Jesse, welcome to Newark State Podcast. Thanks for having me. You and I have kind of had an ongoing sort of philosophical discussion for many years on how libertarians can learn from progressives and progressives can learn from libertarians. And it's, it's funny because I went so far libertarian that it became like a progressive and I'm like, you know, I need to do community building. I need to do community organizing. Go ahead. No, yeah, it's exactly right.
I mean, this is when I think back to our time at Coinbase, I, I feel like so much of the, the fun that we had was thinking about how are all of these different political philosophy is going to be kind of rewritten in this new world where the Internet defines all of us. And we're actually all looking for kind of new frameworks to think about how the world can come together and how the world can can be better than it has been in the past. So let's go through base.
It's it's really funny how Coinbase was so well named that it managed to not just be like easy to pronounce and pass the bar test, but it was also based later on, you know, like you managed to launch base when based.
Go ahead. Yeah. No, I mean, I think that one of the things I've always felt about Base is that we just got incredibly lucky in having a name that we could borrow from Coinbase that kind of brought over the trust that had such a metaphorical meaning in terms of being this platform that everyone can build on that was associated with the cultural phenomenon. Like based that was 4 letters, really easy to pronounce,
totally globally accessible. You know, I think I think there's probably a lot of things we could have gone wrong and the name still would have been really, really great. But luckily over the last two years of building, I think we've got a lot of things right. And today, for those who are maybe listening to this for the first time, base is one of the largest change in the world. It's an etherium layer 2.
There's thousands and thousands of builders all around the world who are choosing to build on base to help us build this global on chain economy that we think is going to massively increase economic freedom, innovation and creativity around the world. You know, one thing I think about and let's go into details is base is interesting because it's a coin less chain in the sense of there isn't a native asset on the chain, but it is it is still useful.
And one way of thinking about it is that coin, the stock is like sort of the quasi native asset of base. So it's not, you know, directly there or another way of thinking about it is it actually takes aspects of block chains that we didn't think you could take. You know, you didn't think people didn't think you could run a block chain without a coin, but you can you can run as like an open state database,
right? Maybe you have some thoughts on that and let's get into the details of how base works. Yeah. I mean, from the beginning of base, one of the theses that we had was if we just focused on building a really great product that solved problems for developers and creators and consumers, that was going to be a way higher leverage way for us to bring this to market than what we've kind of seen for the last few years in terms of people really focusing on the coin and token side of things.
And I think that's proven out to be true. It's been a really good forcing function for us, right? You know, whereas I think a lot of folks who've been building chains otherwise, they said, hey, we're going to have a coin and then we're going to use that coin to pay people to come and build with us. And we're going to kind of use that as a shortcut to try and kind of jump start this the network effects that that's required to be here.
We didn't have that luxury. Instead, we had to go and say, hey, we're going to go fight for every single customer, every single developer, every single creator, every single user. We're going to go have to win them on the merits of using base because it's faster, because it's cheaper, because it's easier to build on, because it's, you know, more more connected to create on, because you can do things that you wouldn't be able to do anywhere else.
And I think that that's been a really good forcing function for us to just make sure that we're always building the right product. All right, so I want to go like kind of top to bottom. So let's start with the technical parts of base and then I want to get to why I think base and, and tools like it are base for building new societies, startup societies, network states. And so it's OK, great. So what is the problem that base
was created to solve? I I know this is super basic but you know, go a. 100%, I've been at Coinbase for five years, Apology and I got to overlap when he was CTO, it was some of the most powerful learning experiences I ever had getting to watch him operate inside of the company. And in those five years, I built the consumer business that coin, so Coinbase, Coinbase Pro, Coinbase Wallet.
And then after doing that for five years, I had this idea of if we wanted to accelerate global crypto adoption, Coinbase was a crypto company, but it wasn't yet an on chain company. It'd been started in 2012. It didn't know how to write smart contracts there. There weren't engineers who were kind of building on chain every day.
And it felt kind of like the early days of the Internet where there were going to be companies that figured out, OK, how do we do this transformation to really become an Internet company, to be a native Internet company? And if a big company like Coinbase could do that first, then other people could follow. And so that was kind of the initial thesis behind the the conception of base was how do we make Coinbase a truly on chain company? And we went through a bunch of
different product iterations. We tried a bunch of things. None of them worked. They all failed. And all of the, the kind of learnings from that pointed us to this idea, which was in order for Coinbase to be an on chain company, we actually needed a platform where we could build the on chain products and services that would help Coinbase be more efficient, help Coinbase get more global scale, help Coinbase leverage this technology to build a Better Business. And so that was really the
initial conception of base. It was let's build the platform that enables Coinbase to make this transition. And then once we started doing that, we were like, OK, well, if we're going to build this for Coinbase, Coinbase is going to want the best platform in the world.
And the best platform in the world is actually going to be an open platform where anyone else in the world can also benefit from that technology stack and can also benefit from plugging in, you know, as you like to say, to the open state database and all of the APIs that Coinbase can kind of bring on chain, whether that's on ramps or off ramps or payments or whatever it is that that, you know, people need in order to build. That's what base became.
It kind of became this platform built for builders by the builders of Coinbase, originally to solve some of Coinbase's problems and coming on chain, but now I think really to enable and accelerate the rate at which the entire world can come on chain. Awesome. And I think actually in a sense, you can almost think of base as like the next version of Coinbase's API's where you're not just querying Coinbase's server for data.
You've got this open state database where you can write and read to it and so on and so forth. And in a sense, it's maintained by Coinbase, but it is also something that is more open than a traditional API. It's kind of the next iteration of it. Would you agree with that or do you disagree with that?
Yeah, exactly. And I, I think back to, you know, some of the presentations you gave when you were at Coinbase where you were talking about, you know, how do we get more verbs, crypto verbs for people to do? And this was like a thing that Balaji says, we have a few verbs buy and sell right now, but we need to expand to hundreds of
verbs. And one of the ways I like to think about Base is it's almost the perfect platform for enabling rapid expansion of verbs because rather than one corporation maybe in a traditional API or serverless environment, one corporation having to add every single new API or every single new verb that you can do. The really powerful thing about a chain like Base is that it's an open platform where everyone can add new verbs.
Every smart contract that a developer deploys is a new verb that some other developer can call. And So what that enables is it enables very rapid expansion in what's possible and what capabilities both builders and consumers have on the chain. So I think when I was thinking early on in the journey of base, I thought back a lot to those conversations that we had where you were really just hammering
how do we get more verbs? Because verbs are how you expand the GDP of the global on chain economy by giving people the actual tools and capabilities to transact on chain, to buy, to sell, to borrow, to lend, to do all of these things that have historically been very complex, very expensive, and very kind of locked out for a lot of people in the traditional world. Yes, exactly. And just the nouns and the
verbs, right. So just for folks who know what we're referring to, a noun was something like AI should have published this at that time in 2018. But basically nouns are like a minor, a holder, right? A wallet, right? And verbs buy, sell, send, receive, but then also stake, burn, mint, right?
All this kind of stuff, right? And you're exactly right that essentially the innovation, one way of thinking about block chains is, you know, Coinbase or any company, Twitter, for example, it can't put its Postgres database in public. It can't give everybody the root password to its Postgres, but it can put a chain in public and everybody has read and write
access to that. And the consensus algorithm ensures it's not corrupted, which would happen with just a Postgres database that was naively, you know, open up to the world. And so, so because everybody has read and write access, they can add the smart contracts which as you see have the verbs and actually also can also add the NFTS which add new or help add new nouns. And you know, different user types are also new nouns.
And in a sense like the smart contracts are on chain code and the NFTS are on chain data, right? So so now help me understand how does base work technically? How does it work in terms of validation of blocks and so on and so forth. Let me understand that. Yeah, absolutely. And and before I jump to that, one thing I do want to say is, you know you mentioned kind of you can think about base as you know an extension of Coinbase or an on chain open version of Coinbase where you have access
to these API's. And I think that was like almost the initial conception of base. But one of the things that we realized very early on is that the opportunity is actually much bigger. It's much bigger than being a single company where you can kind of have give everyone access. It's it's really the opportunity to build a global economy. And if we want to build a global economy that everyone can participate in, one of the things that we realized very early on is it can't be
controlled by one company. The only way to do that is to build a decentralized platform. Because if you're not decentralized, inevitably either a single corporation or a single state will get into a place where it tries to Co opt that
platform for itself. And so from the beginning of Base, and this gets into our technical architecture, we've been very, very committed to decentralizing Base to make it so that everyone can feel confident that they can build on this global platform and trust that it's a neutral place for them to contribute to the global economy. So how do we do that? Base is built as an Ethereum
layer too. If you don't know what Ethereum is, Ethereum is the most secure, decentralized, scalable L1 platform for writing smart contracts. But one of the challenges with Ethereum is that that it's built to be maximally decentralized, which meant that costs for doing things kind of got higher and higher.
And so Ethereum took this, the scaling strategy, which was let's expand the kind of surface area of Ethereum by letting people build and enabling people to build layer twos on top, which let you kind of bootstrap off of that decentralization of Ethereum while bringing much more scalability and driving down the costs of how much it actually costs to use choose the
chain. And So what we do is we basically take transactions, we batch them, we publish them to Ethereum, and that lets us get the best of both worlds.
And so today base is kind of processing, you know, every second hundreds of transactions and bringing all of those to Ethereum, letting us kind of bootstrap off of that decentralization, provide those same decentralization guarantees to customers, but get really, really great cost savings and make it more accessible for more people to come on chain. Interesting. SO you want to describe kind of how you know optimistic roll ups work and sequencing.
And you know, one thing I was actually researching and I was just thinking is like how many disputes have actually had? Well, first why don't you describe how do optimistic roll ups work for somebody who doesn't know? Yeah. So base is an optimistic roll up, which basically means that when we're doing this kind of batching of transactions and submitting them to L1, we're doing that optimistically. And so that basically means that
people are not trusting. But the way the mechanic works is you assume that the batches are faithfully posted to Ethereum and that's done in a way that kind of preserves the mechanic. But there's a mechanism called a fault proof or a challenge where someone could say, hey, the sequencer, which is this kind of entity that's taking those transactions and batching them and publishing them to Ethereum
did something malicious. Now we're going to challenge that and there's going to be a game where there's kind of economic incentives involved to kind of identify where that malicious activity was and unwind it. And So what that means is it means that rather than doing computation on every single transaction, you actually get to drive down the cost. So in 99.99% of the time, you're actually not having to do anything because it's
optimistically accepted. And then in that point, OO 1% of the time, there's a mechanism for making sure that there's still safe for users. Another really important kind of part of this design is that the way it's built is that there's not just one way to transact on the chain. If you were kind of just able to go through the sequencer, one of the concerns would be, OK, you can only go through the
sequencer. What if the sequencer does something malicious in terms of censoring your transaction? And so the way these optimistic roles like base are built is they're built to also enable people to submit transactions through Ethereum. And what that means is it's kind of like an escape hatch where you have this guarantee that transactions can be forced into Ethereum, which gives you much greater certainty that your transaction can't and won't be censored. And so that's the construction
that base uses today. Now, one thing I will say about base is that we've built it on something called the OP stack, which is this open source kind of standard for for building layer twos. And one of the really powerful things about the OP stack is that it's designed such that the proving mechanism, which is this optimistic roll up kind of construction that we talked about is modular.
And so we've started with an optimistic roll up, but we actually have in production right now, there's a team that is proving every block on base with a ZK Prover as well, which is kind of using ZK zero knowledge proofs to validate
that every block is there. We've also seen teams experiment with what are called trusted execution environments where you kind of have hardware devices that are kind of provable that they're, they're signing the transactions and kind of validating and they're using that to prove blocks. And I think where we'll end up with base in the in the next year or so is rather than having one mechanism that's securing base, we'll actually have more knowledge.
Of TE you have some. Degree of you have optimistic, you have 0 knowledge, they all sit on top of each other, and then you can kind of have a game where if any one of them is signaling, hey, there's something going wrong, there's something malicious here. Then you kind of layer them on
top of each other. And that's one of the ways we're going to be able to remove more and more trust out of the system and make it kind of inherit even more of the decentralization and security of Ethereum. Awesome. SO well, now you also have a a goal for progressive decentralization of like sequencing and and validation and so on, right? Go ahead.
Yeah. And so, you know, there's this framework that Vitalik who who created Ethereum uses to kind of define the decentralization of these roll ups, Stage zero, stage 1, stage two, kind of three levels of decentralization. Base started as a stage 0 roll up, which has training wheels. We are about to become a stage 1 roll up after a lot of hard work from the team.
I don't know exactly when this podcast is going to come out, but it is either going to happen, you know, immediately before this podcast comes out or immediately after. And so that's a huge milestone that I'm super, super excited about. And it's just one more step in our kind of commitment to making Base this decentralized platform that anyone can build on. And then from here, we're going to be doing more work to get to Stage 2.
That involves kind of getting to this multi prover environment where we have multiple ways of validating the chain. It also involves increasing kind of the decentralization, the way people submit transactions to base through the sequencer.
We actually have some really cool work that we're doing right now with a team called Flash Blocks, which is helping us start with what's called builder decentralization, where basically there's going to be the opportunity for multiple people to build blocks, which will make the kind of market more efficient for base because you'll have some kind of competition in how people are able to submit transactions and look for MEV. And so that's a really good
first step. And then from there, we're gonna kind of bring further decentralization to the sequencer. Awesome. Now what kinds of things can people do on base? Can they do anything they can do on any L2? Are there unique things like what you know, what kinds of things do you think are? Yeah, go ahead.
Yeah. I mean, I think at this point, in terms of day-to-day usage of crypto, there's probably not another chain in the world where you have more people doing kind of everyday things and so you have people using payments. In terms of social products though, this is really what's shining on base right now. If you look at Farcaster, this is the kind of fastest growing on chain social network.
The vast majority of mini apps built on Forecaster, transactions happening on Forecaster are built on base. And I think that that's like a daily habit that 10s of thousands of people are doing right now. It's still early in the grand scheme of things, but I'm super,
super excited about that. And you know, you're on Forecaster, I'm on Forecaster. We also have creator social products like Zora, where you have creators all around the world who are starting to bring their creativity on chain, have it more directly valued by the free market, and then actually able to capture that value to to help fund future work and to to
live a better life. And so I think that social domain is a really, really rich one on base and probably the place where, you know, in terms of any other chain in the world, I don't think there's anyone who has more social activity than than what's happening on base. And then I'd say there's a long
tail of other use cases. You know, we have Blackbird, which is building kind of restaurants on chain and onboarded hundreds of restaurants in the United States. We have, you know, people who are building pretty much every part of the application spectrum and we're just excited to see all of it happen faster and faster. You know, a few years ago, Moxie Marlinspike wrote this piece which said something like, oh, you know, what's weird about these crypto apps is they have,
he's very good engineer. Obviously he built Signal and so and so forth. But it's interesting. His framework was these crypto apps have like the minimum level of decentralization they need to kind of get out there. And he's phrasing this as negative thing.
And I, I was surprised when he wrote this because my response was that's because block space is a fundamental constraint of crypto in the same way that bandwidth was a fundamental constraint of the early web and everything on the web in the 90s. Like, you know, Amazon, Yahoo, Google was constrained where, you know, I think Amazon's book descriptions didn't even have images at 1st and Google was just put in text, get out text, right images.
You know, digital cameras were only really widespread by the mid 2000s and Facebook only worked because Harvard had T1 connections and so people could put digital camera images and people had like one or two digital images of themselves. They didn't have, you know, camera phones and so on and so forth. So bandwidth is a constraint on the Internet for a long time and block space was a constraint for
crypto apps for a long time. So that's one way of thinking about like what base does, right? It radically increases the amount of block spaces available. That's what L twos do in general and how much more block spaces are and what kinds of things can go on chain. And what do you think is still infeasible? For example, Forecaster still has its own. You know Postgres, right? That you can? Run separately.
So what what do you think is the right thing to put on Ethereum versus on base versus on you know an app specific database like Farcast or how do you think about the division of data there? Yeah, it's a really good question. And I, I think your point is exactly right, which is that we need to increase the bandwidth of block chains in order to enable more use cases.
And I think kind of L2's and in this recent adoption of, of more scalable changes, kind of that broadband moment where we went from dial up to having enough bandwidth to start to build, build real applications in the early days of the Internet. And really the way we think about that is driving down the cost of most transactions to sub cent is really this kind of shelling point where once you get sub cent, people stop thinking about the costs and they start being able to build
really, really powerful things. And so, you know, right now on base, you can send a payment to anyone for a fraction of a cent. You can mint an NFT, you can buy a coin, you can trade, you can post something on social media. And so I think that's this kind of milestone that we just crossed in the last year or so that's leading to a ton of economic activity and a ton of
growth. Now, in terms of how I think this is all going to shake out, I've broadly started thinking about this as kind of like tiers of applications or tiers of use cases, kind of like the Internet. You know, the Internet's actually architected in like 3 tiers. There's like Tier 1 ISPs, Tier 2 ISPs, tier 3 ISPs. And I think that what we'll see as more and more of the world's kind of compute comes on chain is the same rough architecture will happen in the on chain
world. And so that will look like L ones that sit at the bottom that provide kind of maximal decentralization. And this kind of scalable platform that people can build on that they know is going to be neutral kind of as a technology platform, almost like a pure piece of infrastructure. So that's going to be layer one. That's going to be things like Ethereum and Slana.
I think on top of that, we will see what I kind of think about as economies start to shape up. And this is going to be base, right? Base isn't just pure technology like Ethereum, it's a technology plus culture, plus economic activity, plus all of this infrastructure that lets kind of global economy start to crop up. So one example of this is one of the big priorities that we have for base right now is onboarding local currency stable coins all around the world.
So right now we have about 15 local currency stable coins, the Kenyan shilling, the Mexican peso, the Canadian dollar, obviously the US dollar, the euro, the pound, the Singapore dollar, you know, the list goes on and on and on. And that is economic infrastructure that can enable people to come on chain, to start to build, to start to
create. And that's not going to be something that every application is able to build entirely themselves, but it is going to be really, really important infrastructure to enable an economy to start to flourish. And so that's kind of the tier that base is working on. It's like our mission is to build a global on chain economy that increases innovation, creativity and freedom. I think there will be a lot of other economies and I think they'll kind of live side by side.
They'll have like trade that happens between them and and they'll all be working together on top of these kind of foundational L1 technology platforms to grow this. Economy, obviously Coinbase itself uses base a lot. Probably exchanges use base a lot. So those are the unsurprising major use cases. You know, forecasters use base. What are the things that you consider, you know, big apps and what are the things you consider like surprising apps, surprising use cases?
Yeah, I, I think obviously you talked about Coinbase, Coinbase Wallet, other exchanges that are using base for, for payments and transactions. I think Forecaster is the second one. We've invested a lot in Forecaster from a community perspective. And we're actually in the process right now of integrating A Forecaster feed and mini apps into Coinbase Wallet.
And so Coinbase Wallet is going to be evolving to, to have a full social feed, to have mini apps built into it and really to be a place where people can come on chain, get started, find things to do, buy a coin, but then stick around to do a lot more. Zora I think is another, you know, pretty fast growing social network that's built on where if you think about Forecaster kind of analogized to to Twitter, Zora is much more analogized to Instagram where it's primarily
visual content. And Zora just went through a change right now where every single piece of content is actually a coin, and that's through a lot of iteration. Originally, Zora was built as a one of one NFT and then it kind
of went to open edition NFTS. But after kind of experimenting with those different economic models, I think they kind of kind of went full circle and said, hey, the easiest way to let content be valued is to just make each piece of content a coin, let the market value it, and then create kind of market structures that let you redirect that value back to creators.
I think the place that base is really winning right now is in this kind of interconnected social economy that's being built on top of things like Forecaster and Zora. Base is interesting because it's a coin less coin, right? Or it's a coin less chain, right. Where do you think we're going to go with equity backed assets, real world assets, other kinds of things on base or or in general, right. Like I think the legal system is moving quickly in a positive direction.
Maybe you have some thoughts on that and whether base supports that, whether base will support that. Go ahead. Yeah. I do think that this is one of the biggest problems in crypto is that because we've had a relative dearth of high quality assets on chain, there's been a fair amount of confusion around what's actually valuable and why is it valuable. And that's led to astronomical valuations for things that don't really make sense and aren't really driven by kind of market
fundamentals. And I think one of the things I'm most excited about is everything coming on chain over the next few years. And what's going to happen when everything come on comes on chain is a all of those assets are going to become a lot more powerful. Because when you can do 24/7 fully global trading of equities on chain, that's going to be a better product experience for everyone everywhere in the world. And so that's going to be a huge enabler.
But the second thing that I'm really excited about is I think it's going to normalize a little bit on chain as a market where instead of having this bifurcation where you have like the on chain assets that are valued in a totally different way and the off chain assets that are valued in another way, you're just going to have one market and it's going to run on a new technology platform. But we can look at all of them as one holistic market and make value based judgements against
them. And one of the things I'm actually expecting will be kind of a forerunner of this is, and Brian talked about this and we talked about this, you know, the, the the team has been exploring what does it look like to bring coin on chain? And one of the things I'm really curious about is if coin comes on chain, does it get massively marked up like every other kind of token that lives on chain?
Or does it bring fundamentals into the on chain space and say now every other token needs to be compared against coin? Because I think right now people look at the tokens and the coins that are on chain and then they look at stocks like coin off chain and they're valuating the tokens at a much higher rate. And I think that that actually has the opportunity to kind of like re equilibrate us and really force the question of like, why do you value this thing just because it's a token?
And is this kind of like emergence of these traditional assets on chain going to fix that? So I actually have, I, if I was, if I was still CTO or if I was, you know, I would, I would put that as one of the top three things to get done this year to get coin on chain. And there's a reason for that, which is it's not so much about just the assets, about the legal pathway, right?
Whether it's done as a Wyoming Dow, whether it's done as you know, a Tennessee Dow, whether it's done in Dubai, whether it's however it's done right. Building that legal pathway is a tentative importance, not just for Coinbase, but actually for the whole space, because as you say, it puts fundamentals on chain. Number one, maybe it brings
marks down or what have you. And #2 is it's actually what the future is for tech companies because I'm actually very bearish on NYSE, NASDAQ, and generally the entire 20th century I think is ending in terms of U.S. markets. We can go into all that, but I think it's basically like the entire quote, Western world, Anglo world, English speaking world and so on. Everything will eventually just
go on chain. That's what the financial system will be. That is the flipping, and it'll be obviously the right way of doing it. Just like, you know, everything that has not yet gone on the Internet will go on the Internet. You know, like any data structure that isn't yet there will get there. And what puts it there is often a very valuable thing. Let me pause there.
No, 100% agreed. In some ways, you can look at what Coinbase has done with Base and the path we've been paving for other businesses to come on chain. And you can think about COIN as a similar kind of analogy where it's like Base is putting our technology platform on chain and enabling us to build the next generation of Coinbase products on chain and bringing COIN onto Base or COIN on chain.
We'll put our governance platform on chain and will require us to solve a bunch of the hard problems around, you know, bringing governance on chain around figuring out that legal pathway that I think can serve as kind of a beacon for other companies around the world to see how much leverage they can get when they use this new technology platform to transform themselves and to provide greater access to operate more efficiently and to participate in this new global market, this
new global economy that we're building. You know, it's funny, I don't know if you remember there's another diagram that I drew in 20/18/2018 when when we were working together, which showed a bunch of boxes and it was like Fiat currency to cryptocurrency was a much larger market than most people expected it to be, right? Like USDBTC is $100 billion. I mean, if you add Coinbase plus finance plus all the exchanges and so on around the world and say multi $100 billion market, right?
And that's just Fiat currency, cryptocurrency, right? So then if you say what is Fiat equity to crypto equity look like, that's what we're just talking about, right? Taking right these stocks and putting them on chain. What does Fiat real estate to crypto real estate look like? What does Fiat identity to crypto identity look like? What does Fiat X to crypto X look like? I think each of those is like a gigantic business. You know Fiat dollars to crypto dollars is stable coins.
Go ahead 100%. Yeah. And I think this is, I mean, This is why I'm so excited about the opportunity with Base and also why I think it's it's heating up a little right now in the space in terms of building the these technology platforms. Because people are starting to realize, Oh my God, this isn't just going to be the speculative use case. Like we're talking about the technology and the technology platform that willpower the next generation of the global economy.
And they'll be the place where every single asset in the world is denominated and every single asset in the world trades and makes markets and every single participant and every single person in the world can access it if they have an Internet
connection. And that is a massive opportunity both to obviously build great businesses that aren't aren't possible today and expand businesses that exist today, but I think also make a incredible positive impact on the world because we're going to give everyone around the world the the opportunity to participate and to, regardless of where they're born, regardless of where they live, join this new economy, get access to every single asset, and then build whatever they want on top of it.
And that's just going to be an incredible way of making the world better. Did you see the trailer that we? Had for the network school fellowship where I said at the end the only connection you need is an Internet connection. Yes, yes. Yes, yeah, I mean, this is like AII love saying this thing of like all you need is an Internet connection because I think we've we've we've felt that or people
have said that for a while. But the reality is if you had an Internet connection, you could do certain things, in particular what the Internet enabled, it enabled you to transfer information globally. So if you have an Internet connection for the most part, although of course there's you know, China and other parts of the the the world that have kind of secluded themselves off. But for the most part, you could participate in open and free and global transfer of information.
But what the Internet missed was open, free and global transfer of value. And with crypto, with this upgrade to the system, we're finally going to have that. That actually means that when you have an Internet connection, you have access to not just an open information economy, you have access to an open financial economy and all of the stuff that can be built on top of that. And I think it's going to be way, way better. We're doing something. Together, actually, let's talk
about that. We're doing base batches. We're hosting folks at network school for upcoming event. Why don't we talk about that? Tell me about that, Jesse. Yeah, absolutely so. Our vision for bases to bring the entire world on chain, a billion people all around the world. And the way we think we do that is by giving builders and creators the tools to build incredible use cases, applications, incredible content that actually bring all those people on chain.
It's going to be the builders that do it. And so we've been thinking a lot about how do we build a scalable kind of pipeline to enable people to build their first applications, their first communities, their first content on chain, and get distribution to the rest of the world. And so we, we just started this thing called base batches and we're running batch #1, which is kind of everything you need to get started building on chain. It's build a thon and education,
it's mentorship. It's a demo day where you can get more visibility and you can get more distribution. And then it's kind of a pathway to incubation where you're actually going to get, you know, hands on funding and support from some of the best incubators in the world to help you take your your product at that point, which you will have gone zero to 1 on and turn it into a business where you can actually be working on it around the around the year full time focus.
And so when we were thinking about starting batches, we wanted to make sure that we were working with the best people in the world and the best communities in the world. And at the absolute top of our list was the network school. I got to actually go there in the fall, got to do a fireside chat with Balaji and meet a ton of the incredible students that were at the school. My big take away from that is I don't think there's anything else like in the world really.
Thank you. There is there is no other place in the world where you have incredibly high agency motivated people who are making a life decision to oftentimes fly around the world to go to someplace that's a little bit off the beaten path and to be together and try and create something beautiful. And to try and think about what does the next ERA of our society look like?
And how do we start to break down some of these historical borders and boundaries between US and build something new that's connected by the Internet. And so getting to be there this fall, getting to experience that, getting to see how big a bet that Balaji was making on this future and how unafraid he was and all these other people that were there to try something new and to break out of the
mold. That to me and in conversations was then like, that's exactly the kind of bold that BASE aspires to. And that when we're thinking about building batches and we're thinking about supporting builders that we want to deliver to them. And so it just made sense for us to reach out to biology to figure out how could we do a collaboration to put together this event to make it so that when folks go through batches, they'll actually have an opportunity to then go to the
network school. Because there's all of that kind of admiration and hopefully collaboration going forward between BASE and the network school. So that's that's my quick take if you are working. On base you know apply to base batches come to network school also apply for the network school fellowship because we'll be funding things on many different spaces but in in particular people building on base maybe this will help you the backbone of network societies startup societies
network states I love it and. I want to just dig in a little bit because I think some of the people who are watching this on the base side, maybe this is the first time they're hearing about the Network School and what you guys are doing with the Network school scholarship. So can you just give me like a high level overview, like what is the network school? What is the network school scholarship? Totally OK. So network school takes have you heard the term founder market fit?
It's basically like the network school is the intersection of about 20 different things I've done over my life, all in like 1 kind of thing, right? So first and foremost, it's for the dark talent. So many people around the world, whether in the US or outside, certainly outside the US, in India and you know, Mongolia, all Africa, all kinds of space, Latin America that now have an Android phone and they're online, but they don't have resources or what have you,
right? So we've just rolled out our first thing for them, the Network School fellowship Anyone anywhere 100K, where they fill out the application on online. And if I think they've got a good project, we bring them out, level them up right. And we're going to roll out other programs like that, probably an internship program as well, which is folks who are more junior in their career.
They're not yet a tech founder, you know, which is a rare kind of person, but they are, you know, so we'll do other kinds of things. So the never still fellowship Anyone Anywhere, 100K and one of the things about that is we're in a place with an enlightened immigration policy. So we can bring people from around the world, right? It's internationalism and capitalism.
So that right then third is, you know, I taught at Stanford for a long time and I, I, I love that environment, what it was, and it isn't what it was for a variety of reasons, funding cuts, AI fakery of grades and so on. So you have to re envision that. So it's a school in that sense. Third is it's a startup society. So this is something which, you know, is basically an embryonic form of, you know, rather than arguing about politics endlessly, what if we could do it from scratch?
What if we could do something new, right? OK, and just do something all the way from others, you know, let them do their thing. We do our thing, right? 4th, it is really, you know, it's funny as tech as I am, you know, actually a good analogy is cars, right? We're driving cars for it. We have, you know, literally, we
have electric cars. We have self driving cars, we even now have flying cars and you know, if you saw the E hang demo recently, and there's also American versions like Archer, but we also have walkable societies, right? So we're walkable places. So you pull cars back and you also advance them. So we're pushing the frontiers of tech with, you know, obviously AI and crypto and social, all this stuff, right? But we're actually a big part of network school is offline offices, right?
And basically, for example, we ran this thing recently. I'm not sure I'll tell you about this. A learn a Thon actually, you know what we could do a learn a thon for base. You know why? Let me, OK, let me tell you what a learn a Thon is. We took like the fast AI course, which is like 10-11 hours, right? And problem is people don't complete these online courses. They they sign up for it aspirationally. It's like signing up to go and work out and not going and working out, right?
OK, so we did is we said OK, people signed up for the this, this learn a thon. They come at 9:00 AM on Saturday morning and basically they go through so it's like 11 hour course or an 11 hour course, right. So go through five hours of it on the first day and, like, phones down. They're literally watching the video. All 20 people, no distractions, no phones, no notifications. They told their significant other I'll be back Sunday evening. OK. Like literally gone.
OK. Focus biology mode, right? You remember this, right? What would we call it? Yeah, I'd do at like. 1:00 AM in a conference room with the wall just like covered in thoughts and be like, that's right. So I'll just locked in. Yeah, we're locked in. Right we're just we're we're doing this. We're not leaving until it's done, right. OK, so so 9:00 AM, you know, and so they go video.
Then when there's time to code, everybody would bring out their laptops, they would work on them and there's like ATA who's walking around just making sure no one's getting stuck and so on. We have a timer boom next right? And in this fashion it was like. It's like a personal trainer, but for your brain. I call it a personal brainer, right? So the personal brainer is that fun, right? So the personal brainer ran this learn a thon and we had we had, we had water, we had snacks and
so on and so forth. But the goal was just total focus. So in two days, you know, we we took also before and after videos. When should you use a random? Forest, What is a confusion matrix, Donna? What about collaborative filtering, Donna, when should you use a random forest tabular
data? And if you have a lot of like noisy features, what is the confusion matrix like a table of actual answers against like the predicted answers and then comparing, you know, like how often it gets it right and then when and how much it gets it wrong. What is collaborative filtering recommendation algorithm by clustering people or items or things by similarity. So actually we. Should do that with bass. I love that it's. Like the instant, It's the
instant pill. It's like you get on chain pilled in a weekend. Yes, exactly. That's right. And it's, it's what it is. It's the right combination in my view of offline and online, right, Because what's what's scarce is like focus. OK, so other piece of network tool, it's Internet 1st and it's Asia. Asia as a peer, not a guest, right? So Asia in the sense of China, India is obviously a big part of tech, right? And it's a big part of Silicon Valley.
And it's right. But for a variety of reasons, people are like Wilding out in the US about that, which is all unfairly unfortunate. And we'll open up other nodes and other places. I want to do one maybe in Dubai or, you know, maybe one in, in, in the Americas, depending on what time zone. But we'll start start with this one. And then finally, I think this is the thing that makes and there's a lot of different versions of it, I could say, but this is how the cloud takes
land, right? We're doing all this crazy stuff in the cloud. Amazing insane amounts of money moves in our on our coins. It's like actually crazy and huge numbers of people. You know what a million people is like online? It's just have you ever seen the stadium? Like have you seen that the the lime thing on crowd sizes? Have I shown you that, right? It's like, here's what 50 people, 100 people, 204 hundred, right? So like whenever I go to tweet
or render, you go to tweet. It's like, you know, the Star Spangled Banner, they go up to the thing and they're like, oh, you know, they looked at the whole stadium before they go ahead. No. Right. I just, it's timely. I've been having that experience a lot the last week where I'm just like, oh man, I it's easy sometimes to forget that when you go on Twitter now, like with your audience or my audience, it really is like 5. Stadiums. Stadium. Yeah, the stadium or multiple
stadiums, right? But The funny thing is that's so large. And then when you materialize even a small fraction of that in person, it's like a packed hall, right? So I think the numbers in the cloud are so mind crushingly massive that when you start materializing them into the physical world, right, you start to realize how big it is. What we've built online is, right? You start to actually perceive that, you know, and I think that is sort of the missing piece.
You know, obviously tech guys have been wanting to build in the physical world. And so so now we're actually doing that, right? So there's a lot of different things in network school, you know, scratches. I love that. What you know we've talked a lot about crypto. How do you think like crypto fits into this vision of network States and the network school? Like why do those two two things go hand in hand?
Very good question. So I. Think there's the most unpopular word in the most unpopular but most important word in the world, I would argue is re centralization. OK, Why? Basically centralization, decentralization, recentralization. In many ways for crypto, especially with Bitcoin, is it's like there's a burning building, you hit the fire alarm, you get your Bitcoin and you get out, right? And you get out. But if everybody scrambles in every direction, that's crypto
anarchy. And I actually don't believe in crypto anarchy. Crypto anarchy is better than pure anarchy because at least there's digital order, but there's physical disorder, right? What I believe in is crypto civilization, right? Ultimately, there's a rebundling, you know, you have bundling, unbundling, rebundling. There's a centralization, decentralization, recentralization on the other side where we come back together
again in a new form. It's like you take ACD, you unbundle it into MP3 as you rebundle to playlist, right? You take a newspaper, you unbundle it into articles, and you rebundle into Twitter feeds, for example, right? So Western states are getting unbundled into digital tribes organized by coins and stuff, social networks, other things online. I think they're going to get rebundled into startup societies and network seats. And I think that's actually like what people aren't.
My view is people aren't really yet taking the Internet seriously. You know, in a sense, by the way, most people aren't. This is a both a play on words. But second, it's also true most people aren't actually country first, they're Internet first. Should I explain what I mean by that? Like, like for example, when you wake up in the morning, what's the first thing you do? Internet first, right? You're checking your phone or
something like that. Or people, even if they're working out, they're checking their, you know, watch their Fitbit. Where are you finding your friends? Internet first? Because you're whatsapping them or you're messaging them. They're on social networks or an e-mail. How about your business? Internet first. How about your transactions? Internet first. How about your communications? Internet first, right? Like basically an enormous swath of your existence is actually
spent on the Internet, right? To extend it truly wasn't in 1991. It's a completely different life, but what hasn't yet gone there are some of the institutions. Universities aren't Internet first, right? Politicians aren't, they're on social media, but the decision making is an Internet first, right? Laws aren't Internet 1st and that's what crypto represents, right? Crypto represents property. So that that's answers your question, right? How do you build an Internet for
society? It is going to start with, you know, block chains give you monetary policy, they give you property rights, they give you contracts, right? And my view is like common law that worked for the British and the Constitution, it only scaled up to the Americans. But Bitcoin and blockchain, that's for everyone on the Internet. I love that. Yeah, I think there's a lot of overlap when we're talking about building a global on chain economy.
It's almost the same thing where we're talking about, OK, we can use this new technology platform to create an economy that of course has property rights and has contracts that let people organize in new ways. And I, I totally agree.
I feel like we are at the next turning point where we're going to start to see how do people use this technology, not just to do payments and play games and post on social media, but to fundamentally reorganize the way that society works and that humans connect and that we we work together. That's right. And I think like. In, you know, not to sound in the, let's call it time of volatility. That, I think, is to ensue one of the things, you know, the Internet was built to resist a
nuclear attack, right? So even in times of extreme instability, the Internet is there. It's funny, you know, remember people used to talk about the digital divide and they feared that people would lack the Internet. Or actually it's the opposite. Often the Internet is the only thing they have, right? Right. So, so essentially, can you, you know, in a server, have you seen a server rack? You can reboot a server from the Internet, right? So the reboot will be from the Internet.
Yeah, and what? Network school is about is is that it's like, I'll give one more analogy. Have you seen, have you ever read Foundation by Isaac Asimov? Yeah. Yeah. So like Terminus is the school on the edge of the universe, right? Which is set up so that when the Galactic Empire collapses, it can be rebooted in a shorter period of time than it was, you know, before. Right. I love that. So. OK. Here here's here's maybe a last question for you.
You know, we're entering this world of obviously massive change, the network States and and on chain economies, all this starting to happen. What's your advice for like young builders, people who are coming up right now? Like how should they be thinking about this world? How should they be thinking about making their mark, whether that's on base or as part of the network school or in whatever they want? They in whatever way they want to. Great question first.
Oh. But there's tons of stuff. First is apply to network school. We're going to actually have an internship program. So even if you have, you don't know what you're doing in life. If you're smart and you want to work hard, we'll host you on site, train you up, hire you out. I'll, I'll talk about that soon. So that's my first thing. Just go and apply. OK. But then more specifically, I'd say A you.
So what should you learn? You should learn statistics and computer science because from those two primitives, you can rebuild almost everything else, right? That's equivalent of like learning physics and math. Obviously you should still learn math and physics, you know, those are very good. But if you those come at the right angle of attack from stats and computer science, you can rebuild all of AI, all of machine learning and and so on
and so forth. From the computer science part, you can get to cryptography and from computer science, you can do simulations of mechanical engineering, electrical engineering, and from both stats, computer science and AI, you can get to actually the humanities, right, like AI art and this and that. And of course, from crypto, you can have the crypto angle on art with NFTS, right.
So, so from a foundational learning standpoint, from a jurisdiction standpoint, I would reconsider being based in the US. I'm I, I think it's like just less friendly as an environment. I think lots of other countries, lots of other places. There's dozens of countries with digital nomad visas. If you come to network school, we can upgrade to your, your crypto, your Fiat identity, like help you get better residency is better. You know, that's actually an important part of things.
You know, just like one of the reasons people buy cryptocurrency is to upgrade their Fiat currency. You know, they buy Bitcoin at $100 per coin and they sell it at 100,000. They shouldn't sell, but if they did, if they've made such a poor decision to ever sell their Bitcoin, they right, so they use cryptocurrency to upgrade their Fiat currency. And one of the things I think about a lot is their crypto identity could upgrade their Fiat identity, the crypto identity of their NS ID.
Then we can get them a better residency permit that we can get them a better passport or something like that, right. Few more things I would say they should think about things Internet first, not country 1st. And by the there's a totally different, I think if you're in China, there's a totally different set of things one would do. But if you're non China, then that's what you do. And if you're in China, you can be both. There's a whole China stack or the Internet stack.
If you're outside China, really the Internet stack, I would say to be very, very concerned about doing anything in hardware if you don't fully understand the Chinese hardware ecosystem. This is something people don't yet fully understand. But like basically Chinese hardware has gotten so good and they're so much better than everybody else that if you are even Elon is amazing and our greatest entrepreneur of all time has BYD really giving him a run for his money abroad.
It's outselling him in many jurisdictions, right? So Chinese hardware has gotten so good that basically competing directly against Chinese hardware will be very difficult, right? So at least be aware of that. So if you're a young builder, but in software, you can be competitive in creating content, you can be competitive, but it'll be it'll be something where I can't give a specific, you know, thing for any interest person. Those are the general things. The last thing I'll say is not
everybody needs to be a founder. This is actually going to be one of the messages in a coming post. You ready for this one? Ready. Did you know that it's actually by some measures, harder to become a Unicorn founder than to become a pro athlete? OK, there's only 1500 tech unicorns globally and there's like several 1000 pro athletes, right? If you add up NBANFL, European soccer, cricket, whatever, there's like thousands of pro athletes.
There's like about 1000 to 2000 Unicorn founders, right? So like to be a Unicorn founders like being a pro athlete. Not everybody needs to be a founder. You can 1000. In fact, they shouldn't be. You know how hard it is. I know how hard it is. Most people actually will do better as part of a larger vehicle, right? And they don't have to figure
out everything for themselves. There's some degree, you know, so we will have a program for the 1000 X, the 10,000 X number of people who would be great tech employees, tech interns and so and so forth. And then they do really well there. And then maybe they can become a founder or something later. Or they can realize if they if they tell me how hard it is to be a founder, then I might actually listen to them about why they want to be a founder, Right. But only, only right.
So that's other thing I'd say for builders. Builders includes founders and employees and, and, and execs and so on. OK, let me pause there. And open source developers. I was going to say that. You know, not everyone needs to be founder, but I think everyone
can be a builder. And I think this is actually one of the shared, this is one of the shared philosophies that the networks school and base really has is that regardless of what industry you're in, you know, regardless of what your skill set is, you can bring this builder identity and mentality, which is about showing up. It's about working hard. It's about like not giving up. It's about being resourceful and using all the tools that you have at your disposal in order
to get things done. It's about working together with other people. And I think that mentality, it's one of the great superpowers that people can have. And I think it's one of the things that has again, brought base to the network school because it feels like there's so much shared alignment around this idea of everyone everywhere
in the world. If you have an Internet connection, you can be a builder and you can make positive change on the Internet and thereby make positive change on the world. Awesome. OK. With that, Jesse, let's wrap. And so I'll we're base for builders in every school. Check out base APIs and and apply for Nervous Hill Fellowship. All right, thanks. And join base batches. Number one, join base batches there. OK, Thanks, everybody. Thanks guys.
