100 Percent Ethereum (w/ Daniel Liss)
Newcomer PodNovember 09, 202101:01:1556.08 MB

100 Percent Ethereum (w/ Daniel Liss)

We break the seal on crypto in this podcast in a long chat with Dispo CEO Daniel Liss about how the technology could transform social media products. He attended the big NFT conference in New York this past week and explained why the optimism in tech has been directed here. The conversation goes into what the crowd was like at the conference, how the consumer companies could embrace crypto as an alternative business model to advertising and whether it makes sense for services to jump aboard the trend even when its users don't care much about it yet.



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00:00:05
Welcome Tom is here at my apartment in Brooklyn because I

00:00:17
think he's doing sort of Insider stuff and taking tourist

00:00:20
meetings and he needed the real Mike set up.

00:00:23
So my girlfriend who's a video producer has him with all her

00:00:27
camera mics set up, but he's in the same room.

00:00:30
Is me, and I feel like he's, he's dealing with a sort of

00:00:33
dystopian sound overlay. So, we're gonna see how that

00:00:38
comes out. And then we're here with Daniel

00:00:41
list who is the CEO of dispo but we are equally excited that he's

00:00:47
been deep in nft World in this last week for NYC and ft and so

00:00:53
we want to talk about that sort of building on the metaverse

00:00:57
conversation from last week and yeah.

00:01:00
I'm excited for Daniel to play a little bit of tour.

00:01:03
Guide in nft World. Daniel like what?

00:01:07
How deep how deep into the world of nft.

00:01:11
Sorry, right. Would you consider yourself a

00:01:13
Believer or where? Give us the sort of where you

00:01:17
stand right now? I'm a I'm, you know, as the

00:01:20
people I don't have see. NYC would say, I've taken the

00:01:22
red pill. I'm absolutely a Believer but I

00:01:26
think the caveat and we'll walk through it.

00:01:29
I'm sure but You have to believe as an operator and someone

00:01:32
leading a company that this is what you're in.

00:01:34
I'm building a social media company.

00:01:36
With my team, we have to believe that this is what our community

00:01:40
wants, if our community doesn't want it, right?

00:01:41
And we're trying to skate to where the puck is going and

00:01:44
build a once-in-a-generation company.

00:01:45
Then we shouldn't be using this technology.

00:01:48
There's a lot about this promising.

00:01:49
There's a lot about it. That's really frightening.

00:01:52
So I think we'll get into that Tom, you.

00:01:54
Good, tell me about the most red pill person you met at the

00:01:57
convention so far like you're somewhere in the It all you're

00:02:00
buying it but you still need to be convinced like, how who's the

00:02:04
most fucked up person you met in this in this conference?

00:02:10
I wouldn't put it that way but the person who the biggest

00:02:12
believer. So I was at the fun part of this

00:02:15
week is he was just dinners parties activities coffees.

00:02:19
It was an incredible social week and you know, for me who, you

00:02:23
know, we started this company a year and a half ago, we have not

00:02:26
been doing these social networking events and no pun.

00:02:29
Intended. And so it was just a rush of

00:02:33
human interaction activity, you know, with vaccination cards and

00:02:35
mass and safety protocols. But I was at one of these

00:02:38
dinners and an investor throughout a question, to all

00:02:43
the founders and CEOs in attendance and the question was

00:02:47
your portfolio, your personal Investment Portfolio right now?

00:02:51
What is the allocation? And I said, okay, I think it

00:02:57
would be, you know, I'm 33. I'm risk on A lot of my net

00:03:00
worth is tied up in the equity of our company but for of my

00:03:04
liquid assets, I would put 75 percent in the Vanguard S&P 500

00:03:10
ETF. I would do ten percent in bonds,

00:03:13
maybe if I'm being aggressive, you know, of the remaining 15%

00:03:17
seven and a half in cash, seven and a half across.

00:03:21
Bitcoin is here, IAM in Solana, right?

00:03:24
And the guy sitting next to me goes, 100% etherium.

00:03:32
Deadpan. Look in his eyes like I did not

00:03:38
know what I was talking about that.

00:03:39
I was an alien of some sort right.

00:03:41
And maybe I am and I understand looking at that man's net worth

00:03:47
that it has quintuple. You know, gone up 50 acts.

00:03:51
I don't know when he bought right.

00:03:53
If he bought in 27 at the bottom of the last cycle, you know, if

00:03:58
you know I was at a meeting with buying Is, you know, one of the

00:04:01
most senior people there and 12% of their Volume last week was in

00:04:05
Shiba Inu, right? So the world in which were

00:04:08
living the volatility of the assets, I'm even in a world

00:04:12
where in the public markets Peloton can go down two thirds

00:04:15
in less than a year, right? But in, you know, the Bitcoin

00:04:19
world or just the cryptocurrency world, the volatility of the

00:04:22
world in which we are living is shocking amazing.

00:04:26
Incomprehensible to the average average.

00:04:29
Joe Oh, but it's still exciting and I think, you know, we

00:04:32
haven't gone into it, but there is real utility to the

00:04:35
technology that was not necessarily there in 2017.

00:04:37
So if you're serious about building a company, particularly

00:04:41
in the gaming and social world, you have to be looking at this

00:04:44
incredibly intensely but it's so it won't get to sort of the use

00:04:48
cases and with this phone when you're thinking about, but just

00:04:51
like the people part of this story first like so how did you

00:04:54
even? I feel like the nft NYC

00:04:57
conference sort of came on to my Twitter.

00:04:59
Feed all of a sudden or like I was clearly not ready to flee.

00:05:03
Like right, did you? Are you where are you based?

00:05:06
When did you realize this was coming in?

00:05:08
Like why did you decide to go? And then you said, it's like, is

00:05:12
it mostly like going to panels? Or is it mostly going to dinners

00:05:15
around it or like what is the conference as sort of a start-up

00:05:19
CEO going to this thing? Great question.

00:05:21
So I first of all just interest in cryptocurrency, I would call

00:05:26
myself a web to lot of. I assume that's most of Of our

00:05:30
listeners who we can be run through this.

00:05:32
For those of you me, who are not quite sure about the specifics

00:05:35
of web to, and web three. What is web to versus web 3

00:05:39
because I'm assuming web one is eBay, right?

00:05:42
Well, web to is the cloud, right?

00:05:45
It's how I would Define it, right?

00:05:46
You're in a previously. I mean, in, I'll talk about it

00:05:50
in terms of our business, right? 04 to 0-6 when the Myspace

00:05:54
friends stirs, Facebook wars were on Mark Zuckerberg, dad.

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Famously put a hundred thousand dollars of server costs on

00:05:59
Personal credit card, right? Because you can.

00:06:02
Now we talk about the network Dynamics, and soccer Bridge

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genius, and the news feed and f/8 and all the amazing

00:06:07
technological developments. He really is the greatest

00:06:10
operator in software of our time, but at that time, you

00:06:14
know, Friendster don't forget had every advantage.

00:06:17
And a lot of the closed Network just magic that propelled

00:06:21
Facebook ahead of the dangers of the stranger danger of Myspace,

00:06:26
but friends are couldn't keep their back end up.

00:06:28
And so technical a Excellence in a pre Cloud world was a huge

00:06:33
part of the game and now of course, with AWS has your, and

00:06:36
Google Cloud, I'm able to have a much smaller back-end team and

00:06:40
worry about a lot less. Of course, our team is Best in

00:06:43
Class. I'm really proud of them but we

00:06:45
worry about that. A lot less in the web to world

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than the prior generation did. And you know now of course, web

00:06:52
3 is about the blockchain. So it's about smart contracts in

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the uniqueness and provenance of, and of teas.

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And Jurors and I mean, it's like a distributed internet powered

00:07:03
by the economics of cryptocurrencies.

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The let us drive away from sort of centralized Gatekeepers.

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The even the cloud itself is too centralized in the web.

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Three definition. There has been a history of

00:07:14
across the centralized the database.

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Yeah, absolutely. Decentralization.

00:07:18
I think is the core premise. The court magic.

00:07:21
Anyway, that's web to web three. Your web to going into this sort

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of web, three World, figuring out what you think, and then,

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The conference itself, how it came on your radar and sort of

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talk talk me through that sure. So Ryan Hoover, you know, the

00:07:38
founder of product on and we can fund is an adventure of ours.

00:07:43
I put in a very little money to be an LP in weekend fund.

00:07:48
He's also an investor and dispo and he sends out the best LP

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letter I've ever read better than Howard marks just he not

00:07:55
go. What they do is incredibly

00:07:57
ornate, really thoughtful and So I read it religiously and the

00:08:02
last one he sent I mean, was he the last quarter?

00:08:04
The quarter prior there was this company called Eternal .g G

00:08:08
which is an N of T Marketplace for twitch streamers.

00:08:16
My eyes are like, nosing over laughing, but right, but if you

00:08:20
think about it, right? If you actually do the work, you

00:08:23
realize that the gaming Market is bigger than the MBA market.

00:08:27
So if the volume that Dapper Labs did with Top Shot is, you

00:08:32
know, billions, why wouldn't gaming highlights and gaming

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moments and collectibles be a multi-billion dollar market.

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And then you start to think, wow, these guys are really on to

00:08:42
something. And so I asked Ryan to introduce

00:08:45
me to the co-founders of Eternal who just raised again,

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incredibly incredibly sharp guys who you know Jeff and Derek or

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the name of the co-founders who have been in the crypto world

00:08:57
forever. So five plus years and they you

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know, Jeff has a tokenized community called Jeff's buddies.

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I hope I'm not saying anything. I'm not allowed that not doxxing

00:09:10
the Jeff's buddies communities, but shout out to them and he Did

00:09:13
me but, you know, you had he had ascended to Discord or what's

00:09:17
the commits a Discord? Can he said he sent you, the

00:09:20
tokens, you had to use collab land to prove that you have the

00:09:24
tokens. Then you're included in the

00:09:25
Discord server and then they're in this random Discord Community

00:09:28
for four people speculating on criminal nothing you speculate.

00:09:33
It's just an Enthusiast Community for people and the

00:09:36
people in this chat. I'm not going to tell you who

00:09:38
are in it, but our real crypto investors builders Credible

00:09:43
group relatively small group of people and I was I felt the

00:09:47
least intelligent on the subject matter but also they were

00:09:50
interested in my experience, right?

00:09:52
And our experience, it just bow. We have more downloads and a

00:09:55
bigger Community than most of the people involved.

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So it wasn't just people still like web to people want to make

00:10:02
money off by 3. But yeah, it's all right.

00:10:03
Keep Goin sure. So you know they're interested

00:10:06
in scale we're facing a lot of the same problems and are

00:10:10
interesting. A lot of the same subjects

00:10:11
fundamentally right? How do you Something that really

00:10:15
changes the world and has an impact and, you know, has scale.

00:10:19
So I was a part of this and then there was a channel in it.

00:10:23
That said, well first the first one was main that.

00:10:26
So then I went to Maine that and then the next channel was nft

00:10:28
NYC. And when I went to Maine that

00:10:30
all people could talk about it, may not was, bro.

00:10:32
What's going on? And it's a lot of bros not

00:10:34
nearly enough women, which was shocking to me, because I'll get

00:10:37
there. My team is majority women.

00:10:39
Our team is majority women at dispo and our community is 30

00:10:43
women. You know, if you're building a

00:10:44
social product in any generation teen girls run the world.

00:10:48
So the most interesting part and also, the scariest part for the

00:10:51
dispo team is when we're our audience is primarily teen girls

00:10:55
college kids, and the primary. Crypto audience is the 20

00:11:00
open sea whale Bros. There is a huge disconnect and

00:11:03
gap between what our community is interested in, right?

00:11:06
And when we say the world, say the word Madam asked or wallet,

00:11:10
or seed, phrase, or a pin or Wagner.

00:11:13
You know, all the lingo that's now begun to dominate our

00:11:16
Twitter feeds. Our community don't care, and

00:11:18
haven't noticed. And so thinking about what the

00:11:21
future is and what they will tolerate, I think the gaming

00:11:24
world is going to break down a lot of barriers and not actually

00:11:28
Infinity but when the real AAA Publishers when you know, this

00:11:31
past quarter, the CEOs of EA and today to both had questions

00:11:35
about and FTS like the gaming world is going to break down the

00:11:39
barriers, but basically you're in this like sort of like all

00:11:41
male Community, obviously you're right.

00:11:43
Representing sort of a super female Community predominately

00:11:45
male, but a couple of, Yeah, couple rain.

00:11:47
And the, but the hope is that still, the technology is like

00:11:50
relevant to your company. Correct.

00:11:53
So now you're in the nft NYC disc or group, and that's where

00:11:57
they're chattering about it. Well, there was a channel in

00:11:59
Jeff's buddies about it and then, if, you know, there were

00:12:04
spreadsheets of all the events that were happening and then

00:12:07
that was, you know, months ago. And then I started meeting

00:12:10
everybody's gotta by Southwest when people would like sir.

00:12:13
Try and get the good events and you send around spreadsheets

00:12:16
with that kind of or Sundance or any of these content industry

00:12:20
contract versus you've been do or there's just everybody's

00:12:23
there, right? And that became obvious to me

00:12:25
and then I started meeting as we really did a deep dive and did

00:12:28
some out of T. Testing a couple of months ago

00:12:30
I'm just bow and we started getting a lot of inbound calls

00:12:33
from investors and potential employees interested in building

00:12:37
that out. Then the first question within

00:12:39
the first five minutes is oh what's your schedule?

00:12:41
And of tem I see we got To get together, you know, oh, are you

00:12:44
going to the board Apes party or what's going on with FWB or oh

00:12:49
this, you know, CAA is throwing something with their new?

00:12:51
And I thought, wow, this is not all, you know, there's a lot of

00:12:54
really interesting cross-current, you know, we're

00:12:57
in La based company. I've been in La for five years.

00:12:59
There's a lot of interesting cross current between The

00:13:02
Chainsmokers. I heard they were out there.

00:13:05
Unbelievable, unbelievable. They will be the next great,

00:13:08
their investors and dispo. No, my good next great.

00:13:10
Yeah, I was waiting for that anytime.

00:13:13
Seems to the audience. If you are not co-investing with

00:13:15
The Chainsmokers and mantis, there's something wrong with

00:13:18
your portfolio. The amount of work that they do,

00:13:21
they're incredibly incredibly bright switched on guys who's

00:13:25
there? Like who's the who's the man

00:13:27
behind them? The team.

00:13:29
There is no man behind them. There on all the calls from Alex

00:13:31
are sending out the emails. I'm so impressed by them.

00:13:35
There, you should have them on. I think they're incredibly

00:13:37
thoughtful and I mean when you see their name in the deal,

00:13:41
announcements now it means Thing right there, not just investing

00:13:44
in random companies. They're investing in a lot of

00:13:46
categories, potential category. Yes, Chainsmokers also have 100%

00:13:49
exposure to etherium, so that's also very concerning the future

00:13:53
of don't don't, don't let me down sequel is not going to be a

00:13:56
promised, should the crypto Market tanked, but otherwise,

00:14:00
enjoy. Well, I'm going to the salon.

00:14:02
A conference in Lisbon this week.

00:14:04
Oh my God. Yeah, I introduced them to a me.

00:14:07
Woo-hoo just announced her fun with ft x and Solana, so I

00:14:11
assume The Chainsmokers will Soon have plenty of Salon

00:14:14
exposure. That's actually super smart just

00:14:16
for gigs, right? I mean, if you just appear as

00:14:18
the house band at every crypto conference, over the next

00:14:21
several weeks, like your solid booked, do they play a?

00:14:25
Did they play or they got. I'm sure they did.

00:14:28
But, you know, little baby performed board.

00:14:30
Apes after buying one or maybe they gave it to him.

00:14:33
It's hard to say there's not a lot of trees.

00:14:35
There may be no little baby, not debating.

00:14:38
Yeah, sorry. Okay.

00:14:39
I was about to say we come, we had a much bigger story on our

00:14:41
hands. But you see you did good.

00:14:45
There were jumping now. I mean, you went to the board

00:14:47
Apes thing. Our yeah.

00:14:49
Well was this I didn't I didn't make it but I have a lot of

00:14:52
friends he did and it's interesting, right?

00:14:55
You start to realize as a social media company and now we're kind

00:14:59
of heading into people call this social 3 as well.

00:15:03
Social media is a cultural artifact in many ways, right?

00:15:07
You've seen the Cycles. Now first it was Facebook

00:15:09
friends to her. Myspace, there's Instagram

00:15:12
hipstamatic. Please that was Snapchat and

00:15:14
then Tick Tock, triller whatever else.

00:15:17
And here we are with this bow and a bunch of other companies

00:15:21
emerging that are trying to reinvent the photo sharing

00:15:24
memory making category and really get to the point where we

00:15:28
can Embrace some of these new values that you know, have come

00:15:32
out in the discords and clubhouses the world.

00:15:34
So that they're about Community about intimacy about

00:15:37
authenticity and figure out how to bring that into the future.

00:15:40
And I think how do you do that? And do that on a scale that

00:15:44
takes on the titans of social media.

00:15:46
The, you know, one of those answers, one of the hypotheses

00:15:49
has to be that it's built on the blockchain and taking advantage

00:15:53
of whether it's etherium or or Solana what we choose to build

00:15:57
on. But secondly, I think what acts

00:16:01
he's done with the progressive decentralization model.

00:16:03
So you know, functionally inverting your cap table, and

00:16:06
having the community participate in a real substantial, you know,

00:16:10
almost a b Corp on steroids manner.

00:16:13
Is interesting, no one's done that before.

00:16:15
And in many ways, it would be as if Kickstarter gave equity in

00:16:20
their company to the community that shows and equity in the

00:16:23
products, to the people who chose to build them.

00:16:26
But obviously, like Kickstarter mini over those products never

00:16:30
materialized in the form that people expect them to.

00:16:34
Well that's the danger, right? You have to figure out as an

00:16:36
operator and what we're trying to determine the dispos.

00:16:39
All of our testing is how do you layer in the blockchain?

00:16:42
To your product in a way that is not fundamentally changing the

00:16:46
nature of the game. You know the game play, right?

00:16:49
So in social media, what we're building will be closest to read

00:16:54
it in that you your contributions to the community

00:16:57
are valued and denoted in some way that, you know, we haven't

00:17:01
settled on quite yet and whether you're contributing to roles or

00:17:06
otherwise, you know, which are the group albums on our on our

00:17:09
Network or other contributions to the community people.

00:17:13
Value your contribution. And this is a long history in

00:17:15
the internet from Wikipedia moderators to Foursquare,

00:17:18
mayor's to whatever else you might want to keep hearing about

00:17:21
the conference. But let's talk about this book

00:17:23
because obviously, okay, that's what you do and we're getting

00:17:26
we're touching on it. So like, I guess in my very

00:17:29
Layman sense, my understanding of dispo and you can disillusion

00:17:34
a, but like super hot with, you know, obviously David dobrik

00:17:39
co-founding and the sort of Disappearing messaging thing He

00:17:43
gets like cancel delayed. Not am delayed, right?

00:17:46
Always the court can delay. Sorry, you take a photo and you

00:17:49
can delay till 9 a.m. right opposite of disappear.

00:17:52
Yeah. Okay, I'm sorry.

00:17:53
Okay, good very web to we're so then he's gone.

00:17:58
That's Insider cancels him, right?

00:18:00
Yeah. And then you guys like your

00:18:03
investors have different Stakes, but like, we're spark sort of

00:18:07
like, says, oh, we're like giving him back or something,

00:18:10
but then whatever. So there's that whole thing.

00:18:13
And you've been able to, like, I've watched the gross stuff

00:18:16
obviously in covered a little bit and like in some of these

00:18:18
other countries, particularly you've sort of held on to growth

00:18:21
and are trying to sort of, despite sort of like a media

00:18:25
sort of like losing your sort of like favored status in the

00:18:28
media. Keep growing is that the journey

00:18:31
is that a reasonably Fair version of the journey and now

00:18:34
you're like trying to figure out sort of how to capture the

00:18:38
growth you've built in. Like so part of it is exploring

00:18:41
web 3 and like, Nerve or where is that?

00:18:45
How is that a fair Journey or where would you say you're at

00:18:48
now in that and that path? Absolutely.

00:18:50
I think you know, I wouldn't exactly put it that way if you

00:18:53
know but we're that 18 months into this code base.

00:18:57
The team went from six and March to now 22 on four continents, I

00:19:03
think it's incredibly exciting. If you were to ask me or anyone

00:19:08
were working with any of the co-founders that this is where

00:19:12
the Pretty would be. And obviously, there were some

00:19:14
incredible ups and some incredible Downs along the way.

00:19:18
We have a company we're really proud of.

00:19:21
We have a product that is resonating with you know

00:19:24
millions of teens and college kids around the globe and I

00:19:27
think yes, we where we're at now, is we need to figure out as

00:19:32
any social media company would at this stage.

00:19:34
How do you really? You know, you can get downloads,

00:19:37
you can pay for downloads, you can partner with an influencer

00:19:39
celebrity for downloads. You know, acquisition is only

00:19:42
only one part of the game and in social media, you know, when

00:19:46
investors mute us and whether it's tiger, or SoftBank or GST,

00:19:50
or you know, whoever would hypothetically call they will

00:19:53
never ask about our download numbers.

00:19:56
They're going to ask about retention, right?

00:19:58
Because if I were to pay, is it working?

00:20:01
Is it working right? And particularly D30?

00:20:03
So, on the discrete day, 30 days later, or, you know, it camera

00:20:07
apps are often weekly. So weak for, you know.

00:20:10
How are you building? What are the features?

00:20:12
You're Developing to capture more of the users time in a way,

00:20:16
you know, especially for us, the very Mission driven almost

00:20:20
political company and what we're trying to accomplish.

00:20:22
How are you doing in a way? That's different from the

00:20:24
companies of the past and how are you going to set yourself?

00:20:27
What do you mean all political? I think you know the choice of

00:20:31
non am development or delayed development.

00:20:33
In any sense is a choice to untether you know the community

00:20:37
from their phones. And when we asked the girls in

00:20:40
particular why do they like this is is I feel so much pressure,

00:20:46
use it, you know, taking photos, sharing photos online.

00:20:49
And this isn't just an Instagram problem.

00:20:51
This is, you know, everyone's seen what came out in the

00:20:54
hearings. This is really a problem that

00:20:57
the, you know, the phone has created, right?

00:21:00
And what are these social media platforms, make them feel.

00:21:03
They feel alone. They feel not good enough.

00:21:05
They feel issues about their body.

00:21:07
They feel like they have the wrong lifestyle.

00:21:10
They don't have the right clothes.

00:21:11
It's this incredibly Sad and negative impact.

00:21:15
And so for us and I spent my 20s primarily in politics.

00:21:19
How do you genuinely create a social media Network that you

00:21:23
know, delivers joy and connection?

00:21:26
Even if that was the intent of these original platforms?

00:21:29
15 years ago? That's the the question.

00:21:31
And so for us not in development means when you take the photos

00:21:34
you can't access them immediately and that powerful,

00:21:37
right? Because you don't, you know,

00:21:39
next time you go out into the wild and you watch someone no

00:21:41
matter what age or gender. Either they are they take a

00:21:44
photograph or a video the immediately are clutching and

00:21:47
you can see the veins and their neck pop out as they look at and

00:21:50
they say off my arm is fat or whatever it is, right?

00:21:53
It's an incredibly stressful experience.

00:21:55
And so the magic of, you know what, we call the digital

00:21:58
disposable camera is you can wait a little bit, and when you

00:22:02
get the photos back, the next morning, something we hear quite

00:22:05
often, you use your user interviews, is that it feels

00:22:07
like Christmas morning again, right?

00:22:09
It feels like going to the one-hour photo with my mom or my

00:22:11
dad and Up back my role of 24 36, and, you know, almost 20

00:22:17
percent of our users are sharing photos.

00:22:20
The next day, or no, to almost 20% of the photos are being

00:22:23
shared the next day, so that core Loop of taking and sharing

00:22:28
is defensible and magical and inherently viral.

00:22:31
And I think that's what's so exciting thus far.

00:22:33
When we don't think it's important for you to put Eric.

00:22:35
I mean, maybe you're going to same question, but explain to me

00:22:37
the crossover between the instant - of photos and social

00:22:42
media. Leah and the delayed reaction of

00:22:44
it of the nine, a m-- development, that you think

00:22:47
ameliorates the problem of self-image and negativity that,

00:22:52
you know, something happens between the photo being taken

00:22:54
and 9 a.m. the next day that allows people to feel better

00:22:56
about themselves. I don't get that, I think it's a

00:23:00
first of all, you know, on the scale of Purity, you know, I'm

00:23:05
not going to stand here and say we have the solution, right?

00:23:09
That's a very dangerous proposition.

00:23:12
It's incredibly Are to fix the way that people look at

00:23:16
themselves in the mirror, right? That's an example, existed and

00:23:18
predated Instagram, and all of this, so sure.

00:23:20
Even before mirrors, let's go back to the Garden of Eden.

00:23:23
I'm sure we, you know, we all look at ourselves and we wish

00:23:26
something, we're different whatever, the societal standards

00:23:28
were at the time, right? And that's something that's

00:23:30
baggage that all of us have from birth.

00:23:32
And it's not a function, just of cell phones, right?

00:23:35
You know, go back to the Renaissance or the Roaring 20s

00:23:38
or, you know, pick your historical Epoch.

00:23:40
There were Trends, there were he's that were, you know,

00:23:43
certain body images that were more popular.

00:23:46
We're not, we're never going to fix the Francis Hogan of the of

00:23:49
the Medici era was a very different person, but we all

00:23:51
know that the portraits were extremely defeating to the

00:23:54
Arctic rubenesque this story. Yeah, sure.

00:24:02
Go ahead, sure. But I think what we're aiming to

00:24:05
do is create something that it's not perfect, but it's

00:24:08
fundamentally better, right? And so the act of getting back

00:24:12
specifically to the Question. The act of taking the photo

00:24:15
right now on your iPhone when you can see so much and you're

00:24:19
obsessing over it and you're immediately clenching and you

00:24:23
feel this intensity and in turn because of some feelings.

00:24:26
And maybe you're bringing negativity about what you see

00:24:28
that ruins the moment. And so creating that distance

00:24:33
for you from that or even you know will test a gentle reminder

00:24:37
to you to wait a little bit and allow yourself to enjoy Joy at

00:24:43
the next day, we found users. Tell us that they enjoy that a

00:24:47
lot more than the way. They've been taking photographs

00:24:49
in the past and if you can compare it, everyone on this

00:24:51
Zoom, I think is old enough to remember the way that we would

00:24:55
get photos back. When we were kids, it was a very

00:24:58
different feeling from the feeling that we have.

00:25:00
Now when we see them on our phone and our pie apophysis is

00:25:04
one, part of that is the just the time, the distance, you have

00:25:08
between taking it and experiencing it, and that

00:25:11
reveal, and then, Web three, right?

00:25:13
I get I if you lose like on the one hand, you know, if you're a

00:25:17
new up-and-coming consumer company, makes sense to like get

00:25:21
on and see what sort of the new trends are happening, maybe

00:25:24
you'll get adoption some way doing that.

00:25:27
On the other hand there's an argument.

00:25:28
You know that focus is good. You guys have sort of a cool

00:25:32
idea with the disposable camera thing.

00:25:34
Like why why do something else like complicated or Innovative

00:25:39
with like web three? Or I mean, it seems like you're

00:25:41
going through that Journey now or What sort of what got you to

00:25:44
say? Oh, we should think about

00:25:46
crypto. Is it the money side?

00:25:48
The enthusiasm? Or like, if you had to distill,

00:25:50
like, what appealed to you about it and then like, yeah, where

00:25:53
are you in sort of in that journey I think, first and

00:25:57
foremost is just a healthy sense of the history of Technology

00:26:00
knowing that at some point, the switch was made from the

00:26:03
Mainframe to the cloud and the people, the incumbents, you

00:26:06
know, it's hard to think of a company that is almost 18 months

00:26:11
old as an incumbent. But I'm coming from the prior

00:26:13
mindset was slow and, you know wasn't necessarily building.

00:26:17
You know, I met Devin from Open Sea, they were building from

00:26:19
2018, that's a lot longer than we've been building.

00:26:22
So, in Tech a big part of the job is reacting and reacting

00:26:28
because you're smaller with a speed and precision that a major

00:26:32
incumbent. So the metas the Snapchats, the

00:26:37
Pinterest, right? The, you know, 50 100 billion

00:26:39
plus market cap companies will never be able to A because of

00:26:43
the size of the company and, you know, the speed at which the

00:26:46
ship turns, but then also the regulatory concerns that they

00:26:49
have, and I think that was a really interesting part of all

00:26:52
of this is uoft, acts moving to the Bahamas, the Dow laws and

00:26:56
Wyoming. What is actually, what is

00:26:59
actually going? I love what you have to do is a

00:27:00
start-up founder these days like track.

00:27:03
All these like really, it's like what what the most ambitious

00:27:07
part about injuries and Horowitz?

00:27:09
This is an Assad, but related, the most interesting part.

00:27:12
Of injuries in Horowitz to me right now is not how they've

00:27:17
doubled the size investing staff, and that they're probably

00:27:20
going public. It is that they're

00:27:22
single-handedly becoming a regulatory, they don't call a

00:27:26
lobbying, so, whatever, whatever it is, a regulatory shaping

00:27:30
process. And, you know, that front-page

00:27:32
article in the New York Times last week is really breathtaking

00:27:35
when you think about it, right? It's as if we were, you know, if

00:27:39
you think about the analogy of the cloud again, right?

00:27:42
It's Amazon, Microsoft and Google are now the three big

00:27:47
players but imagine a world where those are the only three

00:27:50
players. So Bitcoin salon and aetherium.

00:27:53
And the same person owned a huge chunk of all of them and was

00:27:57
investing in all three of the platform's themselves.

00:28:02
And in all the companies building on them and had such a

00:28:05
head start in funding and access that they then went to

00:28:08
Washington and shape, the rules of the gray.

00:28:11
And the other major lobbyists is Many called coinbase, which they

00:28:14
happen to be a major shareholder in, right?

00:28:17
You know, and one of the partners and I'm sure she didn't

00:28:20
mean anything by it, but happens to be on the board of both

00:28:22
coinbase and Open Sea, which are now going, you know, right?

00:28:26
I think coinbase will destroy open, see your?

00:28:28
Or has a really good shot of just placing it in the popular

00:28:32
imagination, right? The just the breadth of coinbase

00:28:35
is wild compared to open sea, even if opens he continues on

00:28:39
this crazy growth path. So, to answer the original

00:28:42
Question, which is why are we looking at this so hard?

00:28:45
I think it's a belief, you know, it's to your first question.

00:28:48
Do I believe in deleted in the company?

00:28:50
Believe that the blockchain is real?

00:28:52
And it is the future. And, yes, unequivocally.

00:28:54
I think that it is really interesting.

00:28:57
You can talk about the promise of the chains themselves, but

00:29:00
when you think about the Dow model and what axi Infiniti has

00:29:04
done as an example, right? Which is you are giving your

00:29:08
users a percentage of the profits of the company.

00:29:12
By virtue of their participation.

00:29:14
So in the same way, you know, Abraham Lincoln with the

00:29:17
Homestead Act gave in the 1860s people I think was up to 140

00:29:22
acres of land, if they went out and they developed it and they

00:29:27
paid a registration fee, right? If you as a company, and this is

00:29:30
why I read it seems to be going so hard their collaboration with

00:29:34
Arbitron. And I was, I met up with Stephen

00:29:36
and their team this week to learn about what exactly?

00:29:39
They're planning, but it is really interesting.

00:29:41
He's Huffman or You're saying no, Steven?

00:29:44
Who runs our Bertram, okay? Who's a brilliant guy?

00:29:47
He came out of, they actually launched this company before

00:29:50
etherium launched out of a pH. A group of phds at Princeton

00:29:54
brilliant, brilliant movie. You guys, the idea is that for

00:29:58
all the pictures or some subset, the people could easily turn

00:30:01
them into n FTS or I don't want to specifically get into that

00:30:05
right now, but trying to get ahead of whatever you're

00:30:07
announcing but what's the intuition that's one hypothesis,

00:30:11
right? But if you can also If you open

00:30:13
the app and you look at what we're doing, we have cameras and

00:30:18
you have to open dispo to understand it.

00:30:20
But they're, they're almost digital objects in the way that

00:30:24
a skin on for tonight is or certain objects on Roblox and so

00:30:28
we just did our first big collaboration with YSL, the

00:30:31
fashion house, a couple weeks ago, and the user response to.

00:30:34
That was remarkable. It, shocked everyone internally.

00:30:39
And so that opened our eyes. Well, what if the cameras You

00:30:42
know, the images is one way to look at it.

00:30:44
But what if the cameras themselves were mft?

00:30:47
He's right are there are filter and ft's today or other.

00:30:51
I've heard of this idea, right? Or this exists.

00:30:53
It's an idea, right? But I think what's interesting

00:30:56
to the community, you know, the eith community Solana Community

00:31:00
is our scale already. And also the fact that we, you

00:31:03
know, if you compare it to the play, Turn gaming world, we have

00:31:06
a game of our social network, which is you contribute posts

00:31:10
and you contribute to Rolls images.

00:31:12
Rolls and your video will launch sometime soon and you are

00:31:17
rewarded, you know, whether through likes and up votes and

00:31:21
you know, whatever or equivalent of karma is the red of karma but

00:31:25
also emotionally rewarded, right?

00:31:28
So much of what we project on social media is a bid for

00:31:31
affirmation or connection or attention or flirting or

00:31:34
whatever it is that you're looking for in the world and so

00:31:38
layering in and of teas to that right where people can trade

00:31:41
them. You know, so there and we you

00:31:44
create a Marketplace. There's also a resale value to

00:31:46
the person who generated the asset a lot of the behavior.

00:31:50
When you look at what more tapes or crypto Punk's or

00:31:53
fundamentally enabling, right. It's peacocking by putting the a

00:31:56
poor, the crypto punk as your Twitter profile and then it's

00:31:59
access to a community. And so for us to do that on a

00:32:03
social media Network would not be a huge leap and then the

00:32:06
second part of the equation which is actually a very

00:32:08
separate discussion is do you issue a token as the company.

00:32:12
And I think that's the one that's very out there for two

00:32:16
reasons. One is the regulatory issues and

00:32:18
secondly, what is the App Store going to do?

00:32:21
And, you know, I think that it's because for now, they're really

00:32:24
not allowing from what I understand.

00:32:27
At least any company that issues a token to do that in app and

00:32:31
the biggest challenge, you know, and I keep asking this in every

00:32:35
single meeting and every single person I meet is the ux, the

00:32:40
user experience of the The web three native people is not even

00:32:44
close to what we do in the web to it sucks, right?

00:32:47
It's um, it's it's not even close.

00:32:50
And and so every time we say the word wallet or seed, freeze and

00:32:56
I said this earlier, but any of the lingo, right?

00:32:58
And I'm only getting to one or two of the words but in order to

00:33:01
now open a while at on metal mask or right?

00:33:05
Even know the names of all the companies you have to do.

00:33:07
Yeah. The process, the companies like

00:33:10
it requires charts to lay it all out.

00:33:12
It requires charge to lay it all out but you know, the

00:33:15
Counterpoint to all that and I think the really exciting part

00:33:18
is you look at axi and you have to open the Ronin wallet and

00:33:22
then you have to transfer the funds and then you have to wait

00:33:25
sometimes and they're still doing their taxes and they're

00:33:28
still doing it and they're still doing it and so maybe you maybe

00:33:33
you would say well the issue here is, this is a job and it's

00:33:37
not a game but they're all these stories back from 06.

00:33:42
Right, 07, when Facebook was rolling out internationally and

00:33:45
traditionally in Mobile, you know, in our team.

00:33:48
Well, it was mostly desktop then, but traditionally in the

00:33:51
internet, people are not willing to wait for things to load

00:33:53
right, but, you know, latency right?

00:33:55
Our back-end team were constantly reviewing how quickly

00:33:59
are people getting it to load because they will abandon people

00:34:01
have incredibly short time, you know, attention spans.

00:34:06
But with Facebook in the beginning, it was such a magical

00:34:09
product and people felt that it was the internet, right?

00:34:12
They were unable to understand that there was a difference

00:34:14
between the internet and Facebook that they were willing

00:34:16
to load. Wait 30 seconds, 90 seconds per

00:34:19
page load to use it. And so if axi really is, you

00:34:25
know, and most of the times, the first Market mover, when it

00:34:28
comes to the internet is not the winner, right?

00:34:29
Google is not the first search engine started Facebook, not the

00:34:32
first social network. So I think that's what's so

00:34:34
exciting to everyone in the gaming world.

00:34:36
And now, you know, I've met in AA.

00:34:38
Everyone at every, you meet every product manager or game

00:34:41
developer. A game designer at Zynga

00:34:44
supercell Riot, you know, and and and and Dan they're all

00:34:49
thinking about this. This is obsessing them, right?

00:34:52
Because they've existed in a world where people were willing

00:34:55
to buy spend real money on Virtual Goods which adults and

00:35:00
the media still don't really even though it's not a own

00:35:03
skins, I have a great you exactly.

00:35:06
But for my money, I think it made money in OverWatch.

00:35:10
People are people are still very He's skeptical of the digital

00:35:15
Goods economy even with Fiat right even if we don't talk

00:35:18
about blocks, right? And so why couldn't you Eric

00:35:21
trade your skin and have it then live?

00:35:25
Not just in for tonight but also in Roblox and the owner lots of

00:35:30
already met. Why would a centralized company

00:35:32
want to? I mean, we could that is so fun

00:35:34
to be no. But yeah, right?

00:35:36
But the big centralized companies, the incumbents are

00:35:38
not going to necessarily want that, right?

00:35:41
But all the Challengers will, right?

00:35:44
It'll help us scale much faster. So the fluidity it's the same

00:35:48
way that in social media social graphs, right?

00:35:51
It would behoove all of the Challenger companies to create

00:35:55
an interoperable social graph, but of course, the Legacy

00:35:58
companies will never allow it. So, what I think is interesting

00:36:01
about your company approaching crypto and then FTS

00:36:06
specifically, is that to me it could represent this jump from

00:36:09
gaming, towards mainstream usage, right?

00:36:11
Because at the Level, I understand it.

00:36:13
People are very accustomed to Virtual Goods.

00:36:16
The trading of that there is a there is a market, there is a

00:36:18
currency, there is a value for non tangible objects but what

00:36:21
you guys have existed on what your success has come on.

00:36:24
So far, has been through straight-up social media, right?

00:36:27
It's people taking photos things in the real world and gaining

00:36:30
social currency through the success in whatever.

00:36:33
Attention those photos get, where do you see on the your

00:36:37
users interest, the involvement of this kind of web 30 Approach

00:36:43
to social currency towards I guess financialization, when it

00:36:46
comes to like, potentially issuing a token.

00:36:49
I don't think our users understand this, but I don't

00:36:52
think we had Mark Zuckerberg when they announced the news

00:36:56
feed. And, you know, his product

00:36:58
manager was famously, threatened by the community, but the

00:37:00
numbers on the back, end told them, it was working, you know,

00:37:04
there's a part of, and, of course, Steve Jobs was the king

00:37:08
of this. There's a part of creating

00:37:09
consumer products, which is data driven.

00:37:12
And talking to users, of course, right?

00:37:14
Ultimately we are serving them, but there's also a part of it

00:37:17
that's intuition and trying to create something that's

00:37:20
different and enabling enabled by the technologies that you see

00:37:24
adult way, the whole Henry, Ford thing, they would have said I

00:37:27
want Faster Horses or more horses or whatever.

00:37:29
Right, right. Right, right.

00:37:30
I think that's that has to be an obsession of yours if you're,

00:37:34
this is the hardest category in the world.

00:37:36
I think to build in, right is, how do you create something

00:37:40
that's taking advantage? So much has been Built already,

00:37:43
right? I mean you talk to investors

00:37:45
who've investing in Social for the last 15 to 20 years and

00:37:49
there was a consensus, maybe five years ago that social was

00:37:52
over, right? And even Snapchat had to

00:37:55
overcome that in their road to the market.

00:37:59
And of course when Instagram copied stories, a lot of people

00:38:03
thought and the snap share price reflected.

00:38:05
A lot of people thought snap was dead and it's the essential

00:38:08
thesis, the bear case. At that moment was social has

00:38:10
been built already, no one's ever.

00:38:12
Going to touch it again and the emergence of tick-tock, which I

00:38:16
think will be bigger than any of these companies has really

00:38:19
corrected. The market.

00:38:20
It is extremely addictive. It is, it's amazing, it's

00:38:24
amazing. And then, you know, Discord is

00:38:26
surging Jason, and that team are amazing.

00:38:28
Are going to build a behemoth company and hopefully with not

00:38:31
an a driven model. It's really exciting to see what

00:38:34
they're doing seems with subscriptions and I think now

00:38:37
there's this energy out there that social is about to change

00:38:41
and you know my belief is that why is it changing?

00:38:43
Its really because social media is a cultural artifact enabled

00:38:47
by technology, right? Fashion goes through Cycles.

00:38:50
Why were skinny jeans in in last week and now mom jeans are in

00:38:53
this week. Music goes through psycho,

00:38:55
right? I was managing an R&B group for

00:38:57
a while and the the whole premise was.

00:39:00
It's the Boys to Men of this time which was inspired by the

00:39:02
new edition of that time. And then the Four Tops and the

00:39:05
Jackson 5 and The Temptations of that time, right?

00:39:08
And so when you look at social media, you Really, if you're

00:39:13
building it, you really have to believe that it comes in cycles.

00:39:16
And so you have to think about what are the product values.

00:39:19
And for us, that's the authenticity, the community, the

00:39:21
intimacy that gen Z seems to really care about.

00:39:24
But also, what are the unique? Technological changes of this

00:39:28
time, right? No one talks about it, but

00:39:30
Facebook, Surviving the shift from desktop to mobile was

00:39:33
triumphant. Right meeting ever thought it

00:39:35
was gonna happen media. Never never thought it was going

00:39:37
to happen. It's a testament again to why

00:39:39
Zuckerberg is just the best. But also That is why they

00:39:43
hundred here for. He said that earlier and I was

00:39:45
surprised, you didn't react, I was like, I'm not as far as

00:40:00
the antitrust issues facing Facebook and the fact that I do

00:40:03
believe if he's as smart as I think and everyone else thinks

00:40:06
he is, he should break up the company, but as a technical

00:40:10
innovator, he really is preeminent.

00:40:12
But that's all I have to say on that one.

00:40:14
Well, I mean, what's interesting to me, let's see if I can make

00:40:17
this analogy through media here because that because I covered

00:40:19
that for a long time. And to me the most impressive

00:40:21
transformation that happened on that side of things was Netflix,

00:40:24
right? You know, moving from DVDs,

00:40:26
through the qwikster debacle to streaming, right was incredible

00:40:30
and has left them far out ahead, at least for the time being when

00:40:32
it comes to subscribers. But it would also like reads

00:40:36
Reed Hastings, thesis from the beginning was that eventually we

00:40:39
will get to this point where content is going to be streamed.

00:40:42
Directly into people's homes, like DVD was the intermediary

00:40:46
between where the president was and his vision.

00:40:49
And maybe that was the case with shock to, you know, he always

00:40:51
knew that social media was something that needed to exist.

00:40:54
You know as an extremely personal level and on people's

00:40:56
phones is like crypto and N FTS the end result of something that

00:41:02
has been. You know when it comes to social

00:41:05
media something that is needed to exist.

00:41:06
For some time great question. That is exactly why we're

00:41:09
looking so hard and do it and I would actually separate Two

00:41:13
different parts of the web. Three worlds, right?

00:41:16
So first, there's n of T. So the product itself, what are

00:41:19
you? You know, the equivalent in

00:41:21
gaming on a Roblox or a fortnight is the skins or the,

00:41:26
you know, in-game assets. But then the more exciting part

00:41:31
in some ways or the equally, exciting part is Progressive

00:41:34
decentralization model and issuing a token, which enables

00:41:40
people and it's obviously in extract.

00:41:42
Lee link to the issuance of entities.

00:41:44
But if you look at axi right, just the nft of the back sees

00:41:51
themselves as not as interesting as tying them to a token that's

00:41:54
publicly traded and is tied to the primary sales of the axes

00:42:00
and then the resale fees generated by the platform that

00:42:03
go into the community Treasury and are then given to the

00:42:07
participants in the ecosystem. That's really interesting.

00:42:10
It's never been done before, right?

00:42:12
And Back to Zuckerberg because I know you like talking about him

00:42:15
as do. I the fundamental problem that

00:42:19
Facebook is facing if we ignore section 230 and First Amendment

00:42:24
issues. If we ignore privacy and data

00:42:26
collection issues, the fundamental problem they're

00:42:28
facing is one that's driven by the business model which is we

00:42:33
need to create an algorithm that drives engagement because

00:42:37
engagement creates Adam to Tori and Adam inventory creates

00:42:41
Revenue growth. And so, what's really, what's

00:42:44
really compelling to our company is if you were genuinely trying

00:42:48
to create the once-in-a-generation social

00:42:50
media company that will change that, right?

00:42:54
Because Evan and Snapchat tried to build Hardware, you know, had

00:42:59
a bunch of false starts went into the ad model Pinterest has

00:43:04
to be an ad model. Reddit has tried all these other

00:43:06
things, it's going to be an ad model.

00:43:08
So if you're going to try to Jet, if you have teen girls in

00:43:11
college kids, Drive Social Network adoptions excluding the

00:43:15
Pinterest case, which is amazing for other reasons.

00:43:19
If you have that audience, which is really, really hard to do.

00:43:22
And you can see from all that's leaked in the hearings that

00:43:25
Facebook and Instagram have lost that audience.

00:43:28
So, if you're our company and you're trying to create

00:43:30
something that has a business model, that is not a driven

00:43:33
because there's something wrong with that ethically and

00:43:36
politically, then looking very hard at what a token issuance

00:43:40
and what changing the business model fundamentally because

00:43:42
Jason and the Discord team are choosing subscriptions which is

00:43:46
one of the other models, but end of TS and a token issuance are

00:43:49
really, really interesting from an ethical standpoint.

00:43:54
And I think that's why we're so inspired and energized to spend

00:43:58
all this time exploring it because that could be a

00:44:01
game-changer. That's the numbers I've

00:44:02
understood. Why you're looking into using

00:44:05
the most, I believed it the point that it's like, oh, it's

00:44:07
an escape hatch from the ad model.

00:44:10
That is condemned, which is it. Has such strong gravitational

00:44:13
pull because I covered Snapchat during that period, where Evan

00:44:17
actually embarrassingly one of the Scoops that I had early on

00:44:20
covering the company was like, Snap doesn't want to do ads

00:44:23
because they were talking to the all the Chinese companies of the

00:44:25
time. Evan didn't?

00:44:26
I mean it's true that it's one of the journalists, like Escape

00:44:29
hatches of true at the time? Because yeah, you know, they

00:44:31
were looking at, you know, micro payments and people spending

00:44:35
money on individual filters and I mean I guess you could call it

00:44:38
early and have tea or whatever Shirley.

00:44:40
Why didn't they have? They should have had An mou they

00:44:43
should have had cash app, right? The snapcash I want to go back

00:44:46
to the conference where we all got were this guy started.

00:44:48
And there's like, financialization is part of what

00:44:51
excites web three. I mean I was joking online.

00:44:54
Somebody was showing a chart of like interest in web three

00:44:56
verses like the Creator economy and it's way bigger for web

00:44:59
three. And I do think part of it is

00:45:00
like there are others Financial speculation to go with web three

00:45:03
like web, three justifies people, who just want to like

00:45:07
bedding currencies, and on the flip side, you know, there are

00:45:10
founders, like, yourself who are like, oh, I To build a company

00:45:14
like some actual things in this new technology could be useful

00:45:17
and make it possible. So you're interested in more

00:45:20
like a product lens, but then you go to this world.

00:45:23
That's so Financial eyes. And, I mean, that sort of the

00:45:25
etherium joke, you sort of started off with that story and

00:45:29
even some of the founders, who are hardcore, how what's the

00:45:33
Speculator percentage? I guess at this conference, or

00:45:36
like, if you had to say they're just like, betting on currency

00:45:38
goes up, I make a lot of money. That's what I care about, how

00:45:42
How prevalent was that? It's very large, it's very

00:45:45
large, and I think it's fascinating to think, as well.

00:45:48
So, on the individual basis there, right?

00:45:51
All of the open sea, whales the 20 of them, the board Apes

00:45:54
holders, the crypto Punk's holders, not all of them, but a

00:45:57
large number of them are very much interested in this, it's

00:46:01
part Community Driven, its part Financial speculation driven,

00:46:05
right? It's very hard to, as an

00:46:07
outsider who's, you know, a Believer now, but still an

00:46:10
outsider because I haven't Been with them, for any real period

00:46:14
of time, it's very hard to see what the difference is.

00:46:18
And you know, to untangle the links.

00:46:22
I think what's really interesting, people will be

00:46:24
giving you some Spiel and is like empty and you're like, you

00:46:27
just want to make money. I mean, like, you have to say

00:46:30
like, I mean, maybe you disagree, but certainly, some of

00:46:32
the things people say around crypto.

00:46:34
It's like what's the there there?

00:46:37
Right. Sure.

00:46:38
But in any emerging in any emerging technology in that,

00:46:42
Doubly. There will be a bit of a wild

00:46:44
west feel right. Just think about all some of the

00:46:47
news that's been made in the last couple weeks, right?

00:46:50
The head of product to the top and of Team Marketplace is

00:46:55
front-running the transactions and they then have to throw out

00:46:59
the squid games token. Right?

00:47:02
Goes up through the roof and built into the smart contract.

00:47:04
You can't sell and then the developers Cash Out 12 million

00:47:08
dollars. It was a fake squid game token,

00:47:10
they cashed out 12 million dollars.

00:47:11
So Definitely their security issues.

00:47:15
There's a big, alleged alleged everywhere.

00:47:17
Anybody just said, alleged? Yeah.

00:47:19
Right. Right.

00:47:20
So we'll run the disclaimer at the end of the episode.

00:47:23
Sure. But I think the majority of the

00:47:25
people I met and interacted with do seem to be good and are much

00:47:29
more interested in the community elements.

00:47:32
The decentralization elements. But of course, there's a little

00:47:34
bit of a manager. It's also knew I was just yeah,

00:47:37
somebody just had a like a bunch of their crypto like stolen at

00:47:40
gunpoint a I mean it's constant. All of that, all of that.

00:47:43
When you say like the wild west, I mean, so what were you going

00:47:47
to a lot of panels or give us a couple more scenes?

00:47:50
There what was another, like striking striking event?

00:47:54
I would say, one of the interesting observations I had

00:47:57
was there were a lot more investors there than there were

00:48:01
people building. So it was a commentary and

00:48:04
reflection on the amount of dry powder and investor dollars

00:48:11
chasing deals and They're not being that many people with

00:48:15
experience in the space. And also, you know, we to dinner

00:48:18
Monday, where we're trying to recruit people out of the social

00:48:21
media, Behemoth for art, you know, different parts of our

00:48:24
company. And there just seemed to be this

00:48:27
energy. They're searching for a cause

00:48:29
write, like this is the future. I'm, I'm not quite sure for what

00:48:33
it is, but we do. I want the money is feels like

00:48:36
when you know, for people who build consumer products when we

00:48:39
went up when an iPhone was first put into your hands.

00:48:42
Ends and you realize what the Apple team had accomplished and

00:48:45
what this would mean. It feels like another

00:48:48
generational seminal moment, even if you can't, you know, you

00:48:53
couldn't have predicted the first time you and I phone in

00:48:55
your hand, all the use cases and all the magic that would happen

00:48:58
just feel like Uber or covering Uber, you know, a lot of people

00:49:02
went there because it was such a hot company.

00:49:04
I mean, coinbase people ask me. Oh, like, what's the Uber now?

00:49:08
And coinbase is already public and so valuable.

00:49:12
But they're doing so well, but it doesn't feel as exciting.

00:49:14
I mean, you were sort of saying, you think coinbase is going to

00:49:17
beat Open Sea which would presumably mean, they have a lot

00:49:20
of room to grow here. I mean, but yeah, it just seemed

00:49:24
like people are in search of like the company.

00:49:26
That's clearly owning the trend to go for the greatest product

00:49:30
there. I mean, like I want to go back

00:49:31
to your iPhone reference for a second there because one of my

00:49:34
favorite moments in, you know, whatever I periodically re-watch

00:49:39
the video, Steve Jobs introducing the iPhone in The

00:49:42
seven. It's a great hook and reporters

00:49:44
are cynical. You're like, every morning when

00:49:46
I wake up, I didn't get excited. I watch a Steve Jobs.

00:49:49
Yeah, I mean I think it's like you can talk about the world

00:49:51
that was created after that all you want.

00:49:53
But in terms of just like a great product reveal, it's

00:49:56
fucking incredible because it you know, before there was the

00:49:58
knowledge before the iPhone, there was a time afterwards and

00:50:01
you see him, everyone knew that it was coming.

00:50:02
We had a vague idea of what the iPhone was.

00:50:05
He takes it out, everyone kind of gets it and then at some

00:50:08
point in the movie, sorry in the video, he takes that he He shows

00:50:12
the feature where you can pinch to zoom.

00:50:14
So he's like you just take a photo and you take your finger

00:50:16
like this you should end the audience has this moment of like

00:50:19
fuck, that's so good that makes so much sense.

00:50:22
This is the perfect user interaction.

00:50:24
It's a it's a most I've never made in my life before and yet

00:50:27
now I knew exactly what to do with it and that to me is why

00:50:30
the iPhone works because they had like that feature in there

00:50:33
in which people intuitively knew what to do with it and it worked

00:50:35
and instantly this became the best product in a field of

00:50:39
people all trying to make this product.

00:50:40
And so that's sort of Do you see anything close to that with, you

00:50:44
know, at this conference that somebody has a product there in

00:50:46
which any, you know, lay person once they see, it does

00:50:50
demonstrate in front of them, it will click in some sort of like

00:50:53
visceral Atomic away, that they will get it and all the sudden,

00:50:57
all this bullshit that's been going on around, it will fall

00:50:59
into place and the good ideas will fall in and the bad ideas

00:51:02
will go away. And like this world is web three

00:51:05
world will actually exist in the tangible aspect.

00:51:08
Now I feel it coming right? That's fundamentally.

00:51:11
What we would hope to build, right?

00:51:13
Because the web three Community is building the technological

00:51:17
backbone. But on the ux side, all the

00:51:20
nomenclature we talked about earlier is not there, right?

00:51:23
So, even using for us, the word and have tea, or the word token,

00:51:28
is going to be a huge decision, right?

00:51:31
Maybe that's the underlying technology were using or the

00:51:35
architecture, but we may use other words, you know, my

00:51:38
friends, Eternal, the video game and of Company.

00:51:42
They called their nfc's moments. And right now they're built on

00:51:46
floats as the Dapper Labs chain, and so you can buy their moments

00:51:50
for nine dollars. You use.

00:51:51
There's a Fiat on-ramp. And, of course, you can also buy

00:51:54
them in flow, but they're incredibly sharp.

00:51:57
And, you know, the Dapper Labs Top Shot, you acts is probably

00:52:01
the best in class right now, when it comes to serving up,

00:52:04
users can consumers the your community, something that the

00:52:08
average Layman can understand. And I think, In the wallet

00:52:12
worlds, you know what, the team at Rainbow or building, which is

00:52:16
the best etherium wallet, or just crypto wallet by, you know,

00:52:22
Leaps and Bounds that wallet I think is going to do amazing

00:52:26
things for the adoption of cryptocurrency.

00:52:29
But even then, you know that team is coming from the crypto

00:52:32
world. So I think it'll be really

00:52:33
interesting when the two really Collide and you can find,

00:52:37
hopefully a product with web to design, you know, Qualities that

00:52:42
can be understood and really lead to mass adoption.

00:52:46
Did you pick up any new cryptocurrencies while you were

00:52:50
there? How much was there, sort of,

00:52:52
like, get on this one? It's about to go up or I heard

00:52:57
Whispers And rumbling of that but that's not what I was there

00:53:00
for seven. But does it come up like at

00:53:02
these dinners? But people are like, oh, like

00:53:04
what's the hot? Small currency or buying or

00:53:07
absolutely. Absolutely.

00:53:09
And I think, what's also interesting is You know, back to

00:53:12
the Open Sea. Ethical lapse that, you know,

00:53:16
they had to depart Reserve in there, keep their product guy

00:53:20
was before they would list it. You know, buying some of the

00:53:24
collection of nft is known on their homepage so he then knew

00:53:28
where the volume would then go, right.

00:53:29
He was bomb but then these kryptos lose found it and as a

00:53:34
result and that part of the promise of this technology is

00:53:37
how quickly someone was able to find it because it's all public

00:53:39
on The Ledger. And so, They founded.

00:53:42
And then he they had to fire him.

00:53:44
But, you know, you've got to believe there are employees at

00:53:49
coinbase and a bunch of these companies who are seeing flows

00:53:53
happen and acting on them, right because there's no regular

00:53:56
regulation about all of it. So to me it seemed and back to

00:54:00
the question earlier about the amount of financial speculation

00:54:04
it definitely was coming up and a lot of the you know, hushed

00:54:07
Whispers that I wasn't necessarily participating in

00:54:10
that. There is a lot of Of and even

00:54:12
it's interesting when you talk about the VCS themselves, right?

00:54:16
The multi coins, the Alameda research, the jump capitals, the

00:54:20
finance, a lot of them have both Venture arms and hedge funds and

00:54:25
that's new to the Venture Capital World, Andreessen

00:54:27
Horowitz. I'm sure we'll introduce it in

00:54:29
2023 but and you know and the changes that Sequoia just made

00:54:33
are preparing but they're going to think of it more as a mutual

00:54:36
fund approach less than a hedge fund.

00:54:39
But what's interesting in to me, You're going to this crypto

00:54:42
world, and I grew up in New York and her friends.

00:54:44
A lot of the hedge funds is hedge funds, entering the space.

00:54:48
You have to understand, you know, you have to approach it

00:54:51
with a sense of caution. And with real due diligence,

00:54:55
because their incentives in, you know, creating the ecosystem

00:54:59
around a currency, they were very early in which they're

00:55:02
incredibly deep holders. M are not aligned necessarily

00:55:05
with those of your company. And I think really getting, you

00:55:10
know, in terms of what you're building on Whose money or

00:55:13
taking thinking hard about that and who's, you know, when you

00:55:16
give access to the information, the private information of your

00:55:19
company who are you giving it to?

00:55:20
And why you have to be really, really careful about that, hmm.

00:55:24
He's yeah, these firms want visibility into how things are

00:55:27
going so they want access to companies, you might see it,

00:55:30
right? And I think they're all from my

00:55:33
interactions, ethical genuine, thoughtful people.

00:55:36
But still, you know, you know, this is an incredibly

00:55:40
capitalists. Machine.

00:55:43
Like if you had a an ape or whatever Krypto Punk like was it

00:55:48
obvious that you own like we're people wearing them on there

00:55:51
like t-shirts or was there a way to like in the real world signal

00:55:54
to people? Like I sunk a bazillion dollars

00:55:57
and do a hot and ft at this thing.

00:55:59
Yes! People wearing them on t-shirts.

00:56:02
Alexis Ohanian. Whom I love is our lead seed

00:56:05
investor. He wore his crypto Punk of his

00:56:08
wife Serena Williams to the Met Gala.

00:56:11
That's so absolutely there's a huge element of Pride taken and

00:56:16
being a part of this community is the nice side of it for sure

00:56:20
but it's also a status symbol. You know.

00:56:22
You see on Twitter people refer to their nft collections as the

00:56:25
equivalent of their Rolex, right?

00:56:27
So it's like having a really fancy watch.

00:56:29
I like seeing a huge crossover between like sneaker heads and

00:56:32
people that are in 2nf. TS, right, right.

00:56:35
Do you have a fancy nft? No, no.

00:56:38
I see nothing wrong with it though.

00:56:39
But I also don't have a fancy watch or a fancy.

00:56:41
The car right? Well, that's the next move.

00:56:44
I mean, if that's the end of, that's the culture, that

00:56:46
society, that decision not to wear those things is like, I do

00:56:50
think it's weird, and I think somebody else was maybe it was

00:56:53
like Sam, Lester's. I I mean, our culture,

00:56:56
especially Silicon Valley culture, moved away from like

00:57:00
the showy wealth of Wall Street and like Rolex type behavior.

00:57:03
And I think in like San Francisco that was always sort

00:57:06
of tacky, you know, you just like we're all birds and a

00:57:10
hoodie or whatever. It's Strange to me, that sort of

00:57:14
the yeah that's super consumerist showy.

00:57:16
And if tea culture has sort of become acceptable and I wonder

00:57:22
how long I think it's part of it is related to the rise of

00:57:26
injuries and Horowitz, right? Which is as much a media Empire

00:57:29
as an investing Empire and heard was so inspired by what Michael

00:57:32
Ovitz did was CIA, right? Why did it?

00:57:35
Why did Chris lines win the clubhouse deal?

00:57:37
It was because he was able to get Kevin Hart and a bunch of

00:57:40
celebrities even though You know, the clubhouse team had

00:57:43
been Benchmark, entrepreneurs and residents, right?

00:57:46
Brutal, right. So, they saw, they saw a real

00:57:49
strategic and again, to my point earlier, social media consumer,

00:57:54
Tech social companies are cultural artifacts, and

00:57:57
therefore, are inextricably linked to celebrity in this

00:58:00
country. Are you an and recent company?

00:58:03
No, we're not. I am an admirer, you know, I met

00:58:05
them. I think what?

00:58:07
And have met a number of the partners, over the years.

00:58:10
I think, what they do isn't Incredibly impressive for a

00:58:13
number of reasons. Yeah.

00:58:14
And the people working there very small, right.

00:58:16
But the truth is, when you look at the rise of Instagram, right?

00:58:20
Scooter Braun was calling, Kevin trying to get Bieber to be an

00:58:23
investor. When it because Bieber drove a

00:58:25
huge part of the adoption Snapchat, a little less.

00:58:28
So because it's based on intimacy but Clubhouse their

00:58:30
rise very driven by celebrities Twitter.

00:58:33
Of course, huge moment when Ashton Kutcher was using it and

00:58:36
that inspired Ashton becoming a VC and then Oprah, you know,

00:58:40
there's great. Beans in that Nick Bilton book

00:58:43
about their servers melting when Oprah.

00:58:46
First, you know, talked about Twitter on her show which was,

00:58:49
you know, the preeminent couch at that time.

00:58:51
So I think Silicon Valley has long wanted to believe that.

00:58:56
It's all about product and engineering and you acts but

00:59:00
celebrities have always driven adoption.

00:59:02
And so, there's been this uncomfortable relationship with

00:59:06
Hollywood, of course, because who's who's your most helpful?

00:59:11
Bertie investor, we got a number, you know, of course, in

00:59:14
the beginning, it was David, but can't pick among your children,

00:59:17
right? Yeah.

00:59:18
All that happened. But you know, now we've brought

00:59:20
Annie Leibovitz and her team Karen and Jason are unbelievably

00:59:23
help. We're going to hopefully do

00:59:25
something big with them soon. The Chainsmokers have been

00:59:28
amazing, you know I've course of a long relationship with Sofia

00:59:31
Vergara and her manager Luiz. It's like my brother.

00:59:33
They've been very very helpful to us.

00:59:36
We have a number card Delevingne got involved.

00:59:38
Kevin Durand Rich climb in. I just saw her.

00:59:41
Every dollar and Rudi with Mastery.

00:59:44
So I mean and and in right are coming wasn't going to mention

00:59:47
the name, you underestimate La tech companies.

00:59:49
Like name-dropping is the currency down there like he'd go

00:59:52
on for more. Well you can you can't leave

00:59:55
anybody out. They all want to help it is

00:59:56
amazing. I mean, it's yeah, it's cool.

00:59:59
It's a cool moment right now. I mean cool.

01:00:03
Well I don't know any final, thoughts from anybody?

01:00:05
I got one last question here. You know we're recording this

01:00:07
episode both Eric and I are in New York City momentous day

01:00:10
earlier this week when Eric Adams was not only elected

01:00:13
mayor, but made the announcement that he was going to be

01:00:16
accepting his first three paychecks in Bitcoin.

01:00:19
Can you pledge or sign a pledge on our show that the next couple

01:00:23
of paychecks that you get will be in some sort of

01:00:25
cryptocurrency to our accountants?

01:00:27
But I'm incredibly interested in that.

01:00:30
Thank you for. All right, thank you so much for

01:00:34
coming on. Covered a lot of ground, you

01:00:36
know, kind of Realtek, shit. You know, web three.

01:00:39
We use that phrase which I don't think we've said before on the

01:00:43
show, I'm not sure. Thanks a lot.

01:00:45
This is fun. So if I'm Valerie, goodbye,

01:01:07
goodbye. Goodbye.

01:01:08
Goodbye goodbye, goodbye, goodbye.