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Techno Capital Machine | Contributing stETH To Earn MOR

Mar 03, 202539 minEp. 6
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Episode description

With great power factor comes great yield.

Welcome everyone, Kyrin here with Ep#6 of Mere Morpheus. Today we're going to be analysing the 24% capital bucket, how it first came about, the effects of the 90 day fair launch and minor changes that were added post hoc to stop the scourge of the yield farming bearwhale, plus how any project can actually apply this same process.

This is a Value 4 Value show so please provide back any value you got with some time, talent or treasure!

Referral Address: 0xE935f231c99c04Ee0b4532a3d0BdA81B152a0384
Referral Website: https://dashboard.mor.org/#/capital?referrer=0xE935f231c99c04Ee0b4532a3d0BdA81B152a0384&network=mainnet

Timeline:
(00:00:00) Intro
(00:01:05) Das Kapital
(00:05:30) TCM TLDR
(00:10:48) Bootstrap In
(00:15:58) The Unfortunate Bearwhale Farmer
(00:20:45) By The Power Of Staking
(00:24:32) Shut Up & Take My stETH
(00:28:01) Y'all Got Any More Of Them TCM?
(00:31:16) Honey, I Saved Open Source
(00:34:47) Value 4 Value Referral



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Transcript

Intro

Kyrin DownKyrin Down

With great power factor comes great yield. Oh, yeah. Welcome everyone to another episode of the Mere Morpheus podcast. I'm your host here, Kyrin, live on the 03/03/2025. And as you might surmise, this is the podcast where I dismantle the bureaucratic, capitalist, oppressive machine. No. I'm probably not gonna be doing that today, in this episode. But what I will be talking about is analyzing the capital bucket of the Morpheus project. So this is the 24%

of the total tokens that go to this bucket. What is it? How did it originate? Why is it important? Why do we need this? The effects of the ninety day fair launch and the minor changes that will still probably occur to this bucket going towards the future. A little story of the scourge of the of the bear whale, and also how any other project could apply this same project, process, I guess. So let's jump on to Das Kapital,

Das Kapital

the, as as Marx would perhaps say. And a simple question, why do you need capital for a new project? And it's it's relatively simple, but if you dive down deep into it long enough, I think you'll get to all sorts of questions like what is money and how does incentives works on on people. Actually got a book review of this, the price of time in the mere models book reviews channels if you're interested in in that sort of thing. But ultimately, it's linked to incentives and and what is feasible

feasible. What can people do and how are they going to live in the real world while perhaps poll, following this passion, their pursuit of what they're actually trying to do? So, it's reasonable, perhaps for a couple of people to contribute to an open source project in in their free time. If it's something they're passionate about, you know, if they're even lucky, perhaps they

are, have retired, have independent sources of income and can perhaps do it full time. But even then, you're you're gonna at some point need money, resources to scale things, to incentivize more people to work on it, to have a system where people can contribute and live in the in the real world if you want this sort of thing to gain the real traction and movement.

So there's many ways that you can perhaps do this. Now, in the standard traditional world of companies, you know, it'd be seed raising rounds by venture capital. You can have perhaps a ready made project out of the box that you've already worked on and so therefore have some some initial income already coming in. So tied to like a physical business, perhaps, you could have a company taking the financial hit of contributing to open source like Meta is doing at the moment, with its lama.

You could start a DAO. You could use the v for v model like, podcasting two point o is. But a lot of them, involve, I guess, the administration stuff and are ripe for internal politicking. So for example, with DAOs and their tokens, a lot of them either become pay to play, or dying on the vine of, like, a thousand cuts by voting, on every single issue and things like this, or the gradual influence on pressure of of money on the system. So, for example, Ethereum almost became a for profit

corporation. And instead of going down the foundation route, maybe they would have had a foundation and also been for profit. Not not too sure of the specific details. But, you could see how they almost went down that route due to impressions from within their their own community.

OpenAI, for example, used to be open source. And then when the gradual influence and certain pressures of money in that system paid its toll, then they went closed source and, you know, bowed the knee, took the knee to the government and, and to all the influences

related there. So, okay, well, what the hell can you do? What's a good way of raising capital which will keep people and incentives aligned so that you don't have miscellaneous and, I guess, splitting up branching, wasting of time on politicking or of going closed source and, you know, abandoning, I guess, the ethos of what you started with. Well, we have the techno capital machine, and there's a whole section of this in the GitHub of of Morpheus.

I'd love to know Marx's thought of the the techno capital machine. God, that would be funny.

But in any case, I wanna read off this little section here, which will give you an idea of this. So today, there is no easy way for developers who create software to get rewarded for their work without going through an antiquated process. They have to form a company, a foundation, or a DAO to handle sales, computation, storage, overhead, and collect payments from users. This proposal for a techno capital machine is meant to create a platform develop for developers to create and deploy their software. It does so in a way so that the TCM,

techno capital machine, that's the acronym, first handles all the infrastructure and payments before rewarding the developer based on the popularity of the program. Cool. Okay. Well, that's a rather generic description, but also gets highlights to the problem and and what the solution is. So give me the tcm tldr.

TCM TLDR

Okay. Okay. Your wish is my command. And so we've got this little checklist here, also taken from that same section,

which gives a a brief overview of of how this works. So you'll have a developer deploy a native token to power their project, users staking, staked ETH, can allocate to, choose to allocate their yield to, this project in exchange for allocating the stake teeth that generates yield to help fund a project users are rewarded with a proportional stream of the project's native token, aka your yield, which is coming from your stake teeth is now going to a a new section here of,

the the stake teeth is is kind of being used to to buy the the token itself. 50% of the yield allocated to a project is you to purchase that project's native token. If you look on your screen here, I've I've got a little demonstration of, you know, you got your stake teeth, the 3% yield coming from that. And let's just say that's a hundred ETH. That gets split up into 50 ETH, which is used for for buying more,

or in this case for more. And then 50% of that is used to pair with the deposited to a liquidity pool and paired with the token, of an automated market maker. Look, this, I'm gonna be upfront and honest with a lot of these things here when it comes into the deep weeds and technical details of how contracts work, how, first of all, how they code and created no idea. I tried Python once and was abysmal at it.

But the the I kind of understood this, the pairing, creating a liquidity pool, that makes sense to me. When it's a new original project, I didn't understand the step number three, which was the used to purchase that projects native token, because like, where's that purchase coming from if the if a market doesn't already exist for that. So if you do know that, please reply down in the comments below and

inform us. I got to this step where it was like step one deposit stake teeth. Step two, wait, step three, question mark, question mark, question mark, step four profit. So obviously, I don't understand all of this. But what I do understand is how the effects of things works. And I can see that and verify that for myself. So the important thing is that it's pro rata based on your contribution. So if you're, you know, a small minnow, you've only got, you know, 0.1 stake teeth or less,

you can still contribute the way that a whale can. But obviously, the proportions of what you get is going to be based on the proportions that you provide. So the my initial testing out of this because I was part of the actual Morpheus Fair launch

was that what other people were saying of how much they stick staked and how much they got was also related to the same proportion of what I staked and what I got. So this is one of those ones where it's like, you know, I don't understand the deep contracts and nuances of how the contracts work. But this, you know, I did enough research to see that, okay, I was getting roughly what other people were getting, and I'm sure there were a lot of eyes on this contract and people,

looking at it hint, hint it being open source to make sure that everything was above board and that there is not any shenanigans going on the side of a pre mine or, you know, VC sales beforehand or tokens being set aside for x y z. No. This was, you know, done in a in a fair launch manner. And where with these smart contracts, anyone can go check it out and do these sorts of things. So, I've got a little question here, actually, of,

one in the chat. And you're saying, how does integrating staked ETH into more balance the risk of liquidation or other market marketing volatility plays or smart security, smart contract security risk? So this is one of those sections where it's like obviously there's always, smart contract security risks, and there's always a risk in that. The longer it's been around, the more it's been battle tested, is is the way to go. And obviously, having security audits and things like that,

help that a lot. And I believe this one did before it before it was launched. Who paid for that how that came about? Once again, I'm not too sure I don't have all of these details. And also the the risk of liquidation, other marketing volatility plays, we will be getting on to that in these next sections here. So there is a question, I guess, of, okay, why use the yield from stake teeth and not just use the stake teeth itself or just ETH or any other capital?

And the answer to that, I think there is a psychological nuance related to, you know, you've got your stake teeth, your money. But then there's also this yield, which is like money to come. It's not already with you. And there is big psychological differences of how things are related to time, how time is related to money. Check out the book review again,

which changes these dynamics. I will be going over that in the future episode in on fair launches. So let's bootstrap in. Let's, see what actually happened with the Morpheus Fair Launch in the in this capital bucket. So

Bootstrap In

commenced on February eighth of twenty twenty four. So we're, you know, more than a year later now. And this occurred for ninety days until May eighth of twenty twenty four. On the ninety first day, so May 9, was when tokens were claimable and therefore AKA sellable. So this bucket was the first of the four that could be accessed, this being capital code, compute, and, you know, community contributions builders. And, so most of the work was done of this and those other buckets were locked until

a later date when, you know, it's the bootstrapping period. You gotta you gotta get get things rolling first before you can have a fully functioning system. So another little fun Easter egg, if you we try to include these here on this channel, was that the what was it? February 8 was the twenty eighth Earth anniversary of the declaration of the independence of cyberspace. Now with these Easter eggs, like I mentioned in the last episode,

I think a lot of them could just come down to luck. You know, there's only fucking three hundred and sixty five days in a year. So there's gotta be all sorts of Easter eggs for everything. And, you know, it's not necessarily that this was done intentionally. But we like to have fun here. So let's just say that it was some extra details on these. So the minimum amount of stake teeth to deposit was 0.01.

This is still the case. A year later, there is a seven day lockup period, which is when you deposit your stake teeth, you could only unlock that no seven days later. And then it's, you can claim that again, or it's it's locked in the contract for seven days, and then you can get it back. So there's only a seven day period where your funds, I guess, are an inaccessible. And this was done to, stop people from doing quick yield farming as the rewards have to be calculated once per day,

and it rewards in advance on that day. So there are ways of gaming that and, you know, people who are out for QuickBooks are always looking for opportunities like that. Now initially, you could claim your rewards from your stake to ETH, aka the more tokens, once, you know, every twelve seconds. Essentially, once, as the Ethereum blockchain

progresses, you could claim, you know, these tiny minuscule amounts. Why would anyone do this? Because you'd be paying gas fees even though they're relatively small on the, net network. This is where it was launched. I'm not sure. But nevertheless, now the estate deposit contract is managed by, four seven multisig. I believe that's now five of nine, from community members who were participating in, you know, writing up the smart contracts and, this whole process.

As far as I can tell, they don't actually have that much power over that. It's kind of autonomous that that contract. And I believe there's plans to make it an immutable, like lock the contract so no one could do anything with it in the in the future in terms of how the more tokens are distributed from the the capital bucket.

So enough of that, give me the stats on how much was staked over this period. What what were some of the effects? Well, as you can see on the chart that I've got here, which is of the first eleven days, there was this big ramp up period, where it went from zero stake teeth in the very first day until eleven days later, got up to about 80,000. And then if you look at the other little inset chart there, this just continued to rise until it peaked.

You know, the most concrete amount I saw on the on the discord was 142 k staked ETH on the May 5, which was at that time was 4,700 Australian dollars per per ETH. Yes. We're using Aussie dollars here. None of this US crap. So quick math study called about 600,000,000. There isn't in this other chart, I believe it actually got over to 150,000 staked ether at one point in the in the capital bucket, which was just after the unlocking period. So that would have been like May 19, twentieth, late May.

And then it's it's kind of reduced down a lot since then. So not too shabby. That's a that's a whole shit ton of money that people were contributing. And so of that 600,000,000, it was the, you know, the yield of that, which was going to, I guess, start the the process of creating a market

in sent. And therefore, once a market is is contributed, once the more token has a price, then the other buckets, the code community and compute, they are then incentivized because the more more they can get, then they can actually pay for the services, the real life living and stuff while they're working on their computer and creating things. So not too bad.

The Unfortunate Bearwhale Farmer

Let's jump on to the after effect. What happened after the the ninety days? And I guess the most notable thing was the price went down a lot. Down, down, down, down, down. And this, I feel like, just happens for every token and thing that's released. Doesn't matter if it's Fair Launch or not. It just, it goes has perhaps a pickup or a down. Look. I don't know. I don't know about financial markets. I certainly don't do day trading, technical and as analysis, things like that.

So after it got to I think this was hundred and 92 Australian dollars. It's quickly dropped down to that, like, 30 to 40 ish, 20 to 40 zone, and it's just been crabbing along there for a while, for the rough year, since, afterwards. I guess what's important to note is that much like BTC, more has a,

is still being released every day, much as BTC is being mined every day. And so, albeit this is less because the amount of more per day drops, as we will see in the tokenomics section every day, it drops by a little amount. And this is disinflation are disinflationary, not deflationary.

A lot of people get that wrong. If it's deflationary, deflationary, it means that tokens are being taken away from the total supply, whereas disinflationary just means more is being released, but it's a tiny it's a lesser amount each day. Hence, how how Bitcoin works with its four years halving. So what you see is that even though the the price stays at about the same amount, the the actual total market cap can jump up and down and will probably steadily go over up over time as well.

As of the recording of this podcast, there's now 39,000 staked Ethan in the capital pool, and 1,300,000.0 more has been allocated to there since the, the time period of of it being released. So, obviously not all of that has been claimed. And now contrary to delusional fantasies, up only is not possible. So I think it's likely that most projects will experience something like this. And Morpheus itself had its

fair share of short term yield farmers who were, you know, they already had had steak teeth or had teeth and were like, how can I make more money from this? Which fair enough. People like to do that. That's that's what humans do. And how how they go about doing that as long as they're not harming people, I think is or or stealing from them, you know, the kind of fundamental concepts of life, liberty and property, that that's fine. But also if you're if you're creating a system, I guess you want

to have the balance of like, what type of people are you attracting to your project? What what what are you incentivizing within that? You know, and this is where you'll see a lot of meme coins do the, you know, the farming, the, the burning of tokens, the playing around to create metrics that look good and things like this. And, what was being noticed with the Morpheus was particularly in the, I guess, like Q4 of twenty twenty four was,

there was I don't know exactly how it works. There was something to do with, like, if the more price was going down, there was a way to yield farm, which created this kind of negative feedback loop. And that the person who was doing this could create, you know, claim more, dump it, and in that dumping, be able to claim more. You know, it was one of those ones

that was just creating a negative feedback loop. So this was the it's now not as infamous as the BTC bear whale, who's a person who was just a whale who was dumping, dumping super hard. But Morpheus had a person who had, you know, like thousands of steak teeth, and was doing a very similar thing of just dumping, dumping, dumping. And the funny thing is that they actually sold all of their their Morpheus just before the Venice snapshot on the late, you know, on the last day of twenty twenty four.

And if they just held for an extra, like, two weeks, they would have got, like, a huge, huge airdrop. So rest in peace, Mr. Bearwell. So but but how how did this come about? Like, what what can you do to stop value extractors taking from your your project and capitalizing on on negative feedback loops because they're just playing by the rules. Right. And

By The Power Of Staking

I'm going to be channeling my my he man vibes here. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. What's going on? By the power of staking, I have the power factor. I wish I had a sword with me. So whilst calling upon the power of Grayskull is usually my go to option in terms of solving problems, There was a another way, and this was with a few alterations in the I guess you'd call them the capital bucket of of the incentives there. There was just an easy way to to stop this. And so

to incentivize long term holding. And once again, this is you got to be careful here because you don't want to just have like these ridiculous lock ups and say, oh, this is, you know, look at these tokens. They're looks they're locked for a million years. Isn't this good for price or something like that? You got to find this balance between having incentives that will work over the long term whilst also, not

creating a like a Ponzi nomics system. It's it's a it's a fair touch balance. Like it's I think there's a way of doing it, but Lordy, do you have to be very careful with it? So, how this happened with with the Morpheus was there was a, there's been a system for a while which is called Morpheus request for comment. So TCM, the techno capital machine, is actually Morpheus request for comment number six,

if you wanted to check that out. And this system is designed so that transparent, fair, and efficient such suggestions can be implemented. Three of these were proposed and, adopted, namely being MRC 39, which is staking more for capital providers, MRC 45, the Morpheus staked ETH referral system, and MRC 46, the ninety day delay on more claims for capital contributors. I'll skip the middle one just for the moment because that has more relevance,

actually in the value for value section that I'll do at the end. So the other two, what were they? So the power factor, is essentially a way of staking your claimable more, rewards and then getting a multiple multiplication effect on that. So, you know, you've got your your stake teeth, the yield on that is is earning more. And you can at like I mentioned at the start, you could claim that every twelve seconds if you wanted. But

what's a way to to stop people from claiming every twelve seconds? Well, there's a way to incentivize people for long terming, which is if you just leave it in there, you can get a power factor and it'll it'll multiply. So, there's this little curve here you can see on your screen went up to a maximum of six years where you'd get a 10.7, multiplication effect. I tried this out with mine.

So you can see it there. I've locked it until the twentieth of the nine twenty twenty eight, and I've got a power factor of 7.13582 blah blah blah blah blah blah. So, that was one way of doing it. And then also just the claiming of once per ninety days was also implemented after the first eight deposit or since the last claim. And once again, this was

just voted on by the community. Anyone could have their say if they wanted to do it in, you know, have it in five day increments in thirty days and whatever. That was certainly available. And it was once again, we'll get into atomic government's governance at another episode. But this didn't actually have that much effect only on people who were doing these kind of really short term yield farming strategies affected less than 10% of the capital contributors. Anyone who could once again

have their voice at at any point in their site, okay. Shut up and take my state ETH. Okay. Let's do it. If you wanted to contribute in this way, how can you? So I'll list a couple of helpful websites here, the most important being more.org.

Shut Up & Take My stETH

If you go to the dashboard there, that's the interface where you can, you know, put it in, yeah, connect your wallet with your your stake teeth in there and say, like, I'm gonna stake for for this long. And also, I wanna have a power factor, you know, how long do we wanna stake it all for, etcetera, etcetera. Once again, the the stake teeth, your your capital can be removed at any time. Doesn't,

other than the seven day lockup period, but it is never at risk. And it's been, what, a year now for the smart contracts risks and, nothing has been taken. So that's pretty good. Morelord.com. This is great for general stats and info as well as, stuff on your account in particular. There's more stats.info. It's kind of variation of more lord, but in green. So that's kind of cool. And June.com,

if you type in Morpheus there, you can find some historical info. That's where I got the the chart showing the stake detail over time. I guess the important thing to remember with all of this is that it's dynamic and and liable to change. So, you know, historically, up until this point, stake teeth was the the only way to contribute capital to to your project via the yield. But there are suggestions of doing this with like USDC, Seoul, USDT,

all of which I have staking and a yield from them. But I think even BTC was mentioned. I'm not sure how that would work.

And the dynamics in place could change slightly. But, you know, the the the principle is the same, which is you if you want to contribute capital to a project, you can do so and that this capital is kind of the bootstrapping to find a market value for a token which and if there's other buckets being contributed or that other that people can access it for providing services like compute, like code, like,

an agent or community builders and things like that. It's a way of just bootstrapping a project off of the ground. So kinda same with these websites. The the capital bucket, don't take my, my words here as as law. My aim with these episodes is to provide, I guess, the historical context of of what I saw see going on with this project. And then if there is opportunities to say, like, hey, there's the latest developments and things like that,

I will I will do so at the same time. But, yeah, I'm more interested in covering, you know, the bear whale and the and the how things went at the start rather than at this moment going over the latest up to date things. Once again, if you're looking for like an ossified store value, you know, go to BTC. And but if you want to, if you have an idea for a project and you want to make that happen,

you're probably gonna need a way of doing that. And like I said, the foundations, the DAOs, the companies, the all those sorts of things, They might suit your particular project, your need, but, there's no guarantee and there are other ways of doing that, which gets us onto this section here. Y'all got any more of them TCM?

Y'all Got Any More Of Them TCM?

Why? Yes, we do. So it's called the more 20 token standard. It it went so well that kind of seemed like a shame that the smart contracts would be utilized just for this one project. So it was like, well, what's what's a way of, like, contributing this back so that anyone could do this? And so,

all these smart contracts and the dashboards and things to set up, they've already been created. You know, I think it's one of those ones where you just have to plug and play a couple of different variables,

and you'd be able to to do this. Apparently, there's a to utilize these as a point 35% of the staked ether awards, AKA 35 basis points so that if you use this stuff for for a new project, point 35% of the staked yield from that would go into the Morpheus as like a thank you, I guess, for for doing that. I don't know how that works. I don't know how because it's open source. So couldn't you just copy all those things anyway? So that I don't know in terms of that.

And that kind of feels like it's made up on the spot where where that point three five number come from. But the whole thing, I guess, is customizable as well because for the Morpheus project, the 24% of the total more tokens are going towards capital. But this could be more or less depending on on yours. So as far as I know, there's only been one project to actually utilize this fair launch mechanism so far,

and that was now space. They're a far caster client, so therefore, like an ETH social media platform kind of modeled on Myspace, in terms of feel, and they released their space token this way. I believe they are also a Morpheus builder. And if you wanted to stake more to them, you could do that. But getting ahead of myself, that'll that'll be in the community and build a bucket in the in the future. So one, I guess it's been proven that this this sort of fair launch mechanism can work.

And then it's been proven again by another another place doing it another team, another project doing that. So yeah, pretty cool. I think I think that's, as far as I've seen, it's worked reasonably well. I haven't seen any evidence of, you know, pre mine shenanigans of people pulling the rug over of secret tokens being distributed and hidden in

secret wallets. Once again, I can't read smart smart contracts, so I can't verify that for myself. But it's one of those ones where because it's open source and out there, the more eyes that get on it, the more likely it is that someone will see that in the future. And when you've got, you know, 600,000,000 of Ethereum being, the stakes to that and therefore a fair chunk of actual rewards yield going, going into this,

the the likelihood that someone actually has looked at it is very good. Much like the more Bitcoin rises in price, the more incentives there are to for people to triple check that the code is working as intended. So,

Honey, I Saved Open Source

honey, I saved open source. This is just a little final section, which is like it's funny. When I look at Bitcoin sometimes I think

one of the greatest innovations of it is how it will actually affects the energy grids of the world. You know, being able to stabilize grids of being the of being able to handle peak loads or new or, you know, being able to smooth out peak loads and the base demand so that there is always a base demand and then the extra stuff which are, you know, a bit more temperamental, such

as renewables of being able to balance the grid so that that makes sense, that that could be like one of the greatest innovations of Bitcoin. That's one of the ways it could have the biggest impact on the world. And, I would be surprised if this sort of similar thing happens with Morpheus. Like maybe it's the the fair launch mechanism, which is the actual one of the actual greatest innovations that it's it's created.

And that's the all the AI and, you know, ushering in a better world for in a more fair world for for people to access AI and agents is just a nice side effect and benefit of that as well. It could be it could be, you know, and Bitcoin as well. And these things change over time, you know, the white paper Bitcoins, peer to peer electronic cash.

It certainly doesn't behave like cash at this stage, but maybe in the very, very fair few far future, it actually will be once it's store value and it's, it's kind of reached that that upper limits of where it is a bit more stable, it can be utilized in that way. So, I wanna give a little shout out here as well to o o x one nine eight four on,

on the discord because they they had a little post here, which I saw and I thought, you know, this sums it up quite nicely. And so he says, it's not that complicated. Stake deep deposits gave up 3% yield for more. That 3% yield went out to pay coders and apps at app devs,

via more. 3% yield went into l p as liquidity, and the amount of more sale mostly came from the desire of users holding onto it. If the projects are funded efficiently and promising, then there is buying pressure of more. If projects are shit, then stake deals will be withdrawn and more collapses. It's just a decentralized funding of AI on chain compared to typical VC cash injections. It's the future of VC funding. That kind of summarizes my my thoughts as well.

I think it's a really interesting way of of getting a project up off the ground, of making it fair so that anyone who wants to contribute and, you know, not all of us are blessed to have spare capital in in in the world, but being able to contribute in other ways, is is vitally important with compute, with code, with your brain, your resources, your time with the community, participating in the community, okay, building. But you do need to have that capital

there to incentivize that and bootstrapping that off the ground. And, I think this is an amazing way of doing doing it, and I think it's worked pretty well. Obviously, we'll see in in the future. And there's always gonna be people griping and complaining about this happened or that happened or x y z. But in terms of all the kind of things that I've seen, this this seems to be the the most fair and make the most sense to me. So,

that's it for today. Thank you very much for for joining in. In this final value for value section,

Value 4 Value Referral

this is just my little pitch to you. I provide all of this, detail, these infos, the energy. I've worked on this all upfront. Fantastic diagrams and memes. I hope you enjoy these. I spent spent a bit of time creating them. They are good fun, so I enjoy it as well. And I provide all of this upfront to you with, out any stipulations, any, there's no no sponsorships, no ads, no VC funding, no doubts behind this podcast, and there never will be.

But I just ask that you return that value in some shape or form. Now you can do this in time, talent and treasure time. Like I said, leaving a comment correcting me on anything that I got wrong, being able to, know any of those areas where I was unsure reaching out to me or writing that down in the the video comments or audio, I guess, if you've on a podcast platform would be very, very much appreciated talent.

Letting me know how I could improve the podcast, what you would like to see if you want to help contribute to working on the podcast as well would be very much appreciated. And I haven't mentioned this before, but treasure. And so the way that I've done this in my other podcast is, via either PayPal or something called boostograms, which is being able to see send,

Bitcoin via the Lightning Network. And you can do this with a message attached and do it directly within your podcasting app. Because I'm doing this on YouTube and it's a little bit more, broad and because this is a rather specific, project and podcast, there is another way. And this was, like I mentioned, what MRC was it? It was MRC number 45, the Morpheus Stake Eth Referral System. And so if you check out the show notes, I've actually got a Ethereum address there.

This is just a one I've whipped up, a new one. I'll probably use it as like a testing wallet, to be honest, of of just playing around with some things. So if you put that in before you actually stake your your ETH and in on the more dashboard, you can actually do that. This will, I believe, give me a three to 5% bonus and yourself a 1% bonus. I'm not exactly sure, once again, how it how it works. I've yet to test this out for myself. And

you or you could just straight up send me some more to that address. And it'd be very much appreciated, in terms of treasure in terms of helping me pay the bills and keep the lights on and maintain the energy and motivation to do all of these things, knowing one of the worst things about podcasting and I guess media content creation is, is when you feel like it's talking into the void, when it feels like no one's there.

And so contributing back in in some sort of shape, form, or manner is very, very much appreciated and important because without your contributions, this podcast will will certainly go away. So because obviously people wouldn't value it, and why would I work on something that's not valuable to people? So, it this model definitely works better if if there's a message attached, hence why I like the boostograms. But,

yeah, if you use that, it'd be very, very much appreciated. And let me know you've done it as well. Let me know that you've got some value from this. And, and if there's ways that I can provide more value to you, please, please let me know.

So yeah, I think we'll end it there for today. Thank you so much for joining in. I am live here, eleven a. M. On Mondays, Australian Eastern Standard Time. So joining in for the live is super fun as well. But we will leave it there, and, hope you're having a fantastic day wherever you are in the world. Ciao for now. Cara now. Bye.

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