Bankless - SotN #33: Joseph Lubin on CME ETH Futures (Future of ETH, 2021 Bull Run, Consensys)
Episode Date: February 10, 2021🚀 SUBSCRIBE TO NEWSLETTER: http://bankless.substack.com/ ✊ STARTING GUIDE BANKLESS: https://bit.ly/37Q17uI 🎙️ SUBSCRIBE TO PODCAST: http://podcast.banklesshq.com/ 👕 BUY BA...NKLESS TEE: https://merch.banklesshq.com/ ----- 💪BECOME A BANKLESS PREMIUM MEMBER: http://bankless.cc/membership ------ GO BANKLESS WITH THESE SPONSOR TOOLS: ⭐️ AAVE - BORROW OR LEND YOUR ASSETS https://bankless.cc/aave 🚀 GEMINI - MOST TRUSTED EXCHANGE AND ONRAMP https://bankless.cc/go-gemini 💳 MONOLITH - GET THE HOLY GRAIL OF BANKLESS VISA CARDS https://bankless.cc/monolith 📈 KWENTA - DERIVATIVES TRADING WITH INFINITE LIQUIDITY https://bankless.cc/kwenta ------ 📣REGISTER FOR COINDESK CONSENSUS 2021 AND SAVE $20 W/ BANKLESS http://bankless.cc/consensus2021 ------ SotN #33: Joseph Lubin on CME ETH Futures (Future of ETH, 2021 Bull Run, Consensys) We bring Joseph Lubin, co-founder of Ethereum and founder of Consensys, to the Bankless State of the Nation. We do a deep dive into the story of Ethereum, the joint futures of ETH and Consensys, and the current crypto Bull Market. Topics Covered: -The Story of ETH -CME Futures -ETH's roadmap with Proof-of-Stake and EIP1559 -2021 Bull Run -Future of Consensys ------ Relevant Links: Joseph on Twitter https://twitter.com/ethereumJoseph?s=20 Consensys https://consensys.net/ ------ Don't stop at the video! Subscribe to the Bankless newsletter program http://bankless.substack.com/ Visit the official Bankless website http://banklesshq.com/ Follow Bankless on Twitter https://twitter.com/BanklessHQ Follow Ryan on Twitter https://twitter.com/ryansadams Follow David on Twitter https://twitter.com/TrustlessState ----- Not financial or tax advice. This channel is strictly educational and is not investment advice or a solicitation to buy or sell any assets or to make any financial decisions. This video is not tax advice. Talk to your accountant. Do your own research. Disclosure. From time-to-time we may add links in this channel to products we use. We may receive commission if you make a purchase through one of these links. We'll always disclose when this is the case.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right, Bankless Nation.
Welcome to another episode of State of the Nation.
We've got a special guest here, Joe Lubin.
Before we get to Joe, State of the Nations,
what do we do during State of the Nations, David?
We talk about a headline article, a headline news piece,
something that's going through the news cycle,
which for this week, it was the CME Futures Launch,
something cool that happens every single week.
We get a guest on to talk about what's going on in the news cycle.
And of course, this week, it's Joseph Lubin, who has watched the growth of Ethereum since day one.
And now that ETH futures are launched, we want to get Joe on to talk about really what does this mean for the story of ether, the asset, and Ethereum, the economy.
It has been quite the journey. So getting Joe's thoughts here are going to be cool.
State of the Nation comes out every Tuesday. We stream this live over YouTube. So catch it there. That's the best way to catch it.
You can also get it directly into your ears via the podcast. So catch it that way.
too. We released the podcast episodes on Wednesday. David, before we get to CME futures, before we
talk to Joe, a few things going on in the nation that we should talk about. We just had Vitalik
on the podcast where we got his reflections on the year that was 2020. We talked about roll-ups.
We also talked about smart contract wallets, in particular the U.X around social recovery.
That was an awesome episode. What were your takeaways there?
Yeah, I often say that the crypto industry has one of the best vantage points to see the rest of the world,
because there's so many different things that are happening in the world that are very new in 2020 and now 2021,
money printer go burr, the president getting deplatformed, you know, social unrest.
And crypto offers like a lens to see all of it.
And that's kind of what Vitalik put into his 2020 reflections blog post, which I found absolutely fascinating.
Fetalek does a good job, kind of putting into perspective how he sees the world and how crypto is going to impact the world when just the collision course of crypto impacts the rest of the world, which we all think is coming, especially this year.
And so that was a pretty interesting piece.
And then, of course, we get into more Ethereum-centric conversations such as roll-ups and how roll-ups work and why roll-ups are so cool.
and also the intersection of social recovery and smart contract wallets specifically on L2's like roll-ups.
Vitalik is long-term bullish on smart contract wallets on L2 platforms.
And so that was just a fantastic piece of blog post, Vitalik's blog post, that we went through.
So really informative episode.
Absolutely.
Anytime Vitalik is on a podcast, I make a point to listen because there's always something insightful there.
So do that.
That came out on Monday.
We also have Brett Johnson, who is coming out next week.
our podcast recording with him.
This is the guy behind the dollar milkshake theory.
We asked Brett about the crypto milkshake theory,
but we also talk about the dollar's reserve currency status.
So if you are tracking this from a monetary theory perspective,
make sure you tune into that episode coming next Monday.
And then David, this Thursday,
we have a live AMA with Tasha from the Alpha Finance Protocol.
This protocol has been like exploding in growth,
just a massive amount of EFlocked.
last time I looked, it was like three and a half per, no, it was half a percent of ETH locked,
350 million or something, ETH locked inside of the Alpha Finance Protocol.
So this is going to be a community AMA with Tasha, where we figure out where they're going next.
Yeah, this is, the AMAs are fantastic for me personally, because I ask my own questions that I'm
interested in.
I get a ton of learning done during these things.
And then, of course, we always turn to the YouTube chat box to get listener
questions as well. The last AMA we did, the chat box was a pretty fun place to be. And so if you have
questions about what Alpha is, how it works, or what's going on with Alpha in the future, definitely
tune into that AMA coming this Thursday. Guys, this is the secret. David and I do this bankless thing
for ourselves so that we can level up and so that we can learn and we're just open sourcing it.
That's actually the entire platform in a nutshell. Open source learning. Yeah, all right, David,
before we get to Joe, I'm going to ask you the question. I always ask you at the beginning of the
nations. What is the state of the nation this week, my friend? The state of the nation is astounded.
We are astounded. Elon Musk, the world's richest man, the CEO of like the most beloved company,
at least from a younger person's perspective, just bought $1.5 billion worth of Bitcoin. Like we've
never seen a that large of a single purchase of Bitcoin ever. And it's been done by like Elon Musk,
who has just a massive platform and a massive following on Twitter.
So, like, just adding a core fundamental character
right into the heart of, like, the Bitcoin world.
And, like, Bitcoin paints its largest candle ever,
a one-day candle, $8,000 in a single day, absolutely insane.
I'm astounded.
I'm pretty sure the rest of the Bankless Nation is astounded as well.
Yeah, it's a pretty big week.
And I kind of woke up to the fact that, oh,
crypto's mainstream now.
Like, that's what's happening.
You're still maybe early on ETH.
You're still maybe early on DFI.
You're no longer early on Bitcoin, right?
Like Elon Musk is buying it and it's going mainstream.
This is also going to get some of the, I think the Wall Street Betts crowd involved.
Of course, Tesla is one of their beloved stocks.
And I think given the events of GameStop, we've talked about that a lot here.
This is going to draw some of their attention to.
So, dude, overall bullish.
It's astounding.
Good word choice, my friend.
I'm wondering when you're going to run out of adjectives, though,
these day of the nation.
We're going through them quick.
That's awesome, especially the bullish ones.
All right, guys, last thing.
Consensus, the conference is coming up.
This is a really exciting conference to attend,
especially in a crypto bull market.
I remember my first bull market consensus conference.
It was absolutely off the wall, insane.
They're doing it virtual this year.
It's happening May 24th.
Ray Dalio is coming.
Like, we couldn't get Ray Dalio, you know, five years ago.
So this is Consensus the Conference, of course.
You can reserve your place now.
You could save $20 with bankless.
We've got a link in the show notes for you.
So do that.
In just a moment, we will be back to talk to Joe Lubin, co-founder of Ethereum about
ETH futures.
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Guys, we are back with State of the Nation.
We've got Joe Lubin here, who is the co-founder of Ethereum.
He needs no introduction.
to the Ethereum community. He's also the founder of consensus, which has built some of the most
important pieces of Ethereum infrastructure over the years, including Metamask, which if you're
going bankless, you probably use just about every day. Also, Gitcoin, If you're a truffle,
many other pieces of infrastructure. Joe, how are you doing today, Sarah? Welcome to Bankless.
Great, thank you. I've been sitting back here in the wait room. I've got an appointment
scheduled with my bankless managers. I thought Treasury manager.
for people who like Ether.
You know, there's a live shot of David somewhere on Twitter,
and he was caught inside of Wells Fargo today.
I'm not sure how that happened, David,
but you're supposed to be bankless, man.
You're inside of Wells Fargo.
What's going on?
Yeah, somebody caught me making a deposit.
Well, very good.
Well, Joe, this is a really exciting week, I think, for all of crypto.
David just talked about Elon Musk and his purchase of Bitcoin earlier,
but also the launch of Ether,
futures on the CME. Maybe we could kind of rewind the clock a little bit and talk about,
because you've seen this project through from inception, basically.
When Ethereum.
Two weeks ago.
Okay, well, tell, two weeks.
Weeks, not months, right?
So, but Joe, you, when you were starting the project early on with the other kind of co-founders,
how did you think about ethiasa?
Did you ever think that there would be a day where it would be,
traded on the Chicago CME? So I locked in pretty early on this stuff. I thought that when I read pretty much right, when I read the Bitcoin white paper, I thought it would be massively transformational. I thought it would take quite a long time. I have been called an optimist or a true believer. And so I am, I do. I
did think that there would be profound transformation accelerated by Vitalik's vision over how fast it
would have happened if we were sort of moving bits around with a scanning, tunneling microscope
and trying to build software that way on the Bitcoin protocol. And I did, I've spoken over
the years about the fact that we were building infrastructure.
And that that infrastructure was what a commodity like or would take on similar architectures as that of grains and precious metals and other kinds of commodities.
And so would need financial instruments and deep financial infrastructure to get more efficient.
We've seen, so we started out with super inefficient mining and wallets that would just set prices for you.
Nobody would even know what they were or adjust them ever.
And recently, our Infura team is launching something really, really cool called the Infura Transactions Manager.
And they've demonstrated that people are overpaying pretty massively,
just because there's so much fear about getting your transaction handled,
that we can actually, using various techniques.
and intelligence, we can actually just assure people that the pitfalls that are inherent
sometimes in trying to get transactions processed are managed by a service that can save
you money and guarantee nearly that what you want to happen does happen.
So I would say that, yes, I did, and several people did anticipate that things would go mainstream.
It is astonishing to see how fast it's happened.
And I want to call out my friends at Aresax.
So we've been involved as investors and really actively with that project early on, Aresex.
So the CME news is incredible.
super excited about it.
It is much more institutional-focused.
Retail trader would have to jump through some hoops to take advantage of that.
AirSX actually paved the way for the CME futures.
So they launched May of last year, I think.
So they've got Bitcoin futures, Ether futures and spot.
And they're certainly more.
friendly to retail. And they have a physically delivered product, which I think is important.
It's something that I've been talking about for a long time if you're a speculator or need
to hedge in other ways. Making sure of the difference from basis is not because these are really
two different markets, two different liquidity pools, and they can get skewed pretty badly.
and so making sure they're locking in at delivery.
Yeah, yeah.
You know, physical delivery is key.
I'm wondering your thoughts on this.
Is this kind of the CME, the listing on the CME and ERISX, as you were mentioning earlier, kind of paved the way for this?
But is this basically U.S. regulators signaling that, yes, we agree, ETH is a commodity asset,
ETH is a commodity money?
Yes, absolutely.
So Heath, Harvard made that statement explicitly.
The SECs basically said that.
We said that in the first few months of the Ethereum project
that we sought as a fuel, as one of the first crypto commodities.
There are others and there will be other crypto commodities.
And he said money in there.
I don't know if you think about whether Eith's money or not.
I thought about that.
David and I have given that some thought.
And we've come to the conclusion that indeed it is money.
Eat, indeed, is money.
Do you concurred David?
It is known.
So the question is, what is money or what is money going forward?
We know the three definitions of money.
So, Numerare.
means of exchange, store of value.
And we've positioned ether as a crypto fuel.
We also positioned it as a better money than money
and a better money than Bitcoin even,
because it's programmable and cheaper to fire around.
Sometimes usually, well, we'll see that,
that will change in both directions over time.
And money is kind of contextual.
contextual and social and symbolic. So cigarettes are money in some cases, notches on sticks
are money in some cases. I would argue in the future that we're not going to need abstract
money so much, except as a numera. I would argue that maybe that gets taken care of by
evolving baskets of tokens. But money is really a convenience right now. In a world in which we're
tokenizing everything and in which we have intelligent agents determining which tokens you want to
get rid of when you're paying for something first and which tokens you want to receive when you're
receiving in a certain order and exchange services that can help you make that trade if you're
not able to accomplish that directly and just listings of tokens where you've got these open
markets that are valuing the tokens, whether they're automated marketmakers or order books
inside of the spread of automated market makers.
I would argue that the role of money, the abstract role of money, is going to go away
and everything's going to be money.
Joe, I want to get your perspective on how this story of ETH has evolved so far, because, you know,
we talk about ETH as money.
We talk about, like, ETH as, like, a triple point asset as gas or, you know, store
value for defy but i want to get your opinion as to what what was the consensus around ether the
asset back in 2015 and how knowing how what we know now the the six-year-old history of ether
and ethereum how does the path followed suit or not followed suit from the the mental models that
you had back in the early days of ethereum like what what is surprising to you and what
what is something that you just expected?
So there were things that we were thinking that we weren't saying.
And we were initially not very disciplined in the first two or three months,
and then we got very disciplined about what we would say publicly after discussions with lawyers.
And so we crafted legal arguments to the effect that we would be selling a token
that would not be considered by the SEC a sale of an unregistered security to any Americans.
And so the characterization of ether as a crypto fuel was genuine, is still genuine.
It pays for storage and execution of computational steps on Ethereum.
And we also really wanted to focus on the development.
developer ethos, where it was all about building and then biddling, and not so much about early speculation.
So the speculation came in a few years later, mostly in 2017, and that's great.
I mean, we need speculators in our ecosystem. We need people, actors with all sorts of interests in our ecosystem.
them. But the fact that we established the developer ethos early was really important.
And as I said earlier, we did anticipate many of the things that were happening.
We anticipated sharding in the first three days. I remember having a discussion about that.
We had a burn model that we were working on with respect to ether very early, which presages 1559.
So it, you know, the execution has been remarkable.
And it's incredibly difficult to stand up a technology top down.
It has evolved beautifully by the agency of so many different actors with different expertise.
So it seems to be going pretty well.
We've got a long way to go.
So Joe, for those not familiar with, you know, what.
Futures listing, regulator-approved futures listing means in the U.S.
We have a lot of retail listeners out there, and they're probably not as familiar with kind of the traditional financial banking landscape.
But what does this mean for the financialization of ether as an asset or even the institutions and their outlook on ether as an asset?
Yeah, so there has been astonishing movement in the Bitcoin ecosystem, driven early on by people like my friend, Mike Novogratz, more recently by Paul Tudor Jones, Stanley Dr. Miller, and a handful of others who've jumped in.
And recently, Michael Saylor, who I think wins MVP already for 21, maybe for 20 as well, late 20.
So micro strategy has taken a very structured, organized approach to pivoting almost their business model to turn their balance sheet into a Bitcoin museum where they're trading assets for Bitcoin and borrowing money and buying Bitcoin.
And so far I think that's gone very well for them.
Bitcoin's a volatile asset.
And I know they're very smart, so I expect they won't get into trouble.
But they're packaging up the tremendous diligence that they did and the structured strategic
steps that they've followed.
And I think they mentioned maybe 1,000 or 1,400 CEOs and CFOs were on their live stream.
and I'm sure many more will be watching the recorded versions.
And so Novogratz has been saying the herd is coming for several years.
And by that he meant that the Ethereum and Bitcoin phenomenon was largely retail driven.
And by the herd, he meant that institutionals were getting more and more interested.
And the herd is now taking, you know,
University economics courses delivered by Michael Saylor and crew in how to exist and thrive
in the early days of the decentralized protocol system and in the early days of DFI.
So with respect to futures, options, regulators in the United States, these organizations
need to be prudent as they divest themselves of certain assets and invest in certain assets.
There is likely a transformation going on and evolution going on between legacy or state-issued
assets and newer decentralized protocol assets in different forms.
And they need the, as you said, financial infrastructure, they need instruments so that they can respond
in real time if they want to put on a hedge or if they want to take advantage of an opportunity,
or if they want to wire up a lending-driven financial flow in real time in Defi on Ethereum.
So that's coming real soon. Real organizations are getting serious about that.
And bottom line, they're not ready to hedge in Defi on Ethereum, but absolutely.
They already have the accounts open.
They have for years or decades.
And this moves cryptocurrencies into their wheelhouse.
And they know that the world is evolving much more rapidly than we all expected it to for certain reasons.
And the smart ones, the aware ones, are going to survive and thrive.
And if your head is buried and you, for whatever reason, aren't paying attention to or refusing to understand and acknowledge what's going on in our ecosystem, then you're going to have a wicked game of catch-up or find another job or career or something like that.
Speaking of a wicked game of catch up, one thing that really interests me about this, this
ETH futures release is that it took Ether only five years to get futures, yet it took Bitcoin
nine. And like, naturally, Bitcoin came first. It has a harder fight to fight. But Ether,
ether got futures faster than Bitcoin did. What is your takeaway from that?
So I would say thank you to Bitcoin for being there first and paving the way significantly.
Big from Bitcoin.
And so the CME, CBO, others, Aresax especially,
have done a tremendous amount of work to try to get the regulators comfortable with this.
It was weeks away, a few years away.
And regulators have put up hurdles or just slowed processes.
So built on the shoulders of giant.
and giants in our ecosystem.
And I think what you're saying has merit that I forget the exact wording of Mr.
Tarbert, but he just said something like Ethereum is awesome, period, stop, something like
that.
And that's just a reflection of the understanding of people, financial professionals,
who when they take the time to understand the technology are just astonished at all the problems that it will solve and all the opportunities that it will create and the frictions that it will eradicate and the financial flows that will get immediate.
And the agency that small organizations and individuals will have over their economic freedom, their economic activity and their political.
activity. You know, Joe, on bankless, we've called Bitcoin kind of the gateway drug to crypto,
the gateway drug to defy. And I wonder if you sort of see that playing out. So you capture this
moment in time. We've got Michael Saylor putting Bitcoin on the micro strategy balance sheet.
We've just come off news this week where it turns out Tesla stacked 1.5 billion worth of Bitcoin
in January. And I was kind of struck by their SEC filings where it sort of disclosed that information,
that they said they would pursue a strategy to continue acquiring digital assets.
They didn't just say Bitcoin.
They said digital assets.
So I'm curious, do you think that Ether is just going to follow in that same path
now that we've got regulator approvals like CME Futures?
Is Ether going to be the next thing that a publicly trade company, like a micro strategy,
buys?
Maybe they start staking it.
Maybe a Tesla buys Ether as part of its digital strategy.
portfolio. What's your take here?
Yes, so I was a bit-poiner. Then I encountered Ethereum and was blown away by how much more expressive and capable it would be.
And we realized a lot of that vision. I like to think of both the Bitcoin token and the Ethereum token as high-powered money.
You may have called it permissionless bandwidth.
And those tokens are beautiful as they are.
Ethereum adds onto both of those high-powered money foundations
an astonishing layered complexity.
Or we will build an astonishing layered complexity
out of magic internet money protocol Legos.
That's where the excitement lies.
So in staking, in massively decentralizing these networks,
I expect that we will see many organizations contract to with a cloud
or run their own infrastructure.
Consensus offers mining infrastructure.
Sorry, we do a little bit of mining,
but staking infrastructure, which is I think what you're interested in discussing.
And these foundational protocols, or at least Ethereum,
serve as platform for other kinds of platforms.
These other kinds of platforms are what I've sometimes called collaboration networks.
And so we as individuals and organizations will be part
participating in a wide variety of collaboration networks that are built on platforms like Ethereum.
And they will involve investing.
They will involve holding tokens.
They will involve voting the governance rights on your tokens.
They will involve active treasury management.
They will involve setting goals for your collaboration network and raising money for your collaboration network and executing the work.
So all of those different functions that essentially sit in different companies right now are getting much more tightly integrated.
I'm not sure how that's going to play out other than by having much more granular groups of people responsible for that and the boundaries between what we call companies sort of dissolving, where I and you two will be part of lots of these collaboration.
networks for work or leisure or research.
And so I fully expect that any organization that wants to operate optimally and protect its interests
will need to pay attention to many aspects of the emerging decentralized, tokenized economy.
And so yeah, Treasury management doesn't
necessarily mean just financial aspects anymore or it won't soon.
There's something interesting about Ether CME futures that is uniquely different than Bitcoin
futures because Ether, the asset and Ethereum the platform have a roadmap, right?
There are obstacles and objectives that we are going to get over as a community.
Like we mentioned EIP-1559, that has become a core component of Ether the asset, yet
it is not yet included. And then we also have just the further democratization of staking,
and then eth staking derivative tokens. So there's plenty of upgrades to have to put into ether the
asset. Ether the asset is set to have software updates. But that's weird because the Chicago
Mercantile Exchange is a place to trade commodities. And nowhere has there ever been a commodity
on the CME that has gotten a software update, right? Wheat doesn't get a software update.
Bitcoin does not get software updates.
So how do you think about this comparison where like the CME is trading this asset that has like this roadmap?
And how do you see the ether roadmap specifically perhaps with EIP 1559 and then ether staking derivatives?
How do you see that impacting the long term just institutional models of understanding ether the asset?
So the first easy out answer to your question is that yes, ether is.
the token and the commodity and just like the grain industry or the oil industry or the metals industry,
there are lots of companies that organize their own strategies and roadmaps around sourcing,
refining, packaging, and delivering and utilizing those commodities.
So I can easily map our ecosystem onto those ecosystems.
But the more profound, perhaps, answer to your question is that things are shifting.
I mean, the old world has certain models.
And as I discussed before, where these tokens aren't just money, they represent a lot of different things.
And it's certainly a new kind of commodity.
It is unprecedented.
and we're coming up.
So it's a paradigm shift.
It's stated more intensely, it's a clash of civilizations,
and hopefully it'll be a gentle evolutionary clash.
But it's going to evolve us bringing forth great exciting technology
and showing the benefits of that technology by a demonstration,
as Uber has done and Airbnb has done.
And then it's going to involve a discussion in various jurisdictions around the world
about how they would like this technology to fit in and serve their particular civilization,
their particular society, economy, ethos.
It will serve Sweden differently from how it will serve mainland China, probably.
and it's a powerful technology, so I think it's going to transform everything over time.
And it's, you know, even regulation in the United States, it's going to involve a lot of learning from regulators, and some of them have done a great job already.
And it's going to involve a change in some other rules, just because lots of rules around financial,
regulation and compliance were designed to protect consumers from custodians.
So if consumers are only using self-custody wallets and systems, then some of that shouldn't
apply or some of that should fall away.
Joe, when we come back, I want to talk to you more about this idea of the clashing
of civilizations.
But before we do, we want to tell you a bit about the sponsors that made this episode
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card today. All right, guys, we are back with Joe Lupin. Joe, I want to talk about this comment
that you made just prior to our break, where you talked about this clash of civilizations, right?
And I want to unpack kind of what you mean there, right? Because there are maybe many
elements of these civilizations that are clashing. So the bankless dichotomy would be there's a bit
of traditional finance versus this new decentralized finance. We've also talked about kind of the
the nation-state way of organizing things versus the protocol network state way of organizing things.
But what do you think about when you talk about this clash of civilization? What are the civilizations
that are clashing here? So what I was thinking about was something that is an older notion,
and it's still relevant. But early on, several years ago before the project or
in the early days of the project.
It was at least clear to us that we would need to be careful
how we organized, how we launched, how we publicized,
how we executed the project.
There was a concerted effort to avoid the United States of America.
I sort of jumped back pretty quickly
because I did want to operate there.
But there was a history of the United States of America
not liking projects that created their own money.
And so we thought it might be a bad idea
to piss the United States off early on.
We'd land at JFK and get tackled to the tarmac
by the FBI and made an example of.
And so we did consciously avoid that for the first year
while still engaging with American lawyers.
And we set up in Switzerland
because they cherish freedom and decentralization.
And they think of government as a service pretty much
rather than a right and they negotiate with you.
So it had a great experience there.
And things went remarkably well, remarkably quickly.
we haven't made any horrible mistakes, but we were aware that well-resourced vested interests
would take notice of us at some point. We've been delighted at how many people in government
and industries really embrace these ideas and think they're valuable and are adopting them and
supporting them. But still, we have been thinking that at some point we might run up against
organizations that have vested interests that don't want to play, don't appreciate our existence
and the transformation that we might represent. And so we'll see that, I think, although this
Changewave is awfully powerful.
I believe that Ethereum, as a technology,
because it's so much more expressive,
has staying power.
I didn't feel that Bitcoin had the same staying power,
just because you don't really build much on it.
It's just everything's a belief system.
And Bitcoin is much more of a belief system than Ethereum
is because you can just build a lot of functionality on Ethereum.
Until the recent activities where this belief system
is being really strongly, religiously adopted
by major corporations in the United States,
I wasn't certain about Bitcoin.
I'm pretty certain now.
And we just need a lot of that so that Bitcoin,
ether, and other tokens, other protocols
are so embedded in the more fast-moving organizations.
like companies, you know, similar to how Uber and Airbnb established themselves and succeeded
and then dealt with the regulators after, I think we're on a good trajectory.
And so hopefully the clash of civilizations will be as gentle as it has been for Uber and Airbnb.
Yeah, absolutely.
So this kind of leads into you a little bit of, you know, what you're doing with consensus,
which I think is fascinating and fits into this, right?
So it may be that, as we call kind of governments, the final boss, the final boss, the U.S. government has not raised its head on Ethereum because there are so many potential wins.
Sure, they have.
Well, they have in some ways, but there are also, like, lots of wins.
They've been pretty positive, yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
So, like, when the U.S. sees, maybe it's geopolitical adversary, like China, create its own closed private blockchain-type solution.
Well, it is adversarial, adversarial,
adversarially beneficial for the world to have a more open, transparent Linux-type,
Ethereum-type, open ledger.
So can you talk about what consensus is doing,
maybe with respect to stable coins and how governments around the world,
particularly like free, open democratic governments,
think about Ethereum and the wins that they can get from an open ledger-like Ethereum?
Yeah, so we've done a fair amount of work to bring the Ethereum technology into the central bank digital currency context.
We work with two central banks over time in the past, and we're working with four currently, and I think we're about to add three more.
And there are different use cases that we're exploring in its early days for most of them.
Certainly China and a couple other nations are our earliest in rolling out pilot systems.
Others are really quite in the early stages.
So these cases are things like cross-border payments or retail payments,
so just payments by consumers.
And the Ethereum technology is getting real interest, which is exciting.
One argument that we've been trying to make in certain contexts,
and we made it in the context of the United States,
is that, yeah, it's nice to roll out your central bank digital currency
on the next generation of technology.
That just makes sense.
But if you really think about it,
this is likely or can be the foundation of your economy.
And we're in a moment where we're
where we're transitioning everything we do from analog and frictional forms to natively digital
frictionless forms, whether it's identity or reputation or money or other kinds of digital assets.
And when you do that, clearing and settlement happens in the instance of the transaction,
and you squeeze all the delays out of your system. And if you're squeezing all the delays out of these different
financial transactions, you're essentially compounding the creation of value much more closely over time.
And so you're likely to grow value in your ecosystem much faster.
So why would you want to build a money only blockchain platform or near blockchain platform for your CBDC,
central bank digital currency, when you can build something with smart contracts?
and it can serve as your nation-state blockchain, which interoperates with public mainnet blockchains.
We do need public-mainnet blockchains.
I think nation-states can and will and should have their own nation-state infrastructure.
Think of it as a sub-net and different regions within the nation-state can and probably should do that sort of thing.
But we're going to need a global settlement layer for digital assets that everybody can trust,
especially as nation states have issues with one another,
as I think we're going to increasingly see over the next decade or so.
So even if these nation states do have issues, they should be able to enter into agreements.
they should be able to stake value in these agreements,
and there should be impartial judges
that can potentially judge when something bad happens
and slash stakes.
So there should be treaties can be executed on blockchains,
and most of the time when these nation states
make agreements with one another,
there isn't much enforcement power
unless you decide to do something really,
destructive. Yeah, could not agree more with that. Like, so Dave and I have talked about so much
on Bankless how Ethereum kind of provides this credibly neutral substrate for the world. And it can
solve human, global, international coordination problems that we couldn't previously solve.
Joe, I feel like we could get you on an entire episode to talk about all of the other things
that consensus is doing, you know, because there's so much from MetaMast to infuri to all of these
other things. But if you could just-
See you see you next week.
Yeah. And that should be like a three hour long episode. But if you could just pick one thing right now, just one maybe project, something interesting that, you know, is brewing at consensus that bankless listeners would be interested in. What would you talk about today?
It's a hard one. Let me just go with our approach. So we've built a blockchain stack, the most dominant or utilized blockchain stack in the Ethereum.
ecosystem and the blockchain ecosystem that consists of quorum for enterprise with the built
essentially on two different Ethereum clients, Geph and HyperLedger Basu.
Above that we have in Fura and Truffle and Diligence, which is our security audit group that also
produces software. So that's an infrastructure layer that services developers and Madamek sits on
on top of that.
I think we're at 1.8 million monthly active users now in Metamass.
So that's consumer facing.
And it's also B2C as we launch the SNAPs plugin architecture.
We have a group that is building applications.
We call that group Commerce and Decentralized Finance Group.
And they are able to launch applications for consumers and make them available,
make the APIs available to develop.
developers through inferior and trouble.
And also for some of them, make those financial instruments or financial flows or other services available to Enterprise, as Enterprise gets more and more excited about lining their treasuries with Ether.
And so the first really exciting application of all of that is launching something called meta-swaps.
And so we will be metaswops is off the charts in terms of its success.
in bringing uniform interface to swapping tokens and great pricing.
So you're getting everything that you need in Metamask rather than going to different aggregators or dexes.
We also have private market makers involved.
And we're going to be doing that for a whole bunch of products and services for those three cohorts, consumers, developers, and enterprise.
long-winded, but meta-swaps is exciting and much more to come.
Joe, I think everyone in the bankless nation in the broader Ethereum community at large
has to thank you for everything you've done at Consensus,
building out what makes the bankless nation tick.
Like some of this infrastructure, we wouldn't be able to have this podcast
without some of the infrastructure that came out of consensus.
As a long-standing veteran of this crypto industry and have seen many, many bowl markets
I want to ask this final question before we sign off here.
What I'm trying to get my head around is like how big this bull market is about to be, right?
And like I'm trying to like keep myself calm and like not get out over my skis and not just like get too bullish just because other people are getting bullish.
But the world's richest man just bought it $1.5 billion worth of Bitcoin.
So like on the Richter scale of bull markets, like can you like, what are you feeling?
Like how are you measuring this thing?
Yeah, so one should always be careful.
And markets have a characteristic Evan flow normally.
I don't think of this as a bull market.
I think of it as a global paradigm shift.
And it's going to be a new way of organizing all of the systems on the planet
on new sounder trust foundations.
And we're building financial infrastructure
on that new sound trust foundation.
Everything else can be re-architected much better on top of that.
You don't see assets power in such straight lines
for quite long times unless something is going on.
So I think we were already in the middle of a paradigm shift.
And that paradigm shift is now surfing the pre-term
perfect wave, which is caused by the perfect storm of COVID and financial bubbles of all kinds.
I mean, we're at the end of a 70 plus year debt super cycle.
That's how the system was organized.
And people have recognized that and are fed up about that.
And it's so broken anyway that a new paradigm has to occur.
I won't say that I'm bullish, but something's going on.
I think that smile says everything we need.
And it has been fantastic having you on the bankless podcast.
We really appreciate all the work that you've done in this space.
And you've definitely foreseen many of these things before they happened.
Congratulations to everyone in the Ethereum community on CMEEath Futures.
This is a massive milestone.
And Joe, thanks for coming on.
and sharing it with us.
Yeah, so thanks to you guys, too.
You guys are such a smart, entertaining breath of fresh air
and such wonderful energy.
I am very grateful for the work that you guys do,
and I know that the ecosystem loves you.
Well, we appreciate it, Joe.
It's also a ton of fun.
Yeah, it is fun.
We just do this to learn.
And there's no place I would rather be,
and I think David feels the same.
We both feel like we work for the community for the protocol,
as I know you do. Well, fantastic, guys. Thanks, Joe. Once again. Risks and disclaimers, of course.
We talked a little bit about the bull market there, but you have to keep in mind.
Eat is risky. None of that was financial advice. None of this is financial advice.
As always, never ever, right, David? Crypto is risky. So is defy. You could lose what you put in,
but we're head west. This is absolutely the frontier, and we're glad you're with us on the bankless journey.
Thanks a lot.
