Lex Fridman Podcast - #181 – Sergey Nazarov: Chainlink, Smart Contracts, and Oracle Networks
Episode Date: May 1, 2021Sergey Nazarov is the Co-Founder of Chainlink, a decentralized oracle network that provides data to smart contracts. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Wine Access: https://wi...neaccess.com/lex to get 20% off first order - Athletic Greens: https://athleticgreens.com/lex and use code LEX to get 1 month of fish oil - Magic Spoon: https://magicspoon.com/lex and use code LEX to get $5 off - Indeed: https://indeed.com/lex to get $75 credit - BetterHelp: https://betterhelp.com/lex to get 10% off EPISODE LINKS: Sergey's Twitter: https://twitter.com/SergeyNazarov Chainlink Website: https://chain.link/ PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (07:56) - Hedgy (08:22) - Digital vs physical world (16:16) - Definitive truth (20:31) - Decentralized finance (29:00) - Smart contracts (35:16) - Hybrid smart contracts and oracle networks (52:02) - Applications of smart contracts (1:10:08) - AI and smart contracts (1:17:40) - What agreements can be turned into smart contracts? (1:28:43) - Privacy (1:39:01) - Trust (1:54:36) - Bitcoin (2:02:50) - Satoshi Nakamoto (2:10:10) - Ethereum (2:15:59) - Chainlink design decisions (2:28:27) - Dogecoin (2:32:44) - Book recommendations (2:44:54) - Advice for young people (2:56:58) - Meaning of life
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The following is a conversation with Sergei Nazarov, CEO of Chainlink, which is a decentralized
Oracle network that provides data to smart contracts.
He and his team have done seminal research and engineering in the space of smart contracts.
Check out the Chainlink 2.0 white paper that I found to be a great overview of their technology
and vision.
It's 136 pages, but very accessible.
Quick mention of our sponsors.
Wine access, Athletic Greens, Magic Spoon, Indeed, and Better Help.
Check them out in the description to support this podcast.
As a side note, let me say that externally connected smart contracts
that combine the ocean of data out there with the security of the blockchain
are fascinating to me, both technically
and philosophically. Data is knowledge, and knowledge is power. I think the more reliable data sources
we integrate into our decision making, especially when those decisions are executed by programs,
the more efficient and productive our decisions become. There are interactions between humans that should not be formalized digitally, like love,
for example, but for all the others, there's no reason for smart contracts not to automate
away the menial parts of life, making more room for good conversation over brisket and
maybe some vodka with old and new friends.
As usual, I'll do a few minutes of ads now. I try to make these interesting,
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So I gave away everything I own a few times in my life and he accidentally survived and
I don't like stuffed animals.
What I really like about I got them in a thirst thought what I liked about them is
because I'd never seen a stuffed animal that looks pissed off at life.
Like they're usually smiling at him dumb as the ways and this guy was just pissed.
Yeah, I gotta tell you that's actually pretty funny.
I like this guy.
If you had to live only in the digital world or the physical world, which would you choose?
So I think this is actually a question more about what the fidelity of the digital world
would be versus the physical world.
I think this type of question and this whole simulation thing actually comes from papers
about 20, 30 years ago in the philosophical world where people tried
to make this thought experiment of would you be comfortable if everything that was happening
to you happened in a simulation. What they were trying to do is they were intuitively trying
to understand, is there some kind of intuitive, personal connection we have to something being
the real world, right? And then the Matrix movie actually came out of these papers
and then these ideas made their way into the public consciousness.
I personally think that if I had the choice to be in the digital world
at the same fidelity as the real world, with immortality,
I would absolutely go with the digital world.
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
How'd you add the immortality part?
That's a, well, we don't get immortality. If you think about how we would go into the digital way, way, way, way, how do you add the immortality part? That's a one get immortality.
If you think about how we would go into the digital world, right, our our brain patterns
would be mapped onto some kind of probably virtual machine, right?
And that would mean a multi immortality, right?
Because the virtual machine has no limit to how long it can exist.
We don't do think there would be like a versioning system like, uh, there'd be this is a soft
fork versus
hard fork question. Whether surgay version 2.0 would be different from surgay version 1.0,
there would be an upgrade. So that's the mortality. Surgay 1.0 would die in the digital world.
You used to get, you get like a software update and then that's it, you know.
Well, yeah, when people go into the Star Trek Transporter, are they killed or are they transport?
Yeah.
I don't really know.
I haven't written any papers on this.
I haven't really thought about it too much.
There's no white paper on the transporter.
Not at this point.
So what does fidelity mean exactly to you?
Is it like strictly so the fidelity of the physics world,
the physical world is maybe now questions
of physics, quantum mechanics. What is maybe now questions of physics, quantum mechanics,
what is at the bottom of it all?
Or do you mean the fidelity of the actual experience?
It's just perception.
It's just perception.
The human, but that's limited by human cognitive capabilities.
It is, but I don't really have anything else, right?
I think all of these papers that brought up these questions of assimilation, they were
like in epistemology and metaphysics. And what they were trying to do, I think, was they were trying to put people through
a thought experiment where they would come out on the other end and say, the reality
of life is really worth something.
And I don't, you know, ignorance isn't bliss, which is that consistent statement in the
matrix where I ignorance is bliss is that that's what one of the guys says when he's
like, you know, doing something wrong and trying to get back into the matrix and and the question is is ignorance bliss.
And it's like a different version of that.
I think from a perceptual point of view, if my perceptions aren't in any way different. So if fidelity is very good, it doesn't matter.
very good, it doesn't matter. I don't know, right?
So if I don't know something, it doesn't really exist.
And if it doesn't exist in my perception or my consciousness, then it doesn't exist,
period for me, at least.
And then whether it exists in some, you know, more metaphysical version of things, I personally
never really got into the metaphysics stuff because I could never really, um, I couldn't understand what the point of it was, right? It, it, um, it's one of these
things where I couldn't really get what, um, what the, what the practical application of
it was. And this is, this is from those realm of questions, right? Like if there was something
about the world, but you didn't have a capacity to perceive it, what it mattered to you,
uh, to me, it wouldn't matter.
Right. To me, by the way, the simulation thing is a really interesting engineering question,
which is how difficult is it to engineer a virtual reality, a digital world that is
sufficiently of high fidelity, where you would want to live in it? I think that's a really testable
and a fascinating
engineering question. My intuition says like it's not as difficult as we think. It's not nearly
as difficult as having to create a quantum mechanical simulation that's large enough to capture
the full human experience. It might be just as simple as just a really nice quake game.
Like with a nice engine, you know,
that just creating all the basic visual elements
that trick our cognizant, our visual cortex
into believing that we're actually in the physical environment.
And I think that, if that's true, then that's quite,
you know, that a high fidelity digital world
is actually achievable within, you know, a century.
And that changes things. high fidelity digital world is actually achievable within a century.
And that changes things. Yeah, yeah, maybe in our lifetime, I'm really hoping for that.
I'm hoping somebody can copy my brain waves
onto a virtual machine and allow that consciousness
to continue to exist, whether that's death or not, I don't know.
But I think it's actually gonna require some serious
leaps, like even the VR headsets, right?
They don't work if they go below 90 frame rates, right?
People start getting freaked out.
So you have to go from one gaming screen of, you know,
60 frames per second to two screens of 90 frames per second.
And so the people's hardware,
today can't even handle that. And that these for these two little screens by your eyeballs.
What it's going to take to like you know completely trick my consciousness into not knowing
the difference in terms of like you know all the sensory inputs. I'm keeping my fingers crossed
whoever whoever does that and is close to doing that, they should contact
me. I want to have my brain waves turned into a virtual machine.
Would you in that context, if Morpheus came to you, would you take the blue pill or the
red pill, meaning would you be happy just living in that world and not knowing that you're
living inside that virtual world that's running on computer or
Would you want to know the truth of it?
Well actually, I think that's a very different question, right?
There's a there's a there's a actually moral ethical question there about whether you should allow a bunch of people to get you know
Manipulated and killed and enslaved because in the matrix throw and slaved and yeah as as as like a you know
AAA battery to me turn a human being into the battery.
So I think the moral and ethical question of that fascinating enough isn't actually
different than the more and ethical questions we face today in modern daily life, but
I probably have given the choice of just completely going along or going against it.
I would probably go against it if I had to make this kind of binary choice.
Because going along with it, I think at that scale of scary stuff happening to people
is probably something really, really, really difficult.
But for your individual life, it's way more fun to go along with it.
So you're saying you value the opposing system that includes the suffering of others
versus just for yourself and enjoying the ride.
I mean, what's, if there is such a binary choice, why choose the opposed system?
I think it's the nature of the ethical dilemma that you face in that situation.
This is obviously not something that's happening now.
We don't know this.
At the end of the day, at that scale of something like that happening,
that scale of people being manipulated and harmed,
then I think pretty much almost all people have an obligation to go against it.
Probably that's what that looks like, in my opinion.
So you've talked about the concept of definitive truth.
What is it?
In general, what is the nature of truth and human civilization and just talking about
the digital age, the nature of truth and the digital age?
So the interesting thing about definitive truth is that it actually exists on this, at least
in my mind, on this spectrum, between objective truth and just, you know, somebody
made something up and nobody else agrees.
So what I think definitive truth is, is it somewhere in the middle on that spectrum,
where if you and me define what truth is, right, like if you and me have an agreement of some kind,
and we say as long as the weather is sunny or the weather isn't, there is no rain on that day,
then there will be an insurance policy that results.
And you and me both agree that as long as three sensors, three monitoring, weather monitoring stations all say that,
then the definitive truth for us and for that agreement is the result of those systems coming to consensus about what happened out in the real world.
I think the objective, um, truth definition from, from kind of the philosophical world is
really, really stringent and very, very hard to attain.
And that's not, that's not what this is.
And that's actually not what commerce or the ability for people to interact about contracts
needs. What I think the world of commerce needs is an upgrade
from someone can you to laterally decide what the truth is.
Two, there can be a pre-agreed set of
conditions where we define what the truth is
under those conditions. And then you know, you and me basically say
if these 20 nodes or of these 30 data sources
come to consensus within this method of consensus,
with this threshold of agreement,
then definitive truth has been achieved for you and me
in our relationship for this specific agreement
and the specificity and our shared agreement
to that kind of truth or that definitive truth
being acceptable to both
of us is probably what's what's kind of necessary and sufficient for everything to move forward
in a better way. In any case, much better than, you know, I'm a bank or an insurance company,
I'm going to unilaterally decide what happens. It's definitely an upgrade from that.
Do you think it's possible to define formally in this way a definitive truth for many things in this world?
Like you talked about weather, so basically defining that if three sensors of weather agree,
then that we're going to agree that that is a definitive useful truth for us to operate under.
So how many things in this world can be formalized in this way, do you think?
So how many things in this world can be formalized in this way, do you think?
A huge amount.
So there's actually two things going on here.
One thing is the amount of data that already exists, right?
And the pieces of data coming off of markets, IoT,
shipping of goods, any number of other things.
Like even your YouTube channel has a certain amount of likes
or a certain amount of clicks or a certain amount of views.
And even that's quantifiable, right?
So even to a certain degree,
what we do here today, you and me right now,
can be quantified as far as the amount of views,
the amount of clicks, the amount of any number of other.
Yeah, you, the viewer, have power of data in your hands
by clicking like or dislike right now,
or the subscribe button, or the unsubscribe button
which I encourage you to do. Anyway, okay, so there's data flowing into all interactions in this world. There's data.
There's more and more data, right? Like there's more and more data. That data is more and more accessible to everybody
and that accessibility and the fact that there's more of it means we can form more definitive truth proofs.
We can form more and more proofs.
And as we form those proofs, well, we can provide them to these blockchains and smart
contract systems that consume them and then their tamper proof, right?
So they can't be manipulated.
And so now we've combined a system that can prove things with a system that guarantees
a certain outcomes.
And we have a better system of contracts,
which is actually an unbelievably powerful tool
that has never existed before.
Can we talk about the world of commerce and finance,
decentralized finance?
What is it?
What's its promise from both the philosophical
and technical perspective,
if we just zoom in on that particular space
of the digital world.
Sure, so the centralized finance
is the instantiation of a specific type of contract,
smart contract, right?
Or what I call hybrid smart contracts,
which are these contracts that combine the on-chain code
together with the off-chain proofs that something happened.
That's, they're called a hybrid
because they basically use both of these systems, right?
The blockchain and the proofs about what happened.
And what DeFi is, is one specific type of hybrid smart contract that is taking on the contractual
agreements you traditionally find in the financial, global financial system, right?
And that's basically the world of lending, the world of yield generation for people giving traditionally find in the financial global financial system. Right?
And that's basically the world of lending, the world of yield generation for people giving
me or giving whoever their money and somebody giving back them yield back to them, which
is what bonds do and what treasuries do and what a lot of the global financial markets
do, as well as the ability to gain exposure and protection from different types of events and risks.
That's a lot of what derivatives do, right?
Derivatives allow us to say, hey, something's going to happen.
I'm either going to protect myself by getting paid if it happens, or I'm going to benefit
from it happening by basically saying, it's going to happen putting money down on that,
and that prediction will get me a return.
Now, that's a very large part of the global financial system,
excluding all the stuff for global trade and letters of credit and all the stuff that facilitates
international trade. So excluding that at least for now. So if we look at what decentralized
finance does, it takes all of those agreements about generating yield, lending, and all of these
types of things you find in global finance and the world of derivatives and a few other types of financial products and it basically puts them into a different format.
So the format you have for centralized financial agreements is that you go to a bank,
even if you're a hedge fund, even if you're like the richest people, you go to a bank,
they make a product for you and you hope that they honor the product that they made for you.
Or you do a deal with another hedge fund or whoever's product for you and you hope that they honor the product that they made for you.
Or you do a deal with another hedge fund or or or whoever, some counterparty and you
hope that that deal is honored.
And then a number of very freaky things start to take place.
One one of them is people don't have clarity about what the agreement is, right?
So a lot of people don't know exactly what the agreement is
between those parties because they can't actually see it.
Sometimes agreements are kept very private
or parts of them are kept private,
and that keeps other counter parties,
other people in the system from understanding
what's going on.
This is actually partly what happened with the mortgage crisis.
The mortgage crisis in 2008 was basically,
there were a lot of agreements, there were a lot of assets, but because the centralized financial system worked in such an opaque way,
it was so unbelievably difficult to understand what was going on. And so that lack of understanding
for the global financial system basically led to a big boom, and then correspondingly very,
very big bust, which amazingly enough had a huge impact on everybody even though they didn't participate in the boom part of the equation.
In any case, what the centralized finance does is it takes these financial contracts that
power the global financial system.
It puts them in this new blockchain-based format that basically at this point provides
three very powerful things.
The first thing that it provides is complete transparency over what's going on with your financial product. So this means when you use a
financial product in the DeFi format, you and you as a technical person actually can drill down
very, very, very deeply and you can understand where the collateral is, you can understand how
much collateral there is, you can understand what format it's in, you can understand how it's
changing, you can understand this on a second to second or block to block basis.
You have complete transparency into what's going on in the financial protocol that you have
your assets in, which is because blockchains and infrastructure, all of these things are
built on for stat transparency.
Whereas the centralized financial system is very, very good at hiding it.
It's very good at hiding it and packaging things in a glossy wrapper, creating a boom,
then a bust.
The centralized finance is built on infrastructure that forces transparency such that everyone
can understand what the financial product does from day one.
And in fact, escaping that property is practically impossible.
Or if someone tries to escape it, it becomes immediately obvious and people don't use
their financial product. So, so that's number one. Number two is control. So if you look
at what happened with Robinhood, everybody thought the system worked a certain way, right?
Everybody thought, I have a brokerage account, I can trade things under, you know, a certain
set of market conditions.
And then the market conditions changed within the band of what people thought they could
do.
And everybody was fascinated to find out that, oh my God, I thought my band of market
conditions in which I can control my assets is X. But it is actually Y. It is actually
much, much smaller band.
And the reason it is a much, much smaller group
of market conditions is that the system doesn't work
the way people think it works.
The system was wrapped up in an ice glossy wrapper
and given to them to get them to participate in the system
because the system requires and needs their participation.
But if you actually look at how the system works underneath,
you will see that it does not work the way people think that it works. And this is actually another reason that DeFi is so powerful, because
DeFi actually and these blockchain contracts give people the version of the world, they
think they already have, which is why they don't beg for it. Right. So everybody thinks
there's a certain version of the world that works in this reliable way, transparent way.
They're not. They don't realize it. And so they're confused when
you tell them, I'm going to make the world work this way because they think they're already
in that world. But then things like Robinhood make it immediately, painfully clear that
that's not how the world works. So that the second real property of DeFi is control, which
means that you control your assets, not a bank, not a broker, not a third party, you.
You control your bitcoins, you control your tokens and the finance protocol.
If you don't like how something's going in that protocol, you can remove it.
You can send it to another protocol. Or you can use a feature of the protocol to do something it's supposed to do.
And guess what? Nobody can just say, oops, you know, that feature that isn't so good for my friends over here. That feature is actually, we're just going to pause that feature in the critical moment
when you need it to execute your strategy, which is why you took all the risks to begin
with.
The final thing to know about DeFi is that DeFi is inherently global and actually right
now provides better yield globally.
So if you go to a bank right now with the US dollar, you get 1% or less.
If you go to DeFi with the US dollar, you get 7 or 8%.
So if we think about that in a world where there's a lot of inflation coming down the road. And we think about, well,
a lot more systems might be failing soon and they might be highlighting this types of problems
that were there for, or as a result of the type
of control that you see in Robinhood.
And people are more and more concerned
about both transparency and control,
and they're looking for yield to combat inflation,
I think that's what DeFi is about in a practical sense.
It is this clarity about your risk.
It is control over your assets.
And amazingly, at the same time as having
those two unbelievably useful properties,
it is actually superior yield, which
leads me to the very obvious conclusion that the
only reason DeFi isn't more used is because more people don't know about it.
And by virtue of this long kind of explanation here and elsewhere, more people will know
about it.
And it's just such an obvious, the superior solution that I haven't heard a single explanation
as to why, no, no, don't earn 8% and take less
risk and have more transparency with your assets. Seven percent less, take more risk and give
people the ability to change the rules on you at their discretion. Go do that. Who's going to do
that? And in general, on the first two of transparency control, first of all, I do think maybe
you can correct me, but from my perspective, they're, they're like deeply tied together. In
the sense that transparency gives control. Transparency creates accountability. And, and there's this kind
of game being played game, game, game theoretic game, where if I know, if you know, I'm going to
discover your deviation, you're not gonna deviate.
Yes, this could be a whole nother conversation, but just as a small aside, on the social network side of things,
which I've been thinking deeply about in the past year or so, of how to do it right there,
how to fix our social media.
And I tend to believe that human beings, if they're given clear
transparency about which data is being stored, how it's being used, where it's
being moved about, just all a clear, simple transparency of how their data is
being used. And them having the control at the very minimal level of being
able to participate or to walk
away. And walk away means delete everything you have known about me. That will create
a much, much better world. That currently there's a complete lack of transparency on social
media, how the data is being used for your own protection. I mean, there's a lot of
perilous of the central bank situation. And there's not a control element
of being able to walk away.
Like being able to delete all your data,
delete your account on Facebook is very difficult.
It doesn't take a single click,
which I think is what it should take.
There should be a big red button that says,
delete everything you've ever known about me,
or like forget me.
So I think that couple together can create
a very different
kind of world in creative and incentivization that will
lead to like progress and innovation and just like a
much better social network and a really good business
for the future social networks.
But so I tend to see control as naturally being an outgrowth from the transparency.
It should all start the transparency, which is why the smart contract formulation is fascinating.
Because you're formalizing in a simple, clear way any agreement that you're participating in. And as a side comment also, what's really inspiring to me is that I think there's a greater,
I don't know if this is always the case, but it seems like from having talked to people
on a psychological element, there's a hunger amongst people for transparency and for control.
Transparency, another word for that, is authenticity.
If you look at the kind of stuff that people hunger for now,
they want to know the reality of who you are as an individual.
So that means you can create businesses, you can create tools
that are built on authenticity, on transparency.
And then the same inspired by the intelligence of people,
if you give them control, if you give them power,
that they would make good choices.
That's really exciting.
Of course not everybody, but that means that decentralized power
can create effective systems.
So a couple of that, there's a hunger for transparency, centralized power can create effective systems.
So a couple of that, there's a hunger for transparency,
so we can move to a world where everyone's being
just like real, you know, conveying their genuine
human nature, and people are sufficiently intelligent
that if they're given power in a distributed mass scale
sense, that we're going to build a better world to that,
as opposed to centralized
supervised control or only a small percent of the population know what the hell they're
doing.
Everybody else is coolest sheep.
So those two coupled together is really to me inspiring.
Just a really quickly comment on this stuff that you just said, which I think is super, super
super fascinating.
I think that's all exactly right. I think everything that you just said, which I think is super, super, super fascinating. I think that's all exactly right.
I think everything that you said is right.
And I think it's actually going to be the same for social media and banking and every other
type of contract, is that all of those systems that house people's value for them and take
control of either their social media value or their financial value or whatever for them.
All of that is going to be made available to people
in this autonomous piece of code that does the same thing
that the centralized entity used to do.
So they get all the features,
but the autonomous piece of code gives them the ability
to have control while getting all the features.
So banks give you features, social media sites give you
features, whatever other system that you use online gives you features and then it takes your data and it takes control of your assets from you in return for those features.
Right. I think the whole big difference here, partly in line with, you know, the definition of smart contracts and its evolution is that there's this now this, this autonomous piece of code that's giving you all those features
without requiring the ownership and lock-in and control and unilateral kind of
ownership of your data or your value or whatever it is that you're giving it, right?
And I think with this lead to fundamentally,
is just more of a free market dynamic among how people make,
I think with the social media folks,
you should just make some kind of law or something
where you can just export all your data from them.
Everyone should be able to get their data exported
by another application.
And then the network effect of all these social media sites
will kind of crumble,
because people will just combine your Twitter data
with your Facebook data with everything else
into an application that you control.
And there will just be thousands of different interfaces
competing for how to consume all the social media data
because it isn't locked in in one centralized actor's control.
And so this is just the recurring pattern
of what I think all of this will do, is it'll give
peach, it gives people a better deal, right? It gives them features without ownership of data, without
ownership of value, and that's really the difference. So I think this is a good place to talk about
smart contracts then. Can you tell me the history of smart contracts and the basic sort of definitions of what is it?
Sure. So I think smart contracts as a definition has actually gone through some kind of changes
or a small evolution. Initially, I think it was actually a conception of a digital agreement
that was tamper proof and could know things about the world, right? So it could get proof
and it could define that something happened and it could conclude an outcome and release payment or do something else. That's actually the definition
of smart contracts that I began working in this industry with seven or eight years ago when
I started making smart contracts. That is the conception that I had of a smart contract.
Then what happened was that was really hard to do, right, building that type of tamper-proof
digital agreement that could also know things about the
real world and release payments back to people about those events that were codified
in this tamper-proof format was actually a very tall order, turns out it's consistent
of three parts, it's consisting of the contract, the proof about what happened, and you know,
the release of value.
The way things have evolved so far is that the definition has now come to
mean on chain code, right? So it's come to mean the codification of contractual agreement
on a blockchain, right? So there's some code somewhere on some blockchain that defines
what the agreement is. Now that eliminates the part of the definition that's related
to knowing things about the world and it partly eliminates the part of the definition that's related to knowing things about the
world and that partly eliminates the definition about payments and stuff like that.
But basically, it's on chain code, right?
We in our recent work on a second white paper have actually put out a different definition
that we call hybrids mark contracts that actually tries to go back to the initial definition
that I started with seven or eight years ago
which basically says that there's some proof somewhere that's proven to the contract and the contract can know that and the contract can gain
proof, then it can use that proof to settle the agreement that's codified on a blockchain. So you both need a mechanism to provide proof.
You need a mechanism to codify the contract
in a tamper proof way on something like a blockchain. And then as with all contracts, there's a
presumption that there's some kind of release of value. So I think a smart contract in our industry
right now means on chain code, which limits it to whatever can be done on chain only. And then in our internal definition for us,
and for us, a chain link, and for me,
it's hybrid smart contracts,
which is actually the original definition.
It's the idea that a contract can both know what happened
and automatically resolve to the proper outcome
based on what happened.
So you're referring to the chain link 2.0 white paper,
which is
paper that I recommend people look. It's a very easy read and very well structured and very thorough. So I really enjoyed it. Very recently released, I guess. Can you dig in deeper what is
a hybrid smart contract? You mentioned sort of this idea of data or knowing about the world and
On-chain and off-chain. So what are the different roles in this? So hybrid by the way refers to the fact that it's on-chain and off-chain
contracts
So maybe digging deeper of what the heck is it and what does it mean to know stuff about the world?
Like how do you
actually achieve that? Yeah, absolutely. So the on-chain part is where the agreement itself is,
that's the smart contract itself. And that's where you codify certain conditions such as
the conditions under which an interest payment is made or the conditions under which the contract
pays out the full amount that it holds
to someone based on a derivative outcome or something like that. Now what the on-chain code is very good at is
creating transparency about what the core conditions of the contract are.
It's very good at taking in money from other private keys that send it tokens and send it value to hold.
And then it's also very good at returning money or returning value back to other addresses
or other private keys.
It can also be involved in governance, it can be involved in a few other private key
signature based operations.
But primarily the on-chain part of a hybrid smart contract from what I've seen so far
defines the agreement, takes in value, and returns value
based upon the conditions codified in the agreement on a blockchain. The second and equally important
off-chain part is where the term Oracle and Anoracle comes in or an Oracle mechanism or a decentralized
Oracle network as we describe it in the paper. And this is another decentralized computational
system that has a different goal. So blockchains have the goal of packaging transactions into
blocks and connecting them in a cryptographically unique way to create security and assurance
about that chain of transactions. Oracles and decentralized Oracle networks achieve consensus and they
achieve decentralization about the topic of what happened. So blockchains structure transactions,
some of those transactions might be the state changes in different pieces of on-chain code.
And then those on-chain pieces of code require input.
I think the thing that people get a little bit thrown by
is despite being called smart contracts,
the on-chain code on a blockchain
cannot actually speak to any other system.
So, blockchains are valuable and useful
as far as their tamper-proof and secure,
and to be tamper proof and secure,
there made this kind of walled garden
that is able to know and interact only
with the highly reliable information that's within that system,
which is basically tokens and private key signatures.
All the other world's information is not available
in a blockchain inherently.
And a smart contractor, a piece of on-chain code, can't just say,
hey, I'm going to go get some data from over here,
because the API they would get it from creates a whole bunch of
security concerns for the blockchain itself,
and a whole bunch of consensus issues about how to
agree on what that API said or what the truth of the world is,
because it's not even agreeing on what one API said or what the truth of the world is, right? Because it's not even agreeing on what one API said.
It's more so creating a reliable form
of decentralized computation that can give you
a definitive proof of what happened
and not just what one API said.
So for example, some of our most widely used networks
have well over 30 nodes and well over 10 data sources
that are all providing information about the same type
of data and then there's consensus on that one piece of data,
which is then written in and essentially given back into the
on-chain code to tell it what happened.
Because you can't really make an agreement unless you know what happened.
If you and me were to make an agreement and set some contractual conditions,
but our agreement could never know what happened,
it would be completely useless.
However, if you and me made an agreement and there was another system called an Oracle
mechanism or decentralized Oracle network that proved what happened definitively, and
you and me pre-agreed that whatever this mechanism says is what happened, then we can achieve
an entirely new level of automation, right?
We can suddenly say, there's this piece of on-chain code that's highly reliable. We can give it millions, billions,
eventually trillions of dollars in value. And it is controlled by this other
system over here that's also highly reliable under this configurable set of
definitive truth and decentralization conditions, which we all agree are
sufficiently stringent to control that much value. And therefore, the combination of this tamper-proof
on-chain representation of a contract
and this mutually agreed upon definition
of a trigger or a proof system combined
is a hybrid smart contract,
which as you can see probably already,
does a lot more than just a contract on chain.
Can you talk about this consensus mechanism, which by the way is just fascinating. So there is
the on chain consensus mechanism of proof of work and proof of stake. And then there is this
Oracle network consensus mechanism of what is true.
So how do you compare the two,
like how do you achieve that kind of consensus?
How do you achieve security in integrating data
about the world in a way that's definitively true
in a way that is usefully true
such that we can rely on it in making major agreements that as you said involve billions of trillions of dollars.
Right, so this is the challenging, this is the challenging question, right, this is the challenging problem that Oracle networks oracles we are chain link that that we work on in order to create this definitive truth to trigger and create hyper automation in this
more advanced for more advanced formal hybrid smart contracts. The reality I think
of this problem is that it is very specific to each use case and
it and this is actually how we've architected our system is in a very flexible way.
So for example, you need an ability for an Oracle network to grow in the amount of
nodes that it has relative to the value it's secure.
So if you have an Oracle network that secures $100,000 in a beta of a financial product,
maybe it can be fine with only seven nodes
and only two or three data sources, right?
Because the risk to that Oracle network
is relatively low based on the valued secures.
So the first question is actually how do you scale security
relative to value, secured by that Oracle network?
Because it wouldn't be very efficient
to have a thousand
nodes securing $100,000 worth of value.
So one of the first questions is, how do we properly scale and how do we compose ensembles
of nodes in a decentralized way where we can know that, okay, we're going from seven
nodes in a network to 15, to 31, to 57, to 105, to 1000.
Right, so that's one dimension of the problem.
So you have to be scared of the number of nodes
relative to the value that's derived
from the truth integrated into those nodes.
Well, that's not the only problem, right?
The other side of this is that you're trying to create
a deterministic result, a deterministic
output from a set of non-deterministic disparate systems, data sources, or places that prove
things.
Can you also just as a side, what is an Oracle node?
What is the role of an Oracle node?
Sure.
So an Oracle node essentially exists in both places, it exists in both worlds. It exists as an on-chain contract that represents
either an Oracle network or an Oracle node,
so there's an on-chain interface in the form of a contract
that says, I exist to give you this list of inputs.
You can request, whether data for me,
you can request price data for me,
you can ask me to send the payments somewhere. It's a point to API that provides truth about this world.
It's an interface.
So just like an API is an interface for Web 2.0 engineers,
Oracle networks and the contracts that represent them
or individual nodes are the interface of Web 3.0's
use of services. And services includes all services, data, payment systems, messaging systems,
whatever Web 2.0 or any kind of computing service that you can conceptualize.
Needs an interface on chain in the form of a contract that says, here
are the services I can provide for you, here are the transactions you need to send me to
get back this data or that computation or this result.
And then what you actually see is that decentralized Oracle networks, because they're uniquely
capable of generating their own computations in a decentralized way around the data that
they have access to,
you actually see decentralized Oracle networks generating a lot of these services.
So for example, we have a randomness service,
a verifiable randomness function service,
that basically provides randomness on chain,
and that randomness is then used in lotteries and various other contracts that need randomness.
But that randomness, it's not a piece of data that comes from somewhere else.
We don't go to another data source and get it.
We generate it within an Oracle node that then provides it over into Oracle node or Oracle
nodes that provide it into the contracts themselves.
So what do you say Oracle nodes are not deterministic?
Well, they are as far as they come to consensus, but they're, but see, there's
there's this kind of different problem here, right? The blockchains are very focused on
generating blocks of transactions within a smaller universe of transaction types,
a certain block size, and a certain set of conditions. And then they have an economic system
that says, I will perpetually generate blocks of this size
with these transaction types in this kind of limited set
of transaction types, whether those are UTXO transactions
or scripted, solidio, whatever it is.
Oracle's and Oracle networks, we don't have a blockchain,
for example.
There is no chain link blockchain.
Our goal is not to generate a certain set of very clearly predetermined transaction types into a set of transactions that are put into blocks and will infinitely be, you know, done that way.
Our goal is actually to create
what we call a made a layer a decentralized made a layer between the non-deterministic highly
unreliable world and the highly highly, hyper-reliable world
of blockchains so that the unreliable world can be passed through this decentralized
made-a-layer or...
It can coexist with the reliable, unchained world.
Exactly.
It can coexist, and in some cases, the made-a-layer might generate it.
So the problem in giving you this straight answer is that there's just such a wide array of services.
Right. Right. If you were to say, well, sorry, how do we generate randomness from a data source?
Well, we don't use a data source to generate the randomness. That's a type of service that can be generated in an Oracle network itself.
Mm-hmm. And so there will be certain computations that Oracle networks themselves generate themselves to augment and improve blockchains.
And it is actually the goal of Oracle's
to consistently do that.
So if you were to think about the stack
in a very generic high level,
you would see blockchains are databases.
They're basically the data structures
that retain a lot of information
in this transparent, highly reliable form.
Smart Contract Code is the application logic.
It is the logic under which all of this
kind of activity occurs, you know, storing data in the data structure in the blockchain
as a database in a certain conceptualization of it. And then Oracle's and Oracle networks
are all the services that are used by the application code.
So by analogy, let's take Uber.
Uber initially, some core code goes and gets the GPS API
from Google Maps about the user's location,
sends a message to the user through Twilio,
pays the driver through Stripe.
If those services weren't available to the people who made Uber,
they wouldn't have made Uber,
because they would have written their core code on some database, and then they would have had to make a geolocation
company, a telecom messaging company, and the global payments company. And they wouldn't have
done that because it's too hard. And that's the weird scenario that a lot of people in our industry
are in. And that's the problem that Oracle's and Oracle Networks fix is they provide these decentralized services to take
this developer ecosystem, the blockchain and smart contract developer ecosystem from,
hey, I can have a database and write some application logic about tokenization and voting and
private key signing, all of which is super useful and is a critical foundation.
But now, if you just lay around all the world's services, whether
that's market data, weather data, randomness, suddenly people can build DeFi, Fraud Proof
Gaming, Fraud Proof Global Trade, Fraud Proof Ad Networks, and that's why this world
of decentralized services and decentralized Oracle networks is particularly, in my
opinion, important to our industry.
Yeah, it's funny.
You talk about the current sort of decentralized world,
D5, but decentralized services world
is primarily just tokens.
And it's basically just financial transactions.
And the reason why it's super exciting,
the kind of thing you're doing with Chainlink
and Oracle Networks is that you can basically open up
the whole world of services to this
kind of decentralized smart contract world.
I mean, you're talking about just orders of magnitude greater impact financially and just
socially and philosophically. Are there interesting near-term and long-term
applications that excite you? Yeah, there's a lot that excites me and that is
how I think about it that it's not just about we made a decentralized
Oracle network. It's about we made a decentralized service or collection of
services that's going from hundreds to thousands and then people are able to
build the hybrid smart contracts which I think will redefine what our industry is about.
Because for example, for the people that only learned
about blockchains through the lens of NFTs,
they understand blockchains through NFTs,
not through speculative tokens or bitcoins, right?
And I think that will continue.
I think the use cases that excite me,
they vary between the developed market,
the developed world's economies
and emerging markets. I think in the developed world, what you will see is that transparency,
creating a new level of information for how markets work and the risk that is in markets and
kind of the dynamics that put the global financial system at systemic financial risk
like 2008.
And my hope is that all of this infrastructure will soften the boom and bust cycles by making
information immediately available to all market participants, which is by the way what
all market participants want, except for the very, very, very small minority that are able
to game the system and their benefit
and benefit from booms but avoid busts
because of their asymmetric access to information
which everybody should have
and which this technically solves.
I think in the process of doing that
in which is happening, I think, right about now,
you see a polishing of the technology
such that it can be made available to emerging markets.
And on a personal level, I feel that the emerging markets
will benefit much more from this technology,
just like the emerging markets benefit much more
from the internet or from those $50 Android phones
that people can have, because it's such a massive shift
in how people's lives work, right?
I have always had access to books and a library,
which has been fantastic and
very important. But there are places in the world where people don't have libraries, but now
they have the internet and a $50 Android phone, and they can watch the same Stanford lecture that I
watch. I mean, that's kind of mind-blowing realistically, right? They just went from zero to one
in a very, very dramatic way. I think all of these smart contracts,
and in my case, I think the one that I seem to keep
coming back to is crop insurance,
where partly because it doesn't have a tokenization component
partly because it's actually much more important
than it might seem.
What is crop insurance?
Right, so this is the nature of why it's sometimes hard to see the full value of what our industry
does because it solves all these kinds of backend problems that we don't have.
Right.
So crop insurance is if I own a farm and it doesn't rain, I get an insurance payout so I don't
need to close down my farm.
Because if it didn't rain, I don't have crops.
Right.
So people in the developed world can get crop insurance and there's all kinds of systems
that basically pay them out and then they can argue with the insurance company if they
don't get paid out properly and whatever.
And this allows people to smooth out risk.
In fact, a lot of the global options markets were about this.
They were initially about people selling
their produce or their crops ahead of time so that if there was a risk of drought,
they weren't impacted by it, right? And that's where a lot of options trading and all this
kind of stuff came from even though it's now turned into this kind of global casino.
But in the emerging market, there are literally people that if they don't have rain for two seasons,
they need to close down their farm and become a migrant worker of some kind.
And now they have a $50 Android phone where they can read Wikipedia,
but there's still decades away from an insurance company coming to their geography
and offering them insurance because their local legal system simply doesn't allow
that type of thing to exist.
No insurance company is going to go and create insurance, entity and all for them insurance
because the levels are fraud and the ability to resolve that fraud through courts which
just not exist.
Now these people have to wait for decades to have this very basic form of financial protection
or something like a bank account even.
With this technology, they don't.
So with this technology, if I have a $50 Android phone
and the smart contract has data from satellites
or weather stations about the weather conditions
in the geography that my farm is in,
I can put value into the smart contract
and the smart contract will automatically pay me out,
back out at my Android
phone.
And guess what?
I just leapfrog passed my corrupt government not being able to provide a legal infrastructure
to create insurance.
I just leapfrog passed dealing with insurance companies that will probably price gouge
me and often not pay out. I leapfroged into the world of hyper-reliable,
kind of guaranteed smart contract outcomes
that are as good or in many cases better
than what farmers and all parts of the world have.
This type of dynamic for the emerging markets
of creating a way for people to control
and manage risk in their economic life,
I think extends way past insurance.
It extends to them having bank accounts to combat local inflation.
It extends to them being able to sell their goods on the global free market of global
trade without middlemen.
It extends to all these things that we don't really care about, right?
Because we're not farmers, but are unbelievably impactful for people that don't have a bank
account and their inflation rate in their country is double digits or their farm completely depends our reign or their
livelihood completely depends on their ability to sell goods and they can't sell those
goods because there's a middleman who essentially controls all the trust relationships.
But now we have the internet and smart contracts and that might not have to be the case in
the next five or 10 years.
Yeah, so that definitely has a quality of life impact on the particular farmer's life,
but I suspect that it has a huge, like down the line ripple effect on the whole supply chain.
So if you think about farmers, but any other people that produce things that are part of a large, like logistics network,
like supply chain network,
that means when you increase reliability,
you sort of increase transparency and control,
but like where anyone node in that supply chain network can formalize the way it operates
in its agreements with others, then you could just have a very, like, at scale, transformative effect
on how people that down the line use the services that you provide, the products that you create operate.
So, like, it's almost hard to imagine the possible ways in my transform the world.
I wonder how much friction there is in the system, I guess, currently, that smart contracts might remove.
That's almost unknown.
You can sort of hypothesize and stuff, but I wonder.
I've seen enough bureaucracy in my life to know that smart contracts in many cases would
remove bureaucracy.
And I wonder how the world would be once you remove much of the bureaucracy coming from the Soviet Union where I just have seen the life sucked out of the
innovative spirit of human nature by bureaucracy. I wonder, you know, the kind of amazing world that
could be created once bureaucracies are moved. Yeah, I think it's I think it's fascinating how the
world can can evolve. I think this extends fascinating how the world can evolve.
I think this extends a lot further than people thinking to many, many different parts of
the global economy.
It might start with NFTs for art, or it might start with DeFi, or it might start with
Fraudproof Ad Networks next.
We don't know what it's going to go to next. But I think the implication of people being in a system
of contracts that holds them accountable and guarantees contractual outcomes regardless of a
local legal system is something that I think extends, you know, to the supply chain, you can prove
that goods were sourced in an ethical way and you can prove that in a way that can't be gained.
That'll change buying power and supplier power and
how people produce goods that we all consume. And then on
the political level, I personally think that in a number of
decades, we could literally be in a place where politicians
can commit to a certain set of smart contract kind of budget
definitional kind of results.
For example, you know, we discovered oil.
I promise as a politician, I'm going to take the oil
and I'm going to redistribute it to all of you.
Well, that's wonderful.
That's a great idea.
Sounds very nice when you're running for office.
Why don't we codify that in a smart contract?
And why don't we put those conditions very solidly on a blockchain?
And then once once you've been elected, we'll just turn that one on.
And it'll distribute the money just like you said.
And everything will be fine.
I personally think that this new level of systems that allows trustworthy
collaboration between everybody, between supply chain partners, ad network users,
the financial system, insurance companies and farmers,
all of these are just interactions that require a trusted entity,
or in this case, a trusted piece of code,
to orchestrate the interaction in the way that everyone agrees.
Yeah, one of the things that makes the United States
fascinating is the founding documents.
And it's fascinating to think of us moving into the new, in the 21st century, to a digital
version of that.
So the Constitution, a smart Constitution, no offense to the paper Constitution.
But, and I would, that would have transformative effects on politicians and governments holding people accountable.
Oh, man, that's so exciting to think that we might enforce accountability through the smart contract process. Exactly. Why can't that happen? Anything that we could
codify into a smart contract and anything that we all
agree is the way thing the world should work. And then
anything that we can get proof about, right? Anything that
a system somewhere could tell us happened, those are the
pieces of the puzzle, right? We need a trusted piece of code,
we need to have agreement that that's how the world should work. And We need a trusted piece of code. We need to have agreement
that that's how the world should work. And we need a system that'll tell that trusted
piece of code what happened. As long as we have those three things, we can theoretically
codify any set of agreements about anything where those three properties take hold.
I wonder if you can apply that to like military conflict
and so on.
Recently, the Biden announced that we're going to pull off
from Afghanistan after 20 years in the war.
I wonder there's a lot of debacle,
debacles around the war in Afghanistan
and invasion of Iraq, all those kinds of things.
I wonder if that was
instead formulated as a smart contract. That might have actually huge impact on the way we do
conflict. You think of a smart contract as a kind of win-win situation where you're doing
like financial transactions or something like that, but you could see that also about military conflict or like whenever two nations are
attention with each other, different scales of conflict that you could have conflict codified.
And that would potentially resolve conflict much faster, because there's honesty,
transparency, and control within that conflict, because there's conflict in this world.
And I, again, very, very inspiring to think about the kind of effects
you might have on the negative kinds of contracts, on the tense, painful kinds of contracts.
I haven't thought about that as much as actually kind of scary this stuff you're thinking
through now with like the war contract or something.
You know, that's not in the white paper we don't have a word contract or anything.
Again, this is the Russian, we're both Russian, but I'm a little more Russian in the suffering
side.
Maybe I read way too much of the S.K. and military kind of ideas, but anyway, holding politicians accountable in all forms.
I think it's really powerful.
Is there something you could say as a small side on how smart contracts actually work?
If you look at the code, is there a nice way to say technically what is a smart contract?
What does it mean to codify these agreements, the actual process for people who might not at all be familiar?
I think you just write it into code that operates
in this kind of decentralized infrastructure.
You usually write code that runs in a central service somewhere.
Now you write code that runs across a lot of different machines
in this decentralized way.
And then after you write it, you need services.
And that's where Oracle's come in.
They provide all the services.
So just like you would be writing code in Web2.0 land,
running it on a server somewhere and using an API,
here you'd be writing code, putting it on a decentralized
infrastructure like a blockchain, or a smart contract
platform like Ethereum.
And then you would be using various services in the form of Oracle, so there'll just be called Oracle's or decentralized services
instead of APIs, and you're basically composing the same type of architecture except it's hyper-reliable.
At the moment, it's a little bit less efficient because there's an early stage to our industry,
but it provides this extreme level of reliability and transparency,
which for certain use cases is an absolute critical component and is completely reinventing
how they work. So I think people should look at what are the use cases where that trust
dynamic can be so heavily improved. And that's probably the ones where this is maybe initially
useful. But I mean, just to emphasize, I don't think people realize when you say code that we're
talking about non-offuscated actual program.
Like, you can read it.
You can understand it.
And there's something about, maybe this is my computer science perspective of like
software engineering perspective, but there's something about the formalism of programming languages,
which enforces simplicity, clarity and transparency, and because it's
seen to everybody, I mean, simplicity is enforced. There's no, there's something about natural language,
like language, as written in the Constitution, for example, where there's so many interpretations.
With the nice thing about programs, there's not going to be a huge number of books written
about what was meant by this particular line, because it's pretty clear.
Like programming languages have a clarity to them that natural language does not.
They don't have ambiguity, which I think it's important to pause on, because it's really
powerful.
It's really difficult to think about.
I think we live in a world where all the philosophers and legal minds don't know how
to program, so I think not all, most don't.
And so we don't often see the philosophical impact of this kind of idea
that the agreements between humans can be written in a programming language. That's a really
transformative idea. I mean, yeah, it's, it's an idea that's not just technical, it's not just
financial, it's philosophical, it's rethinking human
nature from a digital perspective.
The, like, what is human civilization?
It's interaction between humans.
And rethinking that interaction as a digital interaction that is managed by programming
languages, by programs, by code.
I mean, that's fascinating. That will look
back at this time potentially, as one where us little descendants of apes did not realize
how important this moment in history is. Like, human beings might be totally different,
a century from now, because we codified the
interaction between humans. That might have more of an impact than anything else we do
today. You think about the impact of the internet. One of the cool things is the digitization
of data, but we have not yet integrated the tools, the mechanisms fully that use that data and interact with humans yet.
And that's what smart contracts do.
I wonder if you think about the role of artificial intelligence in all of this,
because your smart contracts are kind of agreements, maybe you disagree with this,
but at least the way I'm thinking about it is agreements between humans or groups of humans. But it seems like because everything is operating in the
digital space that you can integrate non-humans into this, or AI systems that help out
humans, managed by humans. Like, what do you think about a world of high-bid smart contracts, codifying agreements
between hybrid intelligent being networks of humans and AI systems?
Yeah, I think that makes perfect sense. In terms of AI, I'm not an expert, right? So it might be a bit
simplistic or naive my ideas in this field. I think everyone saw the Terminator movie, right?
Everybody kind of saw the Terminator movie in the 90s and it was like, this is really scary.
I personally think AI is amazing and makes perfect sense.
I think it will evolve to a place where people have, you know, just to understand, I work
in the world of trust issues, right?
I work in the world of how can technology solve trust and collaboration issues, using encryption,
using cryptographically guaranteed systems, using decentralized infrastructure, right?
So that's the world that I've been inhabiting for, you know, many, many years now building
smart contracts for seven or eight doing stuff before that. It's kind of what I'm focused
on. So I view AI through that same lens. And my brain natural asks, well, what is the
trust issue that people might have with AI and my natural kind of response as well. Let's say AI continues to be built and improve.
At some point, I have no clue where we are on this now. I've seen different ideas that were very far
from this. I've seen other ideas were very close to this. At a certain point, we'd arrive at a
place with AI where we would be a little bit worried about just how much it could do. We might be worried that AI could do things.
We don't want it to do,
but we still want to give AI a level of control
over our lives.
So in my world, that's a trust issue.
And the way that that trust issue would be solved
with blockchains is actually very straightforward
and I think it's simplicity quite powerful.
You could have an AI that has an ability to do
and control key parts of your and our lives, right?
But then you could limit it with private keys
and blockchains and create certain guardrails
and firm kind of walls and limits to what the AI could never go past
Assuming that encryption, right that encryption continues to work, right and assuming that if it's not that AI
Specialization to break encryption that it wouldn't be able to do that, right?
So if you have an AI that controls
Something very important whatever it, shipping or something in defense
or something in the financial system, whatever it is.
But you're sitting there and you're worried, hey, this thing is unbelievable.
It's coming up with things, we wouldn't have thought of it 100 years, but maybe it's
a little too unbelievable.
How do you limit it? Well, if you bake in private keys
and you bake in these kind of blockchain-based limitations,
you can create the conditions
beyond which an AI could never act.
And those could once again be codified
in the very specific, unambiguous terms
in which you described, which, once again,
in my trust issue- world, would solve the
trust issue for users and make them comfortable with using the AI or seeding control to the
AI, which I think in more advanced versions of AI will continue to be a concern, right?
This is fascinating. So smart contracts actually provide a mechanism for human supervision
of AI systems
For the encryption very encryption heavy so it's not about like is it smarter than us?
It's about will the encryption hold up? Yeah
So we that's based on the assumption that a crypt encryption holds up I think that's a safe assumption we can get into that whole discussion
But from quantum computing but cracking encryption is very difficult.
That's a whole other discussion.
I think we're safe, unsafe ground for quite a long time assuming encryption holds.
There's a space that is at the cutting edge of general intelligence research in AI community, which is the space of program synthesis,
or AI generating programs.
So that's different than what you're referring to,
is AI being able to generate smart contracts.
And that, to me, is kind of fascinating,
to think of, of especially two AI systems between each other generating contracts.
Sort of almost creating a world where most of the contracts are between non-human beings.
I think in AI system, as I think about it, and once again this is not my field, this is something I
might watch a YouTube video on or just see something interesting about at some point. I think if I were to just
reason through it even now, I think that highly deterministic and guaranteed nature of smart
contracts would probably be preferable to an AI because I'm guessing an AI would have a lot of
problems with dealing with the human element of how contracts work today. So an AI, because I'm guessing an AI would have a lot of problems with dealing with the
human element of how contracts work today, right?
So an AI, for example, couldn't pick up the phone and call, you know, Dave at a bank to
do a derivative and kind of discuss with Dave and have a call with him and kind of have
a conversation and make him comfortable and tell him it's going to be fine and kind
of smooth out all the weird, you know, social cues that have to do with making certain derivatives.
I'm assuming that that's a pretty complicated neural map AI kind of problem.
Yeah, so if I think about it, the deterministic guaranteed nature of smart contracts, probably would, and if assuming
they're accessible to AI's, could actually interestingly enough be the format that they
prefer to codify their relationship with non-AI systems and very possibly other AI systems,
right?
Because it is very, I mean, it's pretty guaranteed, right? Because it is very, I mean, it's pretty, it's pretty guaranteed, right?
All the other types of contracts that an AI could go out there and seek to do would require,
you know, some language processing around the law. And I think, I don't know if this
is a term, but probably not a smart AI or a good AI,
or whatever the term is for a high quality AI,
would probably realize some of the limitations
and the risks.
Yeah, yeah, AI definitely dislikes ambiguity
and would prefer the deterministic nature of smart contracts.
I do wonder about this particular problem,
and maybe you could speak to it of how smart
contracts can take over certain industries, in a sense, or how certain industries can convert
their sets of agreements into smart contracts, which is, you mentioned, sort of talking to
Dave from the bank, you know, many of our laws, many of our agreements are currently through natural language, through
words.
And so there is a process of mapping that has to occur in order to convert the legal
agreements, legal contracts of today to smart contracts that by the way AI may be able
to help with. But as a by way of question,
how do you think we convert the legal contracts on which many industries currently function
today? Or not even legal contracts, but ambiguous kind of agreements, maybe they're loose
sometimes into more formal deterministic agreements that are represented by smart contracts.
So I think there's two, maybe two sides to this. I think the first one is actually not a huge problem
where you have things like the Istemaster agreement for derivatives or you have these agreements
that basically already reference a system somewhere, right? Like for example, many legal agreements already accept e signature.
And so they're saying, Hey, I'm going to use this computing system over here around signatures.
And I'm going to consider and there's laws around that and there's clauses to say,
e signatures good enough for this agreement.
I actually don't think this is a big problem for the vast majority of legal
agreements that use systems already, right? So what you'll do is you'll swap out one repository or one or one set of
contract system of contract settlement. And you'll just say, Hey, this block chain
system over here is my new system of contract settlement. Whatever it says is
the state of the agreement instead of, you know, the centralized system over there.
Right. And so there's actually a huge amount of agreements that are already able to do that, and I think
we'll do that.
I think there's another side to your question, which is the amount of agreements that are
very ambiguous that can be turned into smart contracts.
I think the limitation there is too full.
First of all, like you said earlier, the highly reliable
smart contract and the lack of opaqueness and the clarity of smart contracts is very
high and very powerful and very clear. And it's in my opinion going to be much, much easier
to take a smart contract and turn it into a set of natural language explanations and just say,
hey, this is what this does. So I think that many contracts are, and even now in decentralized
finance and DeFi and in decentralized insurance, they're basically being rebuilt in this format
and that rebuilding will make them clearer, like you said. And then restating those in natural
language and explaining to people, well, you know, if the weather does this, it'll, I think it'll actually be a lot
simpler to explain to people what the contract is about.
Especially, mappings, more contracts, it's a natural language.
I didn't even think about that.
So that's, you're saying that's doable and natural and easy to do.
Because there's so much clear, right?
There's that forced clarity that you talked about.
I think the second aspect
of this problem is the nuance around what contracts can be made unambiguous. And I think
that comes down to, often comes down to proving what happened, which is where Oracle networks
and decentralized Oracle networks and Chainlink would come in. And our experience there is
you know, quite extensive over the many years that we've worked on many different contract types.
I think what it fundamentally comes down to is whether there is data.
So we're not going to be able to make a hybrid smart contract about whether somebody painted your house the right color blue.
We're just not going to be doing that because there's no data feed that tells us that your house was painted blue or that it was the right color of blue
You know unless somebody sets up a drone with a color analysis tool and they generate that data
Which by the way it could be possible right they could there could be if there's enough demand then the Conservancy would be created that has drones flying around that's telling you about the colors of you know
All those kind of stuff
So if there's actually demand that that would be created created and because there'll be value to connect that data feed
to the smart contracts and so on.
I think you have it unbelievably right
because there are already insurance companies
that use drones to monitor construction sites
from overhead and see how many people are wearing hard hats.
And if the percentage of people wearing hard hats
isn't sufficiently high, then the policy is voided. And so in that case, there is a data source. And that data
source can be put into a hybrid smart contract. So the limitation of hybrid smart contracts
is, is there a data source or a set of data sources to create definitive truth to settle
the contract and eliminate ambiguity? And then as you, as you said, I think as people realize that smart contracts
are a format in which they can form agreement about things like that insurance product around,
you know, how many people are wearing hard hats. If I'm the construction site owner, well,
you know, I would really like a guarantee that your insurance policy is going to pay me out
if everyone is wearing hard hats. And in that case, there is demand for the data and people will generate the data.
And I actually think the insurance industry is interestingly a precursor of this because
they're so data driven.
You already see insurance companies paying IoT companies to put data into their customers
infrastructure at the cost of the insurance company to generate the
data that the insurance company uses to make a policy for the customer. So you basically
already have people who really want to price data into their agreements when they're
sufficiently high value paying for their own customers to get data sensors into their
infrastructure. And I think as smart contracts become more
of a requested format or data-driven contracts
become more of a format,
there will be a growing demand
about proving what happened through data.
So it'll be motivating totally new data fees being created.
By the way, the insurance industry broadly,
the revolutions there will be huge.
I've worked quite a bit with autonomous vehicles, semi-autonomous vehicles in general.
The insurance industry, by the way, makes a huge amount of money, but is using very crappy
data fees.
Revolutionizing, not by crappy. I mean very crude like literally the insurance is based on
things like age
Gent like basic demographic information as opposed to really high
Resolution information about you as an individual which you may or may not want to provide
So you can choose from an individual perspective to provide a data feed.
And there, like, the power of insurance to enable the individual to empower the individual
could be huge, because ultimately smart contracts motivate the use of data, the creation of new data feeds,
but leveraging the whatever service it provides in truth
as opposed to some kind of very loose notion of who you are.
So that, I'm not, again, not sure how that would change things
in terms of the fundamental experience of life.
Cause I think we're all relying on insurance,
not just in business, but in life.
And grounding that insurance
in more and more accurate representation of reality
might just have transformative effects on society.
Well, just to mention one quick thing
that you said, where I noticed another trust issue,
you said the user might not want to share their data.
Yes.
So what you could actually do,
and what we've already worked on is,
you can have a smart contract that holds the data
and evaluates the data of the user
without sharing it with the insurance company.
Yes.
And the insurance company knows that the smart contract
will evaluate it according to the policy.
They don't need the data. and the user can provide the data knowing it'll never touch the insurance company because
it's only provided to the smart contract.
And suddenly you solve another trust issue because the autonomous piece of code can evaluate
information separately from the interests of both of the counterparties.
And so this is the recurring theme.
I think you're seeing this recurring theme where there's a trust issue.
People can't use a system.
They can't collaborate.
They can't share information.
That would make a better agreement for both of them.
They can't, you know, solve a risk in their daily life.
They can't participate in a market.
They can't have a bank account because nobody will give it to them because, you know, they
can't give it to them in that legal system.
And once you have an autonomous piece of code
that can also know what's going on,
thanks to Oracle Networks and that combination
of the code and the Oracle Network for the hybrid smart contract,
the same pattern just recurs.
It's really the same pattern.
And this is why I keep saying trust issues.
It's because I basically almost every contractual trust
issue that I see, where there is a piece of data
to prove and settle the trust issue in a way
that works for both parties, there is no reason not
to use an autonomous, highly reliable contract and piece
of code.
And I have to tell you, I've seen this in a lot of different
industries. I've seen it insurance, ad networks, global finance, global trade, those are all
multitrally in dollar industries. And then there are other smaller industries. Like even
one of the first smart contracts we worked on many years ago was for search engine optimization
firms where they would tell you, Hey, I'm going to raise your search engine ranking, give me the money. And people
wouldn't want to give them the money because they never knew if they were going to do it.
And then the search engine firm doesn't want to do any work thinking they'll never get any money.
So we just initially even came up with a system where you could put Bitcoin into a smart contract.
And it would be released based on whether the search rank
of a website got to a certain level on Google for a certain keyword.
And so the trust problem was solved.
But it's just the same story.
It's kind of like trust issues around AI, trust issues around financial products, trust
issues around insurance, trust issues around social media, whatever it is.
I think that's what people looking at this industry really need to
understand. And once they do understand, they realize what this is all about. This is about
redefining how everyone collaborates with everyone about everything where we can prove something
through data. You've mentioned confidentiality and privacy that the parties don't need to
necessarily know private data in this interaction. You talk about confidentiality
in the white paper for Chainlink 2.0. Can you talk more about how to achieve
confidentiality in this process? Sure, sure, absolutely.
So I think you once again need to think of the contract
as existing in two parts, right?
You have the on-chain code,
and then you have this off-chain system
called the centralized Oracle Network.
So the question is really,
what portion of the contract should live
and what part of these two systems, right?
So if you wanna create transparency,
you should put more information on chain
because that's what blockchains are very good at.
They're public, transparent,
but they don't necessarily have privacy.
Well, you can see how those two things
are a little bit completely,
diametrically opposed, right?
So I do think, and I do see blockchains working
on on-chain encrypted smart contracts.
That's very inefficient.
It has a lot of nuances around it.
That, I think, will appear at some point.
I think, until it appears, you have
an option of taking a part of the computation
and putting it into the centralized
Oracle Network.
We actually did an entire paper about this that we presented at Stanford in February of
last year, something called Mixicles, which basically talks about how you can take an
Oracle Network and you can put a portion of the computation into the Oracle network, assuming that you're comfortable with that limited set of nodes,
knowing what the computation is,
and you could actually provide additional confidentiality through
special hard work called trusted execution environments,
that all those nodes are forced to run so they won't have been known with their operating.
At the end of the day, if you look at a hybrid smart contract as gaining functionality
from its on-chain code and gaining other functionality from its off-chain, decentralized
Oracle Network component, you can place the part of the computation that you would like
to be private in the decentralized Oracle Network because you can control the set of nodes,
you can control the committee of nodes, you can control the committee of nodes,
and you can require that they run certain hardware
to keep the information private.
You could basically make a derivative that,
or a binary option is the example used in the
Mixicles paper where the payout happened on chain,
but it was actually impossible to tell
what the outcome of the contract was. what the outcome of the contract was.
So the outcome of the contract was computed in the centralized Oracle network, and then
there was a switch that triggered who received the payment.
But from the point of view of analyzing the on-chain transactions and seeing who received
the payment or what the outcome of the contract was. You couldn't derive that, you couldn't backward engineer what that was.
But the users of that hybrid smart contract still had on-chain code that guaranteed them,
that as long as the decentralized Oracle network found a certain outcome,
determined the certain outcome, that the relevant user would get paid, and
there was still a place to put value, right?
So there is this kind of fundamental tension between confidentiality, privacy, which is
very important for many contracts, which is critical to many contracts.
And the public and transparent nature of blockchains, which I think eventually will be solved
through encrypted on-chain smart contracts.
That'll take some time,
I think that'll take years, in my opinion.
And before we arrive there,
I think people will put the private portion
into the centralized Oracle Network.
Once again, going back to what the decentralized
Oracle Networks do,
they seek to provide these services, right?
So the ability to do a privacy-preserving computation
is perhaps a service without which a certain type of contract
might never come into existence
in the form of an on-chain hybrid smart contract.
And so this is once again what we see
the centralized Oracle Networks and decentralized services
doing is providing people these tools and building blocks to compose, you know, like, I'm, I'm, I'm graded making these derivatives contracts,
but I can't make them unless I can retain the privacy of them. And our goal is to provide
the infrastructure that gives you as a developer and as a creator of smart contracts that capability.
And what we've seen
is that as we provide that capability, people create more, which is also really the story
of the internet, right? The story of the internet is it was really tough to do e-commerce while
everything was in HTTP and credit cards were transmitted publicly. And so e-commerce was kind
of tough because how am I going to send my credit card over public on encrypted channels, right?
But the second HTTPS appears, e-commerce becomes a lot easier because I going to send my credit card over public on encrypted channels, right? But the second HTTPS appears, the commerce becomes a lot easier because I can put in my
credit card number and it can be sent over an encrypted channel and, you know, it's
not at risk.
And so I can participate in e-commerce as long as I have a credit card.
I think those types, and I'm sure that was unexpected, right?
I'm sure at the time that was an unexpected outcome from that technology.
I think this is why we sometimes have this focus on privacy because in our work with
contracts and their transition into this hybrid smart contract form, we see a substantial
amount of need for privacy as an inherent property of these contracts.
It'll take a while before that's possible to create the kind of technology
innovation required to do that on chain.
I know there's a few ideas that are being floating about, but so the currently
distributed Oracle networks provide that feature, which is essential to many
contracts. What brings to mind in this whole space again, it might be outside of
your expertise, but within the world, which I'm passionate
about, which is machine learning.
And it seems like very naturally, because current machine learning systems are very data
hungry.
And much of the value mined by companies in the digital space are from data.
They often want their data to maintain privacy.
So you think about an autonomous vehicle space.
Tesla is collecting huge amount of data.
Waymo is collecting huge amount of data.
It seems like it would be very beneficial
to form contracts where one could use the data
from the other in some kind of privacy preserving way,
but also where all the uses
of data are codified and you can exchange value cleanly, you know, basically contracts
over data over machine learning systems use of different data.
I don't know, do you talk to machine learning folks that use ideas of smart contracts or is that for outside of your interest?
Because it seems like exceptionally
applicable set of when we talk about different services that might be created and revolutionized by smart
especially hybrid smart contracts. I
Think machine learning systems comes to mind to me in all industries. I
learning systems comes to mind to me in all industries. I don't know if you've got an interest in interact with those folks or those services.
I think what you're talking about is more data marketplaces in the data marketplace side
of things. Well, this is actually once again very applicable because there's a trust
issue. At the end of the day, let's say I'm trying to sell you some data. You don't know the quality of the data, so you don't know what you want to pay for it.
And I can't give you the data for you to determine the quality, because I've given you
the data, right?
Guess what?
We need an autonomous, impartial agent.
We need an impartial computational kind of agent and on-chain smart contract with an Oracle network to assess my data to
write to basically take random cross-section samples of the data, assess it for
quality, assess it for signal from the algorithm you have, which you don't want to
share with me because you don't want to know the algorithm you're working on,
right? You don't want me to know what you want the data for. So now the
autonomous agent takes your algorithm, keeping it private for me, and takes my working on, right? You don't want me to know what you want the data for. So now the autonomous
agent takes your algorithm, keeping it private from me and takes my data, keeping it private
from you, assesses it on a random cross-section sampling for quality of data, returns the
scoring back to you, allows you to determine a price, and now both you and me know that we've arrived at a fair price for the quality of my data
for what you want to do with it.
And that's once again, from what I've seen in the data market places,
which are full of people who want that data for these learning models,
often for financial markets, often for other reasons.
This is their fundamental problem, which is amazing
enough. There's a trust issue that is getting solved. And I think you can see, even on the
face of it, once that trust issue is solved, those markets can work a lot better, right?
I don't need to know your algorithm. You don't need to know my data. We both know that the
autonomous agent
is not under either of our control
and gave us a fair assessment and a fair price.
And that's it.
And we're all very comfortable with that.
I could even make conditions
that your algorithm isn't analyzing the data
for something I don't want you to analyze it for,
or you can make conditions that the data has to have
any number of properties.
And once again, you haven't leaked any signal to me and I haven't leaked any data to you,
which is once again, just another type of trust issue that all of this solves.
So it's the same pattern.
If you work in this industry long enough or if you really look at these use cases long
enough, you'll simply come to the question, and this is the useful question,
what is the trust issue, this is solving? And then if you can get an answer to that question on a case-by-case basis, that's when you'll understand why blockchains are relevant. And then once
you do that with enough use cases, it becomes, you know, it becomes a little bit mind-block.
You've mentioned trust quite a bit.
a little bit mind blank. You've mentioned trust quite a bit. You also mentioned trust minimization in the chain link white paper. Can we dig into trust a little bit more? What is the nature of trust
that you think about in these smart contracts? What is trust minimization? How do we accomplish, achieve trust minimization? Sure, sure. I think it's important maybe to have a conception of what the alternative is, right?
What is highly reliable, trust minimized off-chain and on-chain computation and alternative to?
So this is just kind of how I see the world in these two camps.
One camp is the traditional, what I call, brand-based
or paper-garenty camp.
And this is the world as pretty much most,
or all people know today.
This is the world where there's a bank logo
or an insurance company logo or some kind of logo.
There's a very big building with marble arches
and columns, you know, it's the biggest building in the town,
bigger than the church.
And everybody feels very good. Everybody's that such a nice logo, it's the biggest building in the towns, bigger than the church. And everybody feels very good.
Everybody's that such a nice logo.
It's such a big building.
Why don't I give them my money?
Why don't I interact with them on the basis of any kind of agreement?
And that's good.
And that is definitely better than that not being there.
And that is definitely a huge improvement for how people conduct commerce, you know, letters
of credit, from
branded entities are very important for global trade to take place in the early stages
of global trade.
So, that's good, but it is fundamentally just a paper agreement with a legal framework
behind it.
And if the paper agreement you have would say Robinhood or somebody else suddenly has to change,
well, it changes. And you can't really do anything about it. You won't be able to change anything
about what happened there. There's some long terms of service. There's some other agreements
around all this stuff. At the end of the day, that's the brand-based and paper guarantee world
where it's all very vague and opaque and
you're kind of hoping for the best because there's a nice logo, it's been around the
hundred years.
A lot of Marvel.
Put a lot of Marvel.
Big building, lots of Marvel's.
This is why banks have such nice buildings, right?
It's not because they want to spend money on buildings.
It's to create confidence in them as an entity in order for people to transact through them.
Right. This is why all these kind of go to cities that had gold rushes,
go to cities that needed banking as a service in certain time periods.
They're the most beautiful buildings at least in the United States.
So this is the brand based paper guarantee model for which up until now,
there has never been an alternative, right?
So up until now, if you had a bad experience
with a bank or insurance company or some logo somewhere,
you would only have one option.
Your option would be to go across the road
and down the block to another building
with another color of marble and another set of agreements
that are fundamentally still paper brand agreements.
Right. Now for the first time, you have mathematical agreements. You have mathematically guaranteed
encryption secured, decentralized infrastructure powered agreements. Right. This is really the shift.
This is really the comparison and the alternative through which people should view all of this
in my opinion because there's once again this conception that everything is fine, everything
works very well.
Well, it does.
It works fine and very well as long as nothing goes wrong.
And then in the cases when things go wrong, which they pretty much invariably at some point
do, then you find out that, well,
you know, turns out they don't have to pay me or turns out I can't trade or turns out
the ATMs can be locked up and only give me 66 euros per day, whether I'm a business or
an individual like what happened in Greece a few years ago, right?
And the reality is that once that becomes a strong enough kind of realization for people,
I think they will all just migrate to mathematically guaranteed contracts because why wouldn't
you?
So in the world of mathematically guaranteed contracts, kind of how do we, and cryptographically,
secured and decentralized infrastructure powered, how do we evolve into that world?
Well, at the end of the day, it comes down to consensus, right?
It comes down to a collection of independent nodes, a collection of
provably independent computing systems, arriving at the same conclusion impartially.
That conclusion might be the transaction is valid between address A and address B.
Address A has one Bitcoin, wants to send it to address B and address B has one Bitcoin, right?
So that's one degree of validation.
It has certain cryptographic primitives that are used certain levels of cryptography,
encryption, and other methods that basically provide clarity and those guarantees.
But fundamentally, it's this level of consensus
that multiple independent computing systems
came to the same conclusion, verify that conclusion,
and created a sense of finality, created a final state
that is globally considered to be the state of a transaction.
And that is how it's achieved, right?
So it's achieved by users looking at these mathematical contract systems and saying, you
know, if I have money in a bank, there's one single person who controls that money, that's
the bank.
They could choose to give me my money or choose not to give me my money.
And that's great.
But maybe there's a percentage of what I own that I want to put into another system,
where there's thousands of independent computing systems that are promising me, you know, with
the help of cryptographic primitives, that I will be able to always have access to this.
Whatever this is, whatever this, you know, token is, I will at least, or at the very least, I will
always have unfettered, complete control and access to it.
So that's one example.
Another example is, hey, we have a hybrid smart contract for something like crop insurance.
I, as the user, evaluate where this smart contract runs.
Oh, wow, this smart contract runs on Ethereum.
Great. evaluate where this smart contract runs. Oh, wow, this smart contract runs on Ethereum. Great, thousands of nodes, lots of computation,
all security, hash power, so on and so on.
Then I look at, oh, well, what triggers the contract?
Oh, there's this Oracle network.
Okay, it's composed of 25 nodes or 15 nodes,
gets data from five different weather stations.
You know, I'm comfortable with that.
I have a certain level of comfort
with that hybrid smart contract and its ability to provide me consensus about the transaction
once the contract knows what's happened. And I'm comfortable with the consensus around
the event that controls the contract, right? Because once again, that event is what determines
what happens with the contract. And if the contract is super well-written, it doesn't matter if the event isn't reliable.
Right.
So now I've made this determination.
I've gotten all this clear transparent information about this system that combines the contract
code with a decentralized Oracle network.
And I've made my decision to participate in this decentralized insurance kind of crop insurance policy. I've sent
the Bitcoin or the stablecoin or whatever I have on my on my Android phone and
Then time goes by and let's say it doesn't rain loan behold the smart contract returns the
The relevant amount from the policy back to me. I continue my life as a farmer. And by the way, the fact
that that happened contributes reputation and contributes proof back to both the contract
as something that can prove to other people that it has settled. And the Oracle network
as something that can prove that it has properly assessed reality or properly triggered a contract.
And this is where there's one of many network effects where the more that smart contracts
and Oracle networks are used, they themselves generate this immutable, unchained data that
proves their value and reliability.
And improving more and more of that in more and more kind of use cases and more and more variants of the same contract,
they arrive at a greater body of proof that they like, I am the decentralized, the decentralized insurance contract for crop insurance used by a million users. And my failure rate is not
existing to really low.
And here's my Oracle network.
And by the way, it's also settled
a million of these.
And so it's not the logo, right?
It's not, hey, what a nice logo
you have on top of a building
above a train terminal or something.
It's much more, hey, there's a million people, there's
a million separate contracts that got settled correctly.
I have all the proof that I could ever need about that.
And it's not something that's very easy to game, right?
Because real value was at stake, real value was moved around.
And so I think once again, the transparency aspect comes in where you're able to prove that
the cryptographically enforced contracts are better.
That said, you can still integrate the traditional banks as long as you create a data feed on
the amount of marble that's included.
So if that's valuable to you in terms of reputation, you can still integrate the Neymar marble that and the size of the logo.
We could still keep the banks around.
I think we will.
I think what will happen with the banks and all the insurance companies, by the way,
is not that they'll just die or something.
I think it'll be just like the internet.
There'll be some of them that adopt this and some of them that don't and some of them
that do it faster, some of them that do it slower. And that's an economic decision that they'll make. I think
their whole question is, is this a foregone conclusion? I mean, I think, you know, my answer,
my answer is yes, this is definitely going to be happening. I think they still have a question
of, you know, is this going to change my industry? But I'm seeing a definite shift in people's understanding. And I think that
shift is going to accelerate rapidly as one or two of them of their competitors through
their hat in the smart contract ring and say, well, I have smart contracts. I guarantee
my outcomes to you. What do they do for you? You know, it's risky, just use mine.
And the second some of them start losing business because of that,
they're gonna move very quickly, because that's what all of their compensation structures
and their goal planning structures are based around.
They're based around what is losing us business or getting us business.
Yeah, it's fascinating organizationally though to think about banks.
They're very old school and their ability to move quickly.
It's questionable to me.
I just look at basic online banking.
Like how good banks are creating a frictionalist online experience and I
and I think they're not very good.
And so that speaks to the kind of people who are in leadership positions at banks,
the kind of people that hire, the kind of culture there is.
So I do wonder if banks will, from inside,
revolutionize themselves to include smart contracts,
or whether totally new competitors will have to emerge
that basically create new kinds of banks.
What is the company's square?
I think it comes up out of nowhere really with cash app and they have Bitcoin on cash app
whether they will start incorporating smart contracts and they will revolutionize the
whole banking industry or whether Bank of America will revolutionize
themselves from within. I'm skeptical on Bank of America, but you never know.
It's in general I'm fascinated by how big organizations, whether it's Google
Microsoft or Bank of America, pivot hard in a world that's quickly changing.
I think that takes bold leadership and a lot of
firing and a lot of pain and a lot of meetings where the one asshole brings up the first principles
idea that you know what the ways we've been doing stuff in the past require you know when you
just throw that out and do stuff totally differently. I know a lot of those assholes in a lot of these different industries.
First of all, I think they're getting listened to more. Second of all, I think all of these places
as I look at it more and more, I think they have a fundamental line of business
that they try to protect. Then everybody's compensation and everybody's metrics and goals is focused around that line of business.
So the second that
things begin to impact that,
then everybody will be in a senior meeting.
And that asshole will be quite listened to because he will have the only thoughtful explanation as to why this is happening.
How things will evolve from there, I actually don't know
because that hasn't been the case yet.
But my thinking is that there will be people who
don't want to cannibalize certain parts of their business
or don't want to change certain parts of their business.
And then there will be people who say, look,
I think this is how the world's going to work.
We're going to make a very, very heavy
kind of set of commitments to put resources towards this.
I already see that with a few banks
working on various blockchain-based systems.
But granted, they've been working on those for years.
So I think all of this comes down to these
kind of quarterly earnings calls
where somebody asks them,
hey, you
know, I saw that bank over there, launched a blockchain bond or a smart contract derivative
platform. And I also saw that they made, you know, $10 billion in revenues or $10 billion
in volume or whatever it is from that. What's your plan? Right? On the earnings call. And
I promise you, by the next earnings call, there's a plan. And then the question on the earnings call. And I promise you by the next earnings call, there's a plan.
And then the question on the next one is,
when's the plan gonna happen?
And then by the next earnings call,
it's a plan that's happening.
And that's what these people are sensitive to.
That's what these organizations are structured around.
It's not completely economically disconnected, right?
They have this core business, they want to protect it.
I understand that idea, but I think the problem with that is sometimes it requires,
it requires this myopic focus, right, and that's what all the innovation stuff is about.
Every time somebody had a core identity is about innovation, they're trying to sidestep this,
but once again, the incentives to maintain
whatever the core business is so strong that the innovation people, even though they are
there, I think they get a phone call and go like, what are we doing for this? And the
ones that actually did good work and got ready to do something for this have done their employer and their organization a very positive service
whereas the ones that aren't ready, I mean, they'll make up something
and maybe they're really smart and they'll get it together, I don't know.
Can we talk about tokens a little bit?
Generally speaking, there's been a meteor rise of a bunch of different tokens
who could just talk about Bitcoin and Ethereum as examples.
Bitcoin, I think, costs $60,000 in value.
What are your thoughts in general on this rise?
What's the future of Bitcoin?
What's the future of Ethereum?
There's the total value locked metric that I think generalizes the different kind of value of these tokens.
What is the future value and impact of cryptocurrency look like if we look through the lens of these
tokens?
I think valuing all these tokens and determining that isn't something I'm particularly
great at.
I haven't spent a lot of time on that
I've spent the majority vast majority of my time on building these systems and
architecting them and getting them to fruition and getting them to a place where they operate properly on both the technical and the crypto economic and in every other and in every other sense.
I think with Bitcoin there is a
certain conception of non-governmental fiat money that Bitcoin is
really the first creator of, right? So there's this very powerful idea called
fiat money. It's basically more or less a kind of 40-year experiment. I think
on August 15th of this year is maybe I think even the 40th anniversary. You know
government can say, hey, I have a currency and it's worth something and here it is.
In terms of the way that governments have stopped that in the past, as if anyone tries to make another fiat currency in their country, they immediately shut it down.
Right? They immediately say, hey, this is really bad.
You've done something really bad. It's time for you to stop. Don't do it anymore.
And it stops, right?
That's been the history of non-governmental fiat currency.
Bitcoin is really due to its decentralized nature,
the first, and possibly in some cases,
in many people's minds, they still,
the only true non-governmental fiat currency.
Now, how powerful is non-governmental fiat currency. Now how powerful is non-governmental fiat currency?
I have no idea, right?
This is why so, it's really as powerful as the ideas
that people ascribe to it, right?
So let's say people start saying,
right now people are saying,
hey, it's internet money.
It's the money of the internet. Okay, great.
What's that worth?
I don't know.
It's probably worth a lot.
I have no idea what it's worth.
But it's as an idea, as a concept, to underpin the fiat money,
the let there be aspect of fiat and of Bitcoin,
you basically look at it and you say, yeah, internet money.
Okay, that could be worth whatever, you know, 60,000, 600,000.
Great question, right?
There are other versions of the world, right?
Where people say, you know, there are countries that don't have
a good fiat currency, and I see a lot of people using Bitcoin.
So Bitcoin isn't internet money.
It's countries without a good internet money. It's
Countries without a good currency money. So all the countries without a good currency not now use Bitcoin and you know let there be
Bitcoin as this right as this conception of Bitcoin. What's the value of that? I don't know That's a great question probably probably huge amount of value
Then there's then there's a further conception of Bitcoin
as some digital gold.
There's a scarcity dynamic.
There's all these other kinds of dynamics.
What is a portable version of digital gold
with some kind of built-in, scarcity worth,
artificially created scarcity? What's that worth? artificially created scarcity.
What's that worth?
I don't know, that's a great question.
I haven't done the analysis on that as the point
might be worth a lot.
What is it all worth if all three of these things
flow into the same fiat kind of,
let there be Bitcoin as these three things,
conception of Bitcoin?
I don't know that's where, I also know that's that's worth but could be worth a huge amount
So I I think it's it's not I don't think it's I personally don't think it's super important what I think it's worth or what many other people think
It's worth I don't think that's that's really that important. I think what's probably important is understanding
what the societal conception of Bitcoin is,
and how does that societal conception evolve over time? And that interestingly enough doesn't
just depend on, you know, you or me, or the people who made Bitcoin or anything else, it actually
depends on current events. So for example, if people suddenly say,
I'm more and more worried about Fiat currency.
I'm more and more worried that governmental Fiat,
even if it's the most reliable version of that,
is not as good as I thought it was.
Maybe I should go on the PayPal app
and maybe I should get some Bitcoin just in case.
What's the world where Bitcoin is a certain percentage of everyone's ownership as a hedge against governmental fiat money not being so good,
haven't done the analysis, but another example right here's this conception, that's the conception.
So when I look at Bitcoin, what I see is a lot of these fascinating conceptions
of what the fiat let there be value of Bitcoin is.
By the way, all of them could be true.
Maybe some of them are true,
maybe some of them aren't true.
And the fascinating thing is that I've seen
this conception change, right?
So when I started in the Bitcoin space,
the conception was micro payments. The cost of Bitcoin is space, the conception was micro payments.
The cost of Bitcoin is low.
We'll have micro payments.
Micro payments are wonderful for machine-to-machine.
Transactions, micro payments are wonderful.
The emerging market, and that's fine.
That was one conception of Bitcoin as,
let there be Bitcoin as micro payments platform.
But then the value rose and things changed.
There was enough expansion in certain ways.
And now the conception has evolved
into this other conception.
But at the end of the day,
I think governments have a very clear set of steps
for directing the public's conception of their fiat, right?
They say our fiat is worth this, for these reasons.
Bitcoin doesn't have that.
Bitcoin doesn't have an official Bitcoin spokesperson
that goes out and says, the non-governmental money
called Bitcoin, the non-governmental fiat money called Bitcoin
has value on the basis of this, this, this, and this.
Here's our fiscal budget, here's our future plans.
Our money will continue to be safe and secure and reliable. So what that whole creates is a whole that
we all fill. We all basically come to some vague group understanding that Bitcoin is worth because it is tied to,
let's say,
all non-governmental fiat money comes into question. Everybody doubts it,
possibly due to inflation.
And everybody says, you know, this is nice,
but I'd like to keep 10, 20% of my wealth
in non-governmental fiat,
just in case, what are those numbers?
I mean, if that happens, I'm guessing you can add a few zeros.
I like how you say, I haven't done the analysis
as if I'm sure a lot of people have done,
quote unquote, analysis, but it's still speculation.
Nobody can predict the future, especially when so much of it has to do with a large number
of people holding an idea in their mind as to the importance of a particular technology
like Bitcoin.
There's a lot of excitement by its possibilities, but the number of zeros you add is an open
question, and nobody can do a perfect analysis except whoever created
this simulation.
Let me ask you this question.
Who is Satoshi Nakamoto?
There's quite a few people who suggest that person is you.
So is it you? No. Who do you think it could be? I don't know who it is. I think if I had to
guess it's probably a group of people, some of which might not even be around anymore. You know,
obviously I'm very grateful to if this is a singular or a group of people for kicking off this
entire industry and making this amazing change in the world,
that I have the privilege and luxury
of being part of in some small way and the work that I do.
I think also this kind of focus on who is Satoshi
or who is Satoshi shouldn't, in my opinion, matter so much
because regardless of who it is,
that in my opinion should have no substantial significant
effect or bearing on the functioning or the value or the use or the security of the Bitcoin
system. So I think whoever it is, they're probably better off not making that public and I think
beyond that, whoever it turned out to be shouldn't matter,
because it has nothing to do with how the system is made useful or secure or anything else.
And so I think that's the point of view that I have.
Now, if you were Satoshi Nakamura, would you tell me?
Because you said they shouldn't whoever's Satoshi is, you
should keep that private. So would you tell it to me? I know.
We're in some kind of weird like thought experiment here. If I was this guy, let me think
about this, which I'm not, by the way, I am not this person. But if you were, would you say it?
I think probably not. I don't see the, I think that they would cause a lot of distraction and a lot of weird stuff.
And so realistically, I don't think it would help anybody or even the person who discloses it,
but just to be clear, I am not.
And whoever it is, I think they haven't said anything because they don't want the attention
and they don't want the distraction and they don't want all the problems from this.
And that makes sense to me conceptually.
It's fascinating to think if they're still out there and part of the Bitcoin, the cryptocurrency
community. And it is inspiring to think that if they're out there, that they're not revealing their identity
because it will be a distraction.
That's kind of inspiring that people are like that, just like George Washington, relinquishing
powers inspiring, because it's ultimately about the progress of the community, and
that's some kind of ego-driven attention scheme.
Again, very inspiring.
The humans that they're best are inspiring.
What do you think about the certainty that people in the Bitcoin
Maximus community have about this particular piece of technology, Bitcoin?
Is there something interesting that you think that you might want to say about this community,
or is it just is what it is? I think at the end of the day results speak for themselves, and
Bitcoin has had an amazing impact on our industry and has had an amazing impact on the world. And I
think, you know, the result is still that Bitcoin
is very widely adopted and driving the adoption
of our industry in many ways.
So I think it's very difficult for people to say that,
you know, Bitcoin maximalists don't have something
that they can latch onto and say,
hey, there's something very real here.
I think there's been decisions made by the Bitcoin community
and the people who made the Bitcoin protocol to focus it on Bitcoin and to focus it on the kind of storing of the
ledger of Bitcoin and the information about Bitcoin and the transaction of Bitcoin and
to focus on securing that.
And I understand why that decision was made to a certain degree, right?
It was about focus.
It was about getting something worthwhile, right?
Without adding additional features and additional risk.
And that decision is a decision that was made
and has the benefits of focus and the benefits
of a certain amount of security and a certain amount
of guarantees around Bitcoin and what that is and the value of that.
And then it has certain limitations, you know, as a consequence of doing less or having the
system hold data that isn't related to Bitcoin or not having the system hold contracts,
contractual outcomes or smart contract code. So I think it's just kind of a decision, right?
And I understand why they're excited and I'm very excited. I started in this industry going
a Bitcoin meetups and I met a lot of fantastic people, libertarian people that wanted to see the world
work differently and shared a lot of my beliefs and a lot of my points of view. And so, you know,
anyone who's been in the industry as long as I have, has had
to come from the Bitcoin ecosystem by virtue of kind of starting out that early. So I have
an unbelievable amount of respect and admiration and gratitude for Bitcoin and that it exists
and everything that it's done and that it birthed this industry. There's absolutely no doubt
about that. You know, at the same time, whatever design decisions people make
are the design decisions they make.
And so if you've made a design decision
that this ledger and this thing will be about Bitcoin,
it won't be about color coins,
it won't be about opportunity bites,
it won't be about these other kind of nuances
that you don't want this to be about.
Then that's fine.
That's fine and that's a logical decision
that's called focus.
And focus has a lot of value
and a lot of great technology products
have focused on something and done that.
And then there's a lot of smart people around Bitcoin
building kind of additional systems
that anchor their security within Bitcoin.
And I think that's an interesting approach that could that could bear fruit.
I think it'll eventually require an interaction with a Bitcoin protocol in more advanced ways.
And then there will be another question of, you know, what is the design decision for
Bitcoin?
Is it that Bitcoin will be just about the Bitcoin ledger or
this Bitcoin want to evolve into an anchor for all these other systems and maybe create
additional data, you know, kind of more data on chain on the Bitcoin blockchain related
to that. So I'm excited to see how that evolves, but until then, kind of results
speak for themselves, and the results that Bitcoin has achieved for our industry and for
itself as, you know, kind of the dominant cryptocurrency and the conception of our industry
that people interact with first is obviously very important and something that I think
really everybody in our industry is grateful for, right? Because without Bitcoin, where would our industry be?
And that's obviously something that we can't forget.
What are your thoughts about Ethereum in this, in the chain link distributed Oracle Network
world?
Is it competition?
Is it collaboration?
Is it complementary technology?
What do you think about Ethereum?
How much do you think about Ethereum?
What role does it have?
Yeah, I think about a lot.
I think it's complete, we're completely complimentary.
So there's no competitive dynamics in my opinion.
We are completely collaborative and complimentary
with Ethereum and all other blockchains
and all other layer twos that operate a contract.
So we do not seek to operate a smart contract.
We seek to augment and enable smart contracts
to go further in what they're able to do.
In fact, Oracle networks have some value,
but they don't have nearly as much value in what they do
if there isn't a mission critical system
like a smart contract that needs their data.
So we've made our own explicit design decisions that are on and created our own focus around guaranteeing that smart contracts can go further.
We've already done that, right?
Decentralized finance, the rate at which we put data is to a degree, the rate at which certain decentralized financial markets grow.
And as we put more data,
we see more financial products go live,
gaming, we provide VRF.
So we have this kind of focus
and it's a very useful, useful and valuable,
kind of valuable for our industry focus.
At the end of the day,
I think that smart contract platforms like Ethereum
made a different set of design decisions from Bitcoin
and others, and they focused on creating the smart contract capability, and they wanted
that functionality to exist.
And I think since then, there's been a number of people that try to improve on that or
try to make variants of that.
From our point of view, we want to support smart contracts in all of
their variations and in all of their use cases. So one of the things that I personally like
about Chainlink is their ability or Chainlink's ability, the Chainlink network's ability to
be useful to many different chains and across many different use cases. I'm personally,
you know, a fan of Ethereum Ethereum has done a huge amount for our industry as well. Ethereum took us from a world where it literally took months
to make a new smart contract by being forced to code it into a protocol. You had to go to the
protocol developers and you had to say, Hey, I need a DEX or I need some kind of smart contract,
put it in the protocol itself, put it in the actual blockchain, mining, and
kind of block generation, transaction generation protocol.
That would take months or sometimes even over a year.
That was a horrible experience, and obviously, very few people wanted to participate in that,
and so very few people made smart contracts, which I was not a fan of, right?
And then Ethereum came along and really did a lot of innovative things and introduced
this approach, to scriptable
smart contracts where you could script all of these different conditions.
And I found that fascinating.
Before Ethereum, I found that fascinating once Ethereum arrived, I found that fascinating
after Ethereum launched, and I still find it fascinating.
And I'm also very grateful to the Italian and the Ethereum community and all the core
developers there for taking our industry a step further.
So I think they absolutely deserve a huge amount of credit for taking our industry from,
it takes months to make a really small smart contract to it takes weeks to make a relatively
secure, relatively advanced piece of on-chain code that anybody can script and people can
do audits on. And, you know, that's an unbelievable leap forward for our industry, and I'm genuinely
grateful to them for that.
I think the next step in line with our body of work is how does that scriptable on-chain
code become more advanced in its interaction with all of the systems and events in the real
world, which is in my opinion, the final missing piece of the puzzle, right?
So my body of work, the body of work that I'm involved in would not be where it is right
now without Bitcoin by any measure.
It wouldn't even be where it is now without Ethereum and the growth in smart contract development
that they've created. And now what what I think is going to happen next is there will be a lot of different
smart contract platforms, a lot of different layer twos.
Some of them will be private for enterprise, some of them will be public.
There will be some public winners in certain geographies for maybe
regulation reasons, maybe other reasons.
There will be other public winners, you know, the larger internet
and there will be a number of different people building smart contracts in different languages.
We are excited and, you know, I am excited and the chain link community is excited and
basically there's a lot of, I mean, for lack of a better word excitement in seeing our industry graduate to providing more use cases, more usable hybrid smart contracts,
right? Because once again, it's absolutely amazing that Bitcoin created non-governmental
fiat money. It's an unbelievable innovation and invented decentralized infrastructure
and birth our industry. It's an unbelievably great achievement and amazing achievement
that we now have
scriptable smart contracts through something like Ethereum. Once again, monumental achievement
in my opinion. Once again, we still need to look to the future. We need to look to how do we take
that decentralized infrastructure concepts that Bitcoin initially put forward, that Ethereum then
improved upon and created into these scriptable smart contract formats.
And how do we expand that into the world of real world outcomes to change the global financial industry,
the global trade industry, the global data marketplace industry, you know, the and many other global industries.
You mentioned results speak for themselves and how design decisions have consequences. The
chain link community have come up with a lot of brilliant designs. So how do you
think through the design choices that you're facing where you can't predict the
future but you're trying to create a better future? Is there something low level introspective advice that you can
give or describe as to how you think through those decisions or high level, how you think
about those decisions?
Sure, absolutely. I think that's a great question. And I think that actually gets to the core
of what the ChainLick network is supposed to achieve.
We are supposed to achieve a maximally flexible system. So once again, this is the big
difference between chain link and Oracle networks in general and blockchains in my opinion.
Blockchains do not seek to be maximally flexible, right? They say, here's my block size.
Here's the transaction types you can, you can put in those blocks.
Here's the contract language I have. Here's, here's kind of my blockchain system, right?
Here's the, here's the few structure for those blocks. They're going to keep getting, you know, kind of composed transactions. They're going to keep putting the blocks, blocks will get connected and it'll continue, right?
And that's a very focused type of system. And that's great. And that makes sense because it's focused
on creating security for that category of on-chain activity,
which is once again a critical, critical part
of building a highly transparent system
and something that Chainlink enables
and doesn't compete with and just enables to do more.
Oracle networks conversely have to interact
with all the world's data and provide all
the services that blockchains don't provide.
So there's kind of a spectrum.
On one end of the spectrum, you have blockchains that are highly secure, highly reliable,
highly tamper-proof, highly transparent, but are not very feature rich.
For example, they cannot talk to an API.
Many of them can generate randomness.
They cannot do some kind of privacy
preserving computation.
So they're very secure, and they're
these kind of data structures and smart contract platforms
to hold on chain code that can define conditions,
receive value back out under conditions
and create transparency around all that,
which makes perfect sense.
And then there's oracles and oracle networks.
That is all the world's data, right?
We're talking about taking all the world's data and making it consumable for all the
world's use cases that have trust issues.
So the amount of variability there is absolutely massive, right?
It's like the decentralized oracle network and the conditions that that decentralized
Oracle network needs to meet is going to vary very widely from an insurance contract to
a lending contract to an ad network contract to the data sales contract that we discussed
to any number of other smart contracts.
So really the ability of a decentralized Oracle network
to flexibly address all of those requirements
is what's necessary.
So flexibility is the goal,
whereas with on-chain, like Bitcoin,
flexibility is the enemy,
in a sense that you want security,
that you want to focus there, and in that kind of world
design decisions have huge consequences.
And then if you look at the distributive Oracle network side, you want to remove the restrictions
of design choices.
You want to provide maximum flexibility then.
So it's a completely separate kind of design framework.
It's a slightly different problem, right?
Because we're not trying to define transaction types
fitting into blocks on a certain timeline
of those blocks being generated.
We're trying to say, hey, there's this world of services
or this world of data that's not very deterministic,
but it's unbelievably useful to these smart contracts
over here.
And actually, they need it to even exist. And we really want them to exist. Because once they exist but it's unbelievably useful to these smart contracts over here. And actually, they needed to even exist.
And we really want them to exist because once they exist, it's going to completely redefine
what our whole industry is known for, right?
And define NFTs are not even the tip of the iceberg.
They're like, they're like the snow coming off the top of the iceberg.
And so our goal is to create a framework and an infrastructure and a software that allows
people to compose
decentralized Oracle networks.
So initially, you can compose a decentralized Oracle network
of seven nodes that goes to three data sources
to trigger your contract worth a million dollars.
And that's where you could start.
And then let's say your smart contract,
your defy smart contract, goes to a billion dollars.
Well, then you need to make some changes, right?
You need to go from seven nodes to 15 or maybe 31 nodes and you need to go from three data
sources to five or seven and you maybe need to create some kind of what we call circuit
breakers and some other checks and you need to make sure that the decentralized Oracle
network comes to consensus around those checks because now the decentralized Oracle network isn't controlling a million dollars controlling a billion dollars and we have decentralized Oracle networks that control well over a billion dollars multiple billions of dollars.
And we see them growing and getting more advanced data sources and more advanced features.
And then if somebody else comes and says well, you know, I don't really want to make a DeFi product. I want to make crop insurance. And I have a completely different set of conditions.
I want this method of consensus and I want data to be aggregated in this way, but not
the way that you do for decentralized financial products.
I mean, what are we supposed to tell them?
We're supposed to tell them, no, you know, our decentralized Oracle network can't let
you do that.
And you're, you know, you can go and wait another five years until somebody builds it
for you.
That's not what we want to do.
What we want to do is be able to say, absolutely,
here's an example of how somebody else
made a decentralized Oracle network
for weather insurance, right?
Here's a template.
Change that template, evolve it to meet your needs.
And then someone else comes and says,
hey, I have some some other use case in gaming, right? I want to make NFTs related to real
world sports events or I want to do whatever I want to do with with some kind of sports related
data. Wonderful. Here's the framework. Here are your risk dynamics. Here's a collection
of node operators. Here's a set of pre-integrated data sources,
here's a reputation system to assess the quality of your ensemble of nodes, here's a way to scale that up as the value in your contract scales,
here's all the tools that you need to build this contract. And what we actually see now as we, as there are multiple types of
computations and data, data sources that are provided by different decentralized Oracle
networks, of which there are now hundreds. We now see that a single hybrid smart contract
might use multiple decentralized Oracle networks. So there might be a hybrid smart contract
that uses a price data, decentralized Oracle network, a proof of reserve,
Oracle network, a randomness Oracle network.
And I think we're going to continue to see this dynamic
that more and more advanced contracts
compose various decentralized Oracle networks
into more advanced use cases.
And this is the dynamic that we're focused on enabling.
And I think it's actually a very virtuous cycle for everybody because the more of these
hybrid smart contracts we enable on Ethereum and other blockchains, the more our industry
provides real world outcomes to the larger world, which is at the end of the day what I think
everybody in our industry wants. Everybody in our industry wants hybrid smart contracts to become the way that global finance
works, global trade works, global insurance products work because they will inherently
need both a blockchain on which the contract itself lives and an Oracle network that
powers all of the other interactions, right? As a developer, how would you recommend somebody listening to this, but also me,
to get started with smart contracts and to get started with hybrid smart contracts?
Well, well for hybrid smart contracts, I'm going to have to do some kind of shameless
promotion.
Please, let me twist your arm.
Thank you.
I think you can go to our YouTube.
We have a number of developer tutorials.
Chainlink YouTube.
Yeah, Chainlink.
I think you just heard Chainlink on YouTube.
You should find it.
Beyond that, we recently had a hackathon.
We had a huge amount of very, very kind of advanced hybrid smart contracts getting built.
To elaborate on that, you had a hackathon.
Is that something that people can follow along like a video or this web page traces of
what happened or is there future actual hackathons that people could literally participate?
There's plenty of more hackathons coming up. We want to enable as many developers in Web3 and Web2
to build hybrid smart contracts as a way to redefine our industry
and kind of make all of these smart contracts come to life.
There are definitely going to be more hackathons
so people should go and preregister a register
on a list to get involved in that.
That's a great resource where we have a lot of speakers
and a lot of educational tools.
They happen over a course of weeks, not days. So there's a long time for
people to work on these things at the speed that they find comfortable. Two questions. One, is
there kind of a hello world entry point for a high-risk mark contracts and two on the hackathon
side? Like, what kind of stuff do you see people building at first just kind of getting their feet wet like what in terms of the kind of applications
that could be enabled.
I mean, there's there's unbelievable things that that that we see people building.
I think how to get your feet wet.
I think the hello world is probably defy because it's pretty straight forward and there's
a large amount of data sources that we already have putting data on chain on testnet,
which is the test environment in which people would build.
So I think DeFi is probably to a certain degree
the most exciting for certain people
and pretty expansive in terms of the tutorials
and the amount of contracts to see how people have already built it.
I think beyond that, we see people building amazing things
at these hackathons.
And the previous hackathon, we saw somebody build a smart contract that allows someone to rent out their Tesla,
right? So it allows the Tesla API to give someone else access and rent out someone's Tesla on the
basis of a smart contract kind of coordinating payment, which was kind of amazing.
The more recent hackathon we saw something called Debridge, which is a cross-chain solution
that loses Oracle networks to confirm data on different chains.
So I think the things that people build will just become expansive and varied in ways
that I can't even imagine.
But I think this recent hackathon saw a huge, huge list of different, different kind of
winners and different categories.
And there's so many different categories.
We even have a GovTech category and a whole bunch of things.
If people want to see what's possible, they can go look at the winners.
I think that's probably a good idea.
Yeah, that'll be on the side of the hackathon.
There's a blog related to that. And we're going to have more of these.
Once again, our explicit goal is to take our industry into this world of hybrid smart
contracts, which just benefits everybody.
It makes more on chain activity.
It helps provide real world value to the average person from all of this infrastructure period.
And at the end of the day, I think that it just redefines what our industry is about through use cases,
right? Because if you only learn through our industry from the point of view of a single use case,
like the NFT use case or some other use case, that's what our industry is about. And the more of
these use cases that people
can make available to the average person or to the fintech world or to the insurance
world or wherever, the faster our industry will not just be about bitcoins or tokens,
it will be about changing global finance, changing global insurance, changing global trade.
And that's the change in the world that I and a lot of other people in this
industry I think got into this for.
Now it's funny you've mentioned about you've had a lot of kind words to say about Bitcoin
and Ethereum as important technology that paved the way for the future and you somehow did
not mention one of the most profound piece of technology which is Doshcoin. What are your thoughts about this particular
revolutionary technology and what are your thoughts about Doshcoin going to the moon to Mars
and outside of the solar system?
I think Doshcoin is a very interesting kind of
probably closer to a social experiment than anything else.
Isn't everything a social experiment? Yeah, I guess that's fair to a social experiment than anything else. Isn't everything a social experiment?
Yeah, I guess that's fair to a degree.
Yeah.
I think it's fascinating how that's evolved.
I think the people that made it with certain goals in mind
and then it's kind of taken on a life of its own.
I don't fully understand exactly why it's
taken on a life of its own at this point.
I once again, I don't spend too much time thinking about different tokens and how they're
evolving.
I'm much more focused on the launching and the technology around trust and all those
kinds of ideas.
But I think one of the fascinating things about Doshcoin is how technology that leverages social dynamics, that
technology's ability to utilize fun and memes to spread.
I think it's really interesting.
I don't think it should be discounted as a, as if I think I tweeted today something about the fundamental force field of fun.
That fun has an effect on the space time.
So general relativity describes how mass and energy can curve space time.
And I was just giving an example that when life is fun, it seems short, when life is not
fun, it seems very long.
So fun has a very
similar effect on space time, like in curved space time. In that same sense, there is a power to the
meme, and I think Doshcoin illustrates that. I think Elon is an example of somebody that uses
Doshcoin, I don't know his philosophy, in particular, in this aspect, but he does use it effectively to excite the
world in a fun way about the possibilities of future technologies like cryptocurrency.
I think the Bitcoin world is very serious right now.
In Moose spoken to about Bitcoin maximalists, there is very little space for fun and joking in the Bitcoin world,
but there's still a little bit of fun and humor left in the
Dorscht coin world. In that sense, I think it's exceptionally
powerful to inspire, to excite, to, to be able to talk about
stuff without, without the seriousness of financial impact that now certain cryptocurrencies have
like Bitcoin.
So I keep an eye on, I've previously mentioned that Dogecoin I think is a fascinating piece
of technology because I do think cryptocurrencies much bigger than the technology that you focus on.
There is also social element that you also spoke to.
That's I think not quite yet understood and it's fascinating to watch, especially as
a co-volves with the different tools on the internet, different social networks, social
network mechanisms on the Internet. So I'm a huge supporter
of Dogecoin because I'm a huge supporter of fun.
I'm fascinated to see how to work out.
You think I'll go to the moon? You think it'll be the first cryptocurrency to land on
the moon? I couldn't say. haven't I haven't done the analysis.
As I said before, I haven't done the analysis.
Oh, yeah.
No matter what I do, hope we get humans back on the moon and hopefully get
humans on Mars soon.
Dogecoin Bitcoin or not.
Let me ask you about books and movies. What books and movies in your
life long ago when you were a baby surge or today had an impact on you. Maybe you would
recommend to others and maybe what ideas you took away from those books, movies,
coloring books, children's books, blogs, whatever. Yeah, yeah, sure. So I think one of the things that
had a very big impact on me were Plato's dialogues and particularly protagonist and gorgeous as
some of the two initial ones. I think what Plato's dialogues
do very well is they give people a clear picture of what dialogue looks like and what the assessment
of information probably should look like, right, and how the dissection and analysis of an idea is
very important and how it can actually be taken in either direction,
but at the end of the day, that the process of eliminating kind of this fuzzy thinking and
arriving at whether it's an external dialogue or an internal dialogue about accurate
picture of reality is actually very important.
And so I think I'm very lucky to have read the dialogues when I was in my early teenage
years and it had a very large impact on me because it kind of showed me that nobody knows
what they're talking about.
I would play out dialogues in my mind and I would engage in certain dialogues with different
people and what the platonic dialogues showed me was kind of how to tell
when someone has no clue. And a lot of people are very good at kind of,
say, they have a clue, right? Saying, like, here's how the world works. Here's what you should do
with your life. Here's what you should do with your time. Here's what you should do with your money.
Here's what you should do with your attention. Here's what you should do with all these things.
Here's what you should do with your money. Here's what you should do with your attention.
Here's what you would should do with all these things.
And I think the ability to evaluate information generally
is something that is surprisingly under taught.
I don't actually understand why there isn't a course
in like high schools or universities
that's just like, here is how you evaluate information.
Here's how you engage in external dialogue
and internal dialogue to arrive at an accurate
picture of reality rather than the picture of reality that other people want you to have
for their benefit most often.
And at the end of the day, I think that put me down a path to really try and understand.
Beyond that, I think biographies have had a very large impact on me.
Plutarchs, Greek and Roman lives, after I read Plato, I started reading a bunch of stuff, Greek stuff.
I was just like, these Greek guys, they really know how it is.
You know, they did this 2,000 years ago and they still got it right.
There's something here. It's kind of this like a theory of time around the value of intellectual ideas, right? If an intellectual idea has survived the test of time, it's much more valuable than the
intellectual idea that I just came up with 10 minutes ago, haven't told anybody and hasn't
gone up against all of the kind of rebuttals.
So what's your favorite, what would you say would be a most impactful biography that you've
come across?
I don't think it was those Greek or Roman biographies because they were very far away. I think that
probably one of the most impactful ones that I can remember recently is around Vanderbilt.
And so Vanderbilt was this guy who basically,
without that much of an education,
he would invent or work with people to make these steamboats
and then he had a lot of acumen around creating
certain monopolies, regardless of what was right or wasn't right.
And then fascinating enough, it all hinged on like a Supreme Court case that decided if monopolies were acceptable in the form of state-created
monopolies or not.
And if it was deemed that state-created monopolies were acceptable, he would have had a huge
problem this guy.
But it was deemed that state-created monopolies through these licenses for steamboat routes was not acceptable.
And that did do interesting things that unseated some kind of all-time landed gentry in
the Americas in like the 1830s and 40s.
And it basically made him right and he saw it before other people.
So I think Vanderbilt was a very interesting personality.
First of all, of all the biographies that I read
is somebody who really took the situation in hand
and kind of took action to achieve an outcome,
which I think was an
amazing result.
The fascinating thing, by the way, is, or an amazing way of looking at things.
The fascinating thing, by the way, is that the fairies now in New York Harbor are all
run as a public good.
So the fascinating thing is that the guy he focused on an industry and he worked on something that was so important that it ended up becoming a public good.
And I think that that's an interesting conception of how to look at this industry.
I think there's a lot of economics dynamics around this industry, but I think I might
say this somewhere else before, but really the success of someone in this industry
is whether they're able to make a Linux or HTTP or an HTTPS-like system that
lives on for a very long time and is essentially a kind of public good.
So success of an idea, even if that idea is originally sort of a capitalist idea about, and that's
grounded in financial benefit, success of it is if it becomes a public good. It is so universal,
it is so fundamental to the quality of life that it's a public good. It is deemed to be so valuable
that it should be a public good. Yeah, I think so. I think that's a pretty good definition of success.
You work on a body of work, and that body of work isn't just some commercial enterprise.
It's a body of work that whatever commercial aspects or economic incentive aspects it might have,
it eventually is so important that it becomes critical to how society functions. I'm personally
quite lucky and grateful to be in my opinion working on something like that with an amazing
team and an amazing community that seems to really very much care about this hybrid smart
contract, transparent world that a lot of people on the industry realistically, I think this
is why a lot of them signed up.
This is why I came into our industries.
It wasn't because Bitcoin was a picture of how the world could work in so many other ways.
And that picture of how the world could work in so many other ways attracted me a very
long time ago.
And I think that all of this stuff will eventually become a public good.
I think it will become so critical to how society's function internally and internationally
that just like they are systems, like the Federal Reserve, like global payment systems,
like all these types of things, I think eventually all of this technology will be baked into
these society, society critical systems. And if I and our community and the people I work
with and the body of work that we're working on can make some kind of contribution to that shift towards fair, economically fair, transparent society.
From my point of view, it's a very, very worthwhile body of work.
In terms of the show, you also mentioned the show.
One of the shows that I really seem to like more and more for some reason is Star Trek.
Not the old Star Trek.
I don't really get the old Star Trek. The special
effects aren't good enough. Star Trek, like the next generation and Voyager and Deep Space
9 and all those. I think whenever I happen to watch a Star Trek show again, I have a very
simple conception in my mind that I really didn't have whenever I saw it way back when it's that this is what the world
looks like if technology takes us towards a utopia, right? So I think there's this fascinating thing
where technology can take us towards a utopia or towards a dystopia. And in my mind, those kind of
three Star Trek shows are a picture of what human civilization looks like if everybody's technological
ambitions successfully take us towards a utopia, right?
Because in the Star Trek universe, you're not seeking money or you're not seeking safety
or you're not seeking, you're not really seeking anything for yourself.
Everybody within Maslow's hierarchy of needs has gotten
so many things for themselves that their goal is learning and discovering and or helping.
I think there is this conception of human life once the base or needs are satisfied.
At the end of the day, I think that's what technology generally can elevate all of
human civilization to, right?
It can elevate us to Star Trek world where if people want to invent, they can do that all
day and nothing else.
If people want to explore the stars, they can explore the stars, and they don't have to
worry about economic scarcity or any number of these other conceptions.
So I don't know what the most impactful on me shows have been, but for some reason recently
Star Trek in the newer variant, not the most new Star Trek shows.
Those shows are a little strange.
The kind of middle Star Trek universe where everybody is doing something with like a very
important purpose and nobody's thinking about,
where's my paycheck or where's my,
where's my whatever,
they're all kind of like,
we have to discover the formula to this,
to save the planet over there.
And literally every episode you're discovering
a formula to save a planet, right?
If some kind or a universe or ecosystem or whatever.
And you're looking at,
you're like,
this is a pretty good place to end up.
This is where we might want to end up.
So it gives you hope.
It's funny that we don't often think about,
I think it's very useful to think
about positive visions of the future
when we're trying to design technology.
There's a lot of sort of in public discourse,
a lot of people are thinking about kind of how everything goes wrong.
It's important to think about that sometimes, but in moderation, I think,
because there's not enough, in my little corner of artificial intelligence world,
people are very kind of fear-monger centered. There's a lot of discussions about how everything goes wrong.
Important to do, but it's also really important to talk about how things can go
right, because we ultimately want to guide the design of the systems to create,
to make things right. And I think with hope and optimism, not naïveness, but optimism,
you can actually create a better world. You have to think about a positive,
better world as you create, because then you can actually create it.
Yeah, I'm one of the people who thinks that having an optimistic view of the world is better
for design and creativity than having a pessimistic one.
It's hard to design when you're in fear.
Do you have advice for young people speaking of being excited about and hopeful about the
future world. Do you have advice for young people today in computer science world and software engineering world and crypto world,
but maybe in any world whatsoever for life?
How to pick a career or how to live life in general?
I think the thing that young people should do is not any one specific thing for any one specific young person.
I think what they should do is what they won't be able to do in the later stages of their life.
And the way, in my opinion, from a framework point of view to think about that is that the amount of obligations and the
amount of time that a person has seems to just diminish over time.
So the amount of free time they have.
So you started your job, you had a bunch of responsibilities, something with your partner
spouse, more responsibilities, kids, probably even more responsibilities, and soon enough, the time
that you have to educate yourself, to travel, to experience the world, however, create,
whatever creative endeavor you're interested in, slowly but surely disappears.
I think this is something that young people don't fully realize. They assume that the world as it is now and the amount of free time that they have to
travel, to educate themselves, to make new friends, to do all these things will somehow
maybe diminish by 10%.
It won't diminish by 10%.
It'll diminish by 90%.
And the 10% that you have, you'll be resting
to get back to work and get things done.
So what I think young people should do,
and this is why it's very different for each of them, right?
I can't tell young people,
hey, you should study philosophy, travel,
and start your own enterprise to achieve something
worthwhile in the world, right?
That might be something that's good for me
with my values and my kind of worldview, but
for other people, might be something else.
I think the way that they should conceptualize it is, imagine if over the next 10, 12 years,
the amount of choice that you had about what you could do was cut down by 90%.
What would you, and this is copying from this kind of Jeff Bezos regret minimization
framework?
In that framework, it's like, what would I regret not doing at 80?
And that's kind of meant to create this long-term view and make these decisions now that will get you
to a long-term future that you can look back on and be proud of your life, right?
What I think young people should do is they should say to themselves, look, if I never
get the chance to travel for as long as I live, assuming that after 25, after 27, after
29, that's the case.
How will I feel about that?
If I never get to start a company, after 25,
after I get married, after I have kids,
how will I feel about that?
And whatever they feel the worst about
is what they should do.
Whatever they feel like when they say to themselves,
you know, if I don't travel now, I will never travel.
And they feel horrible about that.
They just have an overwhelming fear and disgust at themselves in that type of state at 25, 27, 29.
That's what they should do. And they shouldn't listen to anybody else.
Um, I, I, I, I, let me put it to you this way.
If you're really smart, you're going to make it anyway.
There's a lot of people putting a lot of pressure on you because they're afraid whether you're
going to make it.
If you're really smart, you're going to make it anyway.
If you're not really smart, you're screwed anyway.
So the other way, just relax and use your time well to do the things you would most
regret not doing. That's really fascinating.
I wouldn't say relax. I would say very much cherish the free time, the discretionary time that you have
from the age of 18 to maybe 25. Because at 25, everyone's going to start looking at each other and asking,
what have I, like my friends have achieved?
I haven't achieved.
And then by the time you get to 30,
you're gonna look at each other again and go,
well, my friends have a family or a company or a PhD
or whatever, what do I have,
and the pressure will just increase.
And it'll crease so much that even if you want to go
and do the fun thing, it will not be fun because the pressure
of comparing yourself to your friends at 25 or your peers at 30 will be so great that you will
no longer, it will no longer be normal for you to be in a hostile at 30, you know, kind of like
living it up, right? If, if, and, and, and this is why I also can't tell you specifically what it is.
For me, it was getting an education in philosophy that was rigorous and in depth.
It was traveling and it was starting an enterprise that I thought were, that was worthwhile,
that I directed, that I could make into something great.
That's what it was for me.
For other people, it might be something with a band, it might be something with painting,
it might be something with a band, it might be something with painting, it might be an education. You, by the way, should also should not assume that your ability to get an education
will improve. All of those responsibilities will take away your ability to get an education.
So if you value having an education, if you value being a deeply educated, well-rounded person with a wide array of knowledge
on a wide array of topics, capitalism will force you to specialize. That's what it's good at.
It's going to take you. It's going to fashion you into a very specific tool for a very,
most people into a very specific set of tasks. If you want to have an education in something,
get it now. If you want to travel somewhere, travel there now. If you want to have an education in something, get it now. If you want to travel somewhere,
travel there now. If you want to, you know, do some kind of creative endeavor that you doubt whether
you'll have time for in the future, do it now. You won't have time for it in the future. You won't
have time to read philosophy books all day. Unfortunately, you won't have time to fly to, you know,
Italy and kind of hang out with people. If you're serious about your life,
you're going to get more responsibilities, you're going to get more stuff to do. So,
my advice to you is do not piss away this rare, unique discretionary time. If your friends
are, get new friends. Get smarter friends. Get people who are using the limited time they have better. Yeah
That's my advice. So it's just a quickly comment. It's brilliant
You know to reframe high school and undergraduate college education sometimes people want to quickly get it over with but
One thing I remember thinking and it's very true about high school is one of
the only times in your life you'll get a chance to truly get a broad education. You don't
often think of it that way, but it's a chance to really enjoy learning things that are
outside of the specialty that you'll eventually end up with. And that's how college education is. And on a more fun side, I played music, I did martial arts,
and we offline mentioned played video games. I find it fascinating and brilliant, what you said,
which is the world will not give you a chance to truly enjoy many of these things and truly get value from many of those
things once you get older. I find it exceptionally difficult to enjoy video games now.
There's so much stuff to do this, so much responsibility.
And I, at the time, when I played Elder Scrolls and Baldur's Gate and Diablo 2. And at the time, I thought maybe that was a waste of time.
But now looking back, I realize, because I always thought,
let me get the career first.
And then I'll have a chance to play video games.
That's the way I was thinking.
It was a waste of time because I should really
progress on the career.
And then I'll have time to play video games.
No, the reality is that was really fulfilling. Those are some of the happiest
travel
experiences of my life is me traveling to those virtual worlds and spending time in them.
And it was really fulfilling and they stayed with me for the rest of my life.
And I get to experience echoes of that when I play video games these days for an hour
here and hour there, like one hour a month or something like that.
But even those experiences as silly as they are that seem like a waste of time at the time
enjoying them fully, unapologetically. And in a framework, exactly, as you said, would I regret being the kind of person who've never played those video games?
And I can, for myself, honestly say that, yes, look, when I'm on my deathbed, I'm glad I-
Bollars Gate?
Yeah, I've been there.
Bollars Gate 2 and all those arena dagger fall more wind and all the
L just call games.
And yeah, the things that don't necessarily fit
into this kind of storyline of what a career
is supposed to be, travel and all those experiences that you make.
I think I just like to say one final quick thing on this.
I think this extends to really hard things as well.
It extends to the things you want to do.
But one of the best pieces advice, one of my mentors gave me early on in in my
career at around this time is that it will actually become harder to start a company
as you get older.
Yes.
Once again, because you have more responsibilities, you're responsible to your partner for some
kind of income to create a life together.
Once you have kids, you're responsible for an even greater income to create a life for
kids.
And startups do not generate income, right?
They take many, many years before anything happens.
People are getting evicted.
People are eating ramen noodles.
That is a thing.
That happens.
That will happen.
So, I'm not saying that you should do the fun things or the enjoyable things. I'm saying
the things that you would regret not doing, that you can uniquely do in the time span from 18
to 25. Which one of which is if you plan to have a family and start a family when you're 25,
you should start a company now.
You should not wait until a bunch of people depend on you for income to eat to start a
company.
The amount of pressure that will be on you at that point will be monumental.
You should start a company when nobody depends on you and you can sleep on the floor eating ramen noodles and still have a great time and show up with a lot of enthusiasm and be
excited. So I just mean whatever you want to really devote yourself to and and and really
do, don't put it off. Don't go to consulting or banking or any other industry and say,
I'm going to do this for three years and I'll get experience.
The only way you get experience is by doing something.
You go, you do it, you fail, you do it again and again
and again and again and again and then you have experience
and then you can do it right.
That's the only way experience happens.
There is no other way, short of mentorship.
If you're lucky to get mentorship,
99% of people don't get mentorship.
And even though we're talking about young people,
I feel like you're speaking to me.
As somebody who's spent the last two weeks sleeping on the floor, because there's no mattress,
and somebody who is single and somebody who's thinking about it doing a startup, I felt like
you're speaking to me as a, as a fellow young person.
Let me ask you about this whole life of ours to zoom out on the big philosophical question, the ridiculous question,
what do you think is the meaning of it all?
Do you think about this kind of stuff as you're creating all the technology as you're thinking
about this future?
Do you ever zoom out and think like, why?
Why are you surrogate striving?
Why are we the human species striving for the stars?
So I think it comes down to
You know whether people want to live in society
So if if people decide to be part of society they have a certain
Set of conditions that they decide to take part in, right?
So I think with this, with this comes down to is, uh, a lot of really involved
conversations, but if we assume people have free will and choice, we just kind of
make that blanket assumption, then the question starts to become, well, what
choices do we make?
And how do we live with those choices?
And I think probably the most fundamental choice is whether we exist in a society or we choose
to leave society. And there are people that do this, there are people that go live in the woods,
there are people that immigrate to other societies, and they make a choice. And as they enter those
other societies or they choose to leave society, leave society and go live in the woods, they
adopt a certain set of values, right? They adopt values that the society prescribes, they compromise their own values,
they define their own values, and they create a set of values for themselves, right?
I think
at the end of the day, if you're going to choose to live in society,
in addition to all the minimums of, you know, not throwing garbage on the floor and at the end of the day, if you're going to choose to live in society.
In addition to all the minimums of, you know, not throwing garbage on the floor and, you know, doing doing nice things for people that need help and, and, and doing
any number of things to just be a normal human being within society, you, you
have to ask yourself, what am I doing as part of society?
Right? You can always say, hey, I'm gonna leave society.
I'm gonna live in the woods.
I did that, right?
I went and I lived in the woods and I gave it a shot,
realized a ton of stuff, huge amount of clarity from that.
But when you decide to live in society,
you take on, first of all, certain minimal agreements,
you mold your values a little bit to that society.
That's another choice that people inherently make. And then there's a question of, well, what am I doing here?
What am I doing in society? Right. So when people say the meaning of life, I don't know what the meaning of life is. The meaning of life for the choice that you've made within society? Right? Because that's maybe the first fundamental choice you made.
You made a choice and you continue to make a choice to be part of society and a specific society.
Right?
So you've made this choice.
You're part of a society.
And now you kind of have a life and you have people around you.
And then the question is, in my, in my opinion my opinion the question is what is the body of work that you want to make?
right I think personally that life is kind of so short and
The ability to get enough resources for yourself in at least the developed markets where we're lucky to be in is so relatively
abundant that we, you and me, have the luxury, you know, by your pursuit of a PhD, you know,
you've had this luxury, I've had this luxury through the work that I've been doing to pursue
something that makes society better. So this is kind of the question, I would say.
The question is, am I going to live in society, yes or no?
Yes, okay, most people choose yes.
I understand why to a degree.
I understand where some people choose now.
And then what is the, and I'm going to be in society.
I'm going to go, if you choose to be in society,
you're just choosing to abide by the rules.
You're choosing to just do the minimum, right? That's what being part of society means. People that choose to be in society, you're just choosing to abide by the rules. You're choosing to just do the minimum, right?
That's what being part of society means.
People that choose to be part of society, but don't want to do it.
It's very confusing.
They should just leave.
They should just go, look, I don't like this deal.
I'm going to go somewhere else.
I'm going to live in Tibet.
I'm going to live in the woods.
I'm going to live wherever where the rules are to my liking, right?
You've chosen to be in society. Next question, kind of final question
is what is the body of work that I'm going to be involved in? Because in looking at that
Jeff Bezos kind of regret minimization framework thing, I think that's what a lot of it really
comes down to is you kind of the framework is at 80 years old you look back over your life,
what would you regret not doing? What would you regret not not pursuing? I think there are a number of things on a personal
level each person has, but I think at least for me and probably for many of the
other people I know, there's a question of what is the body of work that I was
involved in? What did I do? What what happened? Right? What was I involved in?
and
In my opinion you should have a good answer to that and you mentioned the body working relation to
whether it helped make a better world and
The fundamental question there is what does better mean?
so it's our Striving to understand what is better. What kind of
world would we love to exist after we're gone? And I think that's another thing, almost unanswerable
question, but it's one we can strive towards. What is what is a better world? Right, I think that's
all that's that's once again a very personal question.
I'm not sure if there's an objective moral truth
that's gonna suddenly give us all an answer.
I think it's actually quite fascinating to me
when people feel they have this objective moral truth.
They're so sure in their opinions.
This is what we do.
We should go hurt them or help them or kill them
or rescue them or whatever, right?
There's all these kind
of very situational specific kind of like, this is the right thing to do. The objective
moral truth told me that this is it.
Well, maybe there's a definitive truth that we can arrive towards sort of a consensus
of what that is within the little local pocket of society that you're in. That's the point.
That's what happens.
People just then mislead and they go like objective moral truth.
This is not our idea.
This is coming up from on high here.
This is the objective moral truth that I think exists in some metaphysical form somewhere.
And then you build a building with marble and as big and usually what happens.
And then you convince yourself that that building represents those people.
Actually, the people build those buildings under probably understand that there is no
middle physical object.
They're just like, we're all just coming to consensus.
I'm going to build the biggest building and you're like me.
And that's what we're going to do.
Right?
Like they just, they just look at it that way probably.
I, I think, I think what ends up happening with, with all these values is, yeah, people should determine that way probably. I think what ends up happening with all these values is, yeah,
people should determine that for themselves. I agree that there's a second order question
here of what is the best body of work to work on. Personally, I think that's probably a mix of
what could you realistically achieve? Is that going to have an impact on society that you feel
good about? Yeah. Right? So these are probably the two aspects of this question.
And is this going to have a good impact on society that you feel good about?
Obviously, very subjective, right?
Some people say animals, some people say forests.
We and I are creating this system of economic fairness and transparency.
I feel that I'm in a good position to enable that. I feel that I have
a good chance of succeeding at that, and I think that the impact will be quite meaningful for a
large number of people. And so I'm completely happy to look back once I'm AD and see a body of work
that achieve that and be very proud of that, right? Because I think that's what I'll be doing
when I'm looking back. So, well, I agree with you. The scale of impact as a smart,
hybrid smart contract, this whole idea that you're working on has a potential to
transform the world to the better at a scale that I can't even imagine. So speaking of which, means even more that you would waste
so many hours of that exciting life with me.
Thank you so much for talking to me, Sergey.
This is a really fascinating conversation,
a really fascinating space,
and I can't wait to learn more.
So thank you so much for talking today.
Thank you for having me.
It's been an absolute pleasure.
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Sergey Nazarov. And thank you to
Wine Access, Athletic Greens, Magic Spoon, Indeed, and Better Help. Check them out in the description
to support this podcast. And now, let me leave you with some words from Copernicus.
To know that we know what we know, and to know that we do not know what we do not know that is true knowledge
Thank you.