Wrap with Al Burgio, Founder & Julie Lyle
(upbeat music) >> Live from Toronto, Canada, it's theCUBE, covering Blockchain Futurist Conference 2018. Brought to you by theCUBE. >> Hey, welcome back everyone, here's theCUBE live here in Toronto, Canada in Ontario for Untraceable presents Blockchain Futurist Conference. I'm John Furrier here with Al Burgio, Julie Lyle for the wrap up of the show. Special guests, industry legend Al, serial entrepreneur, Julie, CMO, Barnes and Noble. >> (laughs) >> Great career you've had and you're here new to, first time, we're going to have these big events. At the wrap up we try to get a handle on it and I think the big story here, for me at least, was, during this week, you got a futurist conference, while the price of crypto was plummeting to an all-time low for the year. Yet everyone's upbeat, 'cause they're talking about the future, not about prices. This has been a big part of what we see, build out durable companies, real entrepreneurial activity. Sure, they want to make profit. People scrounging a little bit here and there but most of the time upbeat. >> It's hard to judge things or understand things from afar, John, and people tend to look at prices all day long but that doesn't necessarily give you an indication of what's going on with blockchain technology with some of the organizations out there. The team at Untraceable by far a leader, not just in Canada but internationally with people that are able to try out the entrepreneurs and what have you and it's events like this with just a couple days you get yourself brought up to speed and keep your finger on the pulse. >> Big names. >> Yeah huge names. >> And a futurist event, you got to have some players, some whales on the money side, check, got whose actually inventing the future, entrepreneurial hustle, pitch competitions happening, so all this is blending together. Julie, your perspective, first time seeing a crypto culture community, what's your observation? >> Well I would echo what Al has said about the event itself, it was really well organized and what I was impressed with, surprised actually, but impressed with was the combination of both the technologists as well as the investors and those that are trying to understand how to build these commercial communities and commercial applications out. For a marketer like myself, it's difficult enough to see around corners, but to understand this technology and to have people here who are really trying to target it at solving a specific real-world business problem, it seems like a natural extension of the march on towards bigger and greater, more powerful communities. >> And the technology is interesting, because in previous jobs you've had, you've innovated with data, real-time user data, user experience. Now the shift of token economics potentially could have a huge slingshot advantage to create new opportunities, instrumentation, targeted experiences. Seeing that big time here but the plumbing's not yet in place. It's like the roads aren't paved out. When is blockchain going to be good? >> Yeah, so everyone, there's a clear sentiment: blockchain's the future, the visions are amazing. Ironically, the name of the conference is the Blockchain Futurist Conference and so you have some visions of this that are maybe five to 10 years out, but many of what others are working on, it's the here and now, right? >> Yeah. >> You have opportunities that can demonstrate product market fit today. Others maybe within the next 24 months and they're working hard to do that, fostering their communities of early adopters, businesses perhaps, consumers. In the market in general there's this concern, when's the use going to happen. Quite frankly, we're seeing early stage projects, companies going to market extremely quick. Normally this is the stuff that private companies do. You don't hear the successes and failures; most fail. >> Irrational exuberance certainly happening, going on, but that's ending, you're starting to see that with some of the bubble popping a little bit. It's not so much a mega pop, it's more of a big air coming out of it. But I want to ask both you guys, as senior industry players, because I see couple things happening that are eye level: Token economics is driving a new business model innovation. Blockchain is infrastructure, making things go immutable, having advantages of decentralized infrastructure. And the middle between the two is interoperability. These are the core themes. How do we get all those working together and what would be the benefits of all those working together? Interoperability is a big theme of this event. >> Yeah, it starts with obviously having a forum where you can collaborate with like-minded individuals and you're hearing a lot of these conversations happening and getting a sense of what people are working on as well. It's a new emerging technology. In terms of interoperability, I tend to look at integration as perhaps more important than a focus around interoperability, looking at pre-existing systems in the market and really identifying ways where they can slowly, gradually use aspects of or features of blockchain to really start this shift and this movement and this evolution towards web 3.0. >> Julie, your observations about business model innovation, opportunities that marketers and senior people should be thinking about, mindset-wise? >> Loyalty, obviously, would be a great application, but I think there's far more sophisticated business models around actually, again, the communities, the power of networks, right, and artificial intelligence, blockchain and just what the internet and technology is doing to drive those communities and to empower those consumers. That's where this is headed. It seems to me like a very natural extension. I would also say though, that there's a lot of work to be done in corporate America, private or public businesses. There's a lot of infrastructure to build that interoperability and to make it a seamless experience that will either drive value and adoption or won't, and we've seen that with other technologies fail as well. >> We've seen the same classic adopts, cloud computing, same thing >> Absolutely. >> Amazon, no one's ever going to use it. Oh my God, let's make it consumable and easy. Boom, usage goes up. >> Absolutely. >> Same kind of thing going on here. >> Yeah, user interface is evolving for all things blockchain. >> Alright, guys, thanks so much for coming on. Final predictions, you want to dare make a prediction, Al? >> Before a prediction, one of the things I'd really like to highlight for this event really was having the opportunity to share the stage with someone like Larry King. >> Take a minute to explain what happened. Larry King, the legend-- >> Legend. >> Was here, explain what happened. >> The CNN Larry King. We had fellow legends on the stage and I was humbled to be in their presence. Larry King really was here. He had the opportunity to interview some of the brightest minds in blockchain and in a lot of ways help bring legitimacy to this event, let along the space. Conversations that we'd hear in the hallways of people having conversations with people that they know and sharing with them that they were attending this event and oh, is it blockchain, is it bitcoin, you're going to one of those conferences and then mentioning that one of the headliners was Larry King, is all of a sudden-- >> What was he like, what was your impression of him? Certainly getting up there but-- >> I would say it's exactly the Larry King we know. His questions were phenomenal, really engaging and he knew how to direct those questions. Each question he had for the right fellow attendee on stage. It was awesome. >> Awesome. Well, congratulations, a great job. That's a wrap here, live in Toronto, Canada in Ontario with the Futurist Conference CUBE coverage. Special guests, Al Burgio, Julie here at theCUBE. Thanks for watching, see you next time. (upbeat music)
SUMMARY :
Brought to you by theCUBE. for the wrap up of the show. but most of the time upbeat. John, and people tend to look at prices all day long And a futurist event, you got to have some players, and to have people here who are really trying to target it but the plumbing's not yet in place. and so you have some visions of this In the market in general there's this concern, and what would be the benefits and getting a sense of what people are working on as well. and to empower those consumers. Amazon, no one's ever going to use it. for all things blockchain. Final predictions, you want to dare make a prediction, Al? Before a prediction, one of the things Take a minute to explain what happened. He had the opportunity to interview and he knew how to direct those questions. with the Futurist Conference CUBE coverage.
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Chris Harper, Jereki Ltd | Blockchain Futurist Conference 2018
(electronic music) >> Live from Toronto, Canada. It's the Cube. Covering Blockchain Futurist Conference 2018. Brought to you by the Cube. >> Hello, everyone. Welcome back to the Cube coverage here in Toronto, Canada. We're in Ontario to the Untraceable Blockchain Futurist Conference. This is day two of two days of coverage. I'm John Furrier, your host. Our next guest is serial entrepreneur, Chris Harper, the CEO of Jereki and Mapogo Ventures. Welcome. >> And ZippedScript. >> And ZippedScript. >> Yeah, yeah. >> Hey, lot of balls in the air, a lot of irons in the fire. Welcome to the Cube. >> Hey, good to have me, man. I'm excited to be here. This is awesome. >> So before we get into, you're a serial entrepreneur, what are you working on now? Take a quick minute, explain. >> Yeah. >> Where the names came from, what do they mean, what are you doing? >> So, first things first, we'll start with Jereki. Jereki is a Japanese proverb which means to achieve enlightenment through one's own efforts. So Jereki is a shell company and we currently run this company, it's called Chase your Drink. It basically is replacing pop and juice as a mix for any hard liquor. No sugar, no calories, nothing artificial and the kicker, we got 90 vitamins in these to combat your hangover the next day. So if you're not drinking with Chase, you're drinking wrong. (laughs) >> It's a chaser. >> Chaser, exactly. >> Yeah. >> And these are in stores like, it'll be in Sobeys, Farm Boy in Canada, GNC soon. And it's going really well. >> Okay, how 'about the venture firm? >> Yes, so the next company is Mapogo Ventures. Mapogo is actually, it comes from a group of lions in the African Savanna that were only six lions, but they dominated the savanna for their whole life span, which is super rare, and they took down animals like giraffes, rhinos, and became legend. It was a folk legend about these Mapogo lions. So Mapogo is a venture firm. We specialize in food and beverage companies. If you're doing something epic, we want to talk to you. And then we also specialize in blockchain cryptocurrency and anything that's on the forefront of what's going on in the tech space. So if anybody's interested, they think they have a great idea, you can reach out to us wherever you guys put contact information, I don't know. >> We'll put it up there. >> Yeah, yeah, definitely. >> What's the website? >> Mapogoventures.com >> Okay, got it. >> Yeah, Mapogoventures.com. >> And how much are you guys investing? What's the kind of round size you guys do? >> So it totally depends. We almost don't have a limit or a minimum. It's all about the team, the idea, where you're going, and what you need. We'll get you what you need. >> Is it a new firm, are you making business? >> It's a new firm, it's a new firm. So we have two companies that we're looking at right now, but we don't have any companies in the portfolio, we're looking to add. >> Great, awesome. >> Yeah, yeah. >> Well any great ideas, check it out. How about crypto? What's your seeing, what's your thing, what are you seeing on crypto? What kind of deals? Obviously the flight to quality right now is starting to see the ICOs kind of burning out here and there, but the ones that are solid are standing and growing in a build-out mode. >> I mean, the whole space right now, everybody's worried about it, right? If you're an outsider, you're looking at it like it's all down. But one thing I did want to say during this interview was this is a great event. Untraceable, they sent up an incredible event and even if you're not into cryptocurrency, if you're a business person, crypto's only been around for, you know, six, seven years. So everybody in this room did something before crypto. Right? So they're all multi-faceted individuals and if you're not in crypto, if you're scared of crypto, if you're hesitant about crypto, if you don't understand it, you should be here. You should be at these events because it's priceless networking and who knows where you can go. >> Plus, starting companies on a down, on down the bottom of the market-- >> Yeah. >> Is when the best companies get built. >> 1000%, you know. What did Warren Buffet say? Be fearful when others are greedy, be greedy when others are fearful. Looks to me that the market-- >> Yeah. >> Is incredibly fearful. So maybe you should consider being greedy right now. >> For the people that aren't here, what's the vibe of the show? What's your take, what's the hallway conversations like? >> Yeah, I mean, the vibe of the show. This is actually one of the best conferences I've been to. I've been to a few in New York. This one is incredible. Everyone's so friendly. You can come here, don't know anyone. >> Yeah. >> People will say hi to you. They'll introduce themselves to you. Next thing you know, you had an idea, now you have funding. But it's up to you to make this situation a great situation. >> What's interesting is this sector, blockchain and crypto. >> Yeah. >> Attracts alpha entrepreneurs, alpha engineers. >> Okay. >> You mentioned-- >> Mapogo. >> Smart people are in this world. They've done things before, so this is really interesting. >> Yeah, like people always forget that. They see crypto and they get nervous 'cause like I don't know anything about it. Remember guys, this is a new industry. And we're only in, you know, the first couple innings. This is going to be huge. So come, learn, and surround yourself with killers. >> Alright, what's the coolest thing you've seen so far here? >> The coolest thing I've seen so far. You know, I'm going to be completely honest with you. Larry King. I was so happy to see Larry King and it's awesome that a guy like that is supporting the community, you know. >> Yeah. >> Because this is really a revolutionary technology, the blockchain technology. >> You've done a lot entrepreneurial things since you were 10, you were talking before we came on. >> Yeah. >> How does that help you right now navigate this scene and looking at deals and your own deals and you're building out, you're investing. Other entrepreneurs are coming in, sometimes first time entrepreneurs, how does that help you and what advice would you give other entrepreneurs? >> So I started really young, not knowing where I was going to go. It was kind of just like in my blood. But, you know, you got to get out, you got to talk to people, you know. I always say no deal happens on your couch. You got to jump off the porch. You got to go out, you got to network, you got to meet people. And I started doing that at a young age which got my conversation skills a lot more advanced, so now I can go in and close a deal in 10 minutes where, you know, back in the day, it might take me two hours and I probably wouldn't even close it. So what I would say. >> 10 minutes is a good metric. >> It is. >> That's hey. >> Hey, I don't need to say more or less. If it's an interesting idea, let's go. You should be able to tell me what it is. >> Yeah. >> We should be able to hammer something out. Yeah, yeah, that's pretty much what's going on. >> Awesome. And what's some of the plans that you have for your ventures? Let's go back, the zip line, what's that one? >> Oh, yeah, ZippedScript. >> ZippedScript, I'm sorry. >> So I can't talk too much about ZippedScript. It's launching in fall of 2018. ZippedScript is basically going, it is revolutionizing the higher education industry and the transcript section in that industry. And all I can say is we may or may not be using blockchain technology to do it. >> Got it, okay. >> Yeah. >> And how about the chaser, that sounds very cool. >> Yeah, it is really cool. And, I mean, you guys can go to chase your drink.com, check it out. You can head over to our Instagram, Chase Your Drink. It's taken over. You know, this cola flavor I've got here and tropical thunder is pineapple mango, but cola tastes just like Coca-Cola. >> Yeah. >> Without any of the bad ingredients. And it's really taken over. You know, our biggest problem is supply. >> Yeah. >> We just can't produce enough, but we're fixing that problem. >> That's a good problem to have. >> It's a very good problem to have, right. >> How did you get into the venture side? Just you're scratching an itch, you wanted to put some of your money to work, did you raise unlimited partners, how's that, how'd that develop? >> Totally. >> And what's the current situation? >> Yeah, so it was a group of fellow entrepreneurs and we're all working on our own companies, but we're all ADD, right? And we're like I'm doing this, I'm doing that, but we have all these contacts, all these different skill sets, and we're all great friends. So that's another very important thing that most people talk about. Surround yourself with like minded people, but you want them to have different skill sets. >> Awesome. >> I don't want a clone. I have a clone, we're not going to work well together. >> You want added value, you don't want to subtract value. >> Yeah, exactly. So we came together and we're like we have so much value in so many different spaces, we can walk companies through, you know, a proven concept in any industry, food and beverage, cryptocurrency, and basically you won't make mistakes that we made. That's the bottom line. So you'll accelerate your success by working with us. >> Well, Chris, great to have you on. >> Yeah. >> Congratulations on your success. >> It was amazing, man. >> Check out Chase, check out the fund if you've got a great idea, contact Chris, go the cube.net, you can find his information there. I'm John Furrier here in Toronto with all the action here at the Blockchain Futurist Conference where the future's being created, robust industry, people looking at the long term, this is where the action is. Thanks for watching. Stay with us for day two coverage after this short break. (electronic music)
SUMMARY :
Brought to you by the Cube. We're in Ontario to the a lot of irons in the fire. Hey, good to have me, man. what are you working on now? So if you're not drinking with Chase, And it's going really well. and anything that's on the forefront We'll get you what you need. companies in the portfolio, what are you seeing on crypto? and who knows where you can go. 1000%, you know. So maybe you should consider This is actually one of the But it's up to you to make this What's interesting is this so this is really interesting. And we're only in, you know, is supporting the community, you know. the blockchain technology. since you were 10, and what advice would you You got to go out, you got to You should be able to tell me what it is. We should be able to that you have for your ventures? and the transcript And how about the chaser, And, I mean, you guys can Without any of the bad ingredients. but we're fixing that problem. problem to have, right. but you want them to have going to work well together. You want added value, you and basically you won't go the cube.net, you can
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The Hon. Wayne M. Caines, J.P., M.P. & Kevin Richards | Blockchain Futurist Conference 2018
(techy music) >> Live from Toronto, Canada, it's theCUBE covering Blockchain Futurist Conference 2018, brought to you by theCUBE. (techy music) >> Hello, everyone, and welcome back. This is the live CUBE coverage here in Toronto, Ontario here in Canada for the Untraceable Blockchain Futurist Conference. This is day two of wall-to-wall CUBE coverage. We've got great presentations going on, live content here on theCUBE as well as in the sessions, great networking, but more important all the thought leaders in the industry around the world are coming together to try to set the standards and set up a great future for cryptocurrency and blockchain in general. Our next two guests are very special guests for theCUBE and we're excited to have them on, the Honorable Wayne Caines, Minister of National Security for the government of Bermuda, and Kevin Richards, concierge on the Fintech business development manager, part of the Bermuda Business Development Agency. Thank you guys for coming on, really appreciate the time. >> Thanks very much. >> Thank you for having us. >> Why this is so important is that we heard your presentation onstage, for the folks, they can catch it online when they film it and record it, but the Bermuda opportunity has really emerged as a shining light around the world, specifically in the United States. In California, where I live, Silicon Valley, you guys are now having great progress in hosting companies and being crypto-friendly. Take a minute to explain what's happening, what's the current situation, why Bermuda, why now, what's developing? >> This has all happened over the last eight months. We were looking in November of 2017 to go in the space. In January we went to the World Economic Forum in Davos in Switzerland. When we went to Davos in Switzerland something very interesting happened. People kept coming up to us, I was like the Hound of the Baskerville, or the Pied Piper if you please, and so, so many people were coming up to us finding out more information about Bermuda. We realized that our plan that we thought we could phase in over 18 months, that it had to be accelerated. So, whilst we were at the World Economic Forum in Davos we said to people, "Listen, if you want to change the world, "if you want to help Bermuda to grow, if you're serious," this is a Thursday, "Meet us in Bermuda on the Monday morning." On the Monday morning there are 14 different people in the room. We sat in the room, we talked about what we wanted the world to be, how could Bermuda be in place, what are the needs in this industry, and by the Wednesday we had a complete and total framework, and so we split up into industries. Number one was ICOs, we wanted to look at how to regulate the ICO market. Number two, we wanted to look at digital asset exchanges or cryptocurrencies or how do we regulate security tokens and utility tokens and what do exchanges look like, how do we do exchanges in Bermuda, and then we wanted to talk about education and setting up incubators. And so, come fast forward to July, August, we have an ICO bill in place that allows us to look at setting up ICOs in Bermuda. We wanted to focus on the legal and the regulatory framework, so this is a nascent space. A number of people are concerned about the dark actors, and so we wanted to set up a jurisdiction that traded on our international reputation. Now, remember for the last 60 years reinsurance, finance, captives, hedge funds, people in the financial services market have been coming to Bermuda because that's what we do well. We were trading on the reputation of our country, and so we couldn't do anything to jeopardize that. And so, when we put in place the ICO legislation we had consultants from all over the world, people that were bastions and beasts in industry, in the ICO industry and in the crypto world came to Bermuda and helped us to develop the legislation around setting up an ICO. So, we passed the ICO legislation. The next phase was regulating cryptocurrencies, regulating digital assets, and we set up a piece of legislation called the Digital Asset Business Act, and that just regulates the digital asset space exchanges, and the last piece we wanted to do was a banking piece, and this is the last and we believe the most significant piece. We were talking to people and they were not able to open up bank accounts and they were not able to do, so we said, "Listen, "the Bermuda banking environment is very strong." Our banking partners were like, "Listen, "we love what you guys are doing, "but based on our corresponding banking relationships "we don't want to do anything to jeopardize that space," but how could we tell people to come to Bermuda, set up your company, and they can't open bank accounts? And so, we looked at, we just recently passed creating a new banking license that allows people to set up their business in Bermuda and set up banking relationships and set up bank accounts. That simply has to receive the governor's Royal Assent. As you know, Bermuda's still a British pan-territory, and financial matters have to get the okay of the Queen, and so that is in the final stages, but we're excited, we're seeing an influx, excuse me, a deluge of people coming to Bermuda to set up their companies in Bermuda. >> So, the first two pieces are in place, you have the legislation... >> Mm-hm. >> Mm-hm. >> You have the crypto piece, and now the banking's not yet, almost approved, right? >> It's there, it simply has to get the final sign-off, and we believe that it should take place within the next two weeks. So, by the time this goes to air and people see it we believe that piece will be in place. >> So, this is great news, so the historical perspective is you guys had a good reputation, you have things going on, now you added on a new piece not to compromise your existing relationships and build it on. What have you guys learned in the process, what did you discover, was it easy, was it hard, what are some of the learnings? >> What we've learnt is that KYC, know your customers, and the AML, anti-money laundering, and terrorist financing pieces, those are the critical pieces. People are looking in this space now for regulatory certainty, so when you're talking about people that are in the space that are doing ICOs of $500 million or exchanges that are becoming unicorns, a billion dollar entity in three months, they want a jurisdiction that has regulatory certainty. Not only do they want a jurisdiction with regulatory certainty, they want to open up the kimono. What has this country done in the past, what do they have to trade on? We're saying you can go to a number of countries in the world, but look at our reputation, what we're trading on, and so we wanted to create a space with regulatory certainty, and so we have a regulatory body in Bermuda called the Bermuda Monetary Authority, and they are an independent regulator that they penned the Digital Asset Business Act, and so the opportunity simply for people around the world saying, "Listen, we want to do an ICO, "we want to set up an exchange. "Where's a country that we can go to that has a solid reputation? Hold on, how many countries have law surrounding"-- >> Yeah. >> "The Digital Asset Business Act, how many ICO countries have laws. Guess what, Bermuda becomes a standout jurisdiction in that regard. >> Having a regulation signaling is really important, stability or comfort is one, but the one concern that we hear from entrepreneurs, including, you know, ourselves when we look at the market is service providers. You want to have enough service providers around the table so when I come in and domicile, say, in Bermuda you want to have the banking relationships, you want to have the fiduciary-- >> Yes. >> You want to have service providers, law firms and other people. >> Yes. >> How are you guys talking about that, is that already in place? How does that fit into the overall roadmap for your vision? >> I don't want to beat a horse (laughs) or beat a drum too much, that is what we do as a country. So, we have set up, whether it's a group of law firms and the Bermuda, excuse me, the Bermuda Monetary Authority, the Bermuda that's the register of companies that sets up the companies. We have Kevin, and Kevin will tell you about it, he leads our concierge team. So, it's one throat to choke, one person that needs, so when you come to really understand that the ease of business, a county that's business-friendly with a small country and with a small government it's about ease of reference. Kevin, tell us a little about the concierge team. >> It's like the Delaware of the glove, right? >> Absolutely. >> Come in, domicile, go and tell us how it works. >> I'll give you a little bit of background on what we do on the concierge side. So, one thing that we identified is that we want to make sure that we've got a structure and a very clearly defined roadmap for companies to follow so that process from when they first connect with the BDA in Bermuda to when they're incorporated and set up and moved to Bermuda to start running their business is a seamless process that has very clearly identifiable road marks of different criteria to get through. So, what I do as a concierge manager is I will identify who that company needs to connect with when they're on the ground in Bermuda, get those meetings set up for when they come down so that they have a very clearly mapped out day for their trip to Bermuda. So, they meet with the regulator, they meet with the government leaders, they meet with the folks who've put together legislation that, obviously you mentioned the service providers, so identifying who's the right law firm, corporate service provider, advisory firm on the ground in Bermuda, compliance company, and then making sure that depending on what that company wants to achieve out of their operation in Bermuda they've got an opportunity to connect with those partners on their first trip so that they can put that road map together for-- >> So, making it easy... >> Making it very easy to set up in Bermuda. >> So, walk me through, I want to come down, I want to do business-- >> Yeah. >> Like what I hear, what do I do? >> So, you send me an email and you say, "Listen, Wayne, we're looking at "doing an ICO launch in Bermuda. "I would like to meet with the regulator. "Can you put a couple law firms in place," in an email. I zip that over to Kevin or you go on our Fintech.bm website-- >> Yeah, I was going to say... >> Fintech.bm website, and Kevin literally organizes a meeting. So, when you come to Bermuda for your meeting you have a boardroom and all the key players will be in the boardroom. >> Got it. >> If you need somebody to pick you up at the airport, if you need a hotel, whatever you need from soup to nuts our team actually makes that available to you, so you're not running around trying to find different people to meet, everyone's there in the room. >> And the beauty of Bermuda is that, you know, the city of Hamilton's two square kilometers, so your ability to get a lot done in one day is, I think, second to nowhere else on the planet, and working with the BDA concierge team you're, you know, we connect with the client before they come down and make sure we identify what their needs are. >> The number one question I have to ask, and this is probably the most important for everyone, is do they have to wear Bermuda shorts? (laughs) >> When you come you tell us your size, you tell us what size and what color you want and we'll make sure, so the... I tell this story about the Bermuda shorts. The Bermuda shorts, Bermuda's always had to adapt and overcome. Bermuda, we have something called the Bermuda sloop and it's a sailing rig, and so we... The closest port to Bermuda is Cape Hatteras in North Carolina and we wanted to cut down the time of their voyage, so we created a sailing rig called the Bermuda rig or the Bermuda sloop. Over the years that has become the number one adopted rig on sailing boats. We've always had to adapt and become innovative. The Bermuda shorts were a way to adapt and to get through our very hot climate, and so if you look at just keep that in mind, the innovation of the Bermuda sloop and the Bermuda shorts. Now, this Fintech evolution is another step in that innovation and a way that we take what's going on in the world and adapt it to make it palatable for everyone. >> What's the brand promise for you guys when you look at when entrepreneurs out there and other major institutions, especially in the United States, again, Silicon Valley's one of the hottest issues around-- >> Yes. >> Startups for expansion, right now people are stalled, they don't know what to do, they hear Malta, they hear other things going on. What's the promise that you guys are making to the law firms and the people, entrepreneurs out there trying to establish and grow? >> The business proposition is this, you want a jurisdiction that is trading on years of solid regulation, a country and a government that understands business, how to be efficacious in business. When you come to Bermuda you are trading on a country that this is what we've done for a living. So, you don't have to worry about ethical government, is your money going to be safe. We have strong banking relationships, strong law firms, top tier law firms in Bermuda, but more importantly, we have legislation that is in place that allow you to have a secure environment with a clear regulatory framework. >> What should people look for as potentially might be gimmicks for other countries to promote that, you know, being the Delaware for the globe and domiciling, and what are some of the requirements? I mean, some have you've got to live there, you know, what are some of the things that are false promises that you hear from other potential areas that you guys see and don't have to require and put the pressure on someone? >> When you hear the people say, "We can turn your company around in the next day." That we don't require significant KYC and AML. Red flags immediately go up with the global regulatory bodies. We want when a person comes to Bermuda to know that we have set what we believe is called the Bermuda Standard. When you come to Bermuda you're going to have to jump through some legal and regulatory hoops. You can see regulation, the ICO regulation and the Digital Asset Business Act on BermudaLaws.bm. BermudaLaws.bm, and you can go through the legislation clause by clause to see if this meets your needs, how it will affect your business. It sets up clearly what the requirements are to be in Bermuda. >> What's the feedback from business, because you know, when you hear about certain things, that's why Delaware's so easy, easy to set up, source price all know how to do in a corporation, let's say in the United States-- >> We don't have the SEC handicaps that they have in America, going from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. You're dealing with a colony that allows you to be in a domicile that all of the key players finances... We have a number of the key elements that are Bermuda. We're creating a biosphere that allows a person to be in a key space, and this is, you have first move as advantage in Bermuda. We have a number of things that we're working on, like the Estonia model of e-residency, which we will call EID, that creates a space that you are in Bermuda in a space that is, it's protected, it's governed. We believe that when companies set up in Bermuda they are getting the most secure, the strongest business reputation that a country could have. >> The other thing I would add, I'll just say, you know, quality, certainty, and community is what that brand represents. So, you know, you've got that historical quality of what Bermuda brings as a business jurisdiction, you have the certainty of the regulation and that pathway to setting your company up and incorporating in Bermuda, and then the community piece is something that we've been working on to make sure that any of the players that are coming to Bermuda and connecting with Bermuda and setting up there, they feel like they're really integrated into that whole community in Bermuda, whether it be from the government side, the private sector side. You can see it with the companies that have set up that are here today, you know, they really have embraced that Bermuda culture, the Bermuda shorts, and what we're really trying to do as a jurisdiction in the tech space. >> What can I expect if I domicile in Bermuda from a company perspective, what do I have to forecast? What's the budget, what do I got to do, what's my expectation? Allocate resources, what's going to be reporting, can you just give us some color commentary? >> So, with reference, it depends what you're trying to do, and so there will be different requirements for the ICO legislation. For the ICO legislation a key piece of the document actually is the whitepaper. Within the whitepaper you will settle what your scope of business is, what do you want to do, what you know, everything, everything that you require will be settled in your whitepaper. After the whitepaper is approved and if it is indeed successful, you go to the Bermuda Monetary Authority and they will outline what they require of you, and very shortly thereafter you will able to set up and do business in Bermuda. With reference to the digital asset exchanges, the Digital Asset Business Act, such a clear guideline, so you're going to need to have a key man in Bermuda, a key woman in Bermuda. >> Yeah. >> You're going to need to have a place of presence in Bermuda, so there are normal requirements-- >> There's levels of requirements based upon the scope. >> Absolutely. >> So, if you run an exchange it has to be like ghosting there. >> Yeah, yeah, you need boots on the ground. >> And that's why the AML and the KYC piece is so important. >> Yeah. Well, I'm super excited, I think this is a great progress and this has been a big uncertainty, you know, what does this signal. People have, you know, cognitive dissonance around some-- >> Yes. >> Of the decisions they're making, and I've seen entrepreneurs flip flop between Liechtenstein, Malta, Caymans. >> Right. >> You know, so this is a real concern and you guys want to be that place. >> Not only, we will say this, Bermuda is open for business, but remember, when you see the requirements that we have some companies won't meet the standard. We're not going to alter the standard to accommodate a business that might not be what we believe is best for Bermuda, and we believe that once people see the standard, the Bermuda Standard, it'll cascade down and we believe that high tides raises all boats. >> Yeah. >> We have a global standard, and if a company meets it we will be happy for them to set up and do business in Bermuda. >> Well, I got to say, it's looking certainly that leaders like Grant Fondo in Silicon Valley and others have heard good things. >> Yeah. >> How's been the reaction for some of the folks on the East Coast, in New York and around the United States and around the world? What has been some of the commentary, what's been the anecdotal feedback that you've heard? >> We're meeting three and four companies every day of the week. Our runway is full of Fintech companies coming to Bermuda, from... We have insurtech companies that are coming in Bermuda, people are coming to Bermuda for think tanks, to set up incubators and to do exploratory meetings, and so we're seeing a huge interest in Bermuda the likes have not been seen in the last 20 years in Bermuda. >> Well, it's been a pleasure chatting with you and thanks for sharing the update and congratulations. We'll keep in touch, we're following your progress from California, we'll follow up again. The Honorable Wayne Caines, the Minister of National Security of the government of Bermuda, and Kevin Richards, concierge taking care of business, making it easy for people. >> Oh, yeah, oh, yeah. >> We'll see, I'm going to come down, give me the demo. >> We're open for business and we're looking forward to seeing everybody. (laughs) >> Thank you for the opportunity. >> Thank you very much. >> Thank you. >> Major developments happening in the blockchain, crypto space. We're starting to see formation clarity around, standards around traditional structures but not so traditional. It's not your grandfather's traditional model. This is what's great about blockchain and crypto. CUBE coverage here, I'm John Furrier, thanks for watching, stay with us. More day two coverage after this short break. (techy music)
SUMMARY :
to you by theCUBE. Ontario here in Canada for the Untraceable and record it, but the Bermuda opportunity and so that is in the final stages, So, the first two pieces are So, by the time this so the historical perspective and so the opportunity simply for people standout jurisdiction in that regard. around the table so when You want to have service providers, that the ease of business, a county that's and tell us how it works. on the ground in Bermuda, to set up in Bermuda. So, you send me an email and you say, So, when you come to that available to you, else on the planet, and what color you want What's the promise that and a government that and the Digital Asset Business We have a number of the key and that pathway to Within the whitepaper you will settle what There's levels of requirements So, if you run an exchange it boots on the ground. KYC piece is so important. you know, what does this signal. Of the decisions they're making, and you guys want to be that place. the standard to accommodate to set up and do business in Bermuda. Well, I got to say, in Bermuda the likes have not been and thanks for sharing the come down, give me the demo. forward to seeing everybody. the blockchain, crypto space.
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Azam Shaghaghi, Shivom.io
(upbeat music) >> Live from Toronto, Canada. It's The Cube, covering Blockchain, futurist conference 2018. Brought to you by, The Cube. >> Hello, everyone, welcome back. The Cube's live coverage here in Toronto, Ontario, for Untraceable's Blockchain futurist conference. Two days, this is day one of two days, of Cube coverage. I'm John Furrier, your host. Our next guest is, Azam Shaghaghi, who is the director of public relations, and strategy for Shivom.io. Really interesting story, raised a bunch of money in 15 seconds in an ICO. Really interesting story, welcome to The Cube. Thanks for coming in. >> Yeah, thank you so much for having me. >> So we were just talking on camera, you studied at NASA in Northern California, where I live, and you've got this really cool venture. Before we get into it, talk about what you guys did with the ICO, then talk about what the company does. >> Sure, the project Shivom is about owning your own DNA. So, we are sequencing DNA, and storing it on the patient-friendly platform on Blockchain. Which actually give the power back to the donors, and the people that have the... I mean, and the users, basically. So basically, you can monetize, manage and... >> Control your data. >> Control your own data. >> How much did you guys raise? You did 15 seconds, give us the numbers. What happened? >> So we raised the 35 million. We reached the hard-cap, our public sell was sold out under 15 seconds. >> 15 seconds? - 15 seconds. >> And what month was that? >> It was, actually, on May, the third. >> So it was post, after, I mean, a lot of these actually just went out last year. Still, that's really a good signal, given the climate at that time. >> Exactly, and I think it's about what your actually, your intention is, in order to disrupt. We're talking about genomic information. We're talking about healthcare. At a very highly regulated industry, right? A lot of things have been untapped in that sector. So, hopefully, with the help of Blockchain, A.I., and advanced technology, we can disrupt. >> Now I...Crystal Rose, who's the CEO of Sensay Token, when I interviewed her, in Puerto Rico, she had a comment, which I love, I still use to this day. She makes kind of like A.I. chat boxes, really cool things, your brain and the Blockchain. Similar concept that you're doing, you're DNA on the Blockchain, that you can own and manage, for your own personal benefit, and/or value. >> Exactly. >> That's kind of the concept, if I get that right? >> That it is. >> Okay, who does the genoming? >> Oh, you mean the sequencing? >> Yeah, the sequencing. >> So, I mean, right now, there are companies out there that they do the, I mean, the... >> So, I've got to get it done, and then I bring it to the platform? How does that work? >> So what we, actually, we do, we have created the marketplace, for the industry players, right? For the donors, for the users, for the governments, hospitals, insurance companies, and research labs. So, basically, after you sequence your DNA, we can, you can give it us and we sequence, we manage it, and secure it, store it on the Blockchain. Obviously, we are doing a lot of partnerships with different companies and different ventures. We have an alliance, with different partners out there, that we do, we're trying to promote that, in terms of also helping to develop the kits. >> So I get this right, so a variety of touchpoints, with stakeholders, service providers would do the service, >> Exactly. >> and the users themselves...so if I get my DNA sequence... >> Why? >> If I get my DNA sequence... >> Right... >> Do I direct the provider to put it on the Blockchain, or do I take it myself and put it on the Blockchain? >> So, when you sequence, well, okay, so you just sign up in our platform, >> Got it. >> and after that you sign up in order to sequence your DNA. The kit will be sent out to you. So, it's all through Spark contract. >> So I use your marketplace and you do all the work? >> We do all the work. >> Got it, and how does the tokens work? >> So, basically... >> The better the DNA, the more tokens you get? I wish. Whoops! >> I wish it was like that. I don't think that there is a discussion of a better... >> Okay, I know I'm kidding. >> like DNA. >> I'm afraid you get my DNA sequence, I've got all of these diseases, who knows what I have. Alzheimers or, you know. >> Well that's maybe why you should figure that out, right? Why don't you just sequence your DNA? But, what was the question again? I'm sorry, I forgot. >> So I use your marketplace, and I instruct the service provider to put the DNA. How does the tokens work? >> Oh yes, so the token is OMX token. So, per transaction there is kind of like the token economics that actually has, is kind of like being managed. For example, you donate your DNA to a research lab, you get a certain amount of OMX, and each OMX is going to be worth, you know, some fraction to a varium. >> So some people might know 23 and me. >> Right. >> And do the mail-order kit, same thing. I think some other folks have, I think Ancestry.com does something similar. How do you guys differ from them? Just, decentralized, or they are centralized, obviously. >> They're very centralized, and there is also, there has been research going on, and that they even don't know what is going on, after they sequence your DNA, where that information is going, how is it being stored, so it is all, kind of like, company's property after it is... then you, kind of like, basically sign an agreement that you will give out all the authority to them, and they can do whatever they want to do with it. So basically you are on chain, and we are creating this economy of precision... so, we are promoting precision medicine, we're promoting advanced healthcare, and how we can tackle rare disease, for example, like cancer. We just kicked off, two projects, one in India, and one in Africa. So, we partner with EMQT, a not-for-profit organization, in Africa, in order to sequence 100 people that has Sickle Cell Disease. >> If I want to team the company, how big are you guys, what are you going to do with the funding, where's the product? Take us to a quick update on where you guys are at. >> Sure, we just actually, we had a shuffle in our management team after the ICO, obviously. Now we are moving towards the product development. So, we are hiring a lot of developers, we are working on product development. We are on our roadmap, and are on track. Obviously, we have initiation, re-initiated some of the partnerships, and some of the projects. We are on our marketing, get innovative, kind of like PR, strategy right now, and with a new team... >> And what's the PR strategy, you're in charge of that, is there an outreach, is it promoting the service provider, does it get the marketplace out there? >> It's everything, literally. So we are at the first thing, that our first pillar is the community. So, we want to have the community, you know, engaged in everything that we do. We keep updating them, we get them involved. That's what matters, you know, with us, and we have an organic, kind of like, community. We've already great support in Asia, in India, I mean all over the world, but we are like, very kind of like, you know, some industries favorite...market's favorite. >> Community's super important, well I love your mission. I'd love to keep in touch. It's getting loud in here, but I'd love to follow up with you guys. >> Yeah, obviously, thank you so much for your time. >> People, it's a great project, I mean, it's one of those things where this is a real example of de-centralization, where you can use your own information, and broker that for value. Be part of studies, I'd imagine. >> Exactly. >> Engage with community. >> And create an impact. >> Great, so thanks so much for coming out, appreciate it. It's The Cube coverage live, here, in Toronto, Ontario, for the Blockchain Futurist conference, John Furrier, day one, coverage. Thanks for watching. (digital music)
SUMMARY :
Brought to you by, The Cube. I'm John Furrier, your host. Before we get into it, talk about what you guys did So, we are sequencing DNA, and storing it on the How much did you guys raise? So we raised the 35 million. 15 seconds? given the climate at that time. and advanced technology, we can disrupt. for your own personal benefit, and/or value. So, I mean, right now, there are companies out there So, basically, after you sequence your DNA, and after that you sign up in order to sequence your DNA. The better the DNA, the more tokens you get? I don't think that there is a discussion I'm afraid you get my DNA sequence, Why don't you just sequence your DNA? and I instruct the service provider to put the DNA. and each OMX is going to be worth, you know, How do you guys differ from them? and we are creating this economy of precision... what are you going to do with the funding, So, we are hiring a lot of developers, So, we want to have the community, you know, but I'd love to follow up with you guys. de-centralization, where you can use your own information, for the Blockchain Futurist conference,
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Nataliya Hearn, Cryptochicks | Blockchain Futurist Conference 2018
>> Live from Toronto, Canada, it's theCUBE! Covering Blockchain Futurist Conference 2018. Brought to you by theCUBE! >> Hey, welcome back, everyone, we're live here in Toronto for the Blockchain Futurist Conference put on by Untraceable, Tracy and her team doing a fantastic job, so shout out to the team at Untraceable for another great event. I'm John Furrier with theCUBE, my cohost's Dave Vellante, and we're here with CUBE's friend, CUBE alumni, from the CryptoChicks, Nataliya Hearn, director, good to see you, great to have you back. >> Thank you. (laughs) >> Okay, good to see you, we're laughing, we've got some great funny stories we've been telling, since PolyCon, but really, some great things going on, so give us the update, you had a hackathon recently, you got new things happening here in your organization, take a quick minute to explain what it is for the folks that don't know, what do you guys do, and what's going on? >> Good, well, CryptoChicks is a organization focused on educating women in blockchain and cryptospace. We started because at meetups there would be one or two women out of hundreds of men, who would be afraid to ask stupid questions, so we said, Oh, okay, there's no stupid questions, come and join us, and we'll show you how to open a wallet, what blockchain is all about, so we've been doing that. We've actually grew quite a bit, we are now have chapters in all over the world, in Pakistan, in Bahamas, in Moscow, we just teamed up with She Codes in Israel, which is 50,000 women, so, we're doing really well. >> Congratulations, a great mission, we totally support it, and, you know, I'm proud to say that I love my shirt that says, Satoshi is Female, thanks to Nyla Rodgers, who gave it to me, at Consensus in Blockchain Week in New York, but this is really beyond women in tech, it's beyond that, it's a really, you're doing some innovative things around onboarding, new talent and education, this is a really important, because the Internet is bounded on discovery, learning. >> Absolutely. >> What's the new thing? >> Well, you know when you hear, when you go to the blockchain conference and events, and we hear again and again about the chasm. How do we bridge the chasm, right? That's just the, like, big word that you hear like every third presentation, because the blockchain community needs it. But I think globally, blockchain represents something that's quite unique, and it's an opportunity not just to make money and speculate, or to develop new technology, it's technology that can liberate. But how do we get that message across? And I think we have to start with kids. Kids are our future, but they're also the ones who spend most of their time on social media, so that's a good thing, but if you ask their parents, that's not such a good thing necessarily. So how do we convert them, some of their time from social media to learning? So we've put, we're putting together this program that focuses on children to earn to learn. >> Earn to learn, like they earn coins or money, or? >> That's right, basically they can earn swag, so basically we're creating the marketplace that rewards children for learning. >> All kids, right? >> All kids, well we're focusing on -- >> On girls. >> No, not on girls, we're going to high schools, so immediate next generation. >> So girls, boys, everybody's welcome? >> Absolutely. Yep. >> Awesome. >> Next generation, and they're the next generation that has to solve the problems that we, and opportunities that can be captured, that's coming right to their front door. >> Absolutely, we have a lot of question marks in the blockchain community. Which blockchain, how do we do it, there is going to be multi-chain tokens, we're talking about, next generation is the one who's going to provide solutions for us. So we got to open their minds, and to show that blockchain is a tool like potentially calculus is a tool. To create something that hasn't been there before. >> You know, I have a lot of conversations in Silicon Valley and Nataliya, recently at the Google Cloud event, Google's been very much a great change agent, especially with women in tech and underrepresented minorities, but Aparna Sinha, who's one of the senior people there, dual degrees from Stanford, she's got a PhD, she said we're losing the girls early, and what came out of it was a conversation that, when you have these new market movements like blockchain, AI, these are new skills that you can level up, so the ability to come from behind and level up is an opportunity for people who have traditionally been behind, whether it's women or other minorities, to level up. So it's a huge opportunity now to put the naysayers down to rest, and saying, Screw you, we're going to level up and learn. >> Absolutely, and it's global, the thing is -- >> There's nothing stopping anyone from learning. >> Absolutely, and trust, and the borderless system that blockchain potentially can provide is at a global advantage. As long as you have a cell phone, you can be in a village, an old village, like at our last hackathon, we actually were streaming women hackers from Zimbabwe. So there you go, it's doable. >> So how are you, how are you scaling your message globally? >> So we're starting, one thing is that education today, is basically the bill is being paid either by the government or by parents. The reason I would call that a marketplace, I would like companies to be involved. And it could be local companies, or it could be global. What about creating ARVR classrooms, and providing the information to kids, via a completely new way that they would actually move away from swiping or just looking on some random YouTube videos, to something that they can get a phone, some shoes, mascara, focusing on girls, right? And to understand what that borderless economy really means by experiencing, what does it mean to have tokens that you can trade globally? You are used to your parents giving you some dollars, you go to a corner store. What about if you learn something, you go to a bakery, in Kenya, and for the work that you've done, you get a bun, right, or a meal? >> So this democratizing access, it's bringing education to the masses? >> And it's also uniting the blockchain community, 'cause we would be building this governance platform on blockchain, we would tokenize it, and there will be many elements of it, reward programs, smart contracts that reward content, some level of AI in terms of analysis of what we're doing, so I think this is why I was looking at multi-chain tokens. Maybe that would be a solution to kind of, to deal with -- >> Explain that, what does that mean? >> Well, we've got different chains right now, right? You've got Hyperledger, you've got Ethereum, and all this good stuff. How do you bridge all this, right, instead of having to choose one, you're now saying, I can work in all of them, because each one potentially can offer something unique. Maybe you don't have to choose one. We don't know. Only time will tell, as this, this is such a young industry, and this is why it's so exciting. >> Well, Nataliya -- >> It -- >> Oh, go ahead. >> No, I was going to say, and you're giving the kids examples, so a lot of times kids ask me, Well, what's the difference between crypto and Venmo? I'm like, okay, you know, let's talk about the different things you can do with crypto that you can't do, but they're closer than the older generations are to transferring, you know, money, at least, so now you're applying different use cases and expanding their minds in ways that, perhaps -- >> Absolutely, and I'll give you my example. I mean, I got into blockchain early before Ethereum was launched, and partly I was into public markets, and then I kind of stopped because that project ended, or I stopped and I actually reentered it, because my fifteen-year-old who started mining. But he started mining because I was in that field already, so there you go, it kind of, you know, what comes around. >> Good job. I hope he gets all his Bitcoin. >> Yeah, he did. (laughs) >> So, I want you to tell a story, of what you've seen that's been high impact from your work you've done. You had, again, that whole Pakistan thing going on, you've got all these hackathons, what is a good story you could share? >> You know, the good story we can share, I think the part that we were able to do, the hackathons that we are doing are local, but they're also global, it really is, there's this sense of empowerment, and you know what I think the best story, this is the best story: best story was, at the hackathon that we ran, it was women, over 100 women, that participated. But all our mentors were young, geeky programming guys. Sorry guys. But you really knew they really knew their stuff, so there was technology transfer, and we had a 48 hour hackathon, these guys stayed 48 hours, they didn't go to sleep, they didn't have to as mentors, and there was this amazing technology transfer that happened, and I think some relationships were formed too. >> Yeah, some serious bonding went on, right? >> Yeah, absolutely. >> It's actually a good thing that you're including people. It's not just a certain thing, you got this inclusion. >> Absolutely, and actually all it is is about inclusion, all it is is we are giving a platform for women not to be afraid, I mean, I'm an engineer, so I've been working with men all my life, so for me to ask difficult questions, or stupid questions, it's like natural now, because it's been what my life, but for women, for many, it isn't. So we just wanted to kind of cross that divide, it's not a chasm, it's just a little divide that we're bridged. >> So when you say stupid questions, do you mean like, Why do you do it that way? (laughs) Why don't you do it this way? >> Or, what's a wallet? Like, what's a private key? What's a public key? And asking that not once, but twenty times until you got it. That's okay too. >> That's called learning. >> Yeah. >> Last question, okay I got to ask you, the most important question is, how do someone get a CryptoChicks shirt? >> I think you can order it on our website, sizes are a problem, I know we've discussed this, so we need to -- >> Extra-large. >> Well, CryptoChicks is a not-for-profit organization so there are, we'll have to order this in bunches, so I'll figure this out, but what I wanted to say is that we have another hackathon that's coming up. And the hackathon is in New York, October 5th to 8th, and we have three streams, so if you're a developer, and this is for women, so if you're a developer, we have a stream. If you're not a developer, or you've never coded in your life, but you have a business mind, and you think you have a really good idea that you can put on blockchain, you're welcome to join as well, and now with all the news and regulations, we also have a regulatory stream. >> So for entrepreneurs and for business-minded people, that want to get involved, that they can come too? >> Absolutely. >> Okay, and their website is cryptochicks.ca, that's where you can get access to the information, that's great. >> October 5th to 8th, you said, right? >> That's right. >> And anybody can go? >> Anybody can register. >> And where in New York? >> It's going to be at University of New York, and at their School of Law. >> Great. >> Blockchain Educational Fun Hub. That's what it says on the website, love your website. Looking forward to getting some shirts, and putting it out there, and promoting your mission. Great job, good to see you again. >> You guys are awesome. Thank you so much. >> Thank you. >> Thank you, Nataliya. >> Thank you. >> This is crypto for good, a lot of education, and this opportunity, and our role is to share that, as a community, and I think this is a great example of the kind of community that crypto is. Education people can level up and move fast through and get proficiency, and change their lives. This is what this is all about, glad to bring us this CUBE coverage live, stay with us! Day One continues, I'm John Furrier with Dave Vellante, we'll be right back from Toronto Blockchain Futurist Summit. Thank you. (techno music)
SUMMARY :
Brought to you by theCUBE! so shout out to the team at Untraceable Thank you. come and join us, and we'll show you how to open a wallet, that says, Satoshi is Female, thanks to Nyla Rodgers, that you hear like every third presentation, so basically we're creating the we're going to high schools, so immediate next generation. Absolutely. and opportunities that can be captured, there is going to be multi-chain tokens, that you can level up, so the ability So there you go, it's doable. and providing the information to kids, and there will be many elements of it, Maybe you don't have to choose one. and I'll give you my example. I hope he gets all his Bitcoin. Yeah, he did. what is a good story you could share? and you know what I think the best story, It's not just a certain thing, you got this inclusion. Absolutely, and actually all it is is about inclusion, And asking that not once, but twenty times until you got it. and you think you have a really good idea that's where you can get access to the information, It's going to be at University of New York, Great job, good to see you again. Thank you so much. and this opportunity, and our role is to share that,
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David Johnston, Factom Inc. | Blockchain Futurist Conference 2018
(techy music) >> Live from Toronto, Canada, it's theCUBE covering Blockchain Futurist Conference 2018, brought to you by theCUBE. (techy music) >> Well, welcome back to theCUBE, we're live here in Toronto for the Untraceable Blockchain Futurist Conference for two days of wall-to-wall coverage. I'm John Furrier, my co-host Dave Vellante, who had to take a step away and our next guest is David Johnston, who's the chairman of the board at Factom, industry legend, he's done a lot of great work from startups, he funds it in early days, really was involved in the original decentralized application framework and part of that community. Great to have you on theCUBE, thanks for spending the time with us. >> It's good to be here. >> So, first of all we are believers, theCUBE, our team, we're pretty biased. We think that decentralized applications is going to be the next really renaissance in software and startups because it's not your grandfather's venture capital or app SAS model, there's a real change going on. Capital formation, entrepreneurial activity-- >> Yep. >> So, congratulations for putting that together. What's going on, what's the status of this? I mean, obviously put all the price crashes on the side, there's real building going on. >> Well, it's really actually an exciting time. A lot of of good projects have started the last few years and I think what we're going to see is those projects come to fruition later this year, early next. I think about what's happening with groups like PolyMath and what they're doing on tokenizing securities. It really started that wave last year, and now we've got Bank to the Future, and what's going on in Malta with the legislation. A lot of jurisdictions are looking to basically embrace that model of okay, if you have a company, now we can turn that equity into a record on the blockchain and really give people global ledger where we can then trade it on multiple exchanges. It gets you global access, global liquidity, and all of these advantages, so I see a stampede of projects headed towards that model, but thinking about decentralized applications, what I want to preserve is still the permission-less nature of this ecosystem. I mean, I wasn't a rich investor when I got into bitcoin in 2012, all right. I was lucky to be an economics nerd and already wanted to get rid of my Fiat and opt into non-government currency, and so, you know, the timing was great for me but there weren't any barriers. I could download a node-- >> Yeah. >> I could access the ecosystem, I could jump right in and get involved, and so as we see the ecosystem mature what I hope we see is preserving that permission-less nature and recently I proposed Smartdrops as a means of distributing tokens and utilities or currencies-- >> Yeah. >> As a way of bootstrapping the network. So, that's what I really see coming next. >> Love the Smartdrop concept because you know, with Smart contracts and Airdrops kind of being wishy-washy, you know what goes on there, I think one of the things I want to get your thoughts on, because we were at the cloud blockchain event yesterday. Cloud computing and cloud-native chain, SAS applications, you start to see operators now be involved in cloud as that matures, what decentralized applications bring kind of changes the game a bit. How do you see software development changing, because what cloud did was create devops culture, it certainly leverages opensource. >> Right. >> And there's a big community around that. Now with decentralized application you've got community as an active part of it, so is opensource, how is it going to change the software development frameworks? >> Well, I think you can cut out a lot of the middle steps and go directly to developers that you want to work with. I mean, I think Ethereum really still set the gold standard when they set aside a chunk of ether for developers that contributed code to their GitHub before launch, and people will forget now it was a heavy lift to get Ethereum launched. It took a good year and a half, two years, to go from a whitepaper to production net deployments and in that time they needed to align people, the smartest people in the world to try to build that platform, and so I think people can still draw from that lesson and say, "Okay, I'm going to enroll developers directly, "I'm going to reward the people that download "the alpha, download the beta," right. Bootstrap this community to my first 1,000, first 10,000 users. I think PolyMath did that really well recently with their Airdrop where they got 50,000 people into a telegram channel and fill out a survey and do the KYC because they didn't make it a rounding error, they made it a meaningful Airdrop of hundreds of dollars worth of Poly at the time, and that really motivated people to get involved, so-- >> Yeah, and I like the slogan, "Let the stampede begin." (laughs) Actually, we covered PolyMath at their PolyCon event-- >> Sure. >> That Tracy and Untraceable did, and this is, again, the new dynamic. So, I want to get your thoughts on economics, right. So, you've got crypto, which is token economics, which is a business concept when you think about a new way. Blockchain's certainly becoming an infrastructure. >> Right. >> Token economics is changing the business landscape, so you saw it as an economics nerd and now people are realizing, "Holy shit, "I can actually do things with it differently. "I can change the equation"-- >> Right. >> "And still get the outcomes I want "faster, cheaper, smarter, of something "that's not efficient," this is a new dynamic. How do you see the token economics evolving, you know, aside all the liquidity nonsense we're seeing in the market, certainly fluctuations are happening. >> Sure. >> But from a build-out standpoint, from a business model innovation, where is the action on token economics? >> Well, I loved when the Vitala coined the term token economics, and you know, crypto-economics, and basically what he was describing is we're using math to screw the past and we're aligning people's economic incentives to secure the future. So, that idea that we can rely on encryption to give us a stable, immutable, transparent ledger is really powerful because it takes away, in a cloud context, the need to create a bunch of infrastructure. Right, before the cloud people had their own servers. >> Yeah, provision them. >> Dot com days, right, they spent millions of dollars provisioning their own hardware-- >> Before they could roll out their app. >> Right, and so we take it for granted today. >> Yeah. >> You can jump on AWS or Rockspace-- >> Yeah. >> And get going in a few minutes. So, I think blockchain is going to do something similar for all the features of Smart contracts, financial integrations around transfer of money, all of these things are now a toolkit that as soon as I hook into Ethereum or Bitcoin Cash or one of these protocols I have this large, established infrastructure, thousands of people running nodes that I don't have to pay for-- >> Yeah. >> As a user, and that's amazing for innovation because it just lowers the barrier-- >> Yeah. >> For the average guy to get involved. >> And accelerates time to value big time. >> Yeah. >> All right, so what was your talk here at the show, what were you speaking about, you had a discussion, what was the speech about? >> Really focused on this idea of Smartdrops because I think, you know, this can be a primer-- >> Explain Smartdrops real quick. >> Sure, sure, so most people are probably familiar with Airdrops. >> Yep. >> Been around for years, hey, you want to give 100,000 users of bitcoin some of your new token. We're going to send it out to all their addresses. It's sort of like a spray and pray strategy, very broad, right? >> Yeah. >> And so what I think we need to move to now that we have 50 million people with cryptowallets is we can much more intelligently target who we're dropping to, hence Smartdrop. Right, really focus in on the people that the app needs. If you're at the development stage you want to develop, you want to Airdrop to 1,000 Ethereum developers-- >> Yeah. >> To test out your app, if you're going into your alpha you need those early adopters to try it out, give you feedback. So, it's a thing that I think we could leverage but people have treated it as sort of an afterthought. Right, oh, I'll take one percent of my tokens and do one of these Airdrops. I think we could actually be distributing 20%, 40%, 60% of tokens via Smartdrops if you're properly targeting them and traunching it out based on the maturity of the projects. >> Yeah, and I think Smart contracts, Smartdrops really add value because it brings intelligence-- >> Right. >> To and targeting and more value you can distribute. It's like policy-based distribution. >> Right. >> All right, final question for you, state of the union, obviously people seeing these fluctuations, Ethereum lost its one-year value, it's back down to where it was a year ago. Largest developer community, people get nervous when you have these short term fluctuations that really aren't based on anything from a build-out standpoint. >> Sure. >> It's really more of market dynamics, Asia, wherever, whatever-- >> Right. >> But this real build is in the developer community going on that are building long term, trying to build long term ventures. >> Right. >> What do you say to that community at Ethereum and others, stay the course, don't waver, don't check the price, head down, grind it, what do you say? >> What I say is think long term. We've been through this like four times already. I remember when bitcoin went from almost nothing to $30 and crashed to $2, right, and it took almost a year-- >> Yeah. >> To recover, 2012, get back to 10 bucks, and then it made it's big run 2013 to $250, and proceeded to crash to $50. >> Yeah. >> Right, and then make a big run thereafter to the thousands-- >> Yeah. >> And crash to $200, and here we've made enormous runs and $19,000, you know, on the bitcoin price and it's crashed to $6,000 or $5,000, whatever it is today, and so you got to keep in mind the long term perspective. We have come so far. >> (laughs) Yeah. >> Like when I got into bitcoin in 2012 it was $10 a bitcoin, there were 10 million bitcoins in circulation, meaning $100 million was the entire digital currency universe, and now today there are hundreds of billions of dollars-- >> Yeah. >> Of assets in this space, and it's only been five or six years. Like it's orders of magnitude, so I keep my eye on usage, on real utility. You look at Ethereum, I mean, they're doing seven, eight, 900,000 transactions a day. People are using-- >> Yeah. >> The platform and I think at this point they've got more usage than all of their blockchains combined. >> Yeah. >> And so, you know, that's really exciting and I think keep your head down, keep building, these are the times when sort of like the fluff falls away-- >> Yep. >> And the projects that didn't make sense, all that gets flushed out of the ecosystem and the real projects come to the forefront. >> Well, David you're having a great career so far. Congratulations on getting in early when it was 10 bucks, and we had our first website developer was so good but he wanted to be paid in bitcoin in 2011, it was 22 cents-- >> Wow. >> At the time, I remember buying it, it was like, "What's bitcoin, what is this craziness?" (laughs) We started covering it then, just started doing videos, so we're going to do more interviews. We'll hopefully get you on again. Real quick, final plug for you, what are you working on right now? Share with the community some of the projects and your interests right now and what's going on. >> Well, Factom is a big focus for me because this solves data on the blockchain and lets you do recordkeeping, documentation, all that sort of stuff, and so that's really hit a chord with enterprise, so we need to get the mainstream into the ecosystem and that's really what Factom is focused on. >> Yeah. >> So, really excited, they've delivered their third version of their software, which is now fully decentralized recently. >> Yeah. >> It's a huge milestone for them. >> So, harden it, make it reliable, stable, and make it easy to consume and use. >> That's right, that's the key. >> That's the goal. >> And let people put millions, billions, or trillions of records on, and what Factom does with Merkle trees, basically you only need one transaction every 10 minutes to anchor all of that data. So, what we've created is scalability, and that's what we need for this to go mainstream. >> All right, David Johnston, chairman of the board at Factom here on theCUBE, industry insider, pioneer, also leader, inspiration. theCUBE bringing you all the live action, all the data here not yet on the blockchain, soon to be. I'm John Furrier, live coverage here in Untraceable's event Futurist event here in Toronto, be back with more. Stay with us, be right back with more content after this short break. (techy music)
SUMMARY :
Conference 2018, brought to you by theCUBE. Great to have you on theCUBE, thanks is going to be the next really renaissance in software I mean, obviously put all the price crashes on the side, and so, you know, the timing was great for me So, that's what I really see coming next. Love the Smartdrop concept because you know, so is opensource, how is it going to change and in that time they needed to align people, Yeah, and I like the slogan, "Let the stampede begin." and this is, again, the new dynamic. Token economics is changing the business landscape, How do you see the token economics evolving, in a cloud context, the need to So, I think blockchain is going to do familiar with Airdrops. We're going to send it out to all their addresses. Right, really focus in on the people that the app needs. adopters to try it out, give you feedback. To and targeting and more value you can distribute. it's back down to where it was a year ago. going on that are building long term, to $30 and crashed to $2, right, and it took and proceeded to crash to $50. on the bitcoin price and it's crashed to Of assets in this space, and The platform and I think at this point they've got and the real projects come to the forefront. and we had our first website developer was so good what are you working on right now? and lets you do recordkeeping, documentation, So, really excited, they've delivered stable, and make it easy to consume and use. and that's what we need for this to go mainstream. All right, David Johnston, chairman of the board
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