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I think non-financial
use cases of blockchain are just emerging.
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The biggest such application
currently are NFTs or non-fungible tokens,
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which represent unique assets,
things like collectibles primarily today.
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But there's been an explosion
of representing other types of assets,
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things like carbon credits, real estate
securities and those kinds of things.
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Fundamentally,
you can think of blockchain as creating
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more efficient usage
or exchanges in almost any arena.
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One way to use
blockchain is to track energy
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and how it's used throughout a grid
and being able to then
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help people figure out how to use it
much more efficiently.
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Any time where there's like a contract,
the participants
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they need some level of trust, right?
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And usually we bring in lawyers
to do that, and that's great.
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Lawyers are an awesome solution to that.
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They're also an expensive solution
to that.
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Blockchains can create situations.
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They can't solve every problem,
but they can create situations
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where we don't necessarily
need a lawyer to be involved
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because things that the lawyer would take
care of can happen on the blockchain
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in a way that everyone can trust.
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Currently,
when we upload photos or videos,
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we don't actually have ownership
over that data.
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So there's a huge opportunity in terms of
how do we communicate with people that we
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love, but also how do we create online?
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What excites me
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most about blockchain is the opportunity
to deal with the wealth gap.
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Blockchain enables opportunity
because in this space
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we get to de-identify ourselves
and now I'm able to interact with people
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anonymously or pseudo anonymously,
just as a series of numbers.
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My public key and I can participate
in any type of use cases that I want
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without having that regulation
preventing me simply because
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I'm of a particular demographic
or a particular gender.
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My hope for the future of blockchain
is that we find ways
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to solve problems
that we haven't been very good at solving.
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Financial inclusion’s
an obvious one blockchain technology
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either by itself will solve this problem
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or it will push governments
to put in more sensible regulation,
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to have more sensible policies on access
that will solve the problem.
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The thing that keeps me up at night
that I'm really worried about
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is that we will wind up,
whether accidentally or deliberately,
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rebuilding the same biases
that we have in our existing system.
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There definitely are
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environmental impacts
when it comes to blockchain technology.
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With Bitcoin, it's proof of work, and
proof of work requires energy consumption.
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But the value that Bitcoin brings is much
higher than that energy consumption.
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The environmental impacts are disastrous.
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In the case of the proof of work
technologies, that’s bitcoin as an example.
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So proof of stake
is another form of consensus system.
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We have stakeholders that stake on a
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on a blockchain
to say that this block is valid.
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So using proof of stake, we're actually
not expanding any electricity usage.
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A lot of people believe that
it's less decentralized.
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So I think you're going to see blockchain
reducing its own carbon footprint.
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Meanwhile, providing
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technologies and abilities
that will help improve things outside
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of the blockchain space.
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I believe that cryptocurrency
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and blockchain are going to continue
to grow and be widely adopted.
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It's true that it goes through cycles.
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Sometimes we'll see a massive run up
and then a correction.
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But if you zoom out over these
from one cycle to the next,
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it continues to grow
at a really rapid pace.
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My biggest concern with blockchain
technology is that it's developing
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very fast, but the regulators and
governments don't really understand it.
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They don't know how to regulate it.
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They will eventually, but short term,
they don't.
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And it's important to agree
across countries, not just in one country.
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It's already become a
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an underlying layer for lots of systems
and applications worldwide.
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And so it's pretty difficult to,
at this point, stop using blockchains.
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Do I think decentralized, permissionless
open networks are here to stay?
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I certainly hope so.
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And I think Bitcoin's demonstrated
that they are at least
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at what seems to be over
a decade in existence.
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Will the new ones survive?
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It's really anybody's guess.
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It's impossible to know. For any new thing
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we need a lot of evidence to believe that
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it's really going
to be the next big thing.
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And in the case of blockchain,
we just don't have that evidence yet.
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Blockchain's Helping push the technology.
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It's pushing
ideas, it's pushing competition.
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But sometimes the first mover
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isn't the one who wins.