
minutes.
We
can
do
that
too.
A
Okay,
no
pressure,
okay.
So
let's
do
this
we'll
do
the
quick
updates
and
then
we'll
do
the
treasury
policy.
Maybe
nate
can
do
that
I'll,
we'll
come
back
check
back
with
gene
and
kojak,
hopefully,
and
then
we'll
go
on
to
the
the
last
phase
of
this.
So
updates.
Just
a
reminder,
I
am
I'm
gonna
be
out
monday
and
tuesday
completely
out
we're
heading
out
on
a
road
trip
tomorrow
morning
early.
A
What
I,
what
I've
done
is
I've
tried
to
just
clear
my
schedule
of
all
kind
of
recurring
meetings
aside
from
the
sample
meeting,
so
that
I
can
be
free
in
the
mornings
from
like
seven
o'clock
to
about
10
30
pacific
time
pacific
standard
time,
so
that's
going
to
be
from
august
24th
to
september
8th,
so
I
will
be
available
I'll
be
online
just
to,
but
my
focus
is
really
to
just
kind
of
keep
projects
moving
forward.
A
The
token
gate
is
live
and
it
has
its
first
posts
thanks
to
risha
risha.
Thank
you
for
your
work.
It
was.
It
was
not
easy.
A
Actually,
there
was
like
a
few
hiccups
with
some
of
the
data
and
stuff
like
that
and
risha
just
kept
on
plowing
ahead
and
wrestled
it
down,
and
it
looks
great
and
it's
just
so
cool
like
we
now
we
have
a
token
gate
up
and
running
in
the
tec,
and
this
is
like
really
just
a
test
right
now,
so
that
we
can,
you
know,
figure
out
how
to
use
token
gates,
see
how
they
fit
culturally
with
the
commons
in
our
community.
A
But
it's,
but
you
know,
while
we're
doing
it,
we're
also
trying
to
like
create
some
value
so
that
it's
that
it's
it's
actually
obvious
to
token
holders.
What
this
is
so
reese
has
done
a
great
job.
If
you
haven't
checked
it
out,
please
do
check
it
out
test
out
whether
it
works
for
you.
If
you
assuming
you
have
a
tec
token,
just
all
you
need
is
just
one
and
it'll
prompt
you
to
validate
that
and
then
you'll
get
access
to
this
new
channel.
A
That's
called
the
token
holder
updates
and
you'll
you'll
see
that
so
that's
that's
pretty
cool
any
questions
or
reshad
any
comments
from
you
on
that.
D
A
E
Yeah,
so
as
you
all
know
that
the
policy
treasury
policy
has
passed
through
snapshot,
we
are
going
to
start
moving
into
our
first
phase,
which
includes
the
articulation
of
our
first
investment
strategy,
which
I
am
still
working
on
right
now.
I
hope
to
get
the
kind
of
finalized
document
either
tonight
or
tomorrow
morning,
and
I
will
post
that
in
the
example
thread
channel.
So
if
you
guys,
I
would
like
to
have
your
feedback
for
next
week.
E
Once
I
get
your
feedback,
it
will
go
up
to
the
forum
where
it
will
get
community
advice
process
and
then
that
will
hit
the
snapshot
as
well.
If
that
is
successful,
we
will
go
through
our
first
proposal
and
with
that
being
said,
I
want
to
kind
of
go
over
some
of
the
key
elements
within
what
I'm
working
on
right
now.
So
within
the
first
investment
strategy.
This
is
our
first
attempt
at
taking
the
funds
from
the
laser
tag
wallet.
E
E
You
know,
I
have
general
consensus
that
this
was
the
the
wrong
route
to
take
when
we
first
initialized
this
wallet,
and
so
we
are
going
to
propose
that
they
transfer
ownership
of
all
of
the
tokens
within
that
wallet
over
to
the
sample
working
group
and
the
12th
room
group
in
particular,
we
will
need
to
get
people
who
are
willing
to
be
on
that
multisig.
E
I
need
at
least
five
people,
so,
if
you're
interested
please
dm
me,
if
not,
we
will
talk
about
it
in
next
week's
meeting
about
finding
people
who
are
willing
to
participate
in
that.
With
that
being
said,
they
we
have
a
unique
case
of
tec
funding
here,
so
for
this
initialization
of
the
treasury
we
have
in
within
the
laser
tag,
multisig
around
57
000
tec
tokens,
which
equates
to
about
72
000,
and
this
is
a
good
starting
amount
for
us
to
kind
of
initialize.
E
However,
there
is
a
big
downside
to
having
these
these
funds
and
tec
tokens
on
one
hand
we
as
an
organization,
we
want
to
make
sure
that
we
own
organizational
tokens
and
so
having
that
those
teca
tokens
is
very,
very
important
in
order
to
use
it
as
investment
funds,
we
would
need
to
liquidate
them
and,
in
my
opinion,
that
is
a
pretty
you
know
a
non-starter
in
my
opinion,
just
because
the
way
the
abc
works
and
how
difficult
it
is
to
actually
mint
tec
tokens.
E
So
I
spoke
with
kojak
this
past
week
and
we
talked
about
a
kind
of
a
using
it
as
a
collateral
for
a
loan
and
right
now,
I've
just
started
the
conversation
with
some
leaders,
people
in
the
leadership
of
the
gnosis,
now
to
actually
get
a
kind
of
a
promise,
a
buy-back
promise
from
from
gnosis
to
where
they
would
give
us
the
full
value,
face
value
of
the
57
000
tokens
and
they
would
hold
on
to
it,
and
we
would
promise
to
buy
back
those
tokens
at
a
later
date.
E
That
way
we
can
hold
on
to
the
tec.
Tokens
not
worry,
worry
about
having
to
liquidate
it
through
the
bonding
curve
and
potentially
initialize
some
type
of
sell-off
or
fear
that
you
know
we'd
have
a
a
a
crash
in
price
and
so
that
that
is
the
the
first
big
obstacle
that
we're
trying
to
navigate
and
so
figuring
out
how
to
make
those
tec
tokens
liquid
without
actually
getting
rid
of
them.
And
so
the
loan
buyback
option
is
something
that
we're
very
much
exploring.
E
But
once
we
have
that
taken
care
of,
we
want
to
go
into
our
first
investment
strategy,
which
is
going
to
be
broken
down.
According
to
our
our
treasury
policy
into
three
three
different
broad
investment
categories,
lending
and
borrowing,
liquidity
provision
and
tokenized
derivatives.
And
so
we
will
be
using
a
wide
range
of
protocols
for
our
diversity
and
a
wide
range
of
assets.
E
And
then
we
will
have
a
supplied
lending
on
the
a
ave
protocol.
With
the
convex
token,
the
the
liquidity
provision
aspects
of
it
will
use
balancer
protocol
using
the
staked,
eth
balancer
pool
and
the
balancer
eath
pool,
which
will
give
us
a
v-bow
that
will
allow
us
to
enhance
the
staking
incentives
and
rewards
from
those
and
then
tokenized
rivets,
we'll
use
index
co-ops
ic
eth
as
a
method
of
leveraged
tokenized
derivative,
and
so
each
of
these
three
categories
are
categories
that
we
want
to
really
develop
on
how
to
manage
these.
E
These
assets
within
our
treasury
policy
and
our
and
within
our
treasury,
and
so
the
idea
is
that
you
know
once
we
start
getting
yield
and
reward
from
these
categories.
We
want
to
start
using
that
yield
to
actually
expand
on
these
categories
and
enter
into
new
ones,
and
so
any
of
the
proceeds
that
we
do
have.
We
want
to
start
slowly
start
to
grow,
and
the
idea
here
is
just
kind
of
this
is
a
proof
of
concept.
E
This
is
something
that
we're
going
to
do
we're
going
to
have
projections
on
exactly
how
much
money
we
can
generate
through
our
treasury
management
and
then
we're
going
to
present
that
to
community
to
actually
set
up
our
second
phase
of
of
our
treasury
policy
document
in
our
roadmap
and
and
ask
for
a
much
larger
sum
from
the
common
pool,
and
so
once
we
have
proven
ourselves
in
terms
of
how
we
manage
these
funds
and
how
we
move
forward,
then
we
will
announce
our
second
one,
and
this
comes
to
the
last
part
of
the
this
initial
investment
strategy,
and
that
is
the
processes
of
how
we
manage
it.
E
And
after
looking
around
the
landscape
of
how
treasury
managers
have
been
doing
this,
the
best
way
to
do
this
in
a
decentralized
way
is
to
break
it
up
into
three
distinct
teams.
And
this
is
something
I
I
would
like
to
have
specifically
everybody's
feedback
on.
As,
as
I
continue
to
develop
this,
but
the
idea
is,
we
would
have
a
research
team
that
researches
the
different
investment
opportunities.
E
What
can
be
done?
What
and
and
kind
of
goes
through
the
analysis
of
you
know:
how
much
are
we
getting
from
it
when
when
do
we
make
changes?
When
do
we
adapt
and
then
we
have
an
execution
team
who
actually
pulls
the
trigger
on
making
these
moves.
E
So
the
x62
execution
team
will
be
the
agents
and
monitors
that
are
assigned
to
to
change
change
our
investment
strategies
to
pull
things
out
when
things
go
wrong
and
then
we
have
a
reporting
team
people
who
are
responsible
for
developing
reports
and
transparency
and
allowing
them
to
be
conveyed
to
the
community
for
feedback,
and
so
those
three
teams
are
kind
of
the
the
bread
and
butter
of
like
how
we
organize
ourselves
to
manage
this
investment
strategy,
and
so
outside
of
that.
That
is
what
I
have
so
far
for
our
first
investment
strategy.
E
I
will
be
wanting
to
seek
feedback
in
in
many
forms,
so
I
will
try
to
get
this
document
up
tonight
or
tomorrow
morning
and
if
you
have
the
time
this
weekend
or
early
next
week,
I
would
really
appreciate
your
comments
and
feedback
on
it.
So
we
can
get
it
up
on
the
forum,
but
if
you
have
any
questions,
please
do
ask
and
I'll
pass
it
back
to
you.
Kitty.
E
B
E
That
is
something
that
we,
this
working
group
is
focused
on
building
right
now
and
so
right
now,
it's
going
to
be
focused
on
a
bunch
of
aggregated
small
versions
of
of
utility,
so
like,
for
example,
the
token
gated
channel
that
we
have
that's
one
utility.
We
plan
on
integrating
the
token
within
the
te
academy
in
some
way,
and
there
are
a
bunch
of
future
use
cases
that
we're
trying
to
develop
here
and
so.
B
So
you
you
give
to
the
people
that
buy
those
tokens
get
to
exercise
all
the
utility
of
the
tokens
in
the
main
pool,
but
for
a
limited
time,
so
they'll
buy
them
at
a
discounted
rate
because
they'll
auto
expire.
They
know
they're
only
buying
them
for
a
set
period
of
time,
essentially
renting
the
tokens
when
they
auto
expire,
then
that
frees
up
the
tokens
that
are
in
your
pool.
You
never
actually
had
to
sell
them.
E
E
B
You're
basically
buying
voting
rights.
At
that
point,
and
I
mean
yeah,
I
don't
know
whether
that's
valuable
enough
to
to
justify
it
to
get
enough
money
for
what
you're
wanting
to
raise
money.
For
again
it
was
a
rookie
question,
but
I
said
I
would
say
that
I
said
I
would
speak
up
and
then
shut
up
I'll.
Let
you
guys
decide
whether
it's
an
idea
worth
pursuing
or
not.
E
E
B
Okay,
what
one
more
thing
and
then
I'll,
shut
up
again,
what
about
a
separate
token
just
to
raise
some
funds
that
does
have
some
utility.
That
is
purely
a
fundraiser
token.
That
expires
in
a
certain
period
of
time.
That
is
just
designed
to
raise
you
some
extra
capital
for
you
to
be
able
to
invest
in
that
allows
it
to
have
it
again
purely
an
idea
as
a
fundraiser
or
maybe
it
doesn't
expire.
Maybe
you
set
up
something
that
you
do
just
for
revenue
generation
again
I'll
shut
up.
Now
I
told
you.
E
That's
all
good,
you
know,
an
additional
token
is
something
that
has
been
pondered
for
quite
a
long
time
now.
It's
just
something
that
needs
a
lot
of
management,
and
we
really
just
need
a
good
excuse
to
have
it,
but
we
really
haven't
justified
a
good
excuse
for
it.
What
we
want
to
try
to
do
is
make
this
tec
token
work
for
us
and
the
the
unique
economic
system
that
we
have
built
through.
The
abc
is
something
that
we
want
to
make
work.
E
This
is
kind
of
the
hypothesis
of
our
entire
economic
model
and
so
going
to
a
different
token
is
just
kind
of
abandoning
that
model,
and
we
want
to.
We
want
to
stick
with
this
and
make
sure
that
we
can
create
a
token
economic
model
that
is
able
to
produce
funds
to
fund
public
goods,
and
so,
if
you
get
an
opportunity
I'll
send
you
our
git
book
page
that
kind
of
explains
how
our
token
economic
model
works.
A
Okay,
thank
you,
nate
thanks
for
walking
us
through
that
yeah,
you
know
it's.
I
had.
I
hadn't
really
thought
about
the
57
000
and
the
voting
rights
that
that
come
with
that
and
how
important
that
is.
That's
super
important
point,
and
because,
with
57
000
tec,
you
could
actually
pass
some
stuff,
like
not
huge
proposals,
but
you
could
actually
pass.
You
could
probably
pass
some
proposals,
small
ones,
so,
okay
and
then
one
other
thing
nate
before
we
we
go
on.
I
think,
particularly
with
this
proposal.
A
It
would
be
really
good
for
us
to
do
some
outreach
to
get
some
just
get
some
eyes
on
this.
That
maybe
are
not
normally
in
our
forum.
You
know
maybe
some
of
the
original
hatcher's.
I
don't
know
that
would
be
worth
just
brainstorming
a
little
bit
about
like
how
to
do
that,
so
that
we're
getting
like
some
really
good
advice
on
this.
E
Yeah,
this
is
something
that
I
think
would
be
a
really
good
topic
for
the
new
leaf,
potentially
newly
formed
advisory
council
for
the
for
the
tec,
and
so
I
think
that's
something
that
we
should
definitely
do,
maybe
as
a
first
step
to
organizing
them.
E
But
I
agree
because
it
is.
These
are
very
difficult
decisions
to
make.
But
I
like
from
first
look,
I
think
you
know
just
outright
liquidating.
These
tokens
is
the
wrong
move
and
I
don't
want
to
do
something.
That's
going
to
hurt
us
in
the
end,
because
I
would
like
to
use
these
tokens
later
on
for
governance
swaps
and
things
of
that
nature
that
we
can
do
with
partnership
organizations.
But
if,
if
we
get
rid
of
them,
then
we
virtually
have
a
very
limited
amount
of
tec
tokens
under
our
control.
A
A
Not
hearing
you,
okay,
I'm
sorry
kojak,
it's
I'm!
Sorry,
that's
not
working
for
you
today.
Gene
do
you
want
to
give
it
a
shot.
Do
you
want
me
to
repeat
the
question
or
do
you
have
it.
D
I
think
I
see
it
experience
that
was
meaningful
and
help
you
understand
who
you
are
so
I
I
spent
a
few
years
ago
a
little
bit
of
time
in
incarceration,
and
that
was
a
trying
experience,
it's
very
difficult
to
be
in
a
position
like
that
and
not
find
it
meaningful
and
not
find
it
a
little
bit
elucidating
as
to
who
you
are
and
how
you
got
there
and
yeah.
D
I
spent
over
a
year
thinking
about
it,
and
I
think
it
helped
me
to
see
some
of
my
own
character,
defects
and
kind
of
map
a
chart
to
improving
that
and
accomplishing
something.
That's
worthwhile
and
meaningful
life,
and
the
tec
is
part
of
that
mission.
For
me.
So
thanks
for
letting
me
participate.
A
Cool.
Thank
you.
Thanks
for
sharing
that
yeah
wow,
all
right,
I'm
trying
to
think
right
now
we
we
have
just
like
10
minutes.
It
ended
up
taking
a
little
bit
longer
to
go
through
the
stories
than
I
thought
it
might,
but
actually
I'm
glad
we
did.
I
I
think
I'm
gonna
take
this
next
section
and
just
bump
it
to
next
week.
A
You
know
the
reason
that
I
was
focusing
on
meaning
in
this
is
because
that's
that's
one
of
the
things
I
want
to
talk
about
with
you
all
next
week
is
just
this
work
that
we're
about
to
enter
into
you
know.
None
of
us
are
going
to
get
rich
doing
this
work.
A
As
far
as
I
can
see
you
know
like
this
is
not
the
reason
why
we're
all
here
right
is
to
make
a
ton
of
money
off
of
this,
but
I
wanted
to
talk.
I
wanted
to
spend
a
little
bit
of
time
just
talking
about
what
gives
us
what
gives
us,
meaning,
I
think,
we're
about
to
set
out
on
a
journey
here.
That's
pretty
exciting,
like
you
can
see
the
contours
of
it
starting
to
form,
but
rather
than
diving
into
the
details
of
that.
A
Let's,
let's
hold
off
on
that
for
right
now
we
can
talk
about
it
next
week.
Maybe
what
I'll
do
before
just
closing
a
little
bit
early
is
just
give
a
quick
update
on
this
curation
service
that
we're
working
on
this
thing
is
actually
getting
pretty
it's
getting
pretty
exciting.
A
The
the
the
quick
update
is
that
you
know
we're
working
with
dow
stack
and
tangible
ai
on
this.
They
have
kind
of
a
rough
spec
of
what
this
is.
What
this
is
gonna
do
we're
setting
up
you
know.
Basically,
the
way
this
is
gonna
work
is
risha
is
going
to
take
the
lead
in
terms
of
like
driving
the
ongoing
project
management.
For
this
this,
the
the
curated
content
is
going
to
do
a
number
of
different
things.
A
So
that
goes
to
this
question
of
token
utility
trying
to
just
boost
that
up
so
basically
be
kind
of
like
greatest
hits
for
the
community
in
terms
of
curated
content
around
token
engineering,
and
then
the
thing
I'm
I'm
most
excited
about
is
getting
like
some
really
good
content
to
rise
up
that
we
can
use
in
our
tweets
right
for
tc
twitter.
That
is
so
we're.
A
So
irem
is
kind
of
taking
the
lead
working
with
acid
laser
on
on
that
aspect
and
and
then
the
other
part
that
unanimous
working
with
is
then
because
she's
doing
work
in
communitas
is
then
working
with
the
diff
with
the
various
working
groups
to
help
them
use.
This
curation
tool
so
that
they
can
start
to
curate
knowledge
within
their
specific
working
group.
A
The
obvious
most,
the
most
obvious
example
of
that
is
going
to
be
consilience
library
and
the
omega
working
group
they're
pretty
excited
about
this,
and
so
would
be
working
on
that
front
too.
The
one
of
the
questions
that
has
one
of
the
opportunities
that's
come
up
is
you
know
looking
at
like
well,
could
we
bring
in
some
new
folks
how?
A
How
might
we
use
this
tool
as
a
way
to
start
to
attract
people
around
like
a
special
interest
like
a
an
interest
group
right
and
so
nt
and
are
just
are
starting
to
talk
about
this
like
exploring
like
what
might
that
be,
and
I
think
that
in
the
next
couple
weeks,
certainly
by
the
time
I
get
back
in
early
september,
I
would
really
like
to
dedicate
one
of
our
calls
to
this
exploration.
A
A
The
ante-
and
I
were
talking
about
the
other
day-
the
first
one
is
token
engineering
safety.
So
what
might
the
tec
be
able
to
do
by
getting
some
of
the
leaders
together
in
a
channel
on
our
discord
to
talk
about
token
engineering
safety?
I
mean
this
is
such
a
huge
issue.
This
is
you
know
it's
one
of
the
reasons
that
the
various
governments
around
the
world
are
starting
to
look
at
a
crypto
with
an
eye
to
like
starting
to
regulate
it.
A
You
know
it's
hurting
people
when,
when
these
systems
go
down
when
they're
badly
designed
so
thinking
a
little
bit
about
how
we
might
actually
help
people
from
different
organizations,
different
companies
and
different
well
different
startups
different
organs.
Different
dows
come
together
like
a
shared
working
space
to
collaborate
on
that
and
what
that
might
end
up
looking
like
in
terms
of
what
the
product
is,
that
they
would
generate
through
that
coordination,
not
sure,
but
that
would
be
kind
of
up
to
them.
A
So
it's
the
idea
would
be
that
we
would
be
creating
a
space
for
them
to
come
together.
It
really
would
be
a
shelling
point
like
a
way
for
people
to
come
together
around
these
questions
of
token
engineering
systems
and
making
them
secure,
making
them
safe.
A
second
example
of
that
would
be
not
sure
what
the
best
way
to
describe
this
is,
but
I
don't
know
about
you
all,
but
whenever
I
try
to
describe
token
engineering
to
people,
I
get
a
lot
of
like
what
you
know.
What
are
you
talking
about?
A
This
is
you
know
this
is
still
even
within
web
3.
I
think
the
the
phrase
token
engineering
is
still
something
I
mean
even
within
the
tc.
I
think
that
you
would
get
if
you
were
to
ask
10
different
people
to
define
token
engineering
might
get
like
eight
different
responses,
so
setting
up
a
place
where
people
could,
where
we
get
some
leaders
together,
almost
like
a
pr
or
like
marketing
interest
group
to
focus
on
how
we
start
to
tell
the
story
to
the
next
wave
of
people.
A
That
is
specifically
I'm
not
talking
about
daos.
I'm
talking
about
token
engineering
in
specific,
because
that's
going
to
be
another
big
hurdle
for
us
as
a
sector,
but
also
for
the
tec,
like
being
able
to
get
really
good,
clear,
messaging
and
clear
communications
about
what
that
is.
So
those
are
more,
I'm
not
saying
those
specifically
but
more
to
kind
of
give
an
illustration.
A
Let
me
just
stop
there
I'll
pause
and
see
if
anybody
has
any
comments
or
thoughts
about
that.
A
Okay,
well,
like
I
said
we'll
we'll,
we
will
come
back
to
this
and
we'll
we'll
you
know
we
will
be
kind
of
flushing
that
out
a
little
bit
and
probably
having
like
a
more
formal
conversation
around
that.
So
let's
do
this.
Well,
it's
it's
three
minutes
till
so
we've
got
three
minutes
and
we'll
just
end
three
minutes
early,
all
right!
Everybody.
Thank
you
for
sharing
all
your
stories
today.
I
really
appreciate
it
and
have
a
good
rest
of
your
day.