Afleveringen
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This is my conversation with Stephane Gosselin, Cofounder of Flashbots and Frontier Research, and now, the head of OneBalance
Timestamps:
- 00:00:00 intro
- 00:01:29 sponsor: Optimism
- 00:02:34 my existential question about crypto
- 00:07:13 global consensus is the problem
- 00:14:27 architecting a new system
- 00:21:56 OneBalance and Credible Accounts
- 00:29:39 credible commitment machines
- 00:34:20 sponsor: Privy
- 00:35:35 the user issues permissions for solvers
- 00:37:06 the trust model
- 00:42:20 the CAKE framework and the Credible stack
- 00:47:59 privacy
- 00:54:54 global consensus blockchains and LLM foundation models
- 00:58:55 a company is a mirror on your state of being
- 01:08:26 having a strong why
- 01:17:46 outroLinks:
Stephane Gosselin: https://x.com/thegostep
OneBalance: http://onebalance.io
Frontier Research: https://frontier.tech/Thank you to our sponsors for making this podcast possible:
Optimism - https://optimism.io
Privy - https://privy.ioInto the Bytecode:
Twitter - https://twitter.com/sinahab
Farcaster - https://warpcast.com/sinahab
Other episodes - https://intothebytecode.comDisclaimer: this podcast is for informational purposes only. It is not financial advice nor a recommendation to buy or sell securities. The host and guests may hold positions in the projects discussed.
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This is my conversation with Molly Mackinlay, Head of Engineering, Product, and Research Development at Protocol Labs, and CEO at FilOz.
Timestamps:
- 00:00:00 intro
- 00:01:59 sponsor: Privy
- 00:03:15 motivation
- 00:09:30 exabytes of network capacity
- 00:12:11 edge computing, bringing compute to data
- 00:14:26 the history of IPFS, libp2p, IPLD, Filecoin, FVM, L2s and IPC
- 00:20:08 designing incentives in Filecoin
- 00:25:11 designing the block rewards curve
- 00:27:28 progress through time
- 00:31:19 learnings from building production systems,
- 00:34:15 EVM-compatibility, future-proofing and network upgrades
- 00:43:51 sponsor: Optimism
- 00:44:56 IPC, L2 scaling on Filecoin
- 00:48:55 architecting applications on subnets
- 00:54:12 business models on subnets
- 00:57:27 the interface between a subnet and the internet
- 01:04:41 FilOz as a public goods amplifier
- 01:07:10 opening up the Protocol Labs network
- 01:12:23 Edge Esmeralda, field building, neurotech, and education
- 01:21:04 outro
Links:
Molly Mackinlay - https://x.com/momack28
Protocol Labs - https://protocol.ai
Filecoin - https://filecoin.io
FilOz - https://www.filoz.orgInterPlanetary Consensus - https://www.ipc.space/
Textile Basin - https://basin.textile.io/
web3.storage - https://web3.storage/
Filecoin Virtual Machine - https://fvm.filecoin.io/
Thank you to our sponsors for making this podcast possible:
Optimism - https://optimism.io
Privy - https://privy.io
Into the Bytecode:
Twitter - https://twitter.com/sinahab
Farcaster - https://warpcast.com/sinahab
Other episodes - https://intothebytecode.com
Disclaimer: this podcast is for informational purposes only. It is not financial advice nor a recommendation to buy or sell securities. The host and guests may hold positions in the projects discussed.
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Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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This is my conversation with Rish, cofounder of Neynar, building infrastructure for Farcaster.
Timestamps:
- 00:00:00 intro
- 00:01:51 sponsor: Optimism
- 00:03:01 the idea maze for Neynar
- 00:12:46 exit, building blocks, and monetization models
- 00:17:20 how Neynar is architected
- 00:21:52 handling Frames Friday
- 00:25:04 scaling infrastructure by mapping requests to resources
- 00:35:05 sponsor: Privy
- 00:36:25 taking good risks as a startup
- 00:41:55 iteration and planning ahead, breadth vs depth-first search
- 00:45:36 the channel protocol spec
- 00:51:26 why build Frame Studio
- 00:56:55 companies become extensions of their founders
- 01:05:53 working on the Base team
- 01:10:28 having a tight feedback loop with users
- 01:15:18 cofounder relationship with Manan
- 01:19:25 outro
Links:
Rish - https://warpcast.com/rish
Neynar - https://neynar.com
Thank you to our sponsors for making this podcast possible:
Optimism - https://optimism.io
Privy - https://privy.io
Into the Bytecode:
Twitter - / sinahab
Farcaster - https://warpcast.com/sinahab
Other episodes - https://intothebytecode.com
Disclaimer: this podcast is for informational purposes only. It is not financial advice or a recommendation to buy or sell securities. The host and guests may hold positions in the projects discussed.
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This is my conversation with Sreeram Kannan, founder at EigenLayer.
Timestamps:
- 00:00:00 intro
- 00:01:21 sponsor: Optimism
- 00:02:42 the AVS economy
- 00:05:24 blockchains separate trust and innovation
- 00:16:53 sponsor: Optimism
- 00:18:02 specialized services and SaaS on EigenLayer
- 00:24:50 rollups are open verifiable web servers
- 00:41:35 rollup economics and business models
- 01:55:14 the transition from academic to builder/operator
- 01:06:38 impact per unit action
- 01:10:26 outroLinks:
Sreeram Kannan: https://twitter.com/sreeramkannan
EigenLayer: https://twitter.com/eigenlayerThank you to our sponsors for making this podcast possible:
Optimism - https://optimism.io
Privy - https://privy.ioInto the Bytecode:
Twitter - https://twitter.com/sinahab
Farcaster - https://warpcast.com/sinahab
Other episodes - https://intothebytecode.comDisclaimer: this podcast is for informational purposes only. It is not financial advice or a recommendation to buy or sell securities. The host and guests may hold positions in the projects discussed.
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This is my conversation with Doug Petkanics and Eric Tang, cofounders of Livepeer.
Timestamps:
- 00:00:00 intro
- 00:01:45 sponsor: Optimism
- 00:03:55 Livepeer origin story
- 00:11:54 FFmpeg and the video infrastructure stack
- 00:17:07 compute capacity and cost in open vs closed systems
- 00:22:59 GPUs as the supply side, working at NVIDIA
- 00:40:27 finding latent demand
- 00:46:10 sponsor: Privy
- 00:47:30 learnings on go-to-market, Livepeer Studio, AI video processing
- 01:00:54 AI subnets in the Livepeer network
- 01:07:51 doing whatever it takes to get it done
- 01:13:19 interacting with the market
- 01:18:51 the inner game
- 01:24:30 outroLinks:
Doug Petkanics - https://twitter.com/petkanics
Eric Tang - https://twitter.com/ericxtang
Livepeer - https://twitter.com/livepeer
Livepeer Studio - https://twitter.com/livepeerstudioThank you to our sponsors for making this podcast possible:
Optimism - https://optimism.io
Privy - https://privy.ioInto the Bytecode:
Twitter - https://twitter.com/sinahab
Farcaster - https://warpcast.com/sinahab
Other episodes - https://intothebytecode.comDisclaimer: this podcast is for informational purposes only. It is not financial advice or a recommendation to buy or sell securities. The host and guests may hold positions in the projects discussed.
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This is my conversation with Martin Köppelmann, cofounder of Gnosis.
Timestamps:
- 00:00:00 intro
- 00:01:47 sponsor: Privy
- 00:03:08 Gnosis Pay as an onchain bank account
- 00:13:49 security, passkeys and recovery
- 00:21:19 privacy, Tornado Cash
- 00:28:25 sponsor: Optimism
- 00:29:35 AI agents as a new form of life
- 00:36:43 training with prediction markets as RLHF
- 00:46:00 agents and prediction markets as interconnected concepts
- 00:56:21 why now for prediction markets
- 01:09:08 outroShow notes:
- Martin Köppelmann: https://twitter.com/koeppelmann
- Prediction Prophet, an agent by Polywrap in collaboration with Autonolas and Gnosis: https://predictionprophet.ai/Thank you to our sponsors for making this podcast possible:
Optimism - https://optimism.io
Privy - https://privy.ioInto the Bytecode:
Twitter - https://twitter.com/sinahab
Farcaster - https://warpcast.com/sinahab
Other episodes - https://intothebytecode.comDisclaimer: this podcast is for informational purposes only. It is not financial advice or a recommendation to buy or sell securities. The host and guests may hold positions in the projects discussed.
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This is my conversation with Varun Srinivasan - cofounder of Merkle Manufactory, the company building the Farcaster protocol and the Warpcast client.
Timestamps:
- 00:00:00 intro
- 00:01:34 sponsor: Optimism
- 00:02:44 Farcaster origins
- 00:05:59 sufficient decentralization, namespaces, hubs and CRDTs
- 00:16:02 type 1 vs type 2 decisions
- 00:21:23 the protocol, channels, clients, spam
- 00:30:13 direct messaging and end-to-end encryption
- 00:36:38 a turing complete social protocol
- 00:41:58 sponsor: Privy
- 00:43:19 why frames
- 00:52:14 Facebook, Twitter, Farcaster
- 01:03:25 backstory, growing up in India, Microsoft, YC
- 01:08:11 learnings from Coinbase
- 01:15:13 building a company
- 01:18:53 doing the one thing that matters
- 01:28:07 outroThank you to our sponsors for making this podcast possible:
Optimism - https://optimism.io
Privy - https://privy.ioInto the Bytecode:
Twitter - https://twitter.com/sinahab
Farcaster - https://warpcast.com/sinahab
Other episodes - https://intothebytecode.comDisclaimer: this podcast is for informational purposes only. It is not financial advice or a recommendation to buy or sell securities. The host and guests may hold positions in the projects discussed.
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This is my conversation with Rebecca Rettig and Michael Mosier. Rebecca is the Chief Legal and Policy Officer at Polygon Labs. Michael is cofounder of Arktouros and partner at Ex Ante.
Timestamps:
- 00:00:00 intro
- 00:01:38 sponsor: Privy
- 0:02:59 Rebecca's background, the Silk Road case, Aave, Polygon
- 00:07:22 Michael's background, Department of Justice, FinCEN, Espresso Systems, the White House, ex/ante
- 00:15:12 the current regulatory regime, Bank Secrecy Act, sanctions laws, miners/validators
- 00:29:30 sponsor: Optimism
- 00:30:40 genuine DeFi vs onchain CeFi, critical infrastructure
- 00:44:54 Uniswap contracts, app vs protocol, wallet risk scoring, OFAC, Lazarus Group
- 00:54:19 the Security Alliance (SEAL), white hats, working with the FBI
- 01:08:04 why do this work, the ability to innovate in the US is a freedom
- 01:12:13 crypto policy bootcamp
- 01:14:00 outroThank you to our sponsors for making this podcast possible:
Optimism - https://optimism.io
Privy - https://privy.ioInto the Bytecode:
Twitter - https://twitter.com/sinahab
Farcaster - https://warpcast.com/sinahab
Other episodes - https://intothebytecode.comDisclaimer: this podcast is for informational purposes only. It is not financial advice or a recommendation to buy or sell securities. The host and guests may hold positions in the projects discussed.
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This is my conversation with Vitalik Buterin, creator of Ethereum.
00:00:00 intro
00:01:07 sponsor: Optimism
00:02:17 micro prediction markets, community notes, AIs as participants
00:14:13 decentralized social networks, zk identity, Dark Forest, and Frogcrypto
00:25:54 the dense jungle
00:30:08 sponsor: Privy
00:31:29 political instability, technology
00:34:16 coordination and technology in climate
00:36:13 AI, debugging and drawing, agency, security
00:44:02 timeline for the singularity
00:52:36 living to a 1000 years old
00:54:00 brain-computer interfaces
01:02:15 LojbanThank you to our sponsors for making this podcast possible:
Optimism - https://optimism.io
Privy - https://privy.ioInto the Bytecode:
Twitter - https://twitter.com/sinahab
Farcaster - https://warpcast.com/sinahab
Other episodes - https://intothebytecode.comDisclaimer: this podcast is for informational purposes only. It is not financial advice or a recommendation to buy or sell securities. The host and guests may hold positions in the projects discussed.
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This is my conversation with Hart Lambur. We talk about Hart's path in building UMA (an oracle using schelling points to bring data onchain), Across (an intents-based bridge connecting ETH/L2s), and now Oval (MEV capture for oracle price updates).
00:00:00 Intro00:01:29 Sponsor: Privy (privy.io)00:02:50 The idea maze, Goldman Sachs, RFQ systems, legal vs smart contracts00:11:03 UMA, schelling point and optimistic oracle00:16:41 Raising the seed round00:19:38 Across, intent-based bridging architecture00:30:42 Sponsor: Optimism (optimism.io)00:31:52 Oval00:46:15 MEV capture for protocols01:01:22 Outro
Timestamps:Into the Bytecode:
More episodes - https://intothebytecode.com
Twitter - https://twitter.com/sinahabThank you to our sponsors for making this podcast possible:
Optimism - https://optimism.io
Privy - https://privy.ioDisclaimer: this podcast is for informational purposes only. It is not financial advice or a recommendation to buy or sell securities. The host and guests may hold positions in the projects discussed.
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This is my conversation with Jesse Pollak. He led retail engineering at Coinbase for many years â building Coinbase, Coinbase Pro, and Coinbase Wallet. More recently, he is leading the development of Base, Coinbase's L2 built on the OP Stack.
00:00:00 intro
00:01:43 sponsor: Optimism (optimism.io)
00:03:07 motivation behind Base
00:11:12 pitching Base to the Coinbase exec team
00:14:24 challenges of innovating on a schedule
00:17:54 failing repeatedly to find the right answer
00:22:09 decision to build an L2 with Michael
00:23:30 convincing Surojit Chatterjee, Coinbaseâs CPO
00:24:59 launching Base internally
00:31:58 blockchains as serverless compute
00:36:53 uniswap as a serverless API for currency conversion
00:39:30 the power of small but leveraged teams
00:42:31 how to straddle product building in the onchain and offchain world
00:45:25 sponsor: Privy (privy.io)
00:51:22 the significance of THIS moment in Crypto
00:53:56 getting a 100M devs and 1B users onchain
00:57:02 how the NFT UX will change with Base
01:10:13 how crypto will be incorporated in applications
01:14:00 the risk of onchain heterogeneity
01:17:27 building privacy-oriented onchain platforms
01:26:00 upgrading the financial system
01:28:33 attending Quaker School
01:34:43 relentless positivity in life
01:38:47 building a better futureJesse Pollak:
jesse.xyz on ETH
Twitter
GithubInto the Bytecode:
More episodes and transcripts - https://intothebytecode.xyz/
Newsletter - https://bytecode.substack.com
Twitter - https://twitter.com/sinahabThank you to our sponsors for making this podcast possible:
Optimism - https://optimism.io
Privy - https://privy.io
Relevant Links:
Base - https://base.org/
Coinbase - https://www.coinbase.com/
Brian Armstrong - https://twitter.com/brian_armstrong
Surojit Chatterjee Coinbaseâs CPO - https://www.coinbase.com/blog/welcome-surojit-chatterjee-coinbases-chief-product-officer
OP Stack - https://stack.optimism.io/
Uniswap - https://uniswap.org/
Goldfinch - https://goldfinch.finance/
Zora - https://zora.co/Produced by Spectral.to
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This is my conversation with Liam Horne, former CEO and advisor to Optimism Labs.
00:00 Intro
00:59 sponsor: Privy (privy.io)
03:35 early influences, classmates with Vitalik in Waterloo
08:31 Ethereum's potential and why scalability matters
10:06 learning from Jeff Coleman
17:23 defining a common language
21:06 importance of community in Ethereum
26:34 hackathons lead to progress
31:36 collaboration as a core ETH value
38:30 humility and collective learning
47:27 building a public good
53:07 building Optimism with Ethereum values
01:09:27 sponsor: Optimism (optimism.io)
01:17:41 decentralization is a journey
01:20:59 staying true to your principles
01:32:51 building something new is difficult
01:36:28 Jing Wang
01:42:10 Georgios KonstantopoulosThank you to our sponsors for making this podcast possible:
Optimism - https://optimism.io
Privy - https://privy.ioInto the Bytecode:
Other episodes and transcripts - https://intothebytecode.xyz/
Newsletter for updates - https://bytecode.substack.com
Twitter - https://twitter.com/sinahabRelevant Links:
University of Waterloo https://uwaterloo.ca/(Almost) Everything you need to know about Optimistic Rollup by Georgios Konstantopoulos https://www.paradigm.xyz/2021/01/almost-everything-you-need-to-know-about-optimistic-rollup
ETHGlobal https://ethglobal.com/
Produced by https://spectral.to -
This is my conversation with Aya Miyaguchi, Executive Director at the Ethereum Foundation.
00:00 intro
01:20 sponsor: Optimism (optimism.io)
02:38 reflecting on early days of Ethereum
9:01 Ethereum as an Infinite Garden
19:14 books and ideas that influenced Aya
24:54 the insignificance of titles
32:02 what does âExecutive Director of the Ethereum Foundationâ mean?
40:33 the âteacherâ mindset and how it applies to management
47:24 the importance of diversity
51:41 sponsor: Privy (privy.io)
53:03 the idea of subtraction and how it plays out in practice
1:05:42 funding in a non-profit context
1:08:48 why itâs difficult to describe the potential of Ethereum
1:16:46 embracing imperfection
1:20:43 learning from (un)natural disasters
1:33:20 what the 'next billion' means for Ethereum
1:42:59 Ethereum in emerging economies
1:49:09 outro
Relevant Links:
Finite and Infinite Games by James Carse - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finite_and_Infinite_Games
Aya on Executing with Subtraction - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=noXPewi5qOk
Ethereum Foundation - https://ethereum.org/en/foundation/Thank you to our sponsors for making this podcast possible:
Optimism - https://optimism.io
Privy - https://privy.ioInto the Bytecode:
Other episodes and transcripts - https://intothebytecode.xyz/
Newsletter for updates - https://bytecode.substack.com
Twitter - https://twitter.com/sinahab -
This is my conversation with Dan Romero about Farcaster - a decentralized social network being developed as an open protocol.
We talked about how product decisions in social networks have ripple effects on society, Farcasterâs strategy in the highly competitive world of social products, and Dan's personal philosophies around hiring and team building.
Timestamps:
0:00 intro
2:08 why this problem?
12:54 both product and protocol
23:41 the algorithmic feed
29:40 Farcasterâs strategy for competing with Twitter
1:00:52 approach to team building
1:14:41 how to use social networks, and memeâing
Relevant links:
Dan Romero - https://twitter.com/dwr
Farcaster - https://www.farcaster.xyz/
Farcaster docs - https://github.com/farcasterxyz/protocol
Varun - https://twitter.com/varunsrin
Keybase - https://keybase.io/
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This is my conversation with Jango and Nnnnicholas from Juicebox Protocol. Juicebox is a playful but ambitious project: the DAO operates as a full-stack instantiation of the protocol it's building, and fully reconceptualizes the relationship between contributors and shareholders. It has powered projects like SharkDAO, ConstitutionDAO, and AssangeDAO in the past.
Timestamps:
0:00 intro
1:37 an alternative to traditional org structures
9:53 philosophical alignment
27:30 the key mechanisms of the Juicebox Protocol
35:51 fundraising mechanics and the extensibility of Juicebox v2
46:05 a DAOsâs origins shape its culture
54:46 guiding principles for compensation
1:02:06 working backwards from the future
1:12:11 the subtraction philosophy and Ethereum as the Big Bang
1:31:25 StudioDAO and models for permissionless DAOs
Relevant links:
Jango - https://twitter.com/me_jango
Nnnnicolas - https://twitter.com/nnnnicholas
Juicebox - https://juicebox.money/
Nouns - https://nouns.wtf/
StudioDAO - https://www.studiodao.xyz/
Juicecast podcast about StudioDAO - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ep-9-kenny-from-studiodao/id1623504302?i=1000576149672
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Nadia Asparouhova is an independent researcher. She previously wrote about her research on open-source communities in "Working in Public", and more recently, has been researching the history of and approaches to philanthropy - which she defines with this phrase âif venture capital is risk capital for private goods, philanthropy is risk capital for public goodsâ.
In this conversation, we talked about public goods from this broader perspective. We talked about how previous generations have thought about this question, and how the tech ecosystem outside of crypto are grappling with this today. We talked about the second-order effects of wealth booms which have happened in both tech and crypto, how peer production happens, and the role that intrinsic versus extrinsic rewards might play in the development of crypto protocols.
Timestamps:
0:00 intro
2:01 working as an independent researcher
6:09 understanding wealth booms in tech and crypto
13:01 the unique perspectives of each successive community
25:46 the right (and wrong) question to ask
34:41 the landscape of public goods provisioning
39:22 innovative philanthropic funding models
45:35 the first wave of open source communities and crypto
54:42 different classes of stakeholders
1:05:00 research methodology and tools for thought
Relevant links:Nadia Asparouhova - https://twitter.com/nayafia
Nadiaâs website - https://nadia.xyz/
âWorking in Publicâ - https://www.amazon.com/dp/0578675862/
Gitcoin - https://gitcoin.co/
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Julien Niset is the cofounder and Chief Science Officer at Argent, a crypto wallet that's used and loved by many people in the crypto ecosystem.
In this conversation, we talk about how Argent has evolved to get to where it is today. How Julien sees user experience evolving broadly in the ecosystem, and what the flow of a new person interacting with a crypto application for the first time might look like in the future.Another topic we get into deeply is L2s, how Julien and Argent have thought about the topic of EVM equivalence and compatibility, and why they ultimately chose to build on ZK Rollups like ZkSync and StarkNet.
And lastly, we dive into what has been like to build on StarkNet, what the early community feels like today, what it's been like to write code in Cairo, and as a bit of a snapshot into this experience we do a deep dive into what account abstraction looks like on StarkNet.
Timestamps:
0:00 intro
1:56 leaning into zk rollups and account abstraction
7:29 scaling the self-custody experience
13:20 what onboarding users to crypto will look like in 3 years
20:24 some of the friction points that still need to be abstracted
33:52 L2s and the trade-offs between different rollups
39:45 is breaking EVM-equivalency worth it?
48:01 Julien's experience in the StarkNet ecosystem
58:24 a primer on account abstraction
1:15:38 session keys
1:28:17 starting a sensible wallet set up from scratch
Relevant links:Julien Niset: https://twitter.com/jniset
Argent - https://www.argent.xyz/
StarkNet - https://starkware.co/starknet/
zkSync - https://zksync.io/
Topology - https://www.topology.gg/
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Pedro Gomes is the cofounder of WalletConnect, a communications protocol that enables wallets and apps to securely connect and interact.
In this conversation, We talked about WalletConnect v2 and its architecture, account abstraction, potential downstream effects of a crypto-native chat protocol, and other topics.
Timestamps:
0:00 intro
8:00 developing the user experience before creating the product
10:23 account abstraction and the spectrum of security and convenience
20:39 WalletConnect APIs and âLog in with Ethereumâ
28:55 how WalletConnect works
37:45 light clients and generalized messaging protocols
45:36 the politics of making big changes to the Ethereum protocol
50:14 connecting wallets with WalletConnect Chat
Mentioned in the show:
WalletConnect - https://walletconnect.com/
EIP2938 (account abstraction) - https://eips.ethereum.org/EIPS/eip-2938
WalletConnect APIs - https://docs.walletconnect.com/2.0
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Here is my conversation with Josh Stark.
Josh has a long history in the Ethereum ecosystem going back to the early days of the community. He cofounded one of the first L2 scaling protocols with Counterfactual. He also cofounded ETHGlobal which is a much-loved series of hackathons/events that brings the community together and which acts as an entry point into the ecosystem for many people. And nowadays and most relevant to our conversation, he works in a leadership capacity at the Ethereum Foundation.
In this conversation, we talked about two topics: one being the Ethereum Foundation, and two being the question of why blockchain is matter â this being something that Josh has spent a lot of time thinking about and which he's written about in a long form piece titled Atoms Institutions Blockchains.
Timestamps:
3:50 subtraction
7:22 creating a self-sufficient crypto ecosystem
12:33 the property of âhardnessâ for blockchains
17:47 understanding decentralization
23:11 Atoms, Institutions, Blockchains
26:00 blind men and an elephant
33:06 our civilizationâs infrastructure
43:33 digitally-native hardness
59:38 how the EF operates
1:06:21 challenges with decentralized coordination
1:12:08 infinite players have nothing but their names
Mentioned in the show:
Atoms, Institutions, Blockchains: https://stark.mirror.xyz/n2UpRqwdf7yjuiPKVICPpGoUNeDhlWxGqjulrlpyYi0
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0age is the Head of Protocol Development at OpenSea, and this was a conversation about Seaport, the new marketplace protocol for buying and selling NFTs.
0age takes us through a tour of the Seaport protocol, talking about how it's architected; how conduits and zones work; and we even get into the low level gas optimization work they've done on the contracts. I hope this can be a helpful resource for anyone looking to understand the Seaport protocol or anyone who's building with NFTs more broadly. I also consider 0age to be a true veteran of the space, and hearing him talk through the design of the protocol can be an educational experience in its own rights.
Timestamps:
1:42 why build Seaport
10:20 the Seaport architecture
12:44 EIP712 signatures
14:17 the global concept of a nonce
16:02 EIP1271 and bulk listings
17:18 the Executor and conduits
25:08 zones, additional rules that can be applied on top of an order
29:47 implementing English auctions via zones
32:17 layers of the stack
36:05 fulfillment
40:42 gas optimizations and understanding the low-level behavior of the EVM
58:40 the interaction between OpenSea the product and Seaport the protocol
01:07:06 criteria based items, and partial fills
01:17:50 ideas to build on top of Seaport
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