Science Fair

Take a deeper dive into decentralized projects, protocols, and products at our Science Fair—held during the Opening Night Party at the Internet Archive, Tuesday, July 31 from 6-9 p.m. From the Great Room to the lawn, you will find 70 tables + 70 projects = countless innovative ideas.
Science Fair is a time for you to talk one-on-one with the builders of the Decentralized Web, ask questions, and try out the latest working code. Then, once you know the names, faces and projects, you'll be better set to chart your course through the Summit offerings the next day.
Who knows, you might just meet your next partner, employer, staffer or best friend in the process!
Projects & Lightning Talks
Description
Idea:
Lets get all the Aboriginal, First Nations and Indigenous people in attendance to connect as early in the camp as possible so we can plan our time together.
Frames:
What does a decentralized web bring to Indigenous knowledges and methods of resistance? How do we use this technology to resist differing forms of colonialism at its different fazes of occupation and erasure? It is integral that Aboriginal people have the space and time for closed group discussions to center our voices and knowledges. A tent has been funded to allow a safe space for meetings, collaboration and imaginings of Indigenous futures.
Background:
A number of people have been involved in making dweb camp accessible. There are many Aboriginal, First Nations and Indigenous technologists, poets, activists and writers in attendance. This proposed project programme is intended to contribute to opening space throughout the camp for us to connect directly with one another to start figuring out what we can do together throughout and beyond the camp.
Hopes & Dreams
The hope is that we connect and lay the foundations for a distributed web of connection upon which we can slowly build trust, connection, mutual aid and solidarity once we return to our communities, lands, creations and resistances.
Participation
This project is open only to people who identify as Aboriginal, First Nations and Indigenous.
Why Participate?
Opportunities for us to meet are rare. Lets connect- Organise. Decolonise. Indigenise.
Session rundown
As a matter of priority we should all meet and connect as soon after the camp begins as possible. The format can be co-designed once we have met. This might include but not limited to:
* introduction of ourselves, our peoples, our lands
* introduction of our projects and work
* communication of our offers and needs
Please contact laniyuk@blockades.org if you would like to help co-facilitate this process.
Relevant links
https://github.com/dweb-camp-2019/projects/issues/32
Contact
Laniyuk


Laniyuk is an award winning queer Aboriginal poet born of a French mother and a Larrakia, Kungarrakan and Gurindji father. Her poetry and short memoir reflects the intersectionality of her cross cultural and queer identity. She contributed to the book Colouring the Rainbow: Blak Queer and Trans Perspectives. She is currently exploring the intersection of her poetry, decolonial theory and P2P technologies (poetic computation ala Taeyoon Choi) co-running workshops for queer people of color in Melbourne exploring accessibility and safety of P2P technologies. She has also run decolonial lectures and workshops for universities and in Aotearoa New Zealand at the first Scuttlebutt gathering.


Laniyuk is an award winning queer Aboriginal poet born of a French mother and a Larrakia, Kungarrakan and Gurindji father. Her poetry and short memoir reflects the intersectionality of her cross cultural and queer identity. She contributed to the book Colouring the Rainbow: Blak Queer and Trans Perspectives. She is currently exploring the intersection of her poetry, decolonial theory and P2P technologies (poetic computation ala Taeyoon Choi) co-running workshops for queer people of color in Melbourne exploring accessibility and safety of P2P technologies. She has also run decolonial lectures and workshops for universities and in Aotearoa New Zealand at the first Scuttlebutt gathering.
Incorporating:
-
Javascript running in unmodified browsers
-
IPFS, WebTorrent, YJS, HTTPS
-
A open-source library we created to give a common API to multiple “transports”
-
A decentralized hierarchical naming system
-
A bootloader to boot http browser requests into a decentralized environment
-
A gateway that lazily seeds the Dweb as resources are requested
Questions we grapple with:
-
How to seed the Dweb without overwhelming it
-
How to avoid duplication of large databases
-
How to provide a usable UX on top of slow, and sometimes unreliable decentralization


Mitra Ardron is the technical lead for the decentralization work at the Internet Archive. Apart from building a decentralized version of the archive he is interested in how we can build tools that can work across different decentralized architectures, and has built small libraries for naming and authentication. Prior to the Archive, He co-founded the Association for Progressive Communications (apc.org), co-authored several internet standards, and was CTO on the first peer to peer video sharing system (which pioneered sharding and content addressing). His passions include renewable energy (ran solar payment networks across Africa); and mentoring innovators working to make the world a better place.
Videos from the summit:


Mitra Ardron is the technical lead for the decentralization work at the Internet Archive. Apart from building a decentralized version of the archive he is interested in how we can build tools that can work across different decentralized architectures, and has built small libraries for naming and authentication. Prior to the Archive, He co-founded the Association for Progressive Communications (apc.org), co-authored several internet standards, and was CTO on the first peer to peer video sharing system (which pioneered sharding and content addressing). His passions include renewable energy (ran solar payment networks across Africa); and mentoring innovators working to make the world a better place.
Videos from the summit:
Althea empowers individuals and communities to build and maintain their own sustainable, decentralized internet infrastructure. This is a benefit not only to those who need better access to the internet, but to everyone who believes in the freedom of content and choice of internet providers. Althea networks will also be more efficient, since each node in an Althea network competes with its neighbors to provide the cheapest, fastest service.
Althea works at a low level by allowing internet routers to pay each other for bandwidth. This can be used to create a city-wide incentivized mesh network. End users load their home routers with cryptocurrency, then pay into the mesh as they use bandwidth. Routers in the network automatically compete to provide the cheapest and best service. The permissionless nature of this network disrupts the top-down monopolistic ownership model of today's ISPs. Prices can vary widely between networks, and with a given user's data usage, but we expect that they will be about half of what existing ISPs charge due to competition within the network.
Althea subnet DAOs are on-blockchain organizations which maintain the list of routers (identified by IP address) that make up a local mesh network. They are run by "subnet organizers" who add routers to this list, and can remove bad actors from the network. Subnet DAOs can also charge each router on the network a continous flat fee. Depending on the subnet DAO, the organizers may provide services usually provided by an ISP, such as installation and customer service. Subnet DAOs are very adaptable and we expect a variety of governance approaches, from consensus based collective decision making to more traditional business like approaches.
How will mainstream end users know which subnet DAO to join? Subnet DAOs will be curated by a the Althea global TCR, a tokenized voting system. Through votes, the global TCR generates a list of known-good subnet DAOs. Subnet DAOs can additional put down a deposit to secure their spot on the list. People interested in getting on the Althea network can simply check a website, and input their address to find the subnet DAO in their area which best meets their preferences for level of service and price. An important distinction between subnet DAOs and traditional ISPs is that one router can be part of multiple subnet DAOs. This unpacks the role of the ISP, and removes the traditional monopoly over physical equipment.


Jehan has a background in software consulting and has been developing blockchain software since 2013, including an early wallet for Tendermint, the Avocado state channel framework, and the RPR payment channel routing protocol. He has volunteered with the PeoplesOpen.net mesh network in Oakland for the past 3 years.
Videos from the summit:


Jehan has a background in software consulting and has been developing blockchain software since 2013, including an early wallet for Tendermint, the Avocado state channel framework, and the RPR payment channel routing protocol. He has volunteered with the PeoplesOpen.net mesh network in Oakland for the past 3 years.
Videos from the summit:
Aragon Core
Decentralized application to run your organization
TRANSFER TOKENS Tokens represent your stake in the organization
Your organization is in control of its funds. Transfer and assign them according to your personal needs without artificial limitations.
FUNDRAISING Grasp the potential of a new form of crowdfunding
Utilize the power of the crowd for funding and raise funds globally, in private or publicly, without relying on banks or financial gatekeepers.
VOTING
Decision-making by voting
Use voting for more effective results. Votes are a secure, transparent and unforgeable way to come to a decision on major issues.
PAYMENTS
Instant payments in a few clicks
Adding a new employee to your organization and payroll is as easy as creating a new recurring payment.
ACCOUNTING Tamper-proof, effective accounting
Every transaction is recorded and can be verified on the blockchain at any given time
Unprecedented level of transparency can be gained through the use of a public blockchain to engrave every entry permanently on the ledger. Pre-established rules can automatically define your quarterly spending and budgeting.
PERMISSIONS
Flexible and resilient privilege escalation
Fine-grained permissions deliver the freedom to create an organization that will work for you.
By assigning different permissions to people, you can create the kind of organizational structure that is best suited for your needs.


A constant student. I love learning new languages, frameworks, databases and techniques. I try to have a wide breadth of knowledge on the subjects so I can select the best tool for the task at hand. I've been known to lock myself in a room for a week-end for a codefest to learn a new facet of the trade. As such, I feel confident going into any environment with the assumption that I can become proficient in it.
I love development. I'm passionate about it. I love design. I love the open web. When not in front of the keyboard, you can find me out in the sun rock climbing, skiing, or simply running. I also enjoy art, movies, the occasional video game, and traveling.


María Gómez is a former corporate lawyer. She worked several years in the M&A and corporate finance practice. Currently she works as the strategy lead for Aragon.one, one of the teams working for the Aragon project. A project that is building tools for the governance of organizations and open source projects. María is a local to Bogotá-Colombia, a citizen of the open world.


John Light is the Community Lead at Aragon, a project that is building tools for the governance of organizations and open source projects. He is also a co-founder of Bitseed, author of Bitcoin: Be Your Own Bank, free software advocate and contributor, and advisor to cryptocurrency startups and investors.
John has helped organize many crypto-community events including EIP0 Summit in 2018, the Decentralized Web Summit in 2016, and Blockstack Summit NYC in 2015. He also hosted the P2P Connects Us podcast, founded the Buttonwood SF cryptocurrency trading meetup in San Francisco, and is an avid reader and writer on the topics of peer-to-peer technology, philosophy, and culture.
You can find John's website at lightco.in.
Videos from the summit:


A constant student. I love learning new languages, frameworks, databases and techniques. I try to have a wide breadth of knowledge on the subjects so I can select the best tool for the task at hand. I've been known to lock myself in a room for a week-end for a codefest to learn a new facet of the trade. As such, I feel confident going into any environment with the assumption that I can become proficient in it.
I love development. I'm passionate about it. I love design. I love the open web. When not in front of the keyboard, you can find me out in the sun rock climbing, skiing, or simply running. I also enjoy art, movies, the occasional video game, and traveling.


María Gómez is a former corporate lawyer. She worked several years in the M&A and corporate finance practice. Currently she works as the strategy lead for Aragon.one, one of the teams working for the Aragon project. A project that is building tools for the governance of organizations and open source projects. María is a local to Bogotá-Colombia, a citizen of the open world.


John Light is the Community Lead at Aragon, a project that is building tools for the governance of organizations and open source projects. He is also a co-founder of Bitseed, author of Bitcoin: Be Your Own Bank, free software advocate and contributor, and advisor to cryptocurrency startups and investors.
John has helped organize many crypto-community events including EIP0 Summit in 2018, the Decentralized Web Summit in 2016, and Blockstack Summit NYC in 2015. He also hosted the P2P Connects Us podcast, founded the Buttonwood SF cryptocurrency trading meetup in San Francisco, and is an avid reader and writer on the topics of peer-to-peer technology, philosophy, and culture.
You can find John's website at lightco.in.
Videos from the summit:
We are on the way to have one global page to empower local communities to run events, share views and co-create the web we deserve.
One of the core tenets of DWeb is that "DWeb is built by many" where "everyone is influencing our society's future". Therefore, we see a new website as - not the outcome of two or three creative minds designing & developing - but as a huge picture made up of the thoughts and needs of us all.During the session we will:- finalise the message of DWeb's brand together;- create information architecture for the website;- collect all flashbacks and articles from previous events and...- yes! code it from zero to launch by the final day of DWeb CampSo, whoever you are - a developer, designer, writer, thinker or dreamer - join us! We will have a lot of fun co-creating this BIG touchpoint that will exist into the future to grow our global community.


Iryna Nezhynska is a designer specialising in design languages for digital products and visual communication for tech startups.
Previously a senior visual designer at Deloitte Digital and design team lead at Norwegian software agency Chimera Prime, she has recently moved to Berlin to join blockchain startup Jolocom.
Always being a “person from branding” she has been working in several industries - traditional advertising for local banks and industrial companies, digital publishing for international consumer and retail brands, software development for German fintech companies, brand experience design for insurance and financial corporations and, finally, back to software development - this time for decentralized web.


Iryna Nezhynska is a designer specialising in design languages for digital products and visual communication for tech startups.
Previously a senior visual designer at Deloitte Digital and design team lead at Norwegian software agency Chimera Prime, she has recently moved to Berlin to join blockchain startup Jolocom.
Always being a “person from branding” she has been working in several industries - traditional advertising for local banks and industrial companies, digital publishing for international consumer and retail brands, software development for German fintech companies, brand experience design for insurance and financial corporations and, finally, back to software development - this time for decentralized web.
How it works
Beaker adds support for a peer-to-peer protocol called Dat. It's the Web you know and love, but instead of HTTP, websites and files are transported with Dat.
Deploy a website from your computer — no server required! Visitors connect directly to each other, sharing your site's files and helping keep it online.
Files are transported with the peer-to-peer network instead of being locked away on a server, so you can explore all the files that make up a website or app.
Why build a browser?
Browsers are the gateway to the Web! By building a browser with experimental features and capabilities, we have the flexibility to explore how the browser can help uphold the vision of an open Web.
History
Paul released the Beaker prototype in August 2016 after participating in the inaugural Decentralized Web Summit, where he shopped his idea to integrate peer-to-peer protocols into a browser.
Tara made her first contribution in October 2016 and joined full-time in April 2017. As core developer of the Dat protocol, Mathias has always been a part of the Beaker community, but he officially joined the Beaker team in 2018.


Paul is the co-creator of the Beaker browser and an active contributor to the Dat protocol. Previously Paul helped found the Secure Scuttlebutt project, and has a history of working at small Web development agencies. He's here to talk about peer-to-peer computing and how the Web can become a live environment.
Videos from the summit:


Mathias Buus is a self taught JavaScript hacker from Copenhagen that has been working with Node.js since the 0.2 days. Mathias likes to work with P2P and distributed systems and is the author of more than 650 modules on npm. He is also the Chief of Research at Beaker leading the technical work on the Dat protocol.
Videos from the summit:


Tara is the co-creator of the Beaker Browser, a browser for exploring and building the peer-to-peer Web. She co-founded Blue Link Labs, the team of decentralization enthusiasts behind the Beaker Browser and hashbase.io. She's dedicated to building the Web of tomorrow as a Web for all.
Videos from the summit:


Paul is the co-creator of the Beaker browser and an active contributor to the Dat protocol. Previously Paul helped found the Secure Scuttlebutt project, and has a history of working at small Web development agencies. He's here to talk about peer-to-peer computing and how the Web can become a live environment.
Videos from the summit:


Mathias Buus is a self taught JavaScript hacker from Copenhagen that has been working with Node.js since the 0.2 days. Mathias likes to work with P2P and distributed systems and is the author of more than 650 modules on npm. He is also the Chief of Research at Beaker leading the technical work on the Dat protocol.
Videos from the summit:


Tara is the co-creator of the Beaker Browser, a browser for exploring and building the peer-to-peer Web. She co-founded Blue Link Labs, the team of decentralization enthusiasts behind the Beaker Browser and hashbase.io. She's dedicated to building the Web of tomorrow as a Web for all.
Videos from the summit:
Bring datasets on Hard Drives, bring empty hard drives and facilitate large scale data sharing. We will bring: 10 Million scientific papers, 100k 78rpm records, Geocities archive... What do you have to offer? What do you want? Inspired by Chaos Communications Camp's Department of Hosting Service (DHS): https://events.ccc.de/congress/2016/wiki/Assembly:Department_of_Hosting_Service
Hopes & dreams
Lets open up Big Data-- lets have fun datasets to play with at the event and after.
Participation
Anyone, bring a laptop with USB ports, Bring external hard drives (ones you can leave out in the open)
Why participate
Moving 8TBytes still takes a long time online. Lots of Copies Keeps Stuff Safe. Demo Playing with big data with simple python scripts.
Session Rundown
We don't need a session, but maybe a brief intro do the datasets contributed would be helpful.
Relevant Links
archive.org, https://events.ccc.de/congress/2016/wiki/Assembly:Department_of_Hosting_Service
Contact
Brewster Kahle


A passionate advocate for public Internet access and a successful entrepreneur, Brewster Kahle has spent his career intent on a singular focus: providing Universal Access to All Knowledge. He is the founder and Digital Librarian of the Internet Archive, one of the largest libraries in the world. Soon after graduating from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology where he studied artificial intelligence, Kahle helped found the company Thinking Machines, a parallel supercomputer maker. In 1989, Kahle created the Internet's first publishing system called Wide Area Information Server (WAIS), later selling the company to AOL. In 1996, Kahle co-founded Alexa Internet, which helps catalog the Web, selling it to Amazon.com in 1999. The Internet Archive, which he founded in 1996, now preserves 38 petabytes of data - the books, Web pages, music, television, and software that form our cultural heritage, working with more than 1000 library and university partners to create a digital library, accessible to all.
He first called builders to "Lock the Web Open" using decentralized technologies in 2015, and continues to write about, experiment, cajole, and cheer on those creating decentralized systems we can trust.
Videos from the summit:


A passionate advocate for public Internet access and a successful entrepreneur, Brewster Kahle has spent his career intent on a singular focus: providing Universal Access to All Knowledge. He is the founder and Digital Librarian of the Internet Archive, one of the largest libraries in the world. Soon after graduating from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology where he studied artificial intelligence, Kahle helped found the company Thinking Machines, a parallel supercomputer maker. In 1989, Kahle created the Internet's first publishing system called Wide Area Information Server (WAIS), later selling the company to AOL. In 1996, Kahle co-founded Alexa Internet, which helps catalog the Web, selling it to Amazon.com in 1999. The Internet Archive, which he founded in 1996, now preserves 38 petabytes of data - the books, Web pages, music, television, and software that form our cultural heritage, working with more than 1000 library and university partners to create a digital library, accessible to all.
He first called builders to "Lock the Web Open" using decentralized technologies in 2015, and continues to write about, experiment, cajole, and cheer on those creating decentralized systems we can trust.
Videos from the summit:
Blockstack
Blockstack is a new internet for decentralized apps.
Blockstack’s mission is to enable an open, decentralized internet which will benefit all internet users by giving them more control over information and computation. We’re committed to always support the decentralization of the Blockstack network and ensure that we build the network in a way that no single entity, including Blockstack PBC, has control over it.


Muneeb co-founded Blockstack, a new internet for decentralized apps where users own their data. Muneeb received his PhD in Computer Science from Princeton University specializing in distributed systems. He went through Y Combinator and has worked in the systems research group at Princeton and PlanetLab—the world's first and largest cloud computing testbed. Muneeb was awarded a J. William Fulbright Fellowship and gives guest lectures on cloud computing at Princeton. He has built a broad range of production systems and published research papers with over 900 citations.
Videos from the summit:


Jude Nelson earned his PhD in computer science at Princeton and worked as a core member of PlanetLab, which received the ACM Test of Time Award for enabling planetary scale experimentation and deployment. His research covered wide-area storage systems and CDNs. 10+ years of Vim usage.


Muneeb co-founded Blockstack, a new internet for decentralized apps where users own their data. Muneeb received his PhD in Computer Science from Princeton University specializing in distributed systems. He went through Y Combinator and has worked in the systems research group at Princeton and PlanetLab—the world's first and largest cloud computing testbed. Muneeb was awarded a J. William Fulbright Fellowship and gives guest lectures on cloud computing at Princeton. He has built a broad range of production systems and published research papers with over 900 citations.
Videos from the summit:


Jude Nelson earned his PhD in computer science at Princeton and worked as a core member of PlanetLab, which received the ACM Test of Time Award for enabling planetary scale experimentation and deployment. His research covered wide-area storage systems and CDNs. 10+ years of Vim usage.
We achieve this through a variety of methods. For books we use Non-destructive color digitization using our Scribe system at one of our many scanning centers across the globe. Complete MARC records, Dublin Core & XML. Printed materials, film, and audio are just a few of the other formats that can be digitized and displayed online. We create high quality PDFs running OCR across texts to allow "search inside" of all books. This can be displayed via our open source Book Reader.


Chris worked at the Internet Archive as an archive administrator for a little over 2 years before being promoted to the position of digitization manager. Prior to that, he studied history at San Diego State University, worked in an audio/visual department at Sony Pictures in LA, and then in production for an investment bank in the Bay Area after deciding to return home. His interests include all things Star Trek, World of Warcraft, and American football, in that order. Chris is a creative goofball wrapped in a heart of gold.


Chris worked at the Internet Archive as an archive administrator for a little over 2 years before being promoted to the position of digitization manager. Prior to that, he studied history at San Diego State University, worked in an audio/visual department at Sony Pictures in LA, and then in production for an investment bank in the Bay Area after deciding to return home. His interests include all things Star Trek, World of Warcraft, and American football, in that order. Chris is a creative goofball wrapped in a heart of gold.
The Bitcoin Reference DID method (did:btcr) supports DIDs on the public Bitcoin blockchain. The Bitcoin Reference method has minimal design goals: a DID trust anchor based on the Bitcoin blockchain, updates publicly visible and auditable via Bitcoin transactions, and optionally, additional DID Document information referenced in the transaction OP_RETURN data field. No other Personal Identifiable Information (PII) would be placed on the immutable blockchain.
A secondary intent of the BTCR method is to serve as a very conservative, very secure example and some best practices for creating a DID method. The use cases for BTCR are focused on anonymous and pseudo-anonymous identities, web-of-trust style webs of identity, and absolute mimimal personal information disclosure. Other DID methods will likely need to loosen these standards.
Some aspects of the BTCR method will not be practical if inappropriately scaled — for instance, there is a transaction cost to update keys and DDO object, potential UTXO inflation (i.e. one additional unspent output for every BTCR-based identity), and even if segwit isn't used it could cause blockchain bloat. However, identities using the BTCR method can be a strong as Bitcoin itself -- currently securing billions of dollars of digital value.


Kim Hamilton Duffy is CTO of Learning Machine and Principal Architect of Blockcerts. Her focus is building decentralized systems enabling interoperable, recipient-owned credentials and identity solutions based on open standards and open source implementations. Kim is co-chair of the W3C Credentials Community Group, the standards group driving the Decentralized Identifiers (DID) specification. She co-developed the BTCR DID method specification and open source implementations.
Videos from the summit:


Christopher Allen is an entrepreneur, technologist, and educator who specializes in collaboration, security, and trust. As a pioneer in internet cryptography, he’s initiated cross-industry collaborations and created industry standards that influence the entire internet. He worked with Netscape to develop SSL and co-authored the IETF TLS internet draft that is now at the heart of all secure commerce on the World Wide Web. Though he’s worked within numerous privacy and security sectors, Christopher’s recent emphasis has been on engines of trust such as blockchain, smart contracts, and smart signatures, in particular decentralized self-sovereign identity. Christopher has been a digital civil liberties and human-rights privacy advisor, mobile developer, startup consultant, MBA faculty, and social web strategy consultant. He served as Principle Architect at Blockstream.


Kim Hamilton Duffy is CTO of Learning Machine and Principal Architect of Blockcerts. Her focus is building decentralized systems enabling interoperable, recipient-owned credentials and identity solutions based on open standards and open source implementations. Kim is co-chair of the W3C Credentials Community Group, the standards group driving the Decentralized Identifiers (DID) specification. She co-developed the BTCR DID method specification and open source implementations.
Videos from the summit:


Christopher Allen is an entrepreneur, technologist, and educator who specializes in collaboration, security, and trust. As a pioneer in internet cryptography, he’s initiated cross-industry collaborations and created industry standards that influence the entire internet. He worked with Netscape to develop SSL and co-authored the IETF TLS internet draft that is now at the heart of all secure commerce on the World Wide Web. Though he’s worked within numerous privacy and security sectors, Christopher’s recent emphasis has been on engines of trust such as blockchain, smart contracts, and smart signatures, in particular decentralized self-sovereign identity. Christopher has been a digital civil liberties and human-rights privacy advisor, mobile developer, startup consultant, MBA faculty, and social web strategy consultant. He served as Principle Architect at Blockstream.
Description
The audience for this session works as a community to build a blockchain from newspapers. Hashing and mining are demonstrated along with comparisons to centralized constructs.
Hopes & dreams
"Build a Blockchain" is designed to bring an appreciation to people of the power and societal dimensions of decentralized trust and agreement we commonly call "Blockchain".
Participation
This is friendly to all and does not require any electronics.
Why participate
People should participate who would like to have a hands on experience of Blockchain and a deeper appreciation for the power of peer-to-peer decentralization.
Session rundown
"Build a Blockchain" is designed for 10 to 100 people to participate in the exercise and takes approximately 30 to 45 minutes depending upon audience questions.
Relevant links
Contact
Jay Carpenter


Decentralized realms of naming, numbering, addressing and identity are my areas of expertise and interest.


Decentralized realms of naming, numbering, addressing and identity are my areas of expertise and interest.
Description
Using the Internet Archive as a server and linking images through ImageSnippets to other datasets such as Wikidata and even possibly publishing through Solid Pods, participants will build an image graph from the event, with metadata openly published as linked data in an RDF triple store. The camping experience will inevitably hold many opportunities for image making by the participants; everything from having meals and conversations together, to photos of the surroundings. To document the dweb camp experience with images and descriptions that can then be mapped into an RDF graph and shared using open linked data principles following the F.A.I.R. principles can be a learning experience for participants as well as a lot of fun and at the end will produce a well documented experience enriched with lots of metadata!
Hopes & dreams
The collective interpretation of images can be shared as data that can change how people come to agreements in many different fields. Preserving that information using linked data and shared openly makes those images even more valuable to a future web.
Why participate?
Describing images with linked data metadata is a really interesting project altogether. Being able to formalize image descriptions using datasets such as Wikidata to describe images is fun and it adds a whole new dimension to how we talk about photos. I think this would be a great way for the experiences that people have at the DWeb camp to be archived in a really special way throughout the experience.
Relevant links
Contact
Margaret Warren


Margaret Warren is an artist and technologist. She is the creator of the ImageSnippets, a system for describing images using linked data, semantic web and knowledge representation techniques.
As an artist, Margaret creates works in 2D and 3D and installation pieces in multiple styles and mediums and has been actively involved in the arts since she was a child. She has been associated with numerous galleries in Northwest Florida and was a studio artist at First City Art Center in Pensacola, Florida for over 3 years and a program director and on the board of the Arts & Design Society in Fort Walton Beach for over 4 years. Her work has been shown and sold internationally and commissioned by clients.
She is also a co-founding member of a collaborative art group called the Southeastern Art Players (SAP) that has been in existence for almost 10 years. Over the years, SAP has had many art ‘camps’, art parties and given many workshops and demonstrations of collaborative art ‘playing’. The work created by SAP is very different from any of the work that is created independently by any one member of the group and this has been one of the most rewarding realizations of the SAP experience. The SAP work has won awards, been purchased into the prestigious Cinco Banderas collection in Pensacola, Florida, used for an academic book cover and sold into collections all over the world.
Videos from the summit:


Margaret Warren is an artist and technologist. She is the creator of the ImageSnippets, a system for describing images using linked data, semantic web and knowledge representation techniques.
As an artist, Margaret creates works in 2D and 3D and installation pieces in multiple styles and mediums and has been actively involved in the arts since she was a child. She has been associated with numerous galleries in Northwest Florida and was a studio artist at First City Art Center in Pensacola, Florida for over 3 years and a program director and on the board of the Arts & Design Society in Fort Walton Beach for over 4 years. Her work has been shown and sold internationally and commissioned by clients.
She is also a co-founding member of a collaborative art group called the Southeastern Art Players (SAP) that has been in existence for almost 10 years. Over the years, SAP has had many art ‘camps’, art parties and given many workshops and demonstrations of collaborative art ‘playing’. The work created by SAP is very different from any of the work that is created independently by any one member of the group and this has been one of the most rewarding realizations of the SAP experience. The SAP work has won awards, been purchased into the prestigious Cinco Banderas collection in Pensacola, Florida, used for an academic book cover and sold into collections all over the world.
Videos from the summit:
Description
Problem:
Many people don't understand or care about the things we're working on. Or if they do, their friends aren't there. Barriers to adoption are both technical and social. We have many beautiful systems -- SSB, Matrix, Cabal, etc -- whose UX are good (better in some ways) but exist in their own islands.
Inquiry:
How could interoperability improve the UX of our emerging un-platforms, especially as we grow beyond social networks and static content into open app ecosystems? What does it even mean to interoperate, from both technical and UX perspectives? When does it make sense to build bridges vs defer to other projects' strengths? How do we handle impedance mismatches between technologies? And most importantly, can we all get together over a cup of tea and chat about it?
Hopes & Dreams
- Communication lines between projects are opened up
- We begin to understand the biggest interoperability hurdles and opportunities
- We build relationships that continue to grow past DWeb Camp, and identify ways to continue working together
Participation
This should be relevant to people with UX skills, psychology, marketing, human-centred design, compassion, modest knowledge of at least one DWeb technology
Why Participate?
You want to see the DWeb make inroads into the lives of 'ordinary' people (excuse the prejudice embedded into that word; language is tricky).
You recognise the gaps between where we are and where we could be, and want to have a hand in closing those gaps.
You know that every project has a unique perspective to contribute, and that we're much stronger as allies (and our users are better off too). You want to help forge those alliances.
Session Rundown
A group conversation (or two or five) among people who are either involved in a DWeb project or are strong advocates for humane application of technology. This format would serve two goals:
- To build warm relationships that keep growing after our short time together
- I am totally green at this calibre of event and this feels like a low-key way of contributing something valuable to a topic I care about.
I will be happy to kick off and facilitate discussions and share my own perspectives (disclaimer: I'm part of the Holochain project), but my intent is to "surround myself with people more intelligent than I" and see what happens
Contact
Paul d'Aoust


Ever since he was little, Paul has loved investigating the connections between seemingly unrelated topics. These days, he's especially interested in learning about the ways that technology can help or hinder our journey toward a regenerative future. He currently works with Holo as a developer mentor, helping app creators understand and build with the Holochain distributed framework.


Ever since he was little, Paul has loved investigating the connections between seemingly unrelated topics. These days, he's especially interested in learning about the ways that technology can help or hinder our journey toward a regenerative future. He currently works with Holo as a developer mentor, helping app creators understand and build with the Holochain distributed framework.
bunsanweb is a decentralized web born in Tokyo which forms an open network of individual programs that freely share information between them. Its foundation is built on standard browser-side web technologies.
We view the web as a network of user agents (i.e. browsers) and hyperlinked resources, not a network of servers for their clients. We want the web to be a web of something where user agents communicate with document resources. Hyperlinks can directly link resources across web servers. However, in the status quo the web has become centralized and has become reliant on opaque web services that act as intermediaries between people and resources.
Our goal has been to create a decentralized web that takes back control from these monopolistic systems. We want to create an environment where browsers are enhanced with decentralizing features and programming functionalities are provided for decentralized architectures. We want to return the web to one that emphasizes end-to-end principles and reduce, if not eliminate, centralizing intermediary factors from endpoints. We believe that web endpoints should become an endpoint of inter-person systems. In this system the browser itself can become a resource and perform endpoint-scripts for system functions broken in a decentralized manner.
bunsanweb attempts to provide the tools necessary to realize these goals. Namely, Endpoint-scripting for mixing server-side scripting features into the client-side which allows for both accessing and producing Web resources.
A universal event stream for communicating with unspecified endpoint scripts without the need for specific centralized channels.
Endpoint-relative hyperlinked space where each endpoint views resources from each local link to the universal web. e.g. Where "personal data" is a relative resource for each person that may link to "friends" on the universal web.
We have created prototypes of these tools and more information and code can be found on our website and github repos.
Homepage: https://bunsanweb.github.io/">https://bunsanweb.github.io/
Gitbub Organization: https://github.com/bunsanweb/
Documentation: https://github.com/bunsanweb/bunsan


Ryoichi's current interest is systems programming and programming languages. He has worked for several companies to design and implement programmable architecture of systems. He studied computer science from type theory to component architecture at Kyoto University and Tokyo University. He has been the main programmer for bunsanweb.


Ryoichi's current interest is systems programming and programming languages. He has worked for several companies to design and implement programmable architecture of systems. He studied computer science from type theory to component architecture at Kyoto University and Tokyo University. He has been the main programmer for bunsanweb.
Description
Mass market browsers are control points on our digital future. They decide what values are encoded in our experience of the web - how we read, how we publish, how we share, what we save. Let's look at browsers that are pushing on the edge of what a user agent can be today, and experiment with building our own. This session will be unstructured discussion and hacking - come to learn, share and build!
Hopes & dreams
We build browsers that truly are agents *for us*, represent our values, and include the technologies that enable web experiences that put users in control.
Participation
Join for an hour (or more if you want to keep going?) of sharing and learning about how browsers are built, hacking on adding features to the core, or building extensions. Bring your expertise to share and/or your thirst to learn! Laptops required if you want to build things, but not required to participate in conversation.
Why participate
You want to learn how to hack on browsers, or share your knowledge
Session rundown
Meet, chat, hack, share - see where attendees want to take it
Relevant links
https://github.com/ipfs/camp/tree/master/CORE_AND_ELECTIVE_COURSES/ELECTIVE_COURSE_H
Contact
Dietrich Ayala


Dietrich Ayala is working on safeguarding the internet at Protocol Labs by turning browsers into true user agents, with technologies like IPFS.
Dietrich's first computer job was as webmaster at indie music label Sub Pop Records, doing anything and everything digital. He has since worked at small startups and also household names like McAfee and Yahoo. He spent 13 years working for internet freedom at Mozilla, the non-profit makers of Firefox. Before computerizing, he was a barista and chef.
Dietrich lives in San Francisco California at the moment, and spends a year in Asia every so often because that's where the internet is growing the most and where all of our devices come from. And the noodle soup is good.


Dietrich Ayala is working on safeguarding the internet at Protocol Labs by turning browsers into true user agents, with technologies like IPFS.
Dietrich's first computer job was as webmaster at indie music label Sub Pop Records, doing anything and everything digital. He has since worked at small startups and also household names like McAfee and Yahoo. He spent 13 years working for internet freedom at Mozilla, the non-profit makers of Firefox. Before computerizing, he was a barista and chef.
Dietrich lives in San Francisco California at the moment, and spends a year in Asia every so often because that's where the internet is growing the most and where all of our devices come from. And the noodle soup is good.
Description
Demonstrate a stovetop extraction process with organic hemp. Blend the resulting hemp oil into a therapeutic balm using all-natural ingredients.
Hopes & Dreams
One hope is to being visibility to the therapeutic use of CBD/hemp for serious pain management. I am selling topical balms and calming pet treats (made from the same oil) to fund a permanent facility to house at-risk dogs.
Participation
Workshop is open for observation to all non-commercial attendees. Children are welcome to observe but will not be permitted to participate in the extraction process or blending the balms due to safety considerations.
Why Participate?
Participants will gain an understanding of the cannibinoid (no THC in this process) extraction process. Participants will also be able to observe how to combine therapeutic materials with different boiling points into a balm that does not break or separate when cooled. This makes the resulting product more consistent when used.
Session rundown
I would like to show a stovetop hemp extraction using filter bags and a carrier oil. Then I would like to blend my topical product and create a batch in front of attendees. Half of the workshop would be demonstration and half of the time would be allotted to discussing the product and why attendees are interested in hemp/CBD topical products.
Relevant links
Contact
David Anderson
David Anderson started the hausdog brand to empower sustainable animal rescue. The current model of soliciting donations to support not-for-profit organizations creates an ecosystem where rescues pay too much for goods/services, and are forced to use resources for fundraising that should be used to rescue more animals. The goal of hausdog is to provide an alternative framework to the current model and not to be unnecessarily critical. The dog gear made by hausdog is designed to fit better than what is normally found at pet stores. Anyone who has seen a beloved dog slip a harness and get into trouble can understand why this is not a trivial concern. The merchandise line has since expanded to include calming pet treats and topical balms for people that both contain domestically-grown hemp, with no THC.
All of this might seem disjunctive, but the goal is simple. Design products that are of higher quality than average, and then vertically integrate their production in a way that reduces the costs of rescue, while at the same time generating an income stream to fund rescue activities. Rescue organizations should not need to resort to supplication on social media in order to raise boarding fees. If this model is successful it will allow rescue organizations to buy permanent facilities, and allow staff to focus on rescue-related activities.
In order to bring greater awareness to the constraints faced by rescue organizations, David will give a workshop to demonstrate his technique for making natural topical products. Participants will learn how to combine different ingredients to maximize potency and shelf life of the finished product. Many common topical products contain petroleum byproducts that include parabens - find out what natural ingredients are good subsitutes and how to blend them. The workshop will also include a presentation on producing a CBD pet treat with a standardized dose of CBD. David will share his personal experience using CBD in his rescue work, what an 'owner-surrender' is, and explain why CBD could help reduce it. Samples will be provided to all participants.
David has a MS Finance degree from Illinois Institute of Technology. He is on hiatus from the Economics PhD program at Claremont Graduate University, where his interest was on measuring decision-making through social neuroscience research. He is extremely disappointed with the cultural obsession over food-delivery apps.
David Anderson started the hausdog brand to empower sustainable animal rescue. The current model of soliciting donations to support not-for-profit organizations creates an ecosystem where rescues pay too much for goods/services, and are forced to use resources for fundraising that should be used to rescue more animals. The goal of hausdog is to provide an alternative framework to the current model and not to be unnecessarily critical. The dog gear made by hausdog is designed to fit better than what is normally found at pet stores. Anyone who has seen a beloved dog slip a harness and get into trouble can understand why this is not a trivial concern. The merchandise line has since expanded to include calming pet treats and topical balms for people that both contain domestically-grown hemp, with no THC.
All of this might seem disjunctive, but the goal is simple. Design products that are of higher quality than average, and then vertically integrate their production in a way that reduces the costs of rescue, while at the same time generating an income stream to fund rescue activities. Rescue organizations should not need to resort to supplication on social media in order to raise boarding fees. If this model is successful it will allow rescue organizations to buy permanent facilities, and allow staff to focus on rescue-related activities.
In order to bring greater awareness to the constraints faced by rescue organizations, David will give a workshop to demonstrate his technique for making natural topical products. Participants will learn how to combine different ingredients to maximize potency and shelf life of the finished product. Many common topical products contain petroleum byproducts that include parabens - find out what natural ingredients are good subsitutes and how to blend them. The workshop will also include a presentation on producing a CBD pet treat with a standardized dose of CBD. David will share his personal experience using CBD in his rescue work, what an 'owner-surrender' is, and explain why CBD could help reduce it. Samples will be provided to all participants.
David has a MS Finance degree from Illinois Institute of Technology. He is on hiatus from the Economics PhD program at Claremont Graduate University, where his interest was on measuring decision-making through social neuroscience research. He is extremely disappointed with the cultural obsession over food-delivery apps.
Description
"Chambers of AWE (Acoustic Waves Emergence) are deep, immersive sound experiences created with both ancient and modern acoustic instruments, and augmented by cutting edge technology. Conceived and performed by Laura Inserra, they are a bridge between ancient technology (wisdom traditions and music) and modern technology (high tech and science).
At the core of the project are sound sources created with rare instruments from around the world, from the oldest traditions to the newest 21st century creations. Those sounds create immersive environments with a vast spectrum of frequencies, thus facilitating powerful transformative experiences. In these settings, participants merge with the sound and go on deep inner landscapes' journeys, traveling beyond the field of cognitive perceptions.
The goal is to use music as a medicine to bring people into different states of consciousness and for the participants to have a restorative, uplifting, transformative experience. Every session brings them into deeper resonance with their bodies, allowing them to access ancient 'cellular memory' and precious inner guidance, getting more in touch with their unique creative potential and innate wisdom. "
Hopes & dreams
"Chamber of AWE is impacting communities in profound and meaningful ways. There are frequencies our ears do not hear but our bones, our cells, our mind perceive them. In our modern times, we live in environments depleted by the lack of sounds essential for our wellbeing (compressed music files, rare acoustic live experiences etc.), while being filled with disruptive, stressful frequencies. After all, we are made of cells vibrating on different frequencies, which means we are ‘sound’. That is why sound experiences allow people to amplify their senses and connect with the vast, holistic intelligence of their being and environment.
Our mission is to create collaborations with other creators and deliver more content that holds this approach. The vision is to create sound environments where people can have profoundly transformative, rejuvenating, revealing, and healing experiences. Those environments can be immersive sound experiences in a variety of events and conferences, as well as music content to play in the background at home in order to restore the harmony of the body and the balance of the environment."
Participation
All ages and no preparation needed
Why participate
The promise is a deep nourishment for our multidimensional body, an interconnection with all the participants, an amplification of our senses, a holistic opportunity for healing, a connection to deep inner guidance, and an experience of becoming 'one' with the vibrational nature of existence.
Session rundown
It can be a day long installation, or a guided deeply immersive experience, from 20 minutes up to multiple hours.
Relevant links
https://www.laurainserra.com/chambersofawe
Contact
Laura Inserra
Ian Downie
Elan Rosenman
Darren Gibbs


Laura Inserra is a multi-instrumentalist,sound therapist, composer, teacher, and event producer. With an innate gift for music, Laura is both a self-taught and classically trained musician, which allowed her to develop her unique 'structured improvisation' technique. She authors and performs music for theater, dance performances, exhibitions, and soundtracks for movies.
In these last years she has focused her work around the transformative and healing power of sound and music. As a result of decades of studies and practices of music and different wisdom lineages, she has developed a practice called Resonant Healing.


Laura Inserra is a multi-instrumentalist,sound therapist, composer, teacher, and event producer. With an innate gift for music, Laura is both a self-taught and classically trained musician, which allowed her to develop her unique 'structured improvisation' technique. She authors and performs music for theater, dance performances, exhibitions, and soundtracks for movies.
In these last years she has focused her work around the transformative and healing power of sound and music. As a result of decades of studies and practices of music and different wisdom lineages, she has developed a practice called Resonant Healing.
A blockchain based on proofs of space and time to make a cryptocurrency that is less wasteful, more decentralized, and more secure.


Videos from the summit:


Videos from the summit:
COALA is an global community of blockchain experts across multiple disciplines working towards three core missions:
- Community building and interdisciplinary collaboration, through the organization of invite-only community workshops, public conferences, and policy roundtables.
- Legal analysis of blockchain technology and development of governance frameworks and techno-legal tools to resolve critical regulatory gaps;
- Research & development of foundational building-blocks, protocols and applications, with representation at key technical standards-setting bodies
COALA is an international multidisciplinary collaborative research and development initiative for blockchain technologies. We are a coalition of the leading academic research institutions from around the world, providing neutral, fact-based blockchain research to support policy development. Our working groups are composed of academics, lawyers, economists, protocol architects, security experts, technologists, and entrepreneurs.
COALA brings together diverse stakeholders in working groups and projects - from domain experts to global institutions - to facilitate the development and deployment of blockchain-based frameworks, standards, and applications alongside governance policies that enable innovation and evolution of legal and policy frameworks.
COALA represents the Dynamic Coalition on Blockchain Technologies” at the UN, COALA also has two W3c arms, including the W3C’s Working Group on Cryptoequity (blockchain-based web protocols) and Community Group for COALA-IP (open web protocol for sharing metadata for IP). COALA has also launched the IRTF Blockchain Research Group, responsible for coordinating blockchain-based Internet protocols.
As members of the UN’s IGF, the W3C, the IRTF, and representative of a coalition of leading academic research universities around the world, COALA’s collaborative, community-driven work drives blockchain policy, technical development, and next-generation applications at global scale.


Greg is a lawyer based in Berlin, where he chairs the Privacy and Data Protection subsection of the Blockchain Bundesverband. He is co-founder of the Interplanetary Database Foundation, and the former Chief Policy Officer of ascribe.io and BigchainDB. Before moving to Berlin, Greg spent five years as a litigator with one of Canada’s top class action law firms, where he worked on class actions against Facebook over privacy violations, and Visa and MasteCard alleging price fixing. He served on the Board of Directors of the British Columbia Civil Liberties Association, and authored he BCCLA handbook on laptop and smartphone searches at the Canadian border.
Videos from the summit:


Constance is one of the principal drivers of global, collaborative, multi-stakeholder initiatives (www.blockchainworkshops.org and www.coala.global) and her ongoing work is intended to foster sound public policy to allow blockchain technologies to fulfill the great social and economic promise of its technical ingenuity. Her company, Seven Advisory, also supports diverse public and private clients in global regulations, licensing and compliance, government advocacy, and strategic market development for blockchain technologies.


Primavera De Filippi is a Permanent Researcher at the National Center of Scientific Research (CNRS) in Paris, a Faculty Associate at the Berkman-Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University, and a Visiting Fellow at the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies at the European University Institute. She is a member of the Global Future Council on Blockchain Technologies at the World Economic Forum, and co-founder of the Internet Governance Forum’s dynamic coalitions on Blockchain Technology (COALA). Her fields of interest focus on legal challenges raised by decentralized technologies, their potential to design new governance models and participatory decision-making, and the concept of governance-by-design. Her book, “Blockchain and the Law,” was published in 2018 by Harvard University Press (co-authored with Aaron Wright).
Videos from the summit:


Greg is a lawyer based in Berlin, where he chairs the Privacy and Data Protection subsection of the Blockchain Bundesverband. He is co-founder of the Interplanetary Database Foundation, and the former Chief Policy Officer of ascribe.io and BigchainDB. Before moving to Berlin, Greg spent five years as a litigator with one of Canada’s top class action law firms, where he worked on class actions against Facebook over privacy violations, and Visa and MasteCard alleging price fixing. He served on the Board of Directors of the British Columbia Civil Liberties Association, and authored he BCCLA handbook on laptop and smartphone searches at the Canadian border.
Videos from the summit:


Constance is one of the principal drivers of global, collaborative, multi-stakeholder initiatives (www.blockchainworkshops.org and www.coala.global) and her ongoing work is intended to foster sound public policy to allow blockchain technologies to fulfill the great social and economic promise of its technical ingenuity. Her company, Seven Advisory, also supports diverse public and private clients in global regulations, licensing and compliance, government advocacy, and strategic market development for blockchain technologies.


Primavera De Filippi is a Permanent Researcher at the National Center of Scientific Research (CNRS) in Paris, a Faculty Associate at the Berkman-Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University, and a Visiting Fellow at the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies at the European University Institute. She is a member of the Global Future Council on Blockchain Technologies at the World Economic Forum, and co-founder of the Internet Governance Forum’s dynamic coalitions on Blockchain Technology (COALA). Her fields of interest focus on legal challenges raised by decentralized technologies, their potential to design new governance models and participatory decision-making, and the concept of governance-by-design. Her book, “Blockchain and the Law,” was published in 2018 by Harvard University Press (co-authored with Aaron Wright).
Videos from the summit:
Web monetization and refactoring the Web Economy
The Internet’s ‘original sin’, as coined by Ethan Zuckerman, describes the current problem that there is no obvious way to monetize the web without workarounds such as advertisement, data selling or obtrusive paywalls. As a result we are starting to see the consequences of these models - ranging from Facebook’s Cambridge Analytica scandal to ad-blocker/ad-blocker-blocker wars between publishers.
Micropayments has often been discussed as a potential model to support content-creators and others such as Netflix have created subscription services that bundle content. However since these are often closed systems, they have often failed to capture the majority of content on the web, particularly for small-medium sized creators.
Coil uses the Interledger protocol to provide a third option outside of the aforementioned payment options. Through a flat rate subscription, Coil will be the first company to use Web Monetization (a new standard for how browsers can pay websites using Interledger) to pay out to websites in whatever currency they choose.
Web Monetization is a proposed browser API that uses ILP micropayments to monetize a site. It can be polyfilled by extensions, or can be implemented directly into an ILP-enabled browser. It is designed for continuous payments and to have minimal user interaction. As a result , we imagine that a variety of content can be paid for, ranging from static sites to video streaming.
Coil can essentially be fighting against the monopolization of the Web and kickstart a more diverse, healthier Internet.


Andros is currently a software engineer at Coil, where he works on the flat rate monetization product across different platforms/devices and building Codius, Coil’s open hosting protocol. Previously he was a software engineer at Ripple.


Stefan is the Founder and President of Coil, a San Francisco based startup that wants to create a better business model for the Web. Prior to Coil, Stefan was a prominent figure in the blockchain movement. As an early Bitcoin contributor, he produced the popular “What is Bitcoin?” video, introducing millions of users to Bitcoin and created BitcoinJS, the first implementation of Bitcoin cryptography in the browser. As CTO and one of the first employees at Ripple, Stefan built new protocols for cross-border payments, now used by banks all over the world. He has also worked with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to develop Mojaloop, an open-source national payment switch that connects mobile wallets in developing markets.
Videos from the summit:


Ben is CTO and Co-Founder at Coil, a startup that aims to fix monetization on the Web. In addition to Web Monetization, Ben has contributed to the design and implementation of Interledger, an interoperability protocol for money. Before Coil, Ben worked as an engineer at Ripple.


Andros is currently a software engineer at Coil, where he works on the flat rate monetization product across different platforms/devices and building Codius, Coil’s open hosting protocol. Previously he was a software engineer at Ripple.


Stefan is the Founder and President of Coil, a San Francisco based startup that wants to create a better business model for the Web. Prior to Coil, Stefan was a prominent figure in the blockchain movement. As an early Bitcoin contributor, he produced the popular “What is Bitcoin?” video, introducing millions of users to Bitcoin and created BitcoinJS, the first implementation of Bitcoin cryptography in the browser. As CTO and one of the first employees at Ripple, Stefan built new protocols for cross-border payments, now used by banks all over the world. He has also worked with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to develop Mojaloop, an open-source national payment switch that connects mobile wallets in developing markets.
Videos from the summit:


Ben is CTO and Co-Founder at Coil, a startup that aims to fix monetization on the Web. In addition to Web Monetization, Ben has contributed to the design and implementation of Interledger, an interoperability protocol for money. Before Coil, Ben worked as an engineer at Ripple.
Facilitate the creation of at least one - possibly 2 or 3 acrylic paintings that are created completely collaboratively
Hopes & dreams
The hope is that a few really interesting abstract paintings will emerge from the camp experience that are truly the work of many - and not one single artist. The participants will take part in a 'decentralized' art making experience and at the end of camp, the pieces can be bid on by art collectors who might want to take them home!
Participation
Anyone can participate in this! No one needs to be an *artist*, or experienced at making art. With collaborative art, not ONE person puts their name on any piece, nor 'leads' the art creation. That being said, there is a ‘facilitator’ who will organize some key participants and a process for making the art - and this helps make sure the pieces don't devolve into a muddy mess. Towards the end of camp, the key participants will regroup to decide together how to constructively finish the paintings. The facilitator will then help to make sure there is a balance of everyone's ideas in the piece and that they do not end up the work of just one overwhelmingly 'good' painter.
Why participate
Making collaborative art is fun! Participants get to experience making abstract art with curiosity and openness and learn from each other. Constructive disagreement is openly encouraged throughout the process and this leads to a rich and stimulating learning experience, and (usually) some beautiful work is created that EVERYONE can be proud of!
Session rundown
A lightning talk at the beginning of camp will introduce the project and the key participants can sign up with Margaret Warren, who will be facilitating the process. All paintings will be done with acrylic paint and if people bring collage materials, the group might agree to also collage other other materials into the works as well.
The key participants (probably no more than 6-10) will need to be at an initial 1-3 hour session to get the painting started (probably 1 hour minimum - but then can keep painting as long as they want!) - after that, any camp attendee can paint on the works throughout the camp. Key participants will monitor the works during camp (to keep them from turning into mud), and then the key participants will meet for one final painting session towards the end of camp to 'finish' the pieces.
Contact
Margaret Warren


Margaret Warren is an artist and technologist. She is the creator of the ImageSnippets, a system for describing images using linked data, semantic web and knowledge representation techniques.
As an artist, Margaret creates works in 2D and 3D and installation pieces in multiple styles and mediums and has been actively involved in the arts since she was a child. She has been associated with numerous galleries in Northwest Florida and was a studio artist at First City Art Center in Pensacola, Florida for over 3 years and a program director and on the board of the Arts & Design Society in Fort Walton Beach for over 4 years. Her work has been shown and sold internationally and commissioned by clients.
She is also a co-founding member of a collaborative art group called the Southeastern Art Players (SAP) that has been in existence for almost 10 years. Over the years, SAP has had many art ‘camps’, art parties and given many workshops and demonstrations of collaborative art ‘playing’. The work created by SAP is very different from any of the work that is created independently by any one member of the group and this has been one of the most rewarding realizations of the SAP experience. The SAP work has won awards, been purchased into the prestigious Cinco Banderas collection in Pensacola, Florida, used for an academic book cover and sold into collections all over the world.
Videos from the summit:


Margaret Warren is an artist and technologist. She is the creator of the ImageSnippets, a system for describing images using linked data, semantic web and knowledge representation techniques.
As an artist, Margaret creates works in 2D and 3D and installation pieces in multiple styles and mediums and has been actively involved in the arts since she was a child. She has been associated with numerous galleries in Northwest Florida and was a studio artist at First City Art Center in Pensacola, Florida for over 3 years and a program director and on the board of the Arts & Design Society in Fort Walton Beach for over 4 years. Her work has been shown and sold internationally and commissioned by clients.
She is also a co-founding member of a collaborative art group called the Southeastern Art Players (SAP) that has been in existence for almost 10 years. Over the years, SAP has had many art ‘camps’, art parties and given many workshops and demonstrations of collaborative art ‘playing’. The work created by SAP is very different from any of the work that is created independently by any one member of the group and this has been one of the most rewarding realizations of the SAP experience. The SAP work has won awards, been purchased into the prestigious Cinco Banderas collection in Pensacola, Florida, used for an academic book cover and sold into collections all over the world.
Videos from the summit:
Description
Yoga-inspired tools for body + mind management, specifically tailored for those who spend lots of time around computers. This will be a yoga class that transitions into a guided meditation with our computers (or other device of choice).
Hopes and Dreams
To foster the viewpoint that our computer is not an “other;” it’s an extension of ourselves and the way we see ourselves. And that it, just like us, does best when treated with compassion.
Participation
Anyone can participate! Wear comfortable clothes (this will be more meditative than workout, but still) and bring your computer or whatever tech device you work with the most on a daily basis.
Why participate
Because you are interested in getting to know your computer on a deeply personal level, because spending healing time /with/ your computer is beneficial to both you and the machine, because parts of your body and mind hurt from adjusting to our modern lifestyles of daily tech interaction and use, and/or because it’s just nice to take a break from manifesting incredible new ideas with others at DWeb camp and spend sometime with yourself.
Session rundown
75 minutes, with ~30 minutes beforehand to set up the space. I just like to get there early to set the vibe!
Relevant links
I’ve made dat zines for other tech-forward yoga classes I’ve taught, though they weren't on this exact subject. Here’s a few examples:
5 Minute Computer Calm: https://computer-calm.hashbase.io/
Strength + Grace: https://angblev.com/yoga/strength-and-grace/
Contact
Angelica B


Angelica is an artist, coder and yoga teacher. She works mostly online, balancing making stupid art with personal spiritual practices. You can find her at angblev.com.


Angelica is an artist, coder and yoga teacher. She works mostly online, balancing making stupid art with personal spiritual practices. You can find her at angblev.com.
Description
This is an audience participation demonstration of centralized voting versus decentralized voting. Zero-Knowledge Proofs are also demonstrated and utilized within the decentralized voting demonstration.
Hopes & dreams
Decentralized voting using zero-knowledge proofs educates and demonstrates the power and increased social trust that is possible for collective determination of outcomes and decision making.
Participation
All can participate and a computer is not needed other than as a source for a projector. If no projector is available, this demonstration can be done with no electronics.
Why participate
All people that are interested in governance and what is possible for new ways of high integrity and privacy via voting should gain something from this session.
Session rundown
Approximately 10 to 100 people can participate in this session which requires approximately 20 minutes.
Relevant links
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/17APQG13rsgTqxhSXpUtYXekjzpo5Dcc7KboudSwcCfo/edit?usp=sharing
Contact
Jay Carpenter


Decentralized realms of naming, numbering, addressing and identity are my areas of expertise and interest.


Decentralized realms of naming, numbering, addressing and identity are my areas of expertise and interest.
The DID Universal Resolver is first major project of the 30+ members of the Decentralized Identity Foundation (DIF). DIDs (Decentralized Identifiers) are a foundational standard for decentralized, blockchain-based identity. A DID method is a spec that defines how DIDs are created, read, updated, and deleted (revoked) on a specific blockchain or distributed system. DID methods have been implemented for Bitcoin, Ethereum, Sovrin, IPFS, Veres One, and Blockstack. The Universal Resolver uses Docker-based modules to plug different DID methods into a single codebase. This session will cover the W3C DID specification, the architecture of the Universal Resolver, the primary features of different DID methods, and where the Universal Resolver fits in the fast-moving decentralized identity ecosystem.


Markus Sabadello has been a pioneer and leader in the field of digital identity for many years and has contributed to cutting-edge technologies that have emerged in this space. He has been an early participant of decentralization movements such as the Federated Social Web, Respect Network, and the FreedomBox. He has worked as an analyst and consultant at the Harvard Berkman Center for Internet & Society, at the MIT Media Lab's Human Dynamics Group, at the World Economic Forum, and at the Personal Data Ecosystem Consortium. Markus has spoken at dozens of conferences and published papers about both the politics and technologies of digital identity. In 2015 he founded Danube Tech, a consulting and development company that contributes to Sovrin Foundation, the Decentralized Identity Foundation, and various self-sovereign identity projects around the world.
Videos from the summit:


Markus Sabadello has been a pioneer and leader in the field of digital identity for many years and has contributed to cutting-edge technologies that have emerged in this space. He has been an early participant of decentralization movements such as the Federated Social Web, Respect Network, and the FreedomBox. He has worked as an analyst and consultant at the Harvard Berkman Center for Internet & Society, at the MIT Media Lab's Human Dynamics Group, at the World Economic Forum, and at the Personal Data Ecosystem Consortium. Markus has spoken at dozens of conferences and published papers about both the politics and technologies of digital identity. In 2015 he founded Danube Tech, a consulting and development company that contributes to Sovrin Foundation, the Decentralized Identity Foundation, and various self-sovereign identity projects around the world.
Videos from the summit:
Digital Democracy’s mission is to empower marginalized communities to
use technology to defend their rights. As technology becomes cheaper
and more accessible, we believe it can and should be used to bring
more voices to the table. Digital Democracy helps our partners achieve
transformative change and works toward a world where all people can
participate in decisions that govern their lives.
Over the past eight years, we’ve seen firsthand that change does not
come from technology, but from how people use it. Our local partners
represent marginalized communities around the globe. We have worked
with communities from Haiti to Burma to Peru. Working at the
intersection of human rights and technology, Dd supports local leaders
with the strategic use of tools to catalyze community-driven
solutions.
Our process is both technology and issue agnostic – that is, not bound
to one platform or cause. We recognize that our partners’ issues are
diverse, but many of the challenges they face are shared. Using a
listening-based, human-centered design process, Dd helps to strengthen
our partners’ access, communication, resources and reach.
Equipped with the tools they need, our partners become better
storytellers, advocates and leaders. Together, Dd and its partners are
empowering communities to become their own voice for change. Digital
Democracy works in three primary ways:
Direct Implementation: We train communities to use basic digital
tools, such as cameras, mobile phones, maps and data collection tools.
We conduct ongoing support and capacity building for our partners
whose projects are designed to defend their human & environmental
rights.
Tool Building: We co-create tech solutions with our partners and help
them adapt existing tools to their needs. We also collaborate with
other technologists to support the greater eco-system of open-source
tools which can support our partners’ needs.
Local-to-Global Engagement: We scale our impact beyond our direct
partners. Through events, workshops, and tool-kits, we build bridges
between our work and the work of advocates and decision-makers around
the world.


Karissa McKelvey is an open source software developer, writer, project manager, and activist supporting an equitable web. She develops and maintains a wide variety of tools and services for Digital Democracy. She is also a board member of Code for Science and Society and a Director of the Dat Foundation. Formerly a data scientist, her work studying online political communication resulted in multiple peer-reviewed papers and press in outlets such as NPR and the Wall Street Journal. In addition to an experienced software and web developer, she leads teams to success with diverse projects in academia, non-profits, and industry. In her spare time she plays the trumpet and volunteers at The Debt Collective as a technology consultant.
Videos from the summit:


Stephen Whitmore works with Digital Democracy to build useful open tools that raise the bar of the commons, especially for marginalized communities.
Stephen creates and maintains open technology that enables self-determination; honors people, not profit; is sustainable for the communities that adopt it; and is maximally accessible regardless of resources or technical background. Stephen is based in Oakland, CA, USA.
Videos from the summit:


Karissa McKelvey is an open source software developer, writer, project manager, and activist supporting an equitable web. She develops and maintains a wide variety of tools and services for Digital Democracy. She is also a board member of Code for Science and Society and a Director of the Dat Foundation. Formerly a data scientist, her work studying online political communication resulted in multiple peer-reviewed papers and press in outlets such as NPR and the Wall Street Journal. In addition to an experienced software and web developer, she leads teams to success with diverse projects in academia, non-profits, and industry. In her spare time she plays the trumpet and volunteers at The Debt Collective as a technology consultant.
Videos from the summit:


Stephen Whitmore works with Digital Democracy to build useful open tools that raise the bar of the commons, especially for marginalized communities.
Stephen creates and maintains open technology that enables self-determination; honors people, not profit; is sustainable for the communities that adopt it; and is maximally accessible regardless of resources or technical background. Stephen is based in Oakland, CA, USA.
Videos from the summit:
DTube is an application fully written in javascript, that runs in the browser, that allows you to upload and watch videos through STEEM to the IPFS Network, and chat with friends with GUN. Moreover, it lets you earn rewards from your uploads.
This might ring a bell for those who remember the SteemQ project announcement, which made almost five thousand dollars in rewards, but never got released and ended up being rebranded - It's still not functional after more than a year, and even the current alpha uses a back-end server for everything and is therefore still centralized. I am sure I wasn't the only person disappointed by SteemQ.
I opted for a different approach. Build something first - talk after. If you are wondering, I did everything by myself (and the help of open source libraries of course) and it took about 4 months to reach what I have now, starting from scratch.


DTube is a decentralized video platform that utilizes the Blockchain and P2P technology. It operates without censorship or algorithms that artificially change the rankings of videos. It is ad-free, and creators and users earn revenue when they interact with the service, either by uploading content or commenting on them.
Videos from the summit:


DTube is a decentralized video platform that utilizes the Blockchain and P2P technology. It operates without censorship or algorithms that artificially change the rankings of videos. It is ad-free, and creators and users earn revenue when they interact with the service, either by uploading content or commenting on them.
Videos from the summit:
Description
This is a space for those building or involved with the creation of platforms, collaboration systems and other coordination tools for alternative economic interaction to hear about each others' work and explore how our efforts may interconnect to form wider constellations of apps.
Hopes & Dreams
More connections being made in the New Economy; platforms beginning to build bridges and gather momentum by sharing participants; seed forms of new economic patterns beginning to take root as viable alternatives to the status quo.
Participation
Open to all who are interested, we'll keep it non-technical.
Why Participate?
If you're hoping to create a new more ethical world and are holding a piece of the puzzle, finding others holding different pieces and coming together to see how our forces can be combined is the best way toward success.
Session Rundown
To begin will run through and share these guiding questions:
- What's the quick one-liner to describe your app / platform / network?
- What are the most important resources for you to track?
- How do resources & value flow through your platform?
- Are there resources that come in from external sources?
- Are there resources that are produced by your userbase?
- How do resources leave your platform to enter the wider world?
- What transformations or processes do you perform in converting those inputs to outputs?
- What related value flows (external to your platform) are vital to your value chain?
- What critical transformations do you rely on others in your value chain to perform?
Someone will keep a mindmap going while this is happening and begin connecting dots. If time permits, we can form groups or pairs and discuss common protocols based on interest area / market vertical, or particular integrations at the boundary between platforms of interest. We can then rejoin to share insights with the rest of the group. It can be a day long installation, or a guided deeply immersive experience, from 20 minutes up to multiple hours.
Relevant links
Contact
pospi


Pospi is a former web developer turned blockchain developer turned Holochain developer. His current engagement is HoloREA, a general-purpose resource accounting framework for complex value exchange which has origins in a 40-year body of work. He has a strong interest in ethical production and conscious consumerism, and previously created Everledger’s diamond provenance technology before working at the Ethereum development studio ConsenSys on a range of other blockchain projects. He left that industry in late 2018 after concluding that the profit motive would corrupt and subvert any good that might be achievable, and now dedicates his efforts to building digital commons & social fabric in ecosystems hoping to create viable alternatives to capitalism.
He is based on the Sunshine Coast in Australia, close to his great loves of rainforest creeks and sparsely populated beaches.
Videos from the summit:


Pospi is a former web developer turned blockchain developer turned Holochain developer. His current engagement is HoloREA, a general-purpose resource accounting framework for complex value exchange which has origins in a 40-year body of work. He has a strong interest in ethical production and conscious consumerism, and previously created Everledger’s diamond provenance technology before working at the Ethereum development studio ConsenSys on a range of other blockchain projects. He left that industry in late 2018 after concluding that the profit motive would corrupt and subvert any good that might be achievable, and now dedicates his efforts to building digital commons & social fabric in ecosystems hoping to create viable alternatives to capitalism.
He is based on the Sunshine Coast in Australia, close to his great loves of rainforest creeks and sparsely populated beaches.
Videos from the summit:
Description
Many of us have unused electronics at work or home that are in perfectly functional conditions and we struggle to find better homes for them. I have started a sheet for people to post and claim items: https://ethercalc.org/xyxdz22x7no1 Expecting pick-up at DWeb Camp. The recommended price is $0 but also there may be valuable items that people are willing to pay for, I don't want that to be a barrier so leaving that open!
Hopes & dreams
Some unused electronics on the shelf find new owners.
Participation
Anyone
Why participate
You make something useful out of something useless and save the planet. Just kidding, it's too late to save the planet, but really you have no idea how much I want that old laptop.
Session rundown
We have a table where people can put electronics they don't want and others can take. If it is for a specific person they can put a sticky to indicate. The equipment may also be useful for other people hacking at the Hacking Room, some project may just need a home router to test something out.
Relevant links
https://ethercalc.org/xyxdz22x7no1
Contact
Benedict Lau


Benedict Lau is an engineer who tells stories of technology practices that bring communities together. He studies distributed protocols and collective governance of digital infrastructures. When not "on email", he builds passable open source tools and facilitates activities about peer-to-peer local networks as a way to co-imagine a future equitable web. He is a member of the Hypha Worker Co-operative and a core contributor at Toronto Mesh.
Videos from the summit:


Benedict Lau is an engineer who tells stories of technology practices that bring communities together. He studies distributed protocols and collective governance of digital infrastructures. When not "on email", he builds passable open source tools and facilitates activities about peer-to-peer local networks as a way to co-imagine a future equitable web. He is a member of the Hypha Worker Co-operative and a core contributor at Toronto Mesh.
Videos from the summit:
"Immutable" has been chanted, and most dWeb protocols built with it as an assumption. The problem is, it doesn't scale and it doesn't allow for a person's right to be forgotten.
Hopes & dreams
That technological choices do not incidentally trample upon people's rights or well-being.
Participation
Any, all. No prep required.
Why participate
World population is 7.7B, if you want your app to reach & impact everyone, you may need to challenge and reconsider the immutable assumption. If you're targeting small populations though, this may not be relevant for you.
Contact
Mark Nadal


Mark is a mathematician turned programmer. He runs a VC backed Open Source company and has traveled to 30 countries. The diverse cultures he has experienced fuels his passion for learning, sharing, and creating open technology freely for all.
Videos from the summit:


Mark is a mathematician turned programmer. He runs a VC backed Open Source company and has traveled to 30 countries. The diverse cultures he has experienced fuels his passion for learning, sharing, and creating open technology freely for all.
Videos from the summit:
Accelerating adoption of distributed applications (dApps) easier with the introduction of EOS blockchain platform by providing an operating-system-like set of services and functions that dapps can make use of. EOSdAppStore adds value to the plaform by provideing services to make the developer experience safer, cheaper to deploy, support, and promote
The idea behind EOS is to bring together the best features and promises of the various smart contract technologies out there (e.g. security of Bitcoin, computing support of Ethereum) in one simple to use, massively scalable dapplication platform for the everyday user to empower the impending blockchain economy.


Implementer of BIOS, DOS, WinCE, Windows for embedded devices
Founded Special Computing, integrating thousands of embedded platforms
Microsoft MVP (embedded) for 12 years
Microprocessor Reference Platform Design, training, and certification
Organizer of Community groups (Makers of Phoenix with 3000+ members)
Founded EOSdAppStore to accelerate adoption of distributed applications


Implementer of BIOS, DOS, WinCE, Windows for embedded devices
Founded Special Computing, integrating thousands of embedded platforms
Microsoft MVP (embedded) for 12 years
Microprocessor Reference Platform Design, training, and certification
Organizer of Community groups (Makers of Phoenix with 3000+ members)
Founded EOSdAppStore to accelerate adoption of distributed applications
Description
In this workshop you'll learn a 6000+ year old technique ("bow drill") to create an ember, using local northern California materials, and blow that ember into flame! Fire is the magic that's warmed, fed, and provided tools for humanity for thousands of years. Let's explore how to use simple materials to create it ourselves! I'll never forget the magic of the first ember I created using a bow drill set I made myself, and blowing that ember to life, creating a lasting fire that kept me & my friends warm. I'd like to share that experience as best I can, while also paying respect to the ancient origins of the skill, and that our modern understanding of it comes from the indigenous peoples of north america, and is by no means a white-euro invention.
Hopes & Dreams
I want everybody to be able to experience the magic that is bringing life to an ember, and blowing that tiny ember into flame! I want everybody to have fun, be safe, and learn some new things about the amazing natural world around them. I expect some folx to create an ember successfully, but usually the technique requires further practice. Don't be disheartened -- you'll get there! :)
Participation
Anyone
Why Participate?
Get a deeper understanding of how fire works, and its many uses.
Session Rundown
We'll be covering the basics of starting a fire by friction, primarily using the bow drill technique. If there is time & interest, we could also play with the hand drill technique, and use of a ferrocenium rod. We'll.. - learn the mechanical & physical theory of how the bow drill works - [attempt to] demonstrate its use - talk about knife & fire safety - let people experiment & learn hands-on! I will supply some pre-made bow drill sets for people to play with, made of various materials, and also a few knives for folx who want to try making their own sets from local materials near the camp.
Contact
noffle


noffle is a hacker (the kind that DIYs together chunky fixes to problems), aspiring woodsperson, and anarcha-buddhist. They try to balance computer time with adventures in nature & with friends.


noffle is a hacker (the kind that DIYs together chunky fixes to problems), aspiring woodsperson, and anarcha-buddhist. They try to balance computer time with adventures in nature & with friends.
Mozilla
Browser extensions with libdweb
You've built a distributed application platform that will change everything... but where is everyone? Browser extensions can lower the barrier to entry for early-adopters and developers to try your project.
We’re developing a set of experimental APIs for building dweb applications using the WebExtension framework in Firefox - protocol handlers, TCP/UDP sockets, filesystem access and more.
Come by to see demos and talk to us about what you need to build dweb apps in browsers.
Prototype in the browser to experiment with what the future of the web can look like.


Dietrich Ayala is working on safeguarding the internet at Protocol Labs by turning browsers into true user agents, with technologies like IPFS.
Dietrich's first computer job was as webmaster at indie music label Sub Pop Records, doing anything and everything digital. He has since worked at small startups and also household names like McAfee and Yahoo. He spent 13 years working for internet freedom at Mozilla, the non-profit makers of Firefox. Before computerizing, he was a barista and chef.
Dietrich lives in San Francisco California at the moment, and spends a year in Asia every so often because that's where the internet is growing the most and where all of our devices come from. And the noodle soup is good.


Andre is a Mozilla TechSpeaker focused on decentralization technologies and is an active member of the Secure Scuttlebutt community. In the recent years he published books about Firefox OS and managed a Web Literacy program in vulnerable neighborhoods of Rio. He is a firm believer in empowerment through technological experimentation. His home is in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, where he lives with his wife, cats and more IoT boards than he can ever put into use.


Irakli Gozalishvili is Research Engineer at Mozilla interested in bringing decentralized technologies into world wide web. He believes internet can be a truly public resource, but only if it breaks free of corporate silos and views decentralization as an enabling technology for this.


Dietrich Ayala is working on safeguarding the internet at Protocol Labs by turning browsers into true user agents, with technologies like IPFS.
Dietrich's first computer job was as webmaster at indie music label Sub Pop Records, doing anything and everything digital. He has since worked at small startups and also household names like McAfee and Yahoo. He spent 13 years working for internet freedom at Mozilla, the non-profit makers of Firefox. Before computerizing, he was a barista and chef.
Dietrich lives in San Francisco California at the moment, and spends a year in Asia every so often because that's where the internet is growing the most and where all of our devices come from. And the noodle soup is good.


Andre is a Mozilla TechSpeaker focused on decentralization technologies and is an active member of the Secure Scuttlebutt community. In the recent years he published books about Firefox OS and managed a Web Literacy program in vulnerable neighborhoods of Rio. He is a firm believer in empowerment through technological experimentation. His home is in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, where he lives with his wife, cats and more IoT boards than he can ever put into use.


Irakli Gozalishvili is Research Engineer at Mozilla interested in bringing decentralized technologies into world wide web. He believes internet can be a truly public resource, but only if it breaks free of corporate silos and views decentralization as an enabling technology for this.
Description
Come together for a night of fearless truth-telling in how humans and machines interact in as neighbours or users here on planet Earth. Yes we'll talk power and money, cohersion and extraction and violence and devastation here on Earth. We'll talk also about resilience, resistance and decentralisation and permaculture. We'll get the ghost out of your shell, and butts on the edge of the seats.
Hopes & dreams
My hope is to engage and seed cross-cultural social-technological projects in decentralised internet communication tools and in EcoRestoration camps.
Participation
Anyone - it's poetical political artistic prose and performance, no computer required.
Why participate
Learn about why "Why community networks" with representation from a range of speakers and backgrounds. A form of community weaving and poetry telling (with not all tech centric language) to remember the stories and principles that matter as we engage in building the DWeb.
Relevant links
https://github.com/dweb-camp-2019/projects/issues/27
Contact
Mary Lychee


Mary’s concerns and cares in health care, food, social justice and permaculture, eventually led to learnings in intersectionality, food soveriegnty and watershed ecology. In connecting the dots that health comes from good food, good food comes from good soil, and water is the conduit for life of all, she then understood that it’s how humans collectively manage Earth’s commons that will determine our collective fate in the anthropocene.
She invests alot of her time and care into Diversity and Inclusion efforts, focusing on empowering the voices, skills and leadership of BIPOC, women, non-binary and trans folk.
As an open source developer, hacking on indie projects and decentralised technologies such as Secure ScuttleButt, Mary believes that decentralised web tools can facilitate in localised community action, in acts of social resiliency and resistance, and to together engage in bioregional food systems re-engagement and climate cooling and restorative initiatives.


Mary’s concerns and cares in health care, food, social justice and permaculture, eventually led to learnings in intersectionality, food soveriegnty and watershed ecology. In connecting the dots that health comes from good food, good food comes from good soil, and water is the conduit for life of all, she then understood that it’s how humans collectively manage Earth’s commons that will determine our collective fate in the anthropocene.
She invests alot of her time and care into Diversity and Inclusion efforts, focusing on empowering the voices, skills and leadership of BIPOC, women, non-binary and trans folk.
As an open source developer, hacking on indie projects and decentralised technologies such as Secure ScuttleButt, Mary believes that decentralised web tools can facilitate in localised community action, in acts of social resiliency and resistance, and to together engage in bioregional food systems re-engagement and climate cooling and restorative initiatives.
Description
In order for us to establish connection and strong communication between the women within the DWeb camp, we propose to hold women circles on mornings and/or evenings of the camp.
By creating a woman-only space has been praised by women* who do work around healing justice as a right for women to convene to connect and share without a male gaze or feeling observed. the space will be dedicated for women* to relax and connect.
The women circles are ideal for women to exchange knowledge, skills and life experiences that make space for connection, intimacy and sisterhood. We regard women’s circle as an open a channel of communication where those are present can be present with one another from a place of connection and trust. We will explore these three as pillars for movement building and consolidation of feminisms in tech.
We want to allow this space to hold us all through our emotional and spiritual experiences as women who are living in a patriarchal and male dominated world. We wish for this space to be a space that is for us to design and take over the way we feel is right for us as women working in the many spaces of tech
In this session, we will discuss what we feel like discussing. We will allow ourselves to be moved by the moon and flow to our own rhythms and impulses while exploring the ways we are constructed and deconstructed.
We will also draw tarot cards and set intentions for ourselves and our communities women in tech.


cynthia el khoury received her Reusi Dat Ton instructor certification from LoiKroh massage school in Chiang Mai in 2017. cynthia is an aikido practitioner, a somatic experiencing practitioner in training, and a traditional healing student of ancient Kemet. cynthia is working with APC as gender and women’s engagement coordinator for community networks.


Sol Luca de Tena has spent her life living and working between South Africa and Spain, and calls both countries home. She has over a decade of experience in strategic project management within technology development, capacity building, social impact and policy – with a focus on utilising technologies to address environmental and social challenges. She develops collaboration networks between often diverse interests, including communities, academia, industry and administration, and shapes projects that respond to critical needs. Sol is passionate about creating positive, meaningful change through equitable, sustainable interventions. She is currently a director of Zenzeleni Networks NPC, South Africa's first community network, as well as the vice-chair of the Internet Society’s global Community Networks Special Interest Group (CNSIG).


cynthia el khoury received her Reusi Dat Ton instructor certification from LoiKroh massage school in Chiang Mai in 2017. cynthia is an aikido practitioner, a somatic experiencing practitioner in training, and a traditional healing student of ancient Kemet. cynthia is working with APC as gender and women’s engagement coordinator for community networks.


Sol Luca de Tena has spent her life living and working between South Africa and Spain, and calls both countries home. She has over a decade of experience in strategic project management within technology development, capacity building, social impact and policy – with a focus on utilising technologies to address environmental and social challenges. She develops collaboration networks between often diverse interests, including communities, academia, industry and administration, and shapes projects that respond to critical needs. Sol is passionate about creating positive, meaningful change through equitable, sustainable interventions. She is currently a director of Zenzeleni Networks NPC, South Africa's first community network, as well as the vice-chair of the Internet Society’s global Community Networks Special Interest Group (CNSIG).
Description
Join us for a multi-day journey from ideation to deployment of your decentralized app on the NEAR blockchain. We will come up with ideas for dApps based on a taxonomy of possible blockchain use cases, then work together to create and deploy working prototypes in a hands-on workshop. We will finish off the series by exploring ways we can support each other to take our projects into the real world beyond dWeb camp.
Hopes & dreams
We would love to get a cadre of hacker-organizers and hacker-entrepreneurs building apps on the NEAR blockchain. We also want to be the base-level protocol that supports a huge number of practical, 'get your hands dirty' projects that walk the balance between gaining mainstream adoption and enabling socially-regenerative technologies to take root in the world. Our hope is that by supporting a bunch of people to prototype their dream apps at dWeb camp that we can seed some of those projects so that they then continue to build them in the real world.
Participation
Anyone can participate. You will need a laptop, particularly for the prototyping session. Experience with Javascript is ideal but not necessary, and coding experience is very relevant but you can still join in if you don't have coding experience. Kids are welcome as long as they are interested in participating in discussions and being involved in designing and programming.
Why participate
Join us if you would like to connect with others who are frustrated by unnecessary and overhyped blockchain projects and want to focus on projects that actually use the core aspects of blockchains to enable new social realities. Join if you want to write a blockchain smart contract in Typescript, and without making your users immediately deal with the complexities of private keys. Join if you want motivation to create the idea that has been in the back of your mind for a while and support from other builders to take your project back into the world at the end of dWeb camp.
Session rundown
**Part 1: Intro to Crypto-Prototyping**
90 mins Space for 20-30 people to sit in a circle/rearrange seating/ideate
**Part 2: Use Case Deep Dive**
90 mins Space for 20-30 people to sit in a circle/rearrange seating/ideate
**Part 3: Prototyping Jam**
120 mins Space for 20-30 people to sit at tables with laptops Internet access
**Part 4: Building the Future**
90 mins Space for 20-30 people to sit in a circle/rearrange seating/ideate
Relevant links
Contact
Jessica Watson Miller
Peter DePaulo
Vlad Grichina


Jess has led blockchain projects at Stream and THORChain since 2017. She ran a national Effective Altruism conference and has a Masters of Economics from the University of Sydney.


Peter is a product-focused engineer with over 7 years of experience in tech who has shipped code to millions of users with pharmaceutical oncology clients such as Pfizer, Merck, and Roche.


Vlad started his career as a professional TopCoder competitor and worked on mobile apps since 2009. He founded a 15 person mobile dev company and worked 3 years at Google on the Play Store.
TopCoder Open Finalist (2006)


Jess has led blockchain projects at Stream and THORChain since 2017. She ran a national Effective Altruism conference and has a Masters of Economics from the University of Sydney.


Peter is a product-focused engineer with over 7 years of experience in tech who has shipped code to millions of users with pharmaceutical oncology clients such as Pfizer, Merck, and Roche.


Vlad started his career as a professional TopCoder competitor and worked on mobile apps since 2009. He founded a 15 person mobile dev company and worked 3 years at Google on the Play Store.
TopCoder Open Finalist (2006)
Here are some of the games Samuel Suh of Archon.cloud is planning:
Outdoor Active Games (daytime): dodgeball, waterbaloon fight, kickball, obstacle course.
Indoor activities: traditional games (chess/checkers/go, possibly tac if i can find a tac board), cards (52 standard, uno, etc)
Ongoing game: "assassins" where everyone at the beginning is assigned a 'target' at the beginning of the camp, and an object (a small rubber ducky) that acts as a weapon/shield. if you can isolate your 'target' at a time they are not holding the duck in their hand, your target is 'out'. if you get your target, you now acquire their target, and you keep going. last person not 'out' wins the game. there will be a prize for the overall winner, as well as for winners of other categories like 'most eliminations'. this is the basic rule-set, and the best one to start off with. there will be 'safe zones' as well, and we can propose some rule changes at the very beginning, or agree upon them before the camp begins.
Want to Organize some of your own? Here's a source book for inspiration.
New Games, Blue Games, Junkyard Games, Token Games... Games can help to support problem-solving and connection… We invite you to host a game — all kinds of games are fair game, the sky is the limit!


Sam has a background in coding, management, marketing, and law. He also runs several active communities, both online and offline, moderating chats, organizing meetups, hackathons, and conferences.


Sam has a background in coding, management, marketing, and law. He also runs several active communities, both online and offline, moderating chats, organizing meetups, hackathons, and conferences.
Description
Many of us at Dweb Camp work to provide services for the unconnected and marginally connected, especially in the form of packages of systems running on small devices like Raspberry Pi's.
Hopes & Dreams
I'd like to bring the community together who work on these interrelated challenges so we can share our experiences, the common issues we face, but mostly so that we can meet each other, and spawn other conversations that will occur informally over the camp.
Participation
Anyone is welcome, but I'm hoping that this gathering will bring together the packagers (IIAB, Rachel, LibraryBox etc) with the server builders (Interent Archive; Wikipedia; Learning Equality; Open Street Lights) and the deployers which includes many of the APC fellows attending.
Why Participate?
If you work in this space, this is the chance to figure out who you should make sure to connect with the rest of the camp.
Session Rundown
Part 1: Introductions around the circle, especially from people working in the space.
Part 2: Throwing out some common challenges, chances for people to self-identify as facing, or having solutions to, those challenges.
Part 3: Wherever the conversation above leads us.
(I think 120 mins is probably about right)
Relevant links
https://github.com/internetarchive/dweb-mirror
Contact
Mitra Ardron
Sam Klein (SJ)


Mitra Ardron is the technical lead for the decentralization work at the Internet Archive. Apart from building a decentralized version of the archive he is interested in how we can build tools that can work across different decentralized architectures, and has built small libraries for naming and authentication. Prior to the Archive, He co-founded the Association for Progressive Communications (apc.org), co-authored several internet standards, and was CTO on the first peer to peer video sharing system (which pioneered sharding and content addressing). His passions include renewable energy (ran solar payment networks across Africa); and mentoring innovators working to make the world a better place.
Videos from the summit:


Mitra Ardron is the technical lead for the decentralization work at the Internet Archive. Apart from building a decentralized version of the archive he is interested in how we can build tools that can work across different decentralized architectures, and has built small libraries for naming and authentication. Prior to the Archive, He co-founded the Association for Progressive Communications (apc.org), co-authored several internet standards, and was CTO on the first peer to peer video sharing system (which pioneered sharding and content addressing). His passions include renewable energy (ran solar payment networks across Africa); and mentoring innovators working to make the world a better place.
Videos from the summit:
GIF 1987 file format born to make history
GIF 1989 animation capability extends GIF
GIF LOOPS play magic moments for eternity
GIF SIMPLE easy to copy paste play
GIF 30 years old already, trillions of plays
GIF DISTRIBUTION out the wazoo already
GIF 2018 BILLIONS serve daily 24/7/365
GIF 2030 BAZILLIONS to serve future, how?
GIF SECRET containers tiny.cc/gifspec
GIF CONTAINERS plaintext application comments
GIF PLAINTEXT data like yaml hash etc
GIF APPLICATION in/out plaintext/data
GIF COMMENT wut?
GIF PROGRAM upgrade GIF how?
GIF CAPABILITIES like security and stuff
GIF AUDIO sound sync
GIF VISUAL switch pix for any sound
GIF TEXT sync vocals, transcripts
GIF WIKI sync definition context
GIF LINK sync ordered context lists
GIF HYPERCARD user programmable
GIF BET on programs you want
GIF QUORUM SENSING crowd power bet pools
GIF LEDGER distribute consensus
GIF PICOPAY use floating decimal point
GIF MAKE MEANING with skin in game
GIF OWN program
GIF MEMORY superabundant local cache storage
GIF 512GB solid state SD card $150 2018
GIF PARADIGM SHIFT to abundant local memory
GIF ENDLESS OS for example
GIF TRUST immutable verification chains
GIF NETWORK more open, programmable
GIF NAMEDATA NETWORK LAYER for example
GIF SECURE where all packets self-certify
GIF SIMPLE way more general network model
GIF FAST instant info, no latency
GIF AUDIOVISUAL high bandwidth communication
GIF ATTENTION trade truly scarce resource
GIF ECONOMY meme alignment
GIF SUPERDISTRIBUTION upgrade 'I, Pencil'
GIF PLAYER OWN GAME tiny.cc/deehock
GIF github.com/ggif @dukecrawford


Duke Crawford figured out how to sync audio with GIF. He syncs GIF with audio visual wiki context at th.ai and thinks GIF can learn to host an attention economy where players own the game.
email: duke@th.ai twitter: @dukecrawford.
Videos from the summit:


Duke Crawford figured out how to sync audio with GIF. He syncs GIF with audio visual wiki context at th.ai and thinks GIF can learn to host an attention economy where players own the game.
email: duke@th.ai twitter: @dukecrawford.
Videos from the summit:
At Gnosis, we believe in a redistributed future. A future where anyone can create and trade any kind of asset, allowing for a more efficient distribution of resources.
Before cryptocurrencies came to life, most trading and trans-national business were made with one dominant currency, f.ex. USD on the NASDAQ. With blockchain technology and the application of crypto-economics, plenty of tokens could potentially be considered a base currency, with none of them being strongly predominant. This scenario calls for cross-currency liquidity and markets that can encompass multiple token-economies.
We are building market mechanisms that provide maximum liquidity in such a setting, and allow for arbitrage-free trading across all tokens. Through our decentralized platforms, we enable the distribution of resources—whether these are assets, incentives, information, or ideas. We thus make a redistributed future possible.
Our products are interoperable, allowing you to create, trade, and hold assets.
Create assets Our prediction market platforms allows anyone to build customized forecasting applications, and thus to create an entirely new kind of asset: outcome tokens, which make trading the outcome of any event possible, and hence surface relevant information.
Trade assets Our decentralized exchange models will enable arbitrage-free trading for these new kinds of assets (outcome tokens), or for any other asset, any information, incentive, or idea.
Hold assets Additionally, our Gnosis Safe wallet aims to set a standard for secure, user-controlled fund storage. The Gnosis Safe allows people to securely hold assets, and facilitates onboarding new users to our decentralized platforms by making it as easy as possible to interact with decentralized applications.
Our decentralized platforms and applications provide foundational infrastructure, assuring security, stability, and foresight for the longevity of blockchain-driven technologies.


Kei Kreutler is a researcher, designer, and developer interested in how cultural narratives of technologies shape their use. As Strategy Director at Gnosis, she oversees messaging and direction as the company builds open, blockchain-based prediction market platforms, decentralized exchange protocols, and a secure mobile-first wallet.
Her project-based practice spans disciplines, from engagement with open source space technologies to synthetic biology research, and has been exhibited by organisations including the Victoria & Albert Museum and FACT Liverpool. In 2017 at Strelka Institute for Media, Architecture and Design, she co-founded Patternist, a sci-fi, augmented reality game for urban research and alternative economies. Previously, she contributed to unMonastery, an open source initiative for networked living spaces inspired by monasticism and hackerspace design patterns. Her work focuses on organizational design and utopian conspiracies.
Videos from the summit:


Kei Kreutler is a researcher, designer, and developer interested in how cultural narratives of technologies shape their use. As Strategy Director at Gnosis, she oversees messaging and direction as the company builds open, blockchain-based prediction market platforms, decentralized exchange protocols, and a secure mobile-first wallet.
Her project-based practice spans disciplines, from engagement with open source space technologies to synthetic biology research, and has been exhibited by organisations including the Victoria & Albert Museum and FACT Liverpool. In 2017 at Strelka Institute for Media, Architecture and Design, she co-founded Patternist, a sci-fi, augmented reality game for urban research and alternative economies. Previously, she contributed to unMonastery, an open source initiative for networked living spaces inspired by monasticism and hackerspace design patterns. Her work focuses on organizational design and utopian conspiracies.
Videos from the summit:
Description
In this workshop, participants will learn to create the conditions for a thriving team that can access group intelligence leading to their greatest impact and success. It includes elements such as shifting a group from stress into presence, uniting the team to be on the same page, and creating what a 2-year Google study found as the top attribute of a successful team: psychological safety. Warning: this may include silliness and play in service to better results. The workshop will be experiential and interactive. Come as an individual or bring your team!
Hopes & dreams
It is my joy and the mission of Enliven Leadership to change the way we do business to include greater team coherence that leads to amplified group intelligence to better serve the planet positive mission. An integral part of my philosophy of peak organizational performance and impact is "being before doing." Taking time to de-stress, de-clutter the brain, and reach a state of emptiness creates receptivity in a group to the flow of creative solutions. By creating a culture that allows space for the group to shift from stress into the flow state, a team can move mountains to accomplish their mission. Additional qualities of a culture of collaboration are bonding, playfulness, and fun!
Participation
Open to everyone!
Why participate
Anyone who is part of a team who'd like to enhance their team dynamics, creativity and innovation.
Session rundown
3 hr workshop
Contact
Carley Corrado


Dr. Carley Corrado helps organizations enhance their impact through uniting teams around shared purpose. Her signature ENLIVEN Approach combines a simple strategy to access deeper wisdom as informed by the leading edge of neuroscience in tandem with strategic planning that is aligned with the team's vision and mission. Prior to becoming certified in Transformational Facilitation, her background includes a PhD in Chemistry and Postdoc in Physics from UC Santa Cruz where she helped create the greenhouse solar company Soliculture. Working with over a hundred farmers as the Director of Business Development, she discovered her passion for living soil, full of microbial life forms that together create fertile conditions for growth while mitigating climate change. This complex web of life inspired the development of her method to transform teams to be guided by that same innate intelligence of life.


Dr. Carley Corrado helps organizations enhance their impact through uniting teams around shared purpose. Her signature ENLIVEN Approach combines a simple strategy to access deeper wisdom as informed by the leading edge of neuroscience in tandem with strategic planning that is aligned with the team's vision and mission. Prior to becoming certified in Transformational Facilitation, her background includes a PhD in Chemistry and Postdoc in Physics from UC Santa Cruz where she helped create the greenhouse solar company Soliculture. Working with over a hundred farmers as the Director of Business Development, she discovered her passion for living soil, full of microbial life forms that together create fertile conditions for growth while mitigating climate change. This complex web of life inspired the development of her method to transform teams to be guided by that same innate intelligence of life.
GUN is an open-source decentralized database service that allows developers to build fast peer-to-peer applications that will work, even when their users are offline. It has raised over $1.5 million in a seed round led by Draper Associates. Other investors include Salesforce’s Marc Benioff through Aloha Angels, as well as Boost VC, CRCM and other angel investors.
The project originated 4 years ago, mostly because the founder saw the database behind his early projects as a single point of failure. The idea behind GUN is to offer a decentralized database system that offers real-time updates with eventual consistency.
One can use GUN to build a peer-to-peer database or opt for a multi-master setup. In this scheme, a cloud-based server simply becomes another peer in the network. GUN users get tools for conflict resolution and other core features out of the box and the data is automatically distributed between peers. When users go offline, data is cached locally and then merged back into this database once they come online.
Today, the system has been used to build a decentralized version of Reddit that can handle a few million uniques per month and a similarly decentralized YouTube clone.


Bitcoin's first collaborator. Creator of Identi.fi and head of identity @GUN. Voluntaryist.
Videos from the summit:


Mark is a mathematician turned programmer. He runs a VC backed Open Source company and has traveled to 30 countries. The diverse cultures he has experienced fuels his passion for learning, sharing, and creating open technology freely for all.
Videos from the summit:


Priya is an India-born San Francisco based entrepreneur. She was the 8th employee of Arduino and subsequently, the Director of their office in India. From 2018, she is also a visiting faculty for entrepreneurship, with Fondazione Agnelli in Italy. She works with GUN as a Chief Process Officer.
Videos from the summit:


Bitcoin's first collaborator. Creator of Identi.fi and head of identity @GUN. Voluntaryist.
Videos from the summit:


Mark is a mathematician turned programmer. He runs a VC backed Open Source company and has traveled to 30 countries. The diverse cultures he has experienced fuels his passion for learning, sharing, and creating open technology freely for all.
Videos from the summit:


Priya is an India-born San Francisco based entrepreneur. She was the 8th employee of Arduino and subsequently, the Director of their office in India. From 2018, she is also a visiting faculty for entrepreneurship, with Fondazione Agnelli in Italy. She works with GUN as a Chief Process Officer.
Videos from the summit:
Standards for a Self-Sovereign Technology Stack
Trustee.AI innovates in two aspects of personal data management: decentralized governance and a standards-based self-sovereign technology stack, using blockchain-based decentralized identifiers (DID), W3C Verifiable Credentials, and User Managed Access (UMA) authorization standards. Decentralized governance and self-sovereign technology are linked because in the case where the underlying infrastructure is fully standardized, the only grounds for competition or differentiation are in governance structure and policies. . These concepts stand in contrast to first-generation personal information management that is typically not standards-based and is governed by a central authority..
Health records will be our first use-case as an alternative to current governance practice of how data is used and monetized by state (typical in EU), hospital (typical in US), or vendor (e.g. Google or IQVIA) oligopolies. Trustee.AI represents a fourth alternative with technology as fiduciary to each patient. Our initial proof-of-concept is a health record for the homeless in collaboration with Atlanta’s Emory Healthcare Network. The patients will have full control over access policies for records that include allergies, current medications, diagnoses, encounter notes, labs, imaging, insurance status, emergency contacts, and provider lists. Public blockchains help manage access credentials and accountability independent of any particular institution.
Expected audience: The talk will not be particularly technical. It will show our reference implementation of UMA, uPort, and FHIR health records in a context familiar to anyone who has had some medical encounters. The talk will address challenges in governance for self-sovereign technologies and personal data management, and these topics are relevant in many domains, not just healthcare..
Notes: Adrian Gropper, MD is the main presenter. As a long-time participant in Rebooting Web of Trust, W3C, and UMA standards. All of the Trustee.AI code is open source on GitHub.
Presenter: Adrian Gropper, MD
Patient Privacy Rights Foundation


Adrian Gropper, MD is CTO of the non-profit Patient Privacy Rights Foundation where he brings training as an engineer from MIT (ME ‘74) and physician from Harvard Medical School (MD ‘78) followed by a career as a medical device entrepreneur including launch of AMICAS, a major radiology PACS business, out of MGH. More recently, his paper won a prize at ONC’s 2016 Blockchain Health competition. His current project, HIE of One Trustee, uses public blockchains, standards and open source software to enable patient-controlled independent health records that can last a lifetime. He is active in blockchain standards development for identity, credentials, and reputation.
Policies and practices about control of patient health records is a growing issue for clinical, research, and economic reasons. It directly impacts the work of HHS to implement the interoperability mandates of the 21st Century CURES Act, the work of NIH to implement the All of US research initiative, the CMS API into the Medicare records, and the VA systems APIs with private-sector EHRs and health information exchanges. Patient health records are also the essential feedstock for machine learning and artificial intelligence in medicine as in this very short talk to the 40th reunion class at Harvard Medical School http://bit.ly/HMS78Talk .


Adrian Gropper, MD is CTO of the non-profit Patient Privacy Rights Foundation where he brings training as an engineer from MIT (ME ‘74) and physician from Harvard Medical School (MD ‘78) followed by a career as a medical device entrepreneur including launch of AMICAS, a major radiology PACS business, out of MGH. More recently, his paper won a prize at ONC’s 2016 Blockchain Health competition. His current project, HIE of One Trustee, uses public blockchains, standards and open source software to enable patient-controlled independent health records that can last a lifetime. He is active in blockchain standards development for identity, credentials, and reputation.
Policies and practices about control of patient health records is a growing issue for clinical, research, and economic reasons. It directly impacts the work of HHS to implement the interoperability mandates of the 21st Century CURES Act, the work of NIH to implement the All of US research initiative, the CMS API into the Medicare records, and the VA systems APIs with private-sector EHRs and health information exchanges. Patient health records are also the essential feedstock for machine learning and artificial intelligence in medicine as in this very short talk to the 40th reunion class at Harvard Medical School http://bit.ly/HMS78Talk .
Advancing composability in P2P software utilizing DHT solutions to build an agent-centric internet.
A demo and open discussion on how agent-centric models in P2P applications can lead to greater composability, and how reinventing "old" technologies can unleash new transformative shifts in social coordination, economic outcomes, and realizing shared visions on a global scale.
Jean Russell and Sami Van Ness of Holo/Holochain will host small rolling demos of DHT-based P2P software solutions, and then open the floor for small person-to-person physical exercises which will replicate the functions of a DHT using real-life social coordination.
From there Jean will host lightingtalk-style discussions on using P2P agent-centric applications to layer innovations into “social plugins” which enable new emerging ways of sharing resources, unleashing new forms of wealth, and distributing data, goods and services without centralized middlemen.
In parallel Sami will host more technical lightningtalk-style discussions on using P2P agent-centric applications to layer innovations into software modules utilizing WebAssmembly, Rust, and the Unity Engine to transform what we think of as “browser plugins” or “applications”, and even how we think of modeling traditional business software like calendars when the restrictions of 2D are removed.
About us:
Jean Russell and Sami Van Ness both work for Holo, a distributed cloud hosting platform built on Holochain, which rewards users in cryptocurrency for giving up part of their devices’ spare resources to host distributed applications. Holochain is an Open-source DHT-based blockchain alternative and, infrastructure technology for distributed peer-to-peer applications, and Holo is the flagship application to be built on top of it. The purpose of Holo is to act as a bridge between the budding community of distributed Holochain apps, and the current centralized web. By creating an ecosystem and currency that enable distributed hosting services provided by peers, Holo brings access to distributed applications to the familiar web browser.
Although we are both representing the company while here, this talk requires no knowledge of our products or services, and is aimed at a more general audience from technical to non-technical. The concepts that make up our platform are not new, they are recompositions of existing technologies, and that composability is actually the core of our talk.


Sami Van Ness is a veteran Digital Marketer and Full-Stack Web Developer with over a decade in experience in data-driven marketing automation and brand identity management working with organizations such as Smuckers, Jif, Folgers, Sony, Best Buy, Porsche, Exxon Mobil, and more. Through an interest in cryptography and data privacy she has been involved in the cryptocurrency space for over 5 years. Prior to Holo, she did initial brand identity prototyping, web asset management, white paper and logo design for the project Promether (promether.com), and web asset management for Demonsaw(demonsaw.com).
Cultivator of Flows, Jean Russell passionately transforms ideas into thriving organizations, always looking for the highest leverage points for us to shift from the world we have toward the world we want. Jean is a culture hacker, facilitator, speaker, and writer creating the future today at the intersections of technology, money, identity, and social transformation. Currently her culture hacking comes in the form of leadership within Holo and Holochain, transformative technologies for building the next internet with an eye toward building the economy for the next era.
As a founder of the thrivability movement, Jean plays with social innovators, technologists, and edge-riders from Malmo to Melbourne, and London to San Francisco. Demonstrating collaboration, she curated, "Thrivability: A Collaborative Sketch" in 2010. She wrote "Thrivability: Breakthroughs for a World That Works" (Triarchy Press, 2013). Then she published, with Herman Wagter, "Cultivating Flows: How Ideas Become Thriving Organizations" (Triarchy Press, 2016).


Sami Van Ness is a veteran Digital Marketer and Full-Stack Web Developer with over a decade in experience in data-driven marketing automation and brand identity management working with organizations such as Smuckers, Jif, Folgers, Sony, Best Buy, Porsche, Exxon Mobil, and more. Through an interest in cryptography and data privacy she has been involved in the cryptocurrency space for over 5 years. Prior to Holo, she did initial brand identity prototyping, web asset management, white paper and logo design for the project Promether (promether.com), and web asset management for Demonsaw(demonsaw.com).
Cultivator of Flows, Jean Russell passionately transforms ideas into thriving organizations, always looking for the highest leverage points for us to shift from the world we have toward the world we want. Jean is a culture hacker, facilitator, speaker, and writer creating the future today at the intersections of technology, money, identity, and social transformation. Currently her culture hacking comes in the form of leadership within Holo and Holochain, transformative technologies for building the next internet with an eye toward building the economy for the next era.
As a founder of the thrivability movement, Jean plays with social innovators, technologists, and edge-riders from Malmo to Melbourne, and London to San Francisco. Demonstrating collaboration, she curated, "Thrivability: A Collaborative Sketch" in 2010. She wrote "Thrivability: Breakthroughs for a World That Works" (Triarchy Press, 2013). Then she published, with Herman Wagter, "Cultivating Flows: How Ideas Become Thriving Organizations" (Triarchy Press, 2016).
Description
Presentation and discussion of the design philosophy underpinning Holochain applications, specifically the HoloREA framework. Prepare to unlearn what "framework" (and many other words) mean to you!
Hopes & Dreams
Cross-check the lens through which I'm seeing the world. Have more confidence that the models I have chosen will lead to ethical, regenerative, equitable outcomes. Learn about new models and find common ground in order to build ways that they may mutually support each other.
Participation
Developers, sociologists, whole systems thinkers, distributed governance experts. We will be looking at and discussing code, but my goal is to keep the conversation framed in the (more accessible) constructs of language, cooperation and communication.
Why Participate?
Every time there is a revolution in history the measurement infrastructure changes because we need new representations of complex global realities. HoloREA is an implementation of a measurement model for the realities of today. Lots of us are adopting the ValueFlows protocol, and before it takes off big-time it makes sense that we check in with ourselves and make sure it's still going in the right direction. This is one of those opportunities.
Session rundown
## Presentation / code walkthrough (1 hr) ##
Presentation of the code and architectural choices will focus on the social and relational implications of particular implementation decisions.
## Discussion / exploration / synthesis ##
Discuss and explore as a group how these decisions affect API contracts, protocols, governance networks, social behaviours and power dynamics across a network.
Relevant links
https://github.com/holo-rea/holo-rea
https://github.com/holo-rea/ecosystem/wiki/Modules-in-the-HoloREA-framework
https://medium.com/holochain/holochain-reinventing-applications-d2ac1e4f25ef
Contact
pospi


Pospi is a former web developer turned blockchain developer turned Holochain developer. His current engagement is HoloREA, a general-purpose resource accounting framework for complex value exchange which has origins in a 40-year body of work. He has a strong interest in ethical production and conscious consumerism, and previously created Everledger’s diamond provenance technology before working at the Ethereum development studio ConsenSys on a range of other blockchain projects. He left that industry in late 2018 after concluding that the profit motive would corrupt and subvert any good that might be achievable, and now dedicates his efforts to building digital commons & social fabric in ecosystems hoping to create viable alternatives to capitalism.
He is based on the Sunshine Coast in Australia, close to his great loves of rainforest creeks and sparsely populated beaches.
Videos from the summit:


Pospi is a former web developer turned blockchain developer turned Holochain developer. His current engagement is HoloREA, a general-purpose resource accounting framework for complex value exchange which has origins in a 40-year body of work. He has a strong interest in ethical production and conscious consumerism, and previously created Everledger’s diamond provenance technology before working at the Ethereum development studio ConsenSys on a range of other blockchain projects. He left that industry in late 2018 after concluding that the profit motive would corrupt and subvert any good that might be achievable, and now dedicates his efforts to building digital commons & social fabric in ecosystems hoping to create viable alternatives to capitalism.
He is based on the Sunshine Coast in Australia, close to his great loves of rainforest creeks and sparsely populated beaches.
Videos from the summit:
Description
Creating an open source decentralized p2p platform (for communications, collaboration, commerce, etc) that works using web browsers and cellphones as its sole infrastructure.
Hopes & dreams
Create a low-friction, non-for-profit, truly user-run p2p platform that provides solutions that are useful for everyday life.
Participation
1) General public concerned with the issues we're trying to tack (privacy, digital platform governance, true p2p platforms, etc) and how we could try to improve - both talking about our tech & solutions and listening to everyone's concerns 2) Developers interested in using / collaborating with the Hyper Hyper Space project
Why participate
For the general public: learning about a social / collaboration / commerce platform where you can be in control of your data / tech / etc. by using your own devices to run it (computer or phone) with zero technical involvement. For technologists: exploring the idea of making p2p browser-only apps (like WebTorrent) available to wider audiences, all the interesting technical challenges involved in doing so, thinking of possible applications.
Session rundown
Project presentation, exploration & general discussion:
- 20 mins: intro to the project (goals, description of the tech we have now)
- 20 mins: everybody tries the platform out in their phones / computers, explores connecting to each other
- 20 mins (could be longer if there's interest): discussion, idea sharing, criticism? :-)
Hacking on the project:
- 10 mins: intro to the project (goals, what we have now)
- 20 mins: technology overview
- 30 mins: discussion of what we would like to improve, build, add, etc. as long as we feel like it: prototyping, programming, further discussions, etc
Relevant links
- https://www.hyperhyperspace.org
- https://github.com/hyperhyperspace/
Contact
Santiago Bazerque


Santi Bazerque is working on the Hyper Hyper Space, an open source not-for-profit social platform that attempts to provide solutions to everyday life problems (communication, collaboration, commerce) while being fully decentralized, using people's web browsers and phones as its only infrastructure. He received a computer science degree from the University of Buenos Aires and has extensive experience on both technical and executive roles.


Santi Bazerque is working on the Hyper Hyper Space, an open source not-for-profit social platform that attempts to provide solutions to everyday life problems (communication, collaboration, commerce) while being fully decentralized, using people's web browsers and phones as its only infrastructure. He received a computer science degree from the University of Buenos Aires and has extensive experience on both technical and executive roles.
Description
This is a presentation with audience participation that demonstrates the spectrum of identity, privacy and decentralization
Hopes & dreams
Audience participants walk away with a new appreciation for the dimensions of identity and how fundamental identity is to decentralization and privacy
Participation
All can participate
Why participate
Identity and the subjectivity of the realm is a key point of appreciation from which almost anyone can benefit
Session rundown
This session is designed for 10 to 200 people and is about 20 minutes
Relevant links
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1ghytthY2QG85f6Y1lkjn08P3azqMkwY2oy9FGHOOEmk/edit?usp=sharing
Contact
Jay Carpenter


Decentralized realms of naming, numbering, addressing and identity are my areas of expertise and interest.


Decentralized realms of naming, numbering, addressing and identity are my areas of expertise and interest.
Description
An introduction to iruway farm lab to kick off discussion on different approaches to include diversity of skills, genders, literacy, culture and learning needs that define the new/holistic tech savvy communities. Such a tech savvy community would not discriminate non-techies and would not expect people to be educated or literate while making information available for all and being able to include all in creating and enhancing local knowledge.
Participation
Interest in decentralization of Web and vulnerable communities
Why Participate?
There are a number of vulnerabilities and complex vulnerable communities. For sharing our individual contexts and supporting infrastructures.
Session rundown
We start with our individual contexts of engagement and our vision of going forward. Open discussion and sharing by all.
Relevant links
Contact
Dinesh


Dinesh, as part of Janastu and Servelots groups, has
been exploring tech engagements for "Indian/South needs" through
a rural research lab (iruway.janastu.org) set up near Bangalore.
Research activities have been generally oriented towards
Web content accessibility issues for the low-literate users.
Decentralized local mesh networks, indigenous archives,
and Web Annotation tools frame the context of activity.
A community radio on the mesh using Raspberry Pi based media
repositories as nodes, captive portals and storytelling activities help
realization of renarration activities in a scenario with a large
diversity of literacy. See j.mp/janastu-mesh and see j.mp/myhill
- Anthillhacks, an inclusive event similar to dwebcamp.
Dinesh returned to Bangalore from Palo Alto about 20 years ago
for developing “Pantoto Communities - community owned
community knowledge” software that helped non tech-savvy
domain experts at small organisations do knowledge management
without depending on high-cost tech resources. After meeting a
number of people and organizations working on a wide range of
societal issues, Janastu and Servelots became an R&D body
for these groups. While the Pantoto idea is still active in spirit, its
now being imagined as decentralised archives with Web Annotations
tools to help link data, renarrate content for low literates, and to
enable mesh-based participatory services.


Dinesh, as part of Janastu and Servelots groups, has
been exploring tech engagements for "Indian/South needs" through
a rural research lab (iruway.janastu.org) set up near Bangalore.
Research activities have been generally oriented towards
Web content accessibility issues for the low-literate users.
Decentralized local mesh networks, indigenous archives,
and Web Annotation tools frame the context of activity.
A community radio on the mesh using Raspberry Pi based media
repositories as nodes, captive portals and storytelling activities help
realization of renarration activities in a scenario with a large
diversity of literacy. See j.mp/janastu-mesh and see j.mp/myhill
- Anthillhacks, an inclusive event similar to dwebcamp.
Dinesh returned to Bangalore from Palo Alto about 20 years ago
for developing “Pantoto Communities - community owned
community knowledge” software that helped non tech-savvy
domain experts at small organisations do knowledge management
without depending on high-cost tech resources. After meeting a
number of people and organizations working on a wide range of
societal issues, Janastu and Servelots became an R&D body
for these groups. While the Pantoto idea is still active in spirit, its
now being imagined as decentralised archives with Web Annotations
tools to help link data, renarrate content for low literates, and to
enable mesh-based participatory services.
Description
A deep dive into the current state of the IndieWeb and how you can leverage new standards right now! Add microformats to your blog, interact with other blogs using your own data (like, rsvp, repost, and reply!), syndicate reactions from other silos back to your blog, and assert your identity to use IndieAuth on other sites.
Hopes & Dreams
I'd love to see more adoption of this practical, lightweight style of ownership.
Participation
Anyone can participate. Computers are encouraged if you'd like to hack on your blog and add new features in a workshop.
Why participate?
If you would like to own your data and identity but continue to participate in all the social media silos this is the workshop for you! Leveraging new standards layered on top of the "good old blog" you can give your HTML superpowers.
Session rundown
A one-hour overview, a break, a "Homebrew Website Club" workshop for hacking
Relevant links
Contact
Andy Jacobs


Andy is a life-long coder and maker, starting with the demoscene in the 90's. After 20 years of building web applications, Andy embarked on co-founding the worker-owned Seattle Developers Cooperative. They believe worker-ownership and a dedication to the cooperative principles is the perfect foundation on which we can build technology for a more equitable and inclusive future. Andy hopes to bring peer-to-peer technology to bigger audiences by helping clients understand and leverage these powerful ideas in their businesses.


Andy is a life-long coder and maker, starting with the demoscene in the 90's. After 20 years of building web applications, Andy embarked on co-founding the worker-owned Seattle Developers Cooperative. They believe worker-ownership and a dedication to the cooperative principles is the perfect foundation on which we can build technology for a more equitable and inclusive future. Andy hopes to bring peer-to-peer technology to bigger audiences by helping clients understand and leverage these powerful ideas in their businesses.
We have a version of the IA server that runs on devices as small as Raspberry Pi's. Its intended for use in places where the internet is absent or poor - expensive, slow or censored. It can serve content from local storage; crawl content to that storage; and act as a proxy. We'd love to get some help cleaning off some of the rough edges to make it usable by our target users - people setting up really remote networks.
Hopes & dreams
That community networks in remote places will start using this alongside other tools for Wikipedia, Khan Academy; Kolibri; Open Street Maps etc to provide a full range of content
Participation
People building community networks; coders who know javascript; people who know how to make RPI's into mesh nodes.
Why participate
Help people outside our bubble of great internet access the rich content that allows them to break the cycle of poverty.
Session rundown
No idea yet - probably at least one session for community network people; one on setting up RPIs as mesh nodes; and some hacking sessions if people are interested.
Relevant links
https://github.com/internetarchive/dweb-mirror
Contact
Mitra Ardron
mitra [at] mitra.biz


Mitra Ardron is the technical lead for the decentralization work at the Internet Archive. Apart from building a decentralized version of the archive he is interested in how we can build tools that can work across different decentralized architectures, and has built small libraries for naming and authentication. Prior to the Archive, He co-founded the Association for Progressive Communications (apc.org), co-authored several internet standards, and was CTO on the first peer to peer video sharing system (which pioneered sharding and content addressing). His passions include renewable energy (ran solar payment networks across Africa); and mentoring innovators working to make the world a better place.
Videos from the summit:


Mitra Ardron is the technical lead for the decentralization work at the Internet Archive. Apart from building a decentralized version of the archive he is interested in how we can build tools that can work across different decentralized architectures, and has built small libraries for naming and authentication. Prior to the Archive, He co-founded the Association for Progressive Communications (apc.org), co-authored several internet standards, and was CTO on the first peer to peer video sharing system (which pioneered sharding and content addressing). His passions include renewable energy (ran solar payment networks across Africa); and mentoring innovators working to make the world a better place.
Videos from the summit:
InterPlanetary Wayback (IPWB)
A Distributed and Persistent Archival Replay System Using IPFS
Sawood Alam, Mat Kelly, Michele C. Weigle, and Michael L. Nelson
Old Dominion University, Department of Computer Science, Norfolk, VA - 23529
{salam,mkelly,mweigle,mln}@cs.odu.edu
InterPlanetary Wayback (IPWB) facilitates permanence and collaboration in web archives by disseminating the contents of WARC files into the InterPlanetary File System (IPFS) network. IPFS is a peer-to-peer content-addressable file system that inherently allows deduplication and facilitates opt-in replication. IPWB splits the header and payload of WARC response records before disseminating into IPFS to leverage the deduplication, builds a CDXJ index with references to the IPFS hashes returns, and combines the header and payload from IPFS at the time of replay.
The figure above illustrates the indexing and replay process. The indexer extracts records from the WARC store one record at a time, splits each record into HTTP header and payload, stores the two pieces into IPFS, and generates a CDXJ record using the returned references and some other metadata from the WARC record. The replay receives request from users containing a lookup URI and optionally a datetime, queries for matching record in the CDXJ, fetches the corresponding header and payload from the IPFS Store (using references returned from the index record), combines them, and performs necessary transformation to build the response to the user. The software is available at https://github.com/oduwsdl/ipwb under MIT license.


Sawood Alam is a PhD Student of Computer Science at Old Dominion University, USA. Sawood received his B.Tech. degree in Computer Engineering from Jamia Millia Islamia, India in 2008 and his M.S. in Computer Science from Old Dominion University, USA in 2013. His Master’s Thesis title was "HTTP Mailbox – Asynchronous Restful Communication". Sawood is currently working on his Ph.D. dissertation titled, "A Framework of Web Archive Profiling for Efficient Memento Aggregation". Apart from his academic research in Web Science and Web Archiving field, he has a keen interest in various fields including Linux Containerization, Decentralized Web, Machine Learning, and solving technical challenges of Urdu and other Right-to-Left complex script languages. Sawood actively follows latest Web technologies.
Videos from the summit:


Sawood Alam is a PhD Student of Computer Science at Old Dominion University, USA. Sawood received his B.Tech. degree in Computer Engineering from Jamia Millia Islamia, India in 2008 and his M.S. in Computer Science from Old Dominion University, USA in 2013. His Master’s Thesis title was "HTTP Mailbox – Asynchronous Restful Communication". Sawood is currently working on his Ph.D. dissertation titled, "A Framework of Web Archive Profiling for Efficient Memento Aggregation". Apart from his academic research in Web Science and Web Archiving field, he has a keen interest in various fields including Linux Containerization, Decentralized Web, Machine Learning, and solving technical challenges of Urdu and other Right-to-Left complex script languages. Sawood actively follows latest Web technologies.
Videos from the summit:
Introducing ixo: The Blockchain for Impact
Problem space:
We want to fundamentally address a) the dearth of high quality data measuring impact, and b) the consequent high costs and low liquidity of impact investing and results-based finance instruments.
The ixo solution
We enable any project to cost-effectively collect, verify and measure its impact, enabling funding to be linked to Proof of Impact. We provide a shared data layer and audit trail that documents claims about service delivery and outcomes. Verified impact data is tokenized as digital assets called Impact Tokens, which represent proof of achievement of a project-defined impact metric, milestone or outcome.
Impact Tokens can be traded and exchanged for funding in a variety of contexts:
-
Impact Token triggers payment clause in a service contract tied to proof of delivery of vaccines
-
Impact Tokens triggers outcome payment in an impact bond tied to proof of outcome
-
Impact Token may be a carbon token representing a carbon offset which can be traded in the carbon markets
Impact Tokens may open new markets for trading new forms of impact assets such as health tokens or gender tokens, as quantified standards and methodologies are adopted in other fields. The funder or purchaser of the Impact Tokens would receive access to each project’s underlying impact data, providing greater transparency and accountability.
In the same way that Ethereum is a platform for user-generated ERC20 tokens, ixo is a protocol for user-generated Impact Tokens, which enable impact data to be shareable, tradeable and valuable. Imagine an ETF comprised of a portfolio of Impact Tokens, or an impact exchange where participants trade liquid impact bonds. Impact investing can become a true financial asset class, unlocking greater capital for projects. Marketplaces for impact data will grow, leading to better program optimizations.
Key functions of the ixo Protocol:
-
Data collection using Web3C standardized data templates called impact claims, which are cryptographically signed using decentralized identifiers (DIDs). This allows data to be interoperable across databases. Data is accountable as it resolves to identifiers while preserving privacy. Data is collected from a variety of interfaces e.g. mobile, IoT, data oracles, drones.
-
Scaling of impact evaluation through use of data triangulation and software algorithms.
-
Global Impact Ledger that allows anyone to see and search high level project-based impact data.
-
Tokenization of verified impact data which enables the data to be monetized, shared or traded.
Why the ixo matters:
-
Audit trail and shared data layer for accountability and tracking of impact “value chain”
-
Richer data and greater transparency increases the fundamental value of impact investments and results-based finance instruments like carbon offsets and impact bonds
-
Impact Tokens can have better liquidity and lower transaction costs through peer-to-peer trading
-
Tokenization can spawn new asset class creation and new markets for social finance, unlocking greater capital to fulfill the Sustainable Development Goals
-
Access controls to data, which may contain personal identifying information, in order to be compliant with data privacy laws e.g. GDPR in EU
Traction:
Our first project in South Africa, Amply, was UNICEF’s first blockchain investment, which has, since November 2016, tokenized more than 60,000 pre-school attendance records that are exchanged for government subsidies. We have been awarded technical partner with the first social impact bond in South Africa to fund home-based education services. We are working with UBS Optimus Foundation on tokenizing an impact bond for girls education in India. We are also working with Gold Standard Foundation to originate carbon tokens from cookstove projects using IoT sensors. We also developed a mobile identity SDK with Microsoft that enables anyone to create digital identities.
Additional info:
1) Website: ixo.network
2) Fast Company article
3) Podcast where Amply is featured as UNICEF's first blockchain investment
4) Podcast discussing idea of impact tokens
5) Our Github where we make all our code open source
6) Our white paper executive summary (non-technical)
7) Our full technical whitepaper
8) Our Medium blog


Fennie is a lawyer turned entrepreneur in the blockchain field, as cofounder of ixo, which is a blockchain protocol for scaling impact measurement and tokenizing any project’s impact data into digital assets that can be funded, traded or exchanged.
Fennie is a US-qualified securities lawyer, who practiced in New York and London. When not working on ixo, she is involved in legal advocacy for the emergent token economy, as an advisor to New York State Assemblyman Ron Kim and the New York City Economic Development Corporation on blockchain affairs, as well as working group coordinator at COALA, a cross-disciplinary blockchain technology policy group.
She started her career at JPMorgan. In between Wall Street and law school, she founded a legal services non-profit in Uganda. She holds a law degree from Columbia, and degrees in business and legal studies from Berkeley.
Videos from the summit:


Fennie is a lawyer turned entrepreneur in the blockchain field, as cofounder of ixo, which is a blockchain protocol for scaling impact measurement and tokenizing any project’s impact data into digital assets that can be funded, traded or exchanged.
Fennie is a US-qualified securities lawyer, who practiced in New York and London. When not working on ixo, she is involved in legal advocacy for the emergent token economy, as an advisor to New York State Assemblyman Ron Kim and the New York City Economic Development Corporation on blockchain affairs, as well as working group coordinator at COALA, a cross-disciplinary blockchain technology policy group.
She started her career at JPMorgan. In between Wall Street and law school, she founded a legal services non-profit in Uganda. She holds a law degree from Columbia, and degrees in business and legal studies from Berkeley.
Videos from the summit:
Jolocom uses blockchain and other decentralized technologies to build a virtual infrastructure that supports self-sovereign identity management by any subject, entity, or object connected to a network.
The open source protocol is a universal framework for interactions involving identity verification over the internet and is designed to drive adoption of self-sovereign identity at global scale as a common resource. Anyone and anything with an identity - companies, consumers, public institutions, state citizens, machines - benefits from a system that allows subjects of identity to control and truly own their digital selves. Jolocom’s protocol for self-sovereign identity management finally makes it possible. Our protocol will manifest the following activities related to digital identity management:
● creating a self-sovereign identity for use by humans, organizations, and machines;
● attaching meaningful information to identities in the form of verifiable credentials;
● easily requesting and consuming verified information about identities in an automated fashion.
The vast majority of digital identities in existence today are not interoperable. That means there are currently millions of digital identity systems siloing personal data that serve no utility outside a single, isolated service environment. This system makes sensitive information vulnerable to hacks, which can cost a company billions, a government an election, and an individual his life and reputation. It’s time for a new system, one that fosters healthy, productive relationships between us and our data.
Digital identities created using Jolocom’s protocol are decentralized, making them portable: subjects of identity can carry their digital selves with them at all times for use across an unlimited number of networks and applications. Our model for digital identity effectively prevents a number of problems inherent to solutions employing centralized management, such as siloing sensitive user data on private servers (conducive to massive data breaches), redundancy of identity data and verification processes, and captive personal data. There’s no limit to the number and scope of specialized software implementations our infrastructure can support, making the protocol an invaluable utility to businesses and consumers alike.
These product features set Jolocom apart from other identity management solutions on the market that effectively lock customers into relying on a standalone service that issues them their digital identity. An identity created with Jolocom’s protocol can
persist across different networks and service environments - that’s the key to a smart identity system.
With a team of just seven full-time employees, we have since 2014 led a wide array of implementation projects using and informing Jolocom’s protocol and advanced several influential research studies concerning identity management (self-sovereign solutions in particular). An early contributing member of AGILE, a European Commission Horizon 2020 Research & Innovation project, Jolocom provided specifications for machine interactions in IoT environments. We partnered with Fraunhofer FOKUS to conduct research on identity on the blockchain for the public sector. As part of Deutsche Telekom’s T-Labs blockchain working group, Jolocom successfully built and implemented the identity layer of a prototype operating stack service that allows developers to build a decentralized backend in a matter of minutes; that prototype won Bosch Connected World 2018 logistics challenge.
In fact, we already offer a mobile identity management application that lets smartphone owners meaningfully interact with other people, services, and connected objects using our protocol; an alpha version of the Jolocom SmartWallet is available for Android devices (iOS forthcoming).
To find out more about Jolocom and our work in digital identity and decentralization, visit our website or check out our code.
Projects we integrate with at DWeb: Ethereum, IPFS, BigchainDB, DID & VC standards (DIF)


Joachim Lohkamp is an entrepreneur and tech-enthusiast with a heart foractivism. As the founder of Jolocom, he has been working at the forefront of the decentralization movement in Berlin since 2014. With Jolocom, he is providing the identity solution that will enable real world use cases in smart contract based business models. To ultimately harvest this potential and inform innovation aimed regulation, he co-founded the German Blockchain Association (Bundesblock) that establishes the dialogue between blockchain businesses and politics. He is further active as an advisor for BlockchainHub, a decentralized Think Tank and as a Connector for OuiShare. Finally, you might find him as the Organizer of events like GetDecentralized, Decentralized Web Summit among others.


Eugeniu is a full stack developer at Jolocom. His passion lies in Self sovereign identity systems and architectures. He designed the architecture of both the Jolocom protocol and smart wallet application. His experience stretches from blockchain technology (Ethereum, IPFS) to React, Redux, Reflux, Express, among others. Eugeniu is leading also Jolocom in the Horizon 2020 initiative named AGILE of the EU, building an adaptive IOT gateway for managing devices and visualizing data in real time and exporting data to cloud providers and personal data stores.
Videos from the summit:


Natascha is a full stack developer at Jolocom (React, React Native, JavaScript, Typescript) and on decentralized technologies (Ethereum, IPFS). She has several years of experience in leadership and project management. Beyond this Natascha has 7 years of working experience in the energy sector with a focus on the intersection of IT and energy related topics.


Joachim Lohkamp is an entrepreneur and tech-enthusiast with a heart foractivism. As the founder of Jolocom, he has been working at the forefront of the decentralization movement in Berlin since 2014. With Jolocom, he is providing the identity solution that will enable real world use cases in smart contract based business models. To ultimately harvest this potential and inform innovation aimed regulation, he co-founded the German Blockchain Association (Bundesblock) that establishes the dialogue between blockchain businesses and politics. He is further active as an advisor for BlockchainHub, a decentralized Think Tank and as a Connector for OuiShare. Finally, you might find him as the Organizer of events like GetDecentralized, Decentralized Web Summit among others.


Eugeniu is a full stack developer at Jolocom. His passion lies in Self sovereign identity systems and architectures. He designed the architecture of both the Jolocom protocol and smart wallet application. His experience stretches from blockchain technology (Ethereum, IPFS) to React, Redux, Reflux, Express, among others. Eugeniu is leading also Jolocom in the Horizon 2020 initiative named AGILE of the EU, building an adaptive IOT gateway for managing devices and visualizing data in real time and exporting data to cloud providers and personal data stores.
Videos from the summit:


Natascha is a full stack developer at Jolocom (React, React Native, JavaScript, Typescript) and on decentralized technologies (Ethereum, IPFS). She has several years of experience in leadership and project management. Beyond this Natascha has 7 years of working experience in the energy sector with a focus on the intersection of IT and energy related topics.
Knapsack for Hope is a satellite filecasting technology that uses common satellite equipment to deliver digital content without relying on access to the Internet. It distributes content that would otherwise be inaccessible to those who have limited or no internet access due to censorship, internet cost, living in a remote location, government-backed shutdowns, or unreliable technical infrastructure. Furthermore, it requires no hardware other than the conventional home TV satellite set-top box and a free-to-air satellite dish.
Digital content and data is uploaded to a satellite and then encoded on a TV channel to users’ satellite TV dish. Users record this TV channel from their satellite set-top box to a USB drive. Upon transferring the USB to a smartphone or computer, Knapsack software decodes the transmitted content from the recorded TV channel to its original form, whether that be PDFs, JPEGs, HTMLs, MP3s, or others.
Knapsack is currently deployed in Iran and the Middle East as Toosheh - the Persian word for “knapsack.” Over 150,000 known users have downloaded Toosheh as means to gain access to content otherwise censored by the Iranian government. However the beauty of the technology lies in its ability to be adapted to a myriad number of environments (e.g. refugee camps or disaster recovering regions) and technologies (e.g. Peer-to-Peer sharing). In addition, Knapsack has successfully passed the first round of Mozilla’s NSF Wireless Challenge.


Mehdi Yahyanejad is founder of Balatarin.com, the largest user-generated news website in Persian and a crucial information source in the 2009 pro-democracy protest movement in Iran. He is the co-founder and director of NetFreedom Pioneers, a nonprofit organization that delivers curated digital content via satellite to regions of the world with limited internet access. He is also a researcher at USC researching new anti-censorship technologies.
Videos from the summit:


Sarah Bowers works as an Outreach Coordinator for NetFreedom Pioneers. With a background in international education and nonprofit work, Sarah’s passion lies in cross-cultural inquiry and analyzing the ethics and effectiveness of international development efforts. With these interests she has joined NFP in rethinking the social impact of technology.
Videos from the summit:


Evan (AliReza) Firoozi is a former student activist and journalist who was imprisoned by the Iranian government for more than a year, six months of which he spent in solitary confinement. He has collaborated with several organizations and universities to translate to Farsi technical articles and applications related to internet security, privacy, and anti-censorship. While simultaneously pursuing his education in Computer Science, Evan currently works at NetFreedom Pioneers on the development and implementation of Toosheh/Knapsack, a service and application focused on the distribution of data through satellite connection.


Shadi Sharifi is an Iranian lawyer who practiced family law for four years before moving to the United States. Shadi is an innovator and coordinates NetFreedom Pioneers’ Toranj project - an android application that supports those at risk of experiencing violent or abusive circumstances.


Camelon Baker currently works as the Senior Engineer at NetFreedom Pioneers. He has been responsible for the development and implementation of NFP’s primary project: Toosheh, an offline technology that distributes content through satellite datacasting. Camelon has been a computer engineer for the past 20 years.


Mehdi Yahyanejad is founder of Balatarin.com, the largest user-generated news website in Persian and a crucial information source in the 2009 pro-democracy protest movement in Iran. He is the co-founder and director of NetFreedom Pioneers, a nonprofit organization that delivers curated digital content via satellite to regions of the world with limited internet access. He is also a researcher at USC researching new anti-censorship technologies.
Videos from the summit:


Sarah Bowers works as an Outreach Coordinator for NetFreedom Pioneers. With a background in international education and nonprofit work, Sarah’s passion lies in cross-cultural inquiry and analyzing the ethics and effectiveness of international development efforts. With these interests she has joined NFP in rethinking the social impact of technology.
Videos from the summit:


Evan (AliReza) Firoozi is a former student activist and journalist who was imprisoned by the Iranian government for more than a year, six months of which he spent in solitary confinement. He has collaborated with several organizations and universities to translate to Farsi technical articles and applications related to internet security, privacy, and anti-censorship. While simultaneously pursuing his education in Computer Science, Evan currently works at NetFreedom Pioneers on the development and implementation of Toosheh/Knapsack, a service and application focused on the distribution of data through satellite connection.


Shadi Sharifi is an Iranian lawyer who practiced family law for four years before moving to the United States. Shadi is an innovator and coordinates NetFreedom Pioneers’ Toranj project - an android application that supports those at risk of experiencing violent or abusive circumstances.


Camelon Baker currently works as the Senior Engineer at NetFreedom Pioneers. He has been responsible for the development and implementation of NFP’s primary project: Toosheh, an offline technology that distributes content through satellite datacasting. Camelon has been a computer engineer for the past 20 years.
What will You learn?
Fractals, Escape Iterators and Chemistry of Life


Rick Wesson is a farmer and reformed coder. Between moving rocks on his seven acre urban farm in the bay area. He prefers to study manufacturing firearms, brewing beer and direct current brain stimulation. Mr Wesson has served on ICANN’s Security and Stability committee for 15 years. He serves as a member of the Board for Groundwork Richmond which focuses on teaching at risk youth nutrition, agriculture and technology. Groundwork Richmond is committed to planting trees with wifi antennas to both beautify the community and provide free wifi to low income residents. Mr Wesson is Dyslexic and is a founding member of the Bay Area DEN - Network of Dyslexic Entrepreneurs
Videos from the summit:


Rick Wesson is a farmer and reformed coder. Between moving rocks on his seven acre urban farm in the bay area. He prefers to study manufacturing firearms, brewing beer and direct current brain stimulation. Mr Wesson has served on ICANN’s Security and Stability committee for 15 years. He serves as a member of the Board for Groundwork Richmond which focuses on teaching at risk youth nutrition, agriculture and technology. Groundwork Richmond is committed to planting trees with wifi antennas to both beautify the community and provide free wifi to low income residents. Mr Wesson is Dyslexic and is a founding member of the Bay Area DEN - Network of Dyslexic Entrepreneurs
Videos from the summit:
Description
Anthill is a metaphor for the world of structure and complexity that exists just beneath the surface of everything around us.
Imagine groups of people from different domains living together for a period of time... the location itself brings about an intermingling of thought-systems that would not have interacted otherwise. This inspires collaborations giving birth to eye-opening new productions and curation of existing narratives and annotations of real world objects at the location.
A deployment of a decentralized annotated WiFi-mesh with servers and services help annotate the anthill. Such an annotated anthill is inclusive and navigable by all. Anthillhacks is a week long event near Bangalore, India that explores content creation and dissemination for all participants - from techies to low-literate villagers.
What will You learn?
The talk brings relevance of a number of technologies to a context where there is a huge diversity of literacy and explores inclusive approaches of content creation during and after the event. We hope this talk provides a peek of the issues on the other side of world.


Dinesh, as part of Janastu and Servelots groups, has
been exploring tech engagements for "Indian/South needs" through
a rural research lab (iruway.janastu.org) set up near Bangalore.
Research activities have been generally oriented towards
Web content accessibility issues for the low-literate users.
Decentralized local mesh networks, indigenous archives,
and Web Annotation tools frame the context of activity.
A community radio on the mesh using Raspberry Pi based media
repositories as nodes, captive portals and storytelling activities help
realization of renarration activities in a scenario with a large
diversity of literacy. See j.mp/janastu-mesh and see j.mp/myhill
- Anthillhacks, an inclusive event similar to dwebcamp.
Dinesh returned to Bangalore from Palo Alto about 20 years ago
for developing “Pantoto Communities - community owned
community knowledge” software that helped non tech-savvy
domain experts at small organisations do knowledge management
without depending on high-cost tech resources. After meeting a
number of people and organizations working on a wide range of
societal issues, Janastu and Servelots became an R&D body
for these groups. While the Pantoto idea is still active in spirit, its
now being imagined as decentralised archives with Web Annotations
tools to help link data, renarrate content for low literates, and to
enable mesh-based participatory services.


Dinesh, as part of Janastu and Servelots groups, has
been exploring tech engagements for "Indian/South needs" through
a rural research lab (iruway.janastu.org) set up near Bangalore.
Research activities have been generally oriented towards
Web content accessibility issues for the low-literate users.
Decentralized local mesh networks, indigenous archives,
and Web Annotation tools frame the context of activity.
A community radio on the mesh using Raspberry Pi based media
repositories as nodes, captive portals and storytelling activities help
realization of renarration activities in a scenario with a large
diversity of literacy. See j.mp/janastu-mesh and see j.mp/myhill
- Anthillhacks, an inclusive event similar to dwebcamp.
Dinesh returned to Bangalore from Palo Alto about 20 years ago
for developing “Pantoto Communities - community owned
community knowledge” software that helped non tech-savvy
domain experts at small organisations do knowledge management
without depending on high-cost tech resources. After meeting a
number of people and organizations working on a wide range of
societal issues, Janastu and Servelots became an R&D body
for these groups. While the Pantoto idea is still active in spirit, its
now being imagined as decentralised archives with Web Annotations
tools to help link data, renarrate content for low literates, and to
enable mesh-based participatory services.
Come listen to Hans' captivating lesson on using Cosmos to construct your very own blockchain application in just minutes.
What will You learn?
Listeners will be taught how to build their own blockchain application with Cosmos in 5 minutes!
- https://cosmos.network
Hans is hopeful that web tech can provide social prosthetics for a more just and sustainable world. He started in tech by founding an online gift economy and is curious to see where blockchains can take us. Hans is a developer relations engineer at Cosmos as well as a contributor to the Handshake project.
Hans is hopeful that web tech can provide social prosthetics for a more just and sustainable world. He started in tech by founding an online gift economy and is curious to see where blockchains can take us. Hans is a developer relations engineer at Cosmos as well as a contributor to the Handshake project.
What will You learn?
Brief synopsis of what cryptoart can be defined as compared to how it is made and what it can do


Duncan is an artist from Kalamazoo, Michigan who has recently traveled to NYC and Tokyo to meet with other cryptoartists in real life. After selling a tokenized print of an illustrated parody on stage at the actual first auction of visual art made for the blockchain, he became inspired to found artMuseum.io to be the world's first decentralized open-submission museum of cryptoart for any blockchain.
As a direct result of being empowered by publishing in someone else’s system, this independent artist felt compelled to forge a collection of his own which is not as exclusive in theme but aims to reflect best practices in greater indologies of decentralization and consensus. Growing from the understanding for the root word of token being “to teach,” this telegram user assists artists all over the globe to participate in other the various community based cryptoart “games” which have launched in 2018.
Having accrued enough reputation and body of knowledge from all the odd jobs which made this outlier specialized he was selected by EverdreamSoft to curate the Memorychain and OasisMining collections in Book of Orbs. He began with updating the two Japanese whitepapers into one solid plan, drawing an action plan together with other compatible projects.
As a curator this visionary has launched a word of mouth only cryptoarto collection whose mechanisms push the boundaries of experience by inverting most of the rules. As a student in Marketing at Western Governors University this entrepreneur learned that a successful endeavor is based on giving the market the service it needs. Contrary to all the tokenized games to be announced since mid-2017, his “Proof of Parody” offers a novel upgrade to the joystick battle genre.


Duncan is an artist from Kalamazoo, Michigan who has recently traveled to NYC and Tokyo to meet with other cryptoartists in real life. After selling a tokenized print of an illustrated parody on stage at the actual first auction of visual art made for the blockchain, he became inspired to found artMuseum.io to be the world's first decentralized open-submission museum of cryptoart for any blockchain.
As a direct result of being empowered by publishing in someone else’s system, this independent artist felt compelled to forge a collection of his own which is not as exclusive in theme but aims to reflect best practices in greater indologies of decentralization and consensus. Growing from the understanding for the root word of token being “to teach,” this telegram user assists artists all over the globe to participate in other the various community based cryptoart “games” which have launched in 2018.
Having accrued enough reputation and body of knowledge from all the odd jobs which made this outlier specialized he was selected by EverdreamSoft to curate the Memorychain and OasisMining collections in Book of Orbs. He began with updating the two Japanese whitepapers into one solid plan, drawing an action plan together with other compatible projects.
As a curator this visionary has launched a word of mouth only cryptoarto collection whose mechanisms push the boundaries of experience by inverting most of the rules. As a student in Marketing at Western Governors University this entrepreneur learned that a successful endeavor is based on giving the market the service it needs. Contrary to all the tokenized games to be announced since mid-2017, his “Proof of Parody” offers a novel upgrade to the joystick battle genre.
What will You learn?
How the #OverWeb - an annotation layer on top of the web source - decentralizes linking and page experience


Since BS and MS in Engineering at Stanford, Daveed has had leadership roles in startups, nonprofits, and social enterprises in emergent fields. As a "Shift Shaper," his work focuses on collective wisdom and altering systems of consciousness for positive impact. Daveed worked on decentralization in early 2000s focusing on energy, food, and water and on building local economies. Now his focus is decentralizing linking and the web experience. As CEO and Visionkeeper of Bridgit, Daveed is building post-blockchain protocols that provide 360 context for any idea or object as well as discovery orders of magnitude faster than search. Author of first-of-its-kind augmented reality book,Pacha’s Pajamas: A Story Written By Nature. Daveed is an Active Dreaming teacher, a SoulCollage® Facilitator, a Green For All fellow, and Founder Gym graduate.


Since BS and MS in Engineering at Stanford, Daveed has had leadership roles in startups, nonprofits, and social enterprises in emergent fields. As a "Shift Shaper," his work focuses on collective wisdom and altering systems of consciousness for positive impact. Daveed worked on decentralization in early 2000s focusing on energy, food, and water and on building local economies. Now his focus is decentralizing linking and the web experience. As CEO and Visionkeeper of Bridgit, Daveed is building post-blockchain protocols that provide 360 context for any idea or object as well as discovery orders of magnitude faster than search. Author of first-of-its-kind augmented reality book,Pacha’s Pajamas: A Story Written By Nature. Daveed is an Active Dreaming teacher, a SoulCollage® Facilitator, a Green For All fellow, and Founder Gym graduate.
What will You learn?
How design heuristics are changed when your app is decentralized


Shokunin is the founder of Permaweb.io and the IPFS Discord. He is building the first suite of consumer apps on top of the IPFS stack.


Shokunin is the founder of Permaweb.io and the IPFS Discord. He is building the first suite of consumer apps on top of the IPFS stack.
Description
The dweb is a bold "new frontier" right? This is a retelling of an old story about empire/colonisation that we're at risk of perpetuating. Let's move beyond a path of oppression, of singular definitions of being + knowledge. Let's learn a little bit about our blind spots and how to deliver on the vision of distributed web.
What will You learn?
A perspective about how this isn't new, and insight into what I as a beginner have already learnt.


Mix is a community gardener from the Scuttlebutt ecosystem - this involves cheering others on, helping connect rad people with resources, and crafting social patterns which will help us move closer to a solarpunk future. He's a practicing programmer, teacher, cooperative worker-owner, parent. Communities that he's helped grow, and have grown him include : aotawhiti.school.nz , enspiral.com, loomio.org, devacademy.co.nz, scuttlebutt.nz
Website: protozoa.nz
Talks: Embracing Subjectivity - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P5K18XssVBg
Videos from the summit:


Mix is a community gardener from the Scuttlebutt ecosystem - this involves cheering others on, helping connect rad people with resources, and crafting social patterns which will help us move closer to a solarpunk future. He's a practicing programmer, teacher, cooperative worker-owner, parent. Communities that he's helped grow, and have grown him include : aotawhiti.school.nz , enspiral.com, loomio.org, devacademy.co.nz, scuttlebutt.nz
Website: protozoa.nz
Talks: Embracing Subjectivity - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P5K18XssVBg
Videos from the summit:
What will You learn?
The rising concern of privacy leaks and abuses and what we the users could and should do to fight against it.
Yisi is now working with fantastic developers at Dimension.im on various projects towards a decentralized and privacy-preserving web. He is focusing on how to apply cryptography algorithms and schemes to the real world, including two ongoing projects at Dimension, maskbook.com and tessercube.com, to bring users a web with privacy. He used to be a natural language processing researcher but decided to work on real world cryptography and data privacy protection when he realized the double edged sword of how big companies are using and "abusing" user's data in their lives. He is a true believer of a decentralized web and would like to bring it to more users all over the world.
Videos from the summit:
Yisi is now working with fantastic developers at Dimension.im on various projects towards a decentralized and privacy-preserving web. He is focusing on how to apply cryptography algorithms and schemes to the real world, including two ongoing projects at Dimension, maskbook.com and tessercube.com, to bring users a web with privacy. He used to be a natural language processing researcher but decided to work on real world cryptography and data privacy protection when he realized the double edged sword of how big companies are using and "abusing" user's data in their lives. He is a true believer of a decentralized web and would like to bring it to more users all over the world.
Videos from the summit:
Human identity can be a basis of fair distribution of power and resources - we are all born equal in rights. Existing digital identity concepts rely on 3rd parties, require the release of private data, easy to fake or buy, don't guarantee uniqueness. Proposed solution - massive online synchronized Turing test and anonymous identity network. Potential applications - Proof-of-Identity blockchain, Serverless messenger, Free speech publication platform, Sybil-protected voting, Self-monetized attention, Universal basic income
What will You learn?
Why existing digital identity concepts suck and what could be done to fix it.


Sergey Ivliev holds a Ph.D. in Mathematical economics of Perm State University. He is a director of Perm State University’s Cryptoeconomics & Blockchain Systems Lab, which is the main organizer of the Perm Winter School on Digital Financial Markets (http://permwinterschool.ru) and Perm Summer School on Cryptoeconomics (http://perm.school)
Videos from the summit:


Sergey Ivliev holds a Ph.D. in Mathematical economics of Perm State University. He is a director of Perm State University’s Cryptoeconomics & Blockchain Systems Lab, which is the main organizer of the Perm Winter School on Digital Financial Markets (http://permwinterschool.ru) and Perm Summer School on Cryptoeconomics (http://perm.school)
Videos from the summit:
What will You learn?
- How Interledger works (at a high level)
- How it can be used to internetwork existing payment networks (where to start)
- Some of the things Interledger enables us to build in the future


I have worked as a technology researcher, software engineer, product developer and solutions architect. These days I co-chair the Web Payments Working Group at the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), head up all-things Interledger at Coil (and anywhere else I can) and do a lot of contemplating about how we can make payments better and connect more things and people. I live in Cape Town, South Africa with my beautiful wife, two-and-a-half kids and our dog, Rupert. I love the potential of technology, open source, open standards, interoperability and not being the smartest person in the room. I hate red-tape, closed networks, closed mindedness and writing about myself in the third-person.
Videos from the summit:


I have worked as a technology researcher, software engineer, product developer and solutions architect. These days I co-chair the Web Payments Working Group at the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), head up all-things Interledger at Coil (and anywhere else I can) and do a lot of contemplating about how we can make payments better and connect more things and people. I live in Cape Town, South Africa with my beautiful wife, two-and-a-half kids and our dog, Rupert. I love the potential of technology, open source, open standards, interoperability and not being the smartest person in the room. I hate red-tape, closed networks, closed mindedness and writing about myself in the third-person.
Videos from the summit:
Description
User Agents today do not act on user behalf, instead they comply with commands of the server surrendering user data into corporate walled gardens that can only be used with apps they provide. I would like to inspire you to think of inverse power dynamic, by introducing my own lunet exploration, where web apps are sandboxed and all of the data aggregates into local-first user library.


Irakli Gozalishvili is Research Engineer at Mozilla interested in bringing decentralized technologies into world wide web. He believes internet can be a truly public resource, but only if it breaks free of corporate silos and views decentralization as an enabling technology for this.


Irakli Gozalishvili is Research Engineer at Mozilla interested in bringing decentralized technologies into world wide web. He believes internet can be a truly public resource, but only if it breaks free of corporate silos and views decentralization as an enabling technology for this.
Description
From Syria to Venezuela, the 21st century is already defined by mass migrations of people fleeing unsafe and unstable situations at home. Each instance is unique, but some of the problems the people involved face are shared. With climate change already at its tipping point, freedom of movement may well be the primary human rights issue of this century, and technology could potentially be leveraged at many levels of this struggle. Starting from human centered stories, this talk will seed a few ideas about that potential, while also challenging the notion that technology is *the* solution.
What will You learn?
People will benefit hopefully by the opening of a discussion on a vitally important topic, and creating connections between people interested in furthering their thinking and work in this area.


Matt is a software engineer with a passion for exploring possibilities at the intersection of human rights and emerging technology. With a background in international human rights works as well as the Drupal and Angular open source communities, he is excited to be volunteering as a coordinator of the humanitarian track of the Decentralized Web Summit.
Videos from the summit:


Matt is a software engineer with a passion for exploring possibilities at the intersection of human rights and emerging technology. With a background in international human rights works as well as the Drupal and Angular open source communities, he is excited to be volunteering as a coordinator of the humanitarian track of the Decentralized Web Summit.
Videos from the summit:
The decentralized web is nothing without decentralized storage. That being said, developers and users of the decentralized web are often then burdened with deciding which decentralized storage provider(s) they should work with. Well, in decentralized fashion, the likely answer is not one single provider or even a predetermined set of providers, but rather ANY provider. The decentralized web will be powered by multiple transport layers, and that decision should be left up to the user.
The Safaris and Chromes of the world were built for and currently dominate the centralized web. These centralized apps, however, yield total autonomy of how and where data is stored and retrieved to developers instead of users. The decentralized web, however, must adopt browsers and apps that return this control back to the user. Therefore, developers must be given tools and standards that enable the development of apps that direct the transport (i.e. storage and retrieval) of data without being able to control this data.
I believe this must be achieved through development of a multiple transport layer that has open and transparent standards. The basic concept underlying this idea is already present and being demonstrated in the Internet Archive dweb.archive.org internals. At Wolk we implemented the Internet Archive's transport layer API so that we could be included and incorporated into it's multi-transport vision.
What will You learn?
We would like to share our learnings in wiring Wolk's decentralized blockchain to the Internet Archive's Multiple Transports Layer, to see how we can extend this important idea with other active participants (multiple browser/extension devs, decentralized storage providers, and application devs)


Over the past two years, Rodney Witcher has worked at Wolk focusing on designing and building a protocol that will enable a world where users wrest control of their data away from the big corporations and regain autonomy over their online presence and activity. Rodney's background lies in building large scale applications, honing his skills as an engineer, product designer and dot connector most recently as a co-founder of CrossChannel, a mobile and social advertising company, and previously at a number of companies as a software engineer. Rodney lives in the Bay Area and enjoys spending quality time with his wife Courtney and son Shaw.
Videos from the summit:


Over the past two years, Rodney Witcher has worked at Wolk focusing on designing and building a protocol that will enable a world where users wrest control of their data away from the big corporations and regain autonomy over their online presence and activity. Rodney's background lies in building large scale applications, honing his skills as an engineer, product designer and dot connector most recently as a co-founder of CrossChannel, a mobile and social advertising company, and previously at a number of companies as a software engineer. Rodney lives in the Bay Area and enjoys spending quality time with his wife Courtney and son Shaw.
Videos from the summit:
What will You learn?
You will learn about an open community that exists to support its members on their personal development journeys with self-directed lifelong learning. New media literacies and live co-learning sessions that are happening within Open Learning Commons will also be demonstrated.


Robert Best is an open-source web developer, researcher, and graph analyst. His areas of interest are peer-to-peer technologies, collective intelligence, commoning, social entrepreneurship, and the future of work. Robert is currently stewarding Open Learning Commons, which is a p2p-learning community (See OpenLearning.CC) Most recently he was working with Holo/Holochain: a software framework+platform for creating+hosting fully p2p applications. Prior to Holochain Robert was contributing to Metamaps.cc - an open-source real-time collaborative concept-mapping web application.


Robert Best is an open-source web developer, researcher, and graph analyst. His areas of interest are peer-to-peer technologies, collective intelligence, commoning, social entrepreneurship, and the future of work. Robert is currently stewarding Open Learning Commons, which is a p2p-learning community (See OpenLearning.CC) Most recently he was working with Holo/Holochain: a software framework+platform for creating+hosting fully p2p applications. Prior to Holochain Robert was contributing to Metamaps.cc - an open-source real-time collaborative concept-mapping web application.
What will You learn?
How we can enable a resource-based, barter-like economy which makes all things (including externalities) quantifiable & tradeable


Pospi is a former web developer turned blockchain developer turned Holochain developer. His current engagement is HoloREA, a general-purpose resource accounting framework for complex value exchange which has origins in a 40-year body of work. He has a strong interest in ethical production and conscious consumerism, and previously created Everledger’s diamond provenance technology before working at the Ethereum development studio ConsenSys on a range of other blockchain projects. He left that industry in late 2018 after concluding that the profit motive would corrupt and subvert any good that might be achievable, and now dedicates his efforts to building digital commons & social fabric in ecosystems hoping to create viable alternatives to capitalism.
He is based on the Sunshine Coast in Australia, close to his great loves of rainforest creeks and sparsely populated beaches.
Videos from the summit:


Pospi is a former web developer turned blockchain developer turned Holochain developer. His current engagement is HoloREA, a general-purpose resource accounting framework for complex value exchange which has origins in a 40-year body of work. He has a strong interest in ethical production and conscious consumerism, and previously created Everledger’s diamond provenance technology before working at the Ethereum development studio ConsenSys on a range of other blockchain projects. He left that industry in late 2018 after concluding that the profit motive would corrupt and subvert any good that might be achievable, and now dedicates his efforts to building digital commons & social fabric in ecosystems hoping to create viable alternatives to capitalism.
He is based on the Sunshine Coast in Australia, close to his great loves of rainforest creeks and sparsely populated beaches.
Videos from the summit:
What will You learn?
Listeners will learn both current vocabulary and different approaches for considering and applying values throughout the design process.


Dawn Walker is a PhD student at the University of Toronto focused on participatory design tactics for grassroots environmental monitoring civic technologies. Based in Toronto, she has organized workshops on mesh networking and decentralized technologies with Toronto Mesh. As a member of EDGI and Data Together, she imagines possibilities for more just and resilient environmental and climate data.
Videos from the summit:


Dawn Walker is a PhD student at the University of Toronto focused on participatory design tactics for grassroots environmental monitoring civic technologies. Based in Toronto, she has organized workshops on mesh networking and decentralized technologies with Toronto Mesh. As a member of EDGI and Data Together, she imagines possibilities for more just and resilient environmental and climate data.
Videos from the summit:
Description
It's possible that terms like "decentralization" and "p2p" are actually a poor fit to describe the long-term goals of many who are working in this space. I propose a different take - namely, orthogonality - that emphasizes agency and lack of capture, without encumbering notions fixated on legacy transport-layer brokenness.
What will You learn?
I propose a new set of conceptual dimensions along which to think about our various projects. Even if people reject my general thesis, these axes may be useful tools for people in general.


Data Science/Machine Learning; Ethics in AI; Cybernetics; Sense-making and collective intelligence; Upgrading Liberalism & Individualism to impedance-match the modern memetic environment; Humanity as substrate for what comes next.
Videos from the summit:


Data Science/Machine Learning; Ethics in AI; Cybernetics; Sense-making and collective intelligence; Upgrading Liberalism & Individualism to impedance-match the modern memetic environment; Humanity as substrate for what comes next.
Videos from the summit:
What will You learn?
How to scale your P2P dApp!


Mark is a mathematician turned programmer. He runs a VC backed Open Source company and has traveled to 30 countries. The diverse cultures he has experienced fuels his passion for learning, sharing, and creating open technology freely for all.
Videos from the summit:


Mark is a mathematician turned programmer. He runs a VC backed Open Source company and has traveled to 30 countries. The diverse cultures he has experienced fuels his passion for learning, sharing, and creating open technology freely for all.
Videos from the summit:
What will You learn?
Its important to examine our prejudices when we talk about technology and be aware that others won't share them.


Eric Hellman is Co-Founder and President of the Free Ebook Foundation. After 10 years doing physics research at Bell Labs, Eric got interested in electronic publishing, started an e-journal, started a company, built linking technology for libraries, sold that company to OCLC and worked there a few years, started blogging (at Go To Hellman), and then started working to make free ebooks work for libraries and everyone else. Eric believes that modern cryptographic tools must be widely deployed in the library and publishing industries to ensure digital privacy and security for all.
Videos from the summit:


Eric Hellman is Co-Founder and President of the Free Ebook Foundation. After 10 years doing physics research at Bell Labs, Eric got interested in electronic publishing, started an e-journal, started a company, built linking technology for libraries, sold that company to OCLC and worked there a few years, started blogging (at Go To Hellman), and then started working to make free ebooks work for libraries and everyone else. Eric believes that modern cryptographic tools must be widely deployed in the library and publishing industries to ensure digital privacy and security for all.
Videos from the summit:
Description
Today's mass market browsers are the gatekeepers of the web - a control point for the web's features and capabilities. What if your browser put your values first? What if you could build your own browser? What would you put in it? What trade-offs would you have to make? Who's building the browsers of the future, and how are they doing it?
What will You learn?
Learn what a browser could be if it put your values first. Learn about projects that are pushing on what a browser can be. Learn about approaches for building browsers that truly represent you.


Dietrich Ayala is working on safeguarding the internet at Protocol Labs by turning browsers into true user agents, with technologies like IPFS.
Dietrich's first computer job was as webmaster at indie music label Sub Pop Records, doing anything and everything digital. He has since worked at small startups and also household names like McAfee and Yahoo. He spent 13 years working for internet freedom at Mozilla, the non-profit makers of Firefox. Before computerizing, he was a barista and chef.
Dietrich lives in San Francisco California at the moment, and spends a year in Asia every so often because that's where the internet is growing the most and where all of our devices come from. And the noodle soup is good.


Dietrich Ayala is working on safeguarding the internet at Protocol Labs by turning browsers into true user agents, with technologies like IPFS.
Dietrich's first computer job was as webmaster at indie music label Sub Pop Records, doing anything and everything digital. He has since worked at small startups and also household names like McAfee and Yahoo. He spent 13 years working for internet freedom at Mozilla, the non-profit makers of Firefox. Before computerizing, he was a barista and chef.
Dietrich lives in San Francisco California at the moment, and spends a year in Asia every so often because that's where the internet is growing the most and where all of our devices come from. And the noodle soup is good.
Description
Today's mass market browsers are the gatekeepers of the web - a control point for the web's features and capabilities. What if your browser put your values first? What if you could build your own browser? What would you put in it? What trade-offs would you have to make? Who's building the browsers of the future, and how are they doing it?
What will You learn?
Learn what a browser could be if it put your values first. Learn about projects that are pushing on what a browser can be. Learn about approaches for building browsers that truly represent you.


Dietrich Ayala is working on safeguarding the internet at Protocol Labs by turning browsers into true user agents, with technologies like IPFS.
Dietrich's first computer job was as webmaster at indie music label Sub Pop Records, doing anything and everything digital. He has since worked at small startups and also household names like McAfee and Yahoo. He spent 13 years working for internet freedom at Mozilla, the non-profit makers of Firefox. Before computerizing, he was a barista and chef.
Dietrich lives in San Francisco California at the moment, and spends a year in Asia every so often because that's where the internet is growing the most and where all of our devices come from. And the noodle soup is good.


Dietrich Ayala is working on safeguarding the internet at Protocol Labs by turning browsers into true user agents, with technologies like IPFS.
Dietrich's first computer job was as webmaster at indie music label Sub Pop Records, doing anything and everything digital. He has since worked at small startups and also household names like McAfee and Yahoo. He spent 13 years working for internet freedom at Mozilla, the non-profit makers of Firefox. Before computerizing, he was a barista and chef.
Dietrich lives in San Francisco California at the moment, and spends a year in Asia every so often because that's where the internet is growing the most and where all of our devices come from. And the noodle soup is good.
I will look at a simple set of biologic processes, especially the patterns in differentiation of cells in higher level organisms, that is mimics by similar patterns in other biologic processes. I will then look at cell phone use, especially social media use on cell phones by the most highly connected or addicted amonst us, as a basic biologic process.
What will You learn?
We will learn a very different way of looking at cell phones and social networks.


Stephen Ackroyd is Founder and CEO of TouchAdventures.com, a mobile development studio, building companies.
Stephen is Co-Founder of DirectSalesMobile.com, the leading mobile applications provider for the 6 million salespeople and the 36 million customers in the direct selling industry.
Stephen is Co-Founder of Koncentra.io, a private social network platform for building and curating membership communities using mobile and voice applications to provide infrastructure for events, media distribution, messaging and ML-based prospecting.
Earlier, he was on launch teams for Sony PlayStation and Sega Dreamcast, each running business development.
Stephen has a BA in Computer Science from UCSD and an MBA from UCLA.
Stephen holds the belief that community building, the act and practice of bringing people with shared interests together into safe, curated environments under the direction of a worthy leaders is essential to human growth and survival.
Stephen has a crazy wife, Amra Tareen, and two normal, teenage boys.


Stephen Ackroyd is Founder and CEO of TouchAdventures.com, a mobile development studio, building companies.
Stephen is Co-Founder of DirectSalesMobile.com, the leading mobile applications provider for the 6 million salespeople and the 36 million customers in the direct selling industry.
Stephen is Co-Founder of Koncentra.io, a private social network platform for building and curating membership communities using mobile and voice applications to provide infrastructure for events, media distribution, messaging and ML-based prospecting.
Earlier, he was on launch teams for Sony PlayStation and Sega Dreamcast, each running business development.
Stephen has a BA in Computer Science from UCSD and an MBA from UCLA.
Stephen holds the belief that community building, the act and practice of bringing people with shared interests together into safe, curated environments under the direction of a worthy leaders is essential to human growth and survival.
Stephen has a crazy wife, Amra Tareen, and two normal, teenage boys.
Description
In this talk, a three-year decentralized community veteran will make the case that the time is right for decentralized media as a market force in the technology landscape of Silicon Valley social media.
What will You learn?
• Learn about the frontiers of a brave new movement
• Find inspiration for your calling
• Enjoy some decentralized news and make better decisions


Three-year decentralized technology ecosystem veteran with a background in software engineering and mindfulness as well as advanced states of consciousness at the Transformative Technology Conference in Silicon Valley. Reach out to me on Facebook at http://facebook.com/josh.e.stroud
Videos from the summit:


Three-year decentralized technology ecosystem veteran with a background in software engineering and mindfulness as well as advanced states of consciousness at the Transformative Technology Conference in Silicon Valley. Reach out to me on Facebook at http://facebook.com/josh.e.stroud
Videos from the summit:
What will YOU learn?
This is a 5 minute version of a 1 hour talk that covers fundamentals and brief history of BFT consensus and paves the way for new and improved BFT style consensus protocols. The focus of this talk is educational (as opposed to promotional) and putting blockchain consensus in context of classical consensus.


Peter is a cute developer among other things


Peter is a cute developer among other things
Description
vTaiwan is a an experiment in Taiwan to build a consultation process for the past 5 years, and it has affected more than 26 regulatory reforms. In this share I will describe how vTaiwan came about, how it works, and the people (nobodies) behind.


Shuyang Lin is co-founder and re:architect of PDIS.tw, working to prototype the future of democracy. She combines her passion and skills in interaction design and HCI (Human Computer Interaction) and her computer science background to rethink the relationship between the government and civil society. Her interested includes areas where design overlaps with ethics, policy making and artificial intelligence.


Shuyang Lin is co-founder and re:architect of PDIS.tw, working to prototype the future of democracy. She combines her passion and skills in interaction design and HCI (Human Computer Interaction) and her computer science background to rethink the relationship between the government and civil society. Her interested includes areas where design overlaps with ethics, policy making and artificial intelligence.
A p2p web means everyone is their own server -- but what if they were their own Google too? Turns out, your browser can do more than just publish. It can search, and even query the Web for the data which can drive entire applications.
What will You learn?
You will learn about how a Web crawler that's embedded in the browser can be used to drive a personal search engine as well as many kinds of non-search applications.


Paul is the co-creator of the Beaker browser and an active contributor to the Dat protocol. Previously Paul helped found the Secure Scuttlebutt project, and has a history of working at small Web development agencies. He's here to talk about peer-to-peer computing and how the Web can become a live environment.
Videos from the summit:


Paul is the co-creator of the Beaker browser and an active contributor to the Dat protocol. Previously Paul helped found the Secure Scuttlebutt project, and has a history of working at small Web development agencies. He's here to talk about peer-to-peer computing and how the Web can become a live environment.
Videos from the summit:
Listeners will consider the ideas image graphs. Like knowledge graphs, images and their metadata can be represented as nodes and edges in a graph made up of linked data URI's. The data can then be decoupled - while remaining linked to the image. Image data structured in this way not only facilitates access to the images through a variety of decentralized techniques and processes including Solid Pods, and added value through blockchain techniques but it can preserve provenance, context, intention and copyright intentions for the image maker.


Margaret Warren is an artist and technologist. She is the creator of the ImageSnippets, a system for describing images using linked data, semantic web and knowledge representation techniques.
As an artist, Margaret creates works in 2D and 3D and installation pieces in multiple styles and mediums and has been actively involved in the arts since she was a child. She has been associated with numerous galleries in Northwest Florida and was a studio artist at First City Art Center in Pensacola, Florida for over 3 years and a program director and on the board of the Arts & Design Society in Fort Walton Beach for over 4 years. Her work has been shown and sold internationally and commissioned by clients.
She is also a co-founding member of a collaborative art group called the Southeastern Art Players (SAP) that has been in existence for almost 10 years. Over the years, SAP has had many art ‘camps’, art parties and given many workshops and demonstrations of collaborative art ‘playing’. The work created by SAP is very different from any of the work that is created independently by any one member of the group and this has been one of the most rewarding realizations of the SAP experience. The SAP work has won awards, been purchased into the prestigious Cinco Banderas collection in Pensacola, Florida, used for an academic book cover and sold into collections all over the world.
Videos from the summit:


Margaret Warren is an artist and technologist. She is the creator of the ImageSnippets, a system for describing images using linked data, semantic web and knowledge representation techniques.
As an artist, Margaret creates works in 2D and 3D and installation pieces in multiple styles and mediums and has been actively involved in the arts since she was a child. She has been associated with numerous galleries in Northwest Florida and was a studio artist at First City Art Center in Pensacola, Florida for over 3 years and a program director and on the board of the Arts & Design Society in Fort Walton Beach for over 4 years. Her work has been shown and sold internationally and commissioned by clients.
She is also a co-founding member of a collaborative art group called the Southeastern Art Players (SAP) that has been in existence for almost 10 years. Over the years, SAP has had many art ‘camps’, art parties and given many workshops and demonstrations of collaborative art ‘playing’. The work created by SAP is very different from any of the work that is created independently by any one member of the group and this has been one of the most rewarding realizations of the SAP experience. The SAP work has won awards, been purchased into the prestigious Cinco Banderas collection in Pensacola, Florida, used for an academic book cover and sold into collections all over the world.
Videos from the summit:
Come hear the lessons that Feross has learned from starting and running a P2P open source project. He will try to condense as many lessons into the time slot as possible. This will be a whirlwind!
What will You learn?
Listeners will learn valuable takeaways for running dweb projects in a way that prioritizes helping as many users as possible. Learn what WebTorrent did right and wrong!
- https://speakerdeck.com/feross/what-i-learned-from-webtorrent


Feross is building WebTorrent , the first torrent client that works on the web in the browser. He is bringing P2P to the masses with accessible, WebRTC-based P2P protocols.
Videos from the summit:


Feross is building WebTorrent , the first torrent client that works on the web in the browser. He is bringing P2P to the masses with accessible, WebRTC-based P2P protocols.
Videos from the summit:
What will You learn?
Learn about the new features and projects in the wider IPFS community, how you can get involved in building an *InterPlanetary* network, and the exciting challenges and growth we see coming next.


Molly Mackinlay is the Project Lead for IPFS - the InterPlanetary File System. After spending 5 years at Google managing products like Native Client, Google Classroom, and mobile Search while participating in the wider IPFS community in "1% time" - she now spends her time identifying and coordinating action on the most important challenges in the IPFS ecosystem. Her responsibilities as Project Lead extend from yearly priority setting to cross-working group coordination, and everything in between.
Videos from the summit:


Molly Mackinlay is the Project Lead for IPFS - the InterPlanetary File System. After spending 5 years at Google managing products like Native Client, Google Classroom, and mobile Search while participating in the wider IPFS community in "1% time" - she now spends her time identifying and coordinating action on the most important challenges in the IPFS ecosystem. Her responsibilities as Project Lead extend from yearly priority setting to cross-working group coordination, and everything in between.
Videos from the summit:
Supremacy, in all it’s forms, is ultimately a narrative that we tell ourselves. It is these stories which determine who is valuable, who is authority, who can live and who must die. It was a story of supremacy that allowed Captain Cook(ed) to report to his superiors that the continent now known as ‘Australia’ was Terra Nullius aka uninhabited. He asserted that the people he did encounter were incapable of conceptualizing land ownership or governance. So continues one of the worlds most powerful stories-colonisation:ownership-slavery-murder-child abduction. This talk looks to explore the power and possibility of INTENT. What is possible and what limitations have we already created before coding even begins. What narratives are we imagining through P2P technology and what worlds are we creating? Is tech inherently a colonial space? How do we create tech that is not only decolonial but anti-colonial? While situated in one of the world's longest standing nightmare's how do we create tech that breeds Indigenous survival, resistance and renewal.
What will You learn?
- Start a conversation about importance of learning how the past effects our present
- Start a conversation around decolonisation in P2P
- Give some insight into needs of some Indigenous folks of the dweb
Relevant links


Laniyuk is an award winning queer Aboriginal poet born of a French mother and a Larrakia, Kungarrakan and Gurindji father. Her poetry and short memoir reflects the intersectionality of her cross cultural and queer identity. She contributed to the book Colouring the Rainbow: Blak Queer and Trans Perspectives. She is currently exploring the intersection of her poetry, decolonial theory and P2P technologies (poetic computation ala Taeyoon Choi) co-running workshops for queer people of color in Melbourne exploring accessibility and safety of P2P technologies. She has also run decolonial lectures and workshops for universities and in Aotearoa New Zealand at the first Scuttlebutt gathering.


Laniyuk is an award winning queer Aboriginal poet born of a French mother and a Larrakia, Kungarrakan and Gurindji father. Her poetry and short memoir reflects the intersectionality of her cross cultural and queer identity. She contributed to the book Colouring the Rainbow: Blak Queer and Trans Perspectives. She is currently exploring the intersection of her poetry, decolonial theory and P2P technologies (poetic computation ala Taeyoon Choi) co-running workshops for queer people of color in Melbourne exploring accessibility and safety of P2P technologies. She has also run decolonial lectures and workshops for universities and in Aotearoa New Zealand at the first Scuttlebutt gathering.
MaidSafe was founded by David Irvine in 2006 with the mission to improve privacy and security for everyone on the planet. The solution is the SAFE (Secure Access For Everyone) Network, the world’s first autonomous data network that prioritises the security and privacy of users’ data, managing all our information without human intervention.
The SAFE Network
We need an autonomous network - one that manages all our data and communications without any human intervention or intermediaries.
The simplest way to think about an autonomous data network is one that configures itself. All data on the Network is automatically split into chunks and encrypted (utilising self-encryption) before being uploaded and then stored at random locations selected by the Network alone. There's no need for an IT administrator. Instead, nodes are free to join the network anonymously around the world. Upon joining, each node is moved into and out of small groups at random by the Network, again with no human intervention. These Close Groups now work together and make decisions on behalf of the Network (such as where to store data, who has authority to access data etc.).
The SAFE Network is also self-optimising as it creates additional copies of popular data in order to ensure greater availability of popular data requests. This feature also enables SAFE websites to actually speed up as they receive more visitors - unlike today's web where sites slow down, or even crash, if they receive too many visitors. Should the network split for any reason, for example through loss of power, it will merge as power is restored, and it will correct faults, such as detecting corrupt data chunks and automatically replacing them with good copies as a result of the networks ongoing data integrity checks.
Our design approach has been inspired by the humble ant whose millions of years of evolution influenced the network’s design. Ant colonies exhibit complex and highly organised behaviour without a central authority based on a simple rule set whereby each ant fulfils different duties based on the needs of the colony. Nodes on the SAFE Network function in a similar manner carrying out different functions based on the types of messages they receive.
The ant colony shows us that this self-managing and self-organising behaviour is possible on a massive scale. Building a Network that doesn't require humans overseeing operations is necessary because humans at our worst get tired, emotional and make mistakes. Many data breaches are caused by human error and attackers rely on human interaction to carry out attacks. Human error has also played a significant part in problems with Silicon Valley’s best known companies. Not only are humans prone to mistakes, it also reminds us that we rely on service providers to get access to our accounts and our data. We do not really own our information - access to our own data can be removed at any time by the providers either mistakenly or at the request of others. This is what we're looking to change with the SAFE Network.
Security
The SAFE Network is one in which data cannot be deleted, changed, corrupted, and/or accessed without the data owner’s consent. This is possible because we are removing humans from the management of data so that storage locations are unknown to anyone but the network, whilst the user cannot be identified.
Any service where data is stored on servers, federated servers, owned storage locations, or on identifiable nodes, cannot ensure the security of data and brings us no closer to real unfettered ownership of our data. This also includes blockchain-based solutions.
Autonomous things are already starting to have a huge benefit across a number of industries and we are just scratching the surface in finding out how they can positively impact upon our relationship with our data. Rather than making data more secure, the human element unfortunately has the opposite effect and can lead to data loss, theft, inaccessibility and a fundamental lack of ownership.
A change for the better, for us all - this is what we're building with the SAFE Network.


Gabriel is a Software Engineer working with MaidSafe to decentralise the internet with the SAFE Network. He started becoming involved in the project as part of the community, actively contributing to the goal of having a free web, with real privacy, no surveillance, which helps humans to come closer and closer removing all types of borders between them encouraging cooperation. Empowering developers by removing the need of big companies which act as middleman between the applications and end users has also become one of his main ambitions in the last few years.
Videos from the summit:


As a software developer, Francis has been passionate about Decentralized Web technologies since 2012. Over the years, he has developed a keen expertise with regards to many projects (e.g. SAFE Network, Beaker Browser, Dat, Scuttlebutt, IPFS, etc.) that aim to provide open source platforms for building decentralized applications.


Nick Lambert, started his working life in project management roles with IBM, before a change in tack led him into senior marketing positions with a diverse range of companies. He has co-authored papers on decentralised networks, presented at several international conferences and holds an MSc in Marketing from Strathclyde University.
Videos from the summit:


Gabriel is a Software Engineer working with MaidSafe to decentralise the internet with the SAFE Network. He started becoming involved in the project as part of the community, actively contributing to the goal of having a free web, with real privacy, no surveillance, which helps humans to come closer and closer removing all types of borders between them encouraging cooperation. Empowering developers by removing the need of big companies which act as middleman between the applications and end users has also become one of his main ambitions in the last few years.
Videos from the summit:


As a software developer, Francis has been passionate about Decentralized Web technologies since 2012. Over the years, he has developed a keen expertise with regards to many projects (e.g. SAFE Network, Beaker Browser, Dat, Scuttlebutt, IPFS, etc.) that aim to provide open source platforms for building decentralized applications.


Nick Lambert, started his working life in project management roles with IBM, before a change in tack led him into senior marketing positions with a diverse range of companies. He has co-authored papers on decentralised networks, presented at several international conferences and holds an MSc in Marketing from Strathclyde University.
Videos from the summit:
Matrix is an open network and protocol for secure, decentralized, real-time communication.
Imagine a world where it is as simple to message or video call anyone as it is to send an email, where you can communicate without being forced to install the same app, where your data is secured by end-to-end encryption, where you can choose who hosts your communications, where you can easily share any kind of real-time data over the Internet: this is Matrix! Matrix is defined as an open standard with reference implementations of servers, clients and SDKs, providing the tools to build real-time communication applications and services which are not controlled by single corporations (like Facebook or Google), but by the users themselves.
Matrix can be used for:
-
decentralised group chat with fully distributed persistent chatrooms with no single points of control or failure;
-
WebRTC signaling as a web-friendly signalling transport for interoperable WebRTC calls;
-
Internet of Things use cases, by exchanging and persisting data between devices and services;
-
VR calling, messaging and collaboration, by providing an open universal communication layer;
... and anywhere else you need a common data fabric to link together fragmented silos of communication. Our focus is on simplicity, security, and supporting the fullest feature set.
Matrix’s initial inspiration and goal is to fix the problem of fragmented IP communications, but its real potential and ultimate mission is to be a generic messaging and data synchronisation system for the web - allowing people, services and devices to easily communicate with each other securely whilst maintaining full conversation history.
The Matrix.org Foundation is currently being incorporated as non-profit initiative in the UK. It acts as a neutral guardian of the Matrix spec, nurturing and growing Matrix for the benefit of the whole ecosystem. Matrix's original core team has been building custom VoIP and Messaging solutions for mobile network operators since 2006 with extensive experience in SIP and XMPP, and created Matrix to provide a simpler web-friendly alternative to the wider world.
Matrix's success depends on the wider community’s feedback and uptake: please come to Matrix.org and take a look at the Matrix spec, or come and talk to us at #matrix:matrix.org, or check out the code and run your own Matrix server!


Matthew Hodgson is technical co-founder of Matrix.org: a not-for-profit open source project focused on solving the problem of fragmentation in current Chat, VoIP and IoT technologies. By defining a new lightweight pragmatic open standard for federation/interoperability and releasing open source reference implementations, Matrix hopes to create a new ecosystem that makes open real-time-communication as universal and interoperable as email.
Matthew juggles Matrix with the roles of CEO and CTO of New Vector, the company behind Riot.im, the flagship collaboration app built on Matrix. Previously, as a technical lead at MX Telecom (acquired by Amdocs in 2010), Matthew designed & architected Amdocs’ next-generation Video/VoIP client and network infrastructure, and draws on his Internet background to rapidly deliver carrier-grade enhanced communication solutions to network operators. He has specialised in interactive video and telephony applications for over 16 years, including co-founding a digital marketing startup, and contracting roles at Accenture and the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory. He has a BA in Computer Science and Physics from the University of Cambridge, and has lectured on VoIP at Imperial College London.
Matthew believes in the virtues of open collaboration. We live in an era where we can benefit very easily from cross-industry inputs to foster innovation and we don't make enough out of it. He wants to change the world to give access to communication and privacy to everyone while keeping the user's experience at the heart of every new product and leaving everyone the choice of their provider.


Amandine is the co-founder of Matrix.org, a unique initiative aiming to democratise secure online communication and solve the problem of fragmentation in current Chat, VoIP and IoT technologies. Matrix hopes to create a new ecosystem that makes open real-time-communication as universal and interoperable as email, and brings the power back to the user on choosing who they trust with their data and how they want to communicate. It defines a new lightweight pragmatic open standard for federation/interoperability and releases open source reference implementations of the protocol. Amandine is also Head of Operation and Products for New Vector, the company behind Riot (https://riot.im), an open source, secure and interoperable collaboration tool built on Matrix. She previously set up and led product management for the Unified Communications line of business within Amdocs and has more than 10 years of experience in mobile services and telecommunications. Amandine has a degree in telecommunications engineering from Ecole Supérieure de Chimie, Physique et Electronique de Lyon as well as an EMBA from ESC Rennes.
Videos from the summit:


Matthew Hodgson is technical co-founder of Matrix.org: a not-for-profit open source project focused on solving the problem of fragmentation in current Chat, VoIP and IoT technologies. By defining a new lightweight pragmatic open standard for federation/interoperability and releasing open source reference implementations, Matrix hopes to create a new ecosystem that makes open real-time-communication as universal and interoperable as email.
Matthew juggles Matrix with the roles of CEO and CTO of New Vector, the company behind Riot.im, the flagship collaboration app built on Matrix. Previously, as a technical lead at MX Telecom (acquired by Amdocs in 2010), Matthew designed & architected Amdocs’ next-generation Video/VoIP client and network infrastructure, and draws on his Internet background to rapidly deliver carrier-grade enhanced communication solutions to network operators. He has specialised in interactive video and telephony applications for over 16 years, including co-founding a digital marketing startup, and contracting roles at Accenture and the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory. He has a BA in Computer Science and Physics from the University of Cambridge, and has lectured on VoIP at Imperial College London.
Matthew believes in the virtues of open collaboration. We live in an era where we can benefit very easily from cross-industry inputs to foster innovation and we don't make enough out of it. He wants to change the world to give access to communication and privacy to everyone while keeping the user's experience at the heart of every new product and leaving everyone the choice of their provider.


Amandine is the co-founder of Matrix.org, a unique initiative aiming to democratise secure online communication and solve the problem of fragmentation in current Chat, VoIP and IoT technologies. Matrix hopes to create a new ecosystem that makes open real-time-communication as universal and interoperable as email, and brings the power back to the user on choosing who they trust with their data and how they want to communicate. It defines a new lightweight pragmatic open standard for federation/interoperability and releases open source reference implementations of the protocol. Amandine is also Head of Operation and Products for New Vector, the company behind Riot (https://riot.im), an open source, secure and interoperable collaboration tool built on Matrix. She previously set up and led product management for the Unified Communications line of business within Amdocs and has more than 10 years of experience in mobile services and telecommunications. Amandine has a degree in telecommunications engineering from Ecole Supérieure de Chimie, Physique et Electronique de Lyon as well as an EMBA from ESC Rennes.
Videos from the summit:
The assets of a majority of the world's population are physically visible, but economically and politically invisible. This project estimates that 2.5 billion people have access to formal property rights. This formalization gives them access to the value of their properties whether in the form of credit or credentials. The other 5 billion have no access, and, thus cannot tap into the value of the land they manage, use, and own. Medici Ventures is using blockchain among other technologies to bring property ownership information to light and connect it to the global economy.
Making informal property records global, transparent, and resistant to corruption will make use of the decentralized and immutable properties of blockchain technology. Using Open Index Protocol (OIP), Medici Ventures is developing a data model for property rights information that works with OIP defining indexable metadata for any property-related content. The data model organizes property information into party, spatial unit, and tenure artifacts. Additionally, the model provides for endorsements, which allow for affirmations of claims. All information is supported with a source artifact that provides references to files stored in decentralized storage.


Chris Chryosostom is a senior software engineer at Medici Ventures on the DeSoto project. His experience developing software ranges from inventory management and finance applications to distributed supply chain systems. His current interest is making property rights visible by recording them on blockchain.
Videos from the summit:


Chris Chryosostom is a senior software engineer at Medici Ventures on the DeSoto project. His experience developing software ranges from inventory management and finance applications to distributed supply chain systems. His current interest is making property rights visible by recording them on blockchain.
Videos from the summit:
Meshstream demonstrates:
- Live video streaming over content addressable storage (IPFS)
- Sharing of multimedia content over a peer-to-peer social network (SSB)
- Mesh networking over long-range wireless links using open hardware (LibreRouter)
Each physical node consists of a LibreRouter + a Raspberry Pi, running software developed by Toronto Mesh that use IPFS and SSB. One node will stream video off of a Raspberry Pi camera, publishes to the private IPFS and SSB network formed by these devices, then other nodes can view the embedded player on the SSB timeline of the video publisher. The user experience is similar to streaming a YouTube video and sharing the link on your Facebook, then your friends discover that video via their social feed and view the live stream from the embedded player.
More details here: https://github.com/tomeshnet/meshstream/issues/1


Nicolás Pace is a member of AlterMundi A.C., a grassroots organization supporting rural underserved communities in their pursue for creating their own telecommunications infrastructure, their own piece of internet. In doing so, Nicolas has traveled to more than 15 countries, getting to know most of the community networks out there, and getting to understand the diversity and complexity of the matter. One of the latest actions he has been undertaking has been working together with REDES A.C., a grassroots organization from Mexico in supporting first nation communities. Within AlterMundi he has also been involved in the Decentralized Repository of Culture, a P2P project that tries to find a way around the digital culture distribution, involving everyone in the process: creators, curators, enthusiasts.
Videos from the summit:


Benedict Lau is an engineer who tells stories of technology practices that bring communities together. He studies distributed protocols and collective governance of digital infrastructures. When not "on email", he builds passable open source tools and facilitates activities about peer-to-peer local networks as a way to co-imagine a future equitable web. He is a member of the Hypha Worker Co-operative and a core contributor at Toronto Mesh.
Videos from the summit:


Nicolás Pace is a member of AlterMundi A.C., a grassroots organization supporting rural underserved communities in their pursue for creating their own telecommunications infrastructure, their own piece of internet. In doing so, Nicolas has traveled to more than 15 countries, getting to know most of the community networks out there, and getting to understand the diversity and complexity of the matter. One of the latest actions he has been undertaking has been working together with REDES A.C., a grassroots organization from Mexico in supporting first nation communities. Within AlterMundi he has also been involved in the Decentralized Repository of Culture, a P2P project that tries to find a way around the digital culture distribution, involving everyone in the process: creators, curators, enthusiasts.
Videos from the summit:


Benedict Lau is an engineer who tells stories of technology practices that bring communities together. He studies distributed protocols and collective governance of digital infrastructures. When not "on email", he builds passable open source tools and facilitates activities about peer-to-peer local networks as a way to co-imagine a future equitable web. He is a member of the Hypha Worker Co-operative and a core contributor at Toronto Mesh.
Videos from the summit:
MetaMask is a bridge that allows you to visit the distributed web of tomorrow in your browser today. It allows you to run Ethereum dApps right in your browser without running a full Ethereum node.
MetaMask includes a secure identity vault, providing a user interface to manage your identities on different sites and sign blockchain transactions.
You can install the MetaMask add-on in Chrome, Firefox, Opera, and the new Brave browser. If you’re a developer, you can start developing with MetaMask today.
Our mission is to make Ethereum as easy to use for as many people as possible.


try make future less bad via computers + humans + cryptography
Videos from the summit:


try make future less bad via computers + humans + cryptography
Videos from the summit:
Description
The Decentralized Web is a grand concept spanning many different disciplines, and sometimes it's difficult to communicate to others what it is, why it's important, and what's being done. Come join us to build a collaborative mindmap of the projects and topics being discussed at DWebCamp, and add your own voice to help explain the lay of the land.
Hopes & dreams
I hope that with the participation of all the great minds at DWebCamp, we can build a collection of voices speaking about what the decentralized web is about, and why it's important. The final product of this project will be a website that presents this information spatially as both a 2d site and an immersive 3D/VR "memory palace" experience. My dream is that this experience can then live on across a number of decentralized platforms as a snapshot of the thoughts and concerns of the Decentralized Web community at this point in time.
Participation
People of all ages are welcome! We'll have a number of VR headsets to use for the full immersive experience. If you bring a laptop or smartphone, you can join in from there as well!
Why participate
By participating in this project, you'll get to add your voice to a digital tapestry which documents the current state of the decentralized web, and capture all your thoughts and concerns and hopes and dreams for the future of the web. After the event, this project will be published on multiple decentralized content platforms, as well as uploaded to the Internet Archive.
Session rundown
Flexible schedule and location
Relevant Links
https://i.imgur.com/yiWsXwS.png
Contact
James Baicoianu


James spends most of his time making the web do things it was never intended for. A professional web developer, search engineer, and amateur game developer for 20 years, he's finally found a job which lets him combine the three, building virtual worlds for JanusVR.
Currently, he's working on pushing the boundaries of what browsers are expected to do by combining WebVR, WASM, emulation, and photogrammetry to build worlds which seamlessly blend real, historical, and virtual realities into one.


James spends most of his time making the web do things it was never intended for. A professional web developer, search engineer, and amateur game developer for 20 years, he's finally found a job which lets him combine the three, building virtual worlds for JanusVR.
Currently, he's working on pushing the boundaries of what browsers are expected to do by combining WebVR, WASM, emulation, and photogrammetry to build worlds which seamlessly blend real, historical, and virtual realities into one.
Description
The decentralized web is nothing without decentralized storage. That being said, developers and users of the decentralized web are often then burdened with deciding which decentralized storage provider(s) they should work with. Well, in decentralized fashion, the likely answer is not one single provider or even a predetermined set of providers, but rather ANY provider. The decentralized web will be powered by multiple transport layers, and that decision should be left up to the user.
The Safaris and Chromes of the world were built for and currently dominate the centralized web. These centralized apps, however, yield total autonomy of how and where data is stored and retrieved to developers instead of users. The decentralized web, however, must adopt browsers and apps that return this control back to the user. Therefore, developers must be given tools and standards that enable the development of apps that direct the transport (i.e. storage and retrieval) of data without being able to control this data.
I believe this must be achieved through development of a multiple transport layer that has open and transparent standards. The basic concept underlying this idea is already present and being demonstrated in the Internet Archive dweb.archive.org internals. At Wolk we implemented the Internet Archive's transport layer API so that we could be included and incorporated into it's multi-transport vision.
We would like to share our learnings in wiring Wolk's decentralized blockchain to the Internet Archive's Multiple Transports Layer, to see how we can extend this important idea with other active participants (multiple browser/extension devs, decentralized storage providers, and application devs)
Hopes & dreams
I hope that choice architects (including us) can incorporate the best solutions we have on this puzzle
Participation
Designers of decentralized web + storage systems. This is is not kid friendly
Why participate?
Anyone who wants to reduce hateful/offensive/violent/false ... content while preserving true digital freedom
Session rundown
Moderators can frame the problem [5mins], 5 mins per group with a proposal + 20-30mins discussion
Contact
Sourabh Niyogi
Rodney Witcher


I have been leading Wolk protocol development for the decentralized web since 2017. Over the last 20 years, I cofounded and ran mobile and social advertising businesses CrossChannel and Social Media Networks and did computational cognitive science, linguistics and machine vision research at MIT in the 90s and early 2000s. I live with a wife, 2 kids and 2 dogs in Burlingame, California.


Over the past two years, Rodney Witcher has worked at Wolk focusing on designing and building a protocol that will enable a world where users wrest control of their data away from the big corporations and regain autonomy over their online presence and activity. Rodney's background lies in building large scale applications, honing his skills as an engineer, product designer and dot connector most recently as a co-founder of CrossChannel, a mobile and social advertising company, and previously at a number of companies as a software engineer. Rodney lives in the Bay Area and enjoys spending quality time with his wife Courtney and son Shaw.
Videos from the summit:


I have been leading Wolk protocol development for the decentralized web since 2017. Over the last 20 years, I cofounded and ran mobile and social advertising businesses CrossChannel and Social Media Networks and did computational cognitive science, linguistics and machine vision research at MIT in the 90s and early 2000s. I live with a wife, 2 kids and 2 dogs in Burlingame, California.


Over the past two years, Rodney Witcher has worked at Wolk focusing on designing and building a protocol that will enable a world where users wrest control of their data away from the big corporations and regain autonomy over their online presence and activity. Rodney's background lies in building large scale applications, honing his skills as an engineer, product designer and dot connector most recently as a co-founder of CrossChannel, a mobile and social advertising company, and previously at a number of companies as a software engineer. Rodney lives in the Bay Area and enjoys spending quality time with his wife Courtney and son Shaw.
Videos from the summit:
Namecoin is the first naming system that is simultaneously global (everyone gets the same result for the same lookup), decentralized (no central party decides which names map to which values), and human-meaningful (names aren’t just a hash or something similarly opaque to humans). Previous naming systems such as the DNS, .onion, and .i2p are unable to simultaneously achieve all 3 of these properties.
Namecoin achieves this by recognizing that Bitcoin’s achievement of a decentralized consensus (via a Nakamoto blockchain) has applications outside of the financial system, including naming. Namecoin was the first fork of Bitcoin (we forked Bitcoin before it was cool), and extends Bitcoin’s blockchain validation rules to allow coins to represent human-readable names with arbitrary values attached. The Namecoin blockchain validation rules enforce that all transactions in the blockchain honor uniqueness of names, and that only the owner of a name can update its value. Namecoin’s threat model is very similar to that of Bitcoin: like Bitcoin, Namecoin is mined via Hashcash-SHA256D proof-of-work, and inclusion in the blockchain of a transaction (even if checked via a lightweight client) implies that miners have verified the transaction’s correctness.
Namecoin’s current and proposed use cases include a more censorship-resistant and privacy-respecting alternative to the DNS, a decentralized public key infrastructure for protocols like TLS, OpenPGP, and OTR, a DNS-like functionality for darknet protocols such as Tor onion services, I2P, and Freenet, and single sign-on for website users.
Namecoin has been endorsed by WikiLeaks, has been favorably mentioned in a technical report by ICANN, is funded by NLnet Foundation’s Internet Hardening Fund using funding originating from the Netherlands Ministry of Economic Affairs, and (for a 48-hour period in 2017) had higher hashrate than Bitcoin. Namecoin has an international development team, and is always looking for new contributors. We’d also love to collaborate with your project.
More information is available at https://www.namecoin.org/


Jeremy is Lead Application Engineer and Community Organizer of Namecoin, a naming system (currently used for DNS and identities) which backs authenticity of records with the same algorithms and code used to back financial transactions in Bitcoin. Jeremy wears many hats at Namecoin but spends much of his time working on applications which enhance online privacy.
Videos from the summit:


Jeremy is Lead Application Engineer and Community Organizer of Namecoin, a naming system (currently used for DNS and identities) which backs authenticity of records with the same algorithms and code used to back financial transactions in Bitcoin. Jeremy wears many hats at Namecoin but spends much of his time working on applications which enhance online privacy.
Videos from the summit:
Ninja
the anonymous exchange of anything
The evolution of trade and exchanges is one of the most significant stories in the journey of mankind. Here’s our addition to the newest chapter - a decentralized platform that allows ninjas (its users) to discover different exchanges built by other ninjas (its developers), and to trade crypto assets on these exchanges directly with each other, anonymously, and trustlessly.
Developers, think of Ninja as the modern day version of the App Store. Instead of developing apps, you’ll build decentralized exchanges for crypto assets. Keep it free, use your own in-exchange tokens, or charge transaction fees.
Users, Ninja is the modern day version of Craigslist. Ninja users will be able to trade different crypto assets with one another anonymously and trustlessly — with no central authority or middlemen.
-
Ninja is anonymous. Ninja uses public/private keypair for authentication. No download required. You can use Ninja with complete privacy.
-
Ninja is peer-to-peer. Ninja doesn’t require middlemen, which means no fees, no bureaucracy, and no restriction.
-
Ninja is trustless. Agreements programmed as smart contracts replace reluctant trust with cryptographic proof. Anonymous users from anywhere in the world can now enter in an agreement without the need for a trusted third party.
-
Ninja is permissionless. Ninja allows anyone to create an address and begin interacting with other people on the Ninja network. Anyone can build and launch exchanges.
-
Ninja is decentralized. Designed with the new decentralized Internet primitives Ethereum (code) and IPFS (storage), Ninja aims to provide a product without a single point of failure, that also ensures users can safely own their data.
-
Ninja is transparent. The entire development of Ninja is open-sourced on Github.
The first two Exchanges are now live.
Prediction Exchange allows parties to directly bet against each other without going through a central authority or bookmaker. The management of bets and the settlement of winnings are carried out collectively by the blockchain network, protecting users from any single point of failure. Prediction Exchange has unique properties that allow exciting use cases, previously impossible under any traditional betting mechanism
Read more about Prediction Exchange here.
Cash Exchange is a decentralized, anonymous, peer to peer (P2P) cryptocurrency exchange, which allows users from all over the world to buy and sell cryptocurrencies. You don’t need a bank account to use Ninja. This means that in addition to benefiting users that prefer not to leave a paper trail, over 2 billion unbanked people in the world, who are currently restricted when it comes to using traditional platforms will now be able to join the movement towards the decentralized future of money.
Read more about Cash Exchange here.
Coin Exchange and Goods Exchange will be introduced in Q3 2018.


Duy is the founder of Ninja, an anonymous peer-to-peer exchange, more casually known as the crypto version of Craigslist. Prior to that, Duy was the founder of Autonomous, which creates smart office products based on AI and Robotics technologies.
Offline, Duy lives in NYC and enjoys boxing, cycling, and bagels.
Videos from the summit:


Duy is the founder of Ninja, an anonymous peer-to-peer exchange, more casually known as the crypto version of Craigslist. Prior to that, Duy was the founder of Autonomous, which creates smart office products based on AI and Robotics technologies.
Offline, Duy lives in NYC and enjoys boxing, cycling, and bagels.
Videos from the summit:
What is Ocean Protocol?
Ocean Protocol is an ecosystem for sharing data and associated services. It provides a tokenized service layer that exposes data, storage, compute and algorithms for consumption with a set of deterministic proofs on availability and integrity that serve as verifiable service agreements. There is staking on services to signal quality, reputation and ward against Sybil Attacks.
Ocean helps to unlock data, particularly for AI. It is designed for scale and uses blockchain technology that allows data to be shared and sold in a safe, secure and transparent manner.
How Ocean Protocol Works
The Ocean Protocol is an ecosystem composed of data assets and services, where assets are represented by data and algorithms, and services are represented by integration, processing and persistence mechanisms. Ocean Protocol facilitates discovery by storing and promoting metadata, linking assets and services, and provides a licensing framework that has toolsets for pricing.
A multitude of data marketplaces can hook into Ocean Protocol to provide “last mile” services to connect data providers and consumers. Ocean Protocol is designed so that data owners cannot be locked-in to any single marketplace. The data owner controls each dataset.


Dr. Dimitri De Jonghe is a cross-domain protocol researcher. After finishing his PhD on micro-electronics and machine learning, he co-founded a series of blockchain startups: ascribe [power to creators] and BigchainDB [a blockchain database], and Ocean Protocol [a public network for data and AI marketplaces]. Currently, Dimitri is heading research at Ocean Protocol on public intelligence networks.
Videos from the summit:


Dr. Dimitri De Jonghe is a cross-domain protocol researcher. After finishing his PhD on micro-electronics and machine learning, he co-founded a series of blockchain startups: ascribe [power to creators] and BigchainDB [a blockchain database], and Ocean Protocol [a public network for data and AI marketplaces]. Currently, Dimitri is heading research at Ocean Protocol on public intelligence networks.
Videos from the summit:
OmiseGO is a subsidiary of Omise, a leading online payment gateway service provider operating in Southeast Asia. The OmiseGO blockchain team has been involved in the Ethereum community from its very beginning--starting in 2015, Omise Blockchain Lab began research work focusing primarily on scalability. At this time, OmiseGO is focusing on building Plasma architecture as a scalability solution for the Ethereum ecosystem.
OmiseGO is building public financial infrastructure to securely process high transaction volume, rooted to the Ethereum blockchain, including:
-
OMG Network, a blockchain-based financial network powered by Plasma architecture and secured with Proof-of-Stake (PoS) consensus with the OMG token
-
Decentralized exchange mechanism, built directly into the OMG blockchain to facilitate currency-agnostic transactions
-
eWallet SDK, open source tools that will allow anyone to easily build a wallet or application to integrate with the OMG Network
For greater detail on these features, please refer to our latest roadmap update.
At OmiseGO, we are building a currency-agnostic financial platform for all - banked and unbanked users alike. We are committed to decentralizing value transfer to mitigate the opportunity for fraud, manipulation, centralized friction and enable access to users that otherwise may be excluded from closed financial systems.
The OMG Network will be built using Plasma chain architecture; originally conceived by Joseph Poon (creator of Lightning Network) and Vitalik Buterin (creator of Ethereum), that allows “child” blockchains to interact with “root” blockchains, to enable scalability. We are excited to be conducting in-depth research on design and incentives within a Plasma ecosystem, and will be implementing Plasma to support high transaction volume on the OMG Network. The OMG Network will be secured through PoS consensus by having OMG token holders stake their tokens to validate transactions on Plasma.
By leveraging our decentralized exchange mechanism, all OMG Network users will have the flexibility to store and transact with their preferred currency. Accessible by any digital wallet or account, users will no longer require permission from a banking system or government on which assets they are allowed to hold and which financial services they can use.
Lastly, to enable usage of the OMG Network, we are building a public and free eWallet SDK. Individual consumers and companies can build on top of the SDK to create a customized wallet through which they can cash-in/cash-out value to conduct transactions on the OMG Network. We believe this is a critical component to ensuring that both financially included and excluded users can easily access to decentralized financial platforms on Ethereum.


Eva is fascinated with human behavior and how it impacts economic activity and incentive systems. She supports strategy development and research at OmiseGO, to build accessible financial infrastructure based on the Ethereum blockchain, while ensuring that all necessary components exist to on-ramp diverse, global users into web3.
Videos from the summit:


Kasima has been developing software for decades. Most of that time has been spent helping startups deliver software to production. As Director of Engineering for Plasma, he's singularly focused on productionizing Plasma research to ship the OMG Network in a safe and responsible manner. Tooling, documentation, and repeatable deployment practices put a smile on his face.


Althea loves a good positive sum game. She helps to guide growth strategy at OmiseGO, a fintech company building the free and fully public OMG network for scalable, decentralized asset exchange secured by the Ethereum blockchain, with a special focus on incentive alignment across the crypto ecosystem.
Videos from the summit:


Eva is fascinated with human behavior and how it impacts economic activity and incentive systems. She supports strategy development and research at OmiseGO, to build accessible financial infrastructure based on the Ethereum blockchain, while ensuring that all necessary components exist to on-ramp diverse, global users into web3.
Videos from the summit:


Kasima has been developing software for decades. Most of that time has been spent helping startups deliver software to production. As Director of Engineering for Plasma, he's singularly focused on productionizing Plasma research to ship the OMG Network in a safe and responsible manner. Tooling, documentation, and repeatable deployment practices put a smile on his face.


Althea loves a good positive sum game. She helps to guide growth strategy at OmiseGO, a fintech company building the free and fully public OMG network for scalable, decentralized asset exchange secured by the Ethereum blockchain, with a special focus on incentive alignment across the crypto ecosystem.
Videos from the summit:
Description
This is a brainstorming session around an audacious question: can we build an open source and cooperatively-run alternative to proprietary cloud platforms? One that can provide end-users with guarantees of transparency, privacy and control? And is capable of Internet-scale resilience and growth so it can compete with the largest corporations?
OneCommons.org is a new project designing such a cloud platform. The goal of this session would be to explore participants' ideas about these concepts. Besides the technical challenges there are a complex web of social, legal, economic issues that require a broad range of skills and perspectives from participants. Questions like: what is the policy framework for user rights privacy? What is the criteria for choosing applications? What open source and open data licenses should be used? How to do you balance competing interests?
If there is time we could present OneCommons' vision and architecture as a starting point for discussion and later dive deeper into some more specific features we are exploring such as decentralized governance, platform-wide data sharing, and participatory funding models.
Hopes & dreams
- Develop shared understandings of the needs and wants of potential users and developers.
- Find developers of open source applications that could be candidates for running on the OneCommons platform.
- Connect participants with shared goals and passions around this topic.
Participation
Anyone can participate.
Why participate
If you chose to come to this camp you probably are concerned about centralization of the web around a few large corporations. This is a new approach to providing a viable alternative that likely touches on an interest of yours.
Session rundown
About 2 hours.
Relevant links
https://onecommons.github.io/preview
Contact
Adam Souzis


Adam is founder of OneCommmons.org. He has long had an interest in decentralized and participatory systems: In 2003 he released Rhizome, the first open source semantic wiki; he cofounded Kinecta, a leading provider of syndication and aggregation solutions; and built Glam/Mode Media's OpenSocial-based distributed apps platform.
Adam likes to balance his research projects with a practical business side. He has launched a variety of companies, including a street fashion social network (stylemob.com), a cannabis tech platform (Octavia Wellness), one in ad-tech (Graphite) and one blocking ads (FairBlocker).
He is thrilled to finally bring these two sides together with OneCommons: a decentralized, non-proprietary platform with a viable business plan.


Adam is founder of OneCommmons.org. He has long had an interest in decentralized and participatory systems: In 2003 he released Rhizome, the first open source semantic wiki; he cofounded Kinecta, a leading provider of syndication and aggregation solutions; and built Glam/Mode Media's OpenSocial-based distributed apps platform.
Adam likes to balance his research projects with a practical business side. He has launched a variety of companies, including a street fashion social network (stylemob.com), a cannabis tech platform (Octavia Wellness), one in ad-tech (Graphite) and one blocking ads (FairBlocker).
He is thrilled to finally bring these two sides together with OneCommons: a decentralized, non-proprietary platform with a viable business plan.
Openlibrary.org is the world's largest open-source, non-profit, digital public library program with 3M+ accessible ebooks and a wiki-editable catalog of metadata spanning 25M editions and 7M authors.
Founded in 2006 by Aaron Swartz, Open Library’s mission began as an effort to ensure the existence of a web page for every published book. The Internet Archive has continued this mission by digitizing as many of these books as possible to create a universal library, built by and for the World’s readers.
At a Glance
-
~300k books logged
-
~1M borrowable modern books
-
~2M public domain & unrestricted books
-
~2M registered readers
Follow Us
-
@openlibrary on twitter
Features
-
All of our books have a happy robot which can read aloud to you!
-
Full Text Search across the contents of 3M+ books
-
Select from hundreds of thousands of modern books to borrow for up to 2 weeks
-
Browse or create themed Reading Lists
-
Keep a Reading Log
-
Star ratings
Want to help?
Open Library is Open Source & Community-Powered
-
Check Open Library’s footer for developer info on APIs + Data Dumps
-
10 active volunteers spanning 5+ countries
-
Designers, Librarians, and Engineers welcome


(@mekarpeles on GitHub) is a software engineer and citizen of the world dedicated to curating a living map of the universe's knowledge. His philosophies on open access and semantic knowledge systems can be explored at https://michaelkarpeles.com.


(@mekarpeles on GitHub) is a software engineer and citizen of the world dedicated to curating a living map of the universe's knowledge. His philosophies on open access and semantic knowledge systems can be explored at https://michaelkarpeles.com.
OpenTimestamps is open-source, trust-minimized, cryptographic timestamping infrastructure that primarily (but not exclusively) uses the Bitcoin blockchain.
In short, what this means is OpenTimestamps can prove data existed in the past, rather than being recently created in the present. Since adversaries don't have time machines, that can often prove rule out certain kinds of attacks. For instance, a timestamp on a digital signature can prove that the signature was created prior to the secret key being stolen. Or a timestamp on an archived video of a speech could prove that the video was created prior to anyone realising how important it would be. This doesn't by itself guarantee that the data is real - maybe someone had a reason to fake the video five years ago? -but it's often good evidence that it is.


Videos from the summit:


Videos from the summit:
Ouinet is a Free/Open Source technology which allows web content to be served with the help of an entire network of cooperating nodes using peer-to-peer routing and distributed caching of responses. This helps mitigate the Web's characteristic single point of failure due to a client application not being able to connect to a particular server.
The typical Ouinet client node setup consists of a web browser or other application using a special HTTP proxy or API provided by a dedicated program or library on the local machine. When the client gets a request for content, it attempts to retrieve the resource using several mechanisms. It tries to fetch the page from a distributed cache (like IPFS), and if not available, it contacts a trusted injector server over a peer-to-peer routing system (like I2P) and asks it to fetch the page and store it in the distributed cache.
Future accesses by client nodes to popular content inserted in distributed storage shall benefit from an increased redundancy and locality, which translates in increased availability in the face of connectivity problems, increased transfer speeds in case or poor upstream links, and reduced bandwidth costs when access providers charge more for external or international traffic. Content injection is also designed in a way which allows for content re-introduction and seeding on extreme cases of total connectivity loss (e.g. natural disasters).
The Ouinet library is a core technology that can be used by any application to benefit from these advantages. Ouinet integration provides any content creator the opportunity to use cooperative networking and storage for the delivery of their content to users around the world.


Ivan Vilata-i-Balaguer is a member of eQualitie, a company that develops open and reusable systems with a focus on privacy, online security, and information management. He works on the development of technologies enabling unfettered access to the World Wide Web for netizens operating in some of the most restrictive Internet environments.
Videos from the summit:


Ivan Vilata-i-Balaguer is a member of eQualitie, a company that develops open and reusable systems with a focus on privacy, online security, and information management. He works on the development of technologies enabling unfettered access to the World Wide Web for netizens operating in some of the most restrictive Internet environments.
Videos from the summit:
Description
P2P, in its simplest meaning, means two people forming a direct connection to share what's important to them-- just like having a crush, or falling in love. How, then, can we make decentralized tech that is cute, nervous, and full of desire--that makes people crush on each other, helps them fall for one another? What are the p2p apps that will be shared like used copies of a Le Guin novel, or left meaningfully on the screen when you invite someone over for dinner? How can we write code to be cherished like a mixtape?
This workshop will be a combination of nostalgia and future-building. We will discuss the history of our crushes, how they developed, and when technology played a crucial part. Then we will write up visions for a lovely future, using p2p apps that were built to be objects of affection.
Hopes & dreams
I hope people see a different approach to designing new technology in this space--tech that fits in the emotional lineage of mixtapes, myspace, and poetry. Whether it helps spark your new project, or gives an introduction to some of the work already being made, the main goal is to make the decentralized world more inviting, to go beyond tech specs and demos to the small beautiful things that hit you in the chest.
Participation
Everyone is welcome and it is kid friendly. The main focus of the workshop is love, memory, and desire---and so anyone who has experienced these three things and wants to discuss them would be a good fit. The workshop is a mix of discussion and some exploration of dat zines/dat apps. A computer would help with this, but I feel the workshop is still of interest without one.
If you bring a computer, it could also be good to bring a favorite song in mp3 format. One that fills you with feeling, whatever that means for you.
Why participate
It is of interest to those who want to cherish the future, and who want to explore heartfelt approaches to code. It is through this under-discussed aspect of tech that we can create a more diverse and emotionally rich space. There'll be a focus on Dat and Beaker Browser, so there is the bonus of exploring and experimenting with both of these mediums.
Session rundown
3 hours overall, with a break in the middle. This can all happen in the same space.
Relevant links
- https://coolguy.website/projects/dat-zine-library/index.html
- https://invidio.us/watch?v=X_BQ9m0kOeo
Contact
Zach Mandeville


Zach is a writer, barber, tarologist and solarpunk currently living in New Zealand. He is the webmaster for coolguy.website, an active butt on scuttlebutt, and an active zinester within the dat community. He codes with his heart on his sleeve. You can read more about him at dat://coolguy.website/about-me/


Zach is a writer, barber, tarologist and solarpunk currently living in New Zealand. He is the webmaster for coolguy.website, an active butt on scuttlebutt, and an active zinester within the dat community. He codes with his heart on his sleeve. You can read more about him at dat://coolguy.website/about-me/
P2P Models
Decentralized Blockchain-based Organizations for Bootstrapping the Collaborative Economy
P2P Models is a large research project to build Blockchain-powered organizations which are decentralized, democratic and distribute their profits, in order to boost a new type of Collaborative Economy (tweet thread). The project has three legs:
-
Infrastructure: Provide a software framework to build decentralized infrastructure for Collaborative Economy organizations that do not depend on central authorities.
-
Governance: Enable democratic-by-design models of governance for communities, whose rules are, at least partially, encoded in the software to ensure higher levels of equality.
-
Economy: Enable value distribution models which are interoperable across organizations, improving the economic sustainability of both contributors and organizations.
The Collaborative Economy is rapidly expanding, but it is dominated by centralized web platforms which hold user data and concentrate all decision-making power and profits.
P2P Models is a 1.5M€ EU-funded interdisciplinary research effort for bootstrapping the emergence of a new generation of self-governed and more economically sustainable peer-to-peer Collaborative Economy communities. It is a 5-year project (2017-2022) which will be based in the Universidad Complutense de Madrid (Spain), with Principal Investigator and advisors from the Berkman Klein Center (Harvard University).
The project will contribute to the Blockchain ecosystem, from a commons-oriented approach (not focused on finance). It will build software modules, grounded on social theory, for the easy building of Decentralized Autonomous Organizations that aim to support collaborative communities. You may get a deeper insight of the project in this 5-page project summary.


Antonio Tenorio-Fornés is a free software developer and researcher. He holds a 5 years CS/Eng degree and a Master in Research in Computer Science. He is currently developing his PhD at the Universidad Complutense de Madrid, funded by an institutional scholarship, and working for the awesome P2P Models project. His research aims to provide decentralized governance tools for Commons-Based Peer Production communities. In the past, he was a core part of the technical team of the P2Pvalue European research project. He has been visiting researcher at the University of Surrey, the University of Westminster and Kozminski University. His experience developing decentralized web tools includes Teem, SwellRT and Decentralized.science, using technologies such as Blockchain and IPFS. Recent related work also include the proposal a framework for decentralized applications using IPFS and Blockchain and the design and development of decentralized.science, a project that aims to disintermediate and open scientific publication.
Videos from the summit:


Antonio Tenorio-Fornés is a free software developer and researcher. He holds a 5 years CS/Eng degree and a Master in Research in Computer Science. He is currently developing his PhD at the Universidad Complutense de Madrid, funded by an institutional scholarship, and working for the awesome P2P Models project. His research aims to provide decentralized governance tools for Commons-Based Peer Production communities. In the past, he was a core part of the technical team of the P2Pvalue European research project. He has been visiting researcher at the University of Surrey, the University of Westminster and Kozminski University. His experience developing decentralized web tools includes Teem, SwellRT and Decentralized.science, using technologies such as Blockchain and IPFS. Recent related work also include the proposal a framework for decentralized applications using IPFS and Blockchain and the design and development of decentralized.science, a project that aims to disintermediate and open scientific publication.
Videos from the summit:
People's Open Network works with communities to build and operate wireless networks. We provide open source software, off-the-shelf hardware, and educational materials used to host workshops, train operators, and install nodes. Our prototype consists of over 40 nodes in the Bay Area sharing paid internet subscriptions with unconnected neighbors. We’re currently working on building access to gigabits of donated bandwidth (via Internet Archive and Paxio) and connecting a homeless camp in Berkeley
Our solution is designed for a city like Oakland, a community with a widening class and digital divide. Nearly a quarter of households here have no computer access at home, and more than a fifth of homes lack internet access at home despite its close proximity to Silicon Valley.
The People’s Open Network is primarily targeted at three types of people:
1) those who want to share a single internet connection with their neighbors;
2) those who cannot afford the monthly subscription through a corporate internet service; and/or
3) those interested in learning how the internet works.
We can be replicated in a decentralized manner across urban environments with a socioeconomically diverse population of stakeholders — such as families, individuals, businesses, encampments, and community spaces. In addition to distributing access to the wider internet, our solution can lead to local mesh internets that are independent of ISPs.
We have begun to implement our network in the SF Bay Area, a densely-populated, hilly, coastal region. We use the area’s mixed elevation to our advantage to get line-of-sight between homes and buildings across long distances. Our target community and environment has not changed since our last submission.
Mai Ishikawa Sutton is a writer, digital commons activist, and freelance organizing consultant. She is a steward/community organizer with the People's Open Network, library assistant at the Oakland Public Library, and the Digital Commons Fellow with the Commons Network. Her writing focuses on intersections of human rights, solidarity economics, and digital commons. Formerly, she was the Community Engagement Manager at Shareable. Before that she was with the Electronic Frontier Foundation advocating for the public interest in international intellectual property policy.


Jenny Ryan is co-founder, community organizer & treasurer of both the Omni Commons and the People's Open Network. She works alongside organizations to build human and communications infrastructure. She connects grassroots communities and global initiatives rooted in the shared struggle to reclaim the commons, create public spheres through the cultivation of open spaces, and enable direct democracy through principles of federation and open source or Read/Write culture. Her past research includes an extensive ethnography of online social networking, the legal and ethical dimensions of problematic online content, and posthuman anthropological explorations of how the dead live on online.


Seth Ray is a People's Open Network volunteer && smooth (((node))) operator
Mai Ishikawa Sutton is a writer, digital commons activist, and freelance organizing consultant. She is a steward/community organizer with the People's Open Network, library assistant at the Oakland Public Library, and the Digital Commons Fellow with the Commons Network. Her writing focuses on intersections of human rights, solidarity economics, and digital commons. Formerly, she was the Community Engagement Manager at Shareable. Before that she was with the Electronic Frontier Foundation advocating for the public interest in international intellectual property policy.


Jenny Ryan is co-founder, community organizer & treasurer of both the Omni Commons and the People's Open Network. She works alongside organizations to build human and communications infrastructure. She connects grassroots communities and global initiatives rooted in the shared struggle to reclaim the commons, create public spheres through the cultivation of open spaces, and enable direct democracy through principles of federation and open source or Read/Write culture. Her past research includes an extensive ethnography of online social networking, the legal and ethical dimensions of problematic online content, and posthuman anthropological explorations of how the dead live on online.


Seth Ray is a People's Open Network volunteer && smooth (((node))) operator
Description
In the race to have the fastest and best models of tech in what we judge will make an impact on people’s lives, we often times find ourselves operating from a head space and not dropping into the rest of our bodies and even disregarding our emotions. On the other hand, one of the leading underlying causes for trauma and wounds for men in our world is the way that patriarchy denies boys and men their right to process and feel emotions.
In this session, facilitator cynthia and co-facilitator Nico will hold space for men to discuss what it means to be a man doing work in tech? What are the expectations that are projected on us on the field? How does the image of “the guy in tech” affect the behaviors of men in male dominated spaces? And how does male performance in turn impact women in the tech field?
We hope that after this session, a greater sense of balancing the masculine with the feminine will allow men to show in their whole capacities, and liberate themselves from expectations and need to perform the right kind of masculinity.
Session Rundown
This will be an intimate conversation that will run for around 75 minutes.
Participation
We hope to host 10 to 15 people. Participants are asked to come with an open heart and an open spirit and will be asked to be as open as they can and want to be with one another.


cynthia el khoury received her Reusi Dat Ton instructor certification from LoiKroh massage school in Chiang Mai in 2017. cynthia is an aikido practitioner, a somatic experiencing practitioner in training, and a traditional healing student of ancient Kemet. cynthia is working with APC as gender and women’s engagement coordinator for community networks.


Nicolás Pace is a member of AlterMundi A.C., a grassroots organization supporting rural underserved communities in their pursue for creating their own telecommunications infrastructure, their own piece of internet. In doing so, Nicolas has traveled to more than 15 countries, getting to know most of the community networks out there, and getting to understand the diversity and complexity of the matter. One of the latest actions he has been undertaking has been working together with REDES A.C., a grassroots organization from Mexico in supporting first nation communities. Within AlterMundi he has also been involved in the Decentralized Repository of Culture, a P2P project that tries to find a way around the digital culture distribution, involving everyone in the process: creators, curators, enthusiasts.
Videos from the summit:


cynthia el khoury received her Reusi Dat Ton instructor certification from LoiKroh massage school in Chiang Mai in 2017. cynthia is an aikido practitioner, a somatic experiencing practitioner in training, and a traditional healing student of ancient Kemet. cynthia is working with APC as gender and women’s engagement coordinator for community networks.


Nicolás Pace is a member of AlterMundi A.C., a grassroots organization supporting rural underserved communities in their pursue for creating their own telecommunications infrastructure, their own piece of internet. In doing so, Nicolas has traveled to more than 15 countries, getting to know most of the community networks out there, and getting to understand the diversity and complexity of the matter. One of the latest actions he has been undertaking has been working together with REDES A.C., a grassroots organization from Mexico in supporting first nation communities. Within AlterMundi he has also been involved in the Decentralized Repository of Culture, a P2P project that tries to find a way around the digital culture distribution, involving everyone in the process: creators, curators, enthusiasts.
Videos from the summit:
PLAN is a Community Operating System that allows people with few resources to conduct real-time logistical planning, and coordinate with high reliability, persistence, and privacy. Our project goals are for PLAN to incorporate the following design characteristics: total data-ownership, end-to-end encrypted, “offline-first” operation, spatial and immersive, hardware agnostic, plugin architecture with open protocols by design, relationship focused, and free & open-source.
Hopes & dreams
Beyond DWeb, we want PLAN to be the world's first truly open, architecturally distributed, and spatially immersive operating system. At PLAN Systems, we believe people profoundly benefit from having the tools to connect with each other, manage common resources, and to engage in meaningful projects. PLAN is a spatial collaboration and communication tool for teams, groups, and organizations, with a highly adaptable interface -- we dream of a future where integrated productivity tools allow communities to organize, visualize their environment, and be digitally self-reliant.
Participation
Anyone can participate. Demo exhibit preparation is required. We will be setting up a computer hooked up to a touch screen monitor. We’ll bring portable units for others to play with and use, or people can install PLAN on their own machine so that they can be “invited” into the community map. Any information that event coordinators would like to share about the different projects attending, or the details about the specific area could be pre-populated, and refined on site.
Why participate
We envision participants using our spatial map to orient themselves to the camp area, be able to discover information about other participant projects, and conduct realtime communications on site. Interactivity envisioned: fly around the event space in 3D, discover information about the space and participants, pin a note to a community message board, add yourself to a contacts map.
Session rundown
PLAN Systems is excited to demo an interactive, geospatial map of the event space, with areas of interest annotated and ad-hoc comments and feeds available to interact with during the event. Participants can visually explore and interact with the event space through a 3D digital map, displayed via a touchscreen monitor as well as other connected machines (as available). The experience will be powered by PLAN, our open-source software platform being developed for communities and organizations to securely collaborate and become digitally self-reliant.
Relevant links
Website: http://www.plan-systems.org
GitHub (technical): https://github.com/plan-systems/design-docs
PLAN Textbook (charter, 501(c)(3) pending): https://plan-systems.org/docs/plan-textbook.pdf
Contact
Brandon D. Wallace, Drew O'Meara
info [at] plan-systems.org


As a USAF veteran and senior analyst, Brandon has lived and worked around the world contributing all-source analysis and executive level decision support; including deployments to OEF and OIF. After serving with distinguished merit, Brandon went on to attend UT Austin, graduating with honors while engaging in cross-discipline studies (communications & environmental geography). As a small business owner & technology consultant, he specializes in information systems, multi-media production, developing organizational solutions, and geo-spatial planning. Brandon is Director and co-founder of PLAN Systems, with a mission to foster human communications and relationships.


Once a U.S. nuclear submarine officer and a student of computer science at Cornell University, Drew has served as CTO of SoundSpectrum, an audio visualization software company that has shipped software for over 17 years, including licensing software to Apple Inc. and authoring U.S. patent 9971632. He specializes in the design and engineering of real-time 3D graphics, data visualization, computation, communications, and distributed systems. Drew is the Chief Engineer and co-founder of PLAN Systems, leading the development architecture of PLAN. He is a passionate advocate for community-centric FOSS technologies.


As a USAF veteran and senior analyst, Brandon has lived and worked around the world contributing all-source analysis and executive level decision support; including deployments to OEF and OIF. After serving with distinguished merit, Brandon went on to attend UT Austin, graduating with honors while engaging in cross-discipline studies (communications & environmental geography). As a small business owner & technology consultant, he specializes in information systems, multi-media production, developing organizational solutions, and geo-spatial planning. Brandon is Director and co-founder of PLAN Systems, with a mission to foster human communications and relationships.


Once a U.S. nuclear submarine officer and a student of computer science at Cornell University, Drew has served as CTO of SoundSpectrum, an audio visualization software company that has shipped software for over 17 years, including licensing software to Apple Inc. and authoring U.S. patent 9971632. He specializes in the design and engineering of real-time 3D graphics, data visualization, computation, communications, and distributed systems. Drew is the Chief Engineer and co-founder of PLAN Systems, leading the development architecture of PLAN. He is a passionate advocate for community-centric FOSS technologies.
Hopes & Dreams
People who wanted to attend the camp but could not get to can feel good by getting (or sending) a postcard.
Participation
Anyone can participate.
Why participate?
Share good vibes. Document camp attendance and interest in a personal, artistic and tangible way. Celebrate the social network layer of the DWeb.
Session rundown
Have a small table or area designated for the postcard activity. People can bring postcards, postage stamps, and names and addresses of people to send a postcard to. During the camp, people can come fill out the postcards - addressing new one, or adding to existing ones - write notes, draw pictures, or just sign their name. At the end of the camp, the facilitator takes the completed postcards and mails them. (Or some participants could take some to hand-deliver them).
Contact
cel (Charles Lehner)


Charles builds and maintains applications on Secure Scuttlebutt, with a focus on integrating external systems and protocols into the platform; current projects include git-ssb, ssb-npm-registry, and patchfoo.
Videos from the summit:


Charles builds and maintains applications on Secure Scuttlebutt, with a focus on integrating external systems and protocols into the platform; current projects include git-ssb, ssb-npm-registry, and patchfoo.
Videos from the summit:
Powerpoint Karaoke is an improvisational and art event where audience members give a presentation using a set of Powerpoint slides that they’ve never seen before. There are three rules:
1. The presenter cannot see the slides before presenting
2. The presenter delivers each slide in succession without skipping slides or going back
3. The presentation ends when all slides are presented, or after 5 minutes (whichever comes first)
The source material will be the Military Industrial Powerpoint Complex slides curated for a previous instance of this event. They will be served from the local Internet Archive server.
Hopes & dreams
Have lots of fun and realize the value of archiving obscure content on the interwebz!
Participation
Anyone! Especially people who'd like to practice presenting slides to an audience in a casual environment!
Why participate
Laugh and have lots of fun
Session rundown
Need projector at Board Room for an hour or so. 5-min sessions.
Relevant links
Previous instance: https://blog.archive.org/2018/02/15/military-industrial-powerpoint-complex-karaoke-tuesday-march-6/
Slide material: https://archive.org/details/MilitaryIndustrialPowerpointComplex
Contact
Benedict Lau
ben.hy.lau [at] gmail.com


Benedict Lau is an engineer who tells stories of technology practices that bring communities together. He studies distributed protocols and collective governance of digital infrastructures. When not "on email", he builds passable open source tools and facilitates activities about peer-to-peer local networks as a way to co-imagine a future equitable web. He is a member of the Hypha Worker Co-operative and a core contributor at Toronto Mesh.
Videos from the summit:


Benedict Lau is an engineer who tells stories of technology practices that bring communities together. He studies distributed protocols and collective governance of digital infrastructures. When not "on email", he builds passable open source tools and facilitates activities about peer-to-peer local networks as a way to co-imagine a future equitable web. He is a member of the Hypha Worker Co-operative and a core contributor at Toronto Mesh.
Videos from the summit:
If you think about it, there is no reason why signals have to travel to a Facebook server 3000 miles away just to plan a local dinner or outing with friends. Students in a class should be able to connect with one another and collaborate on documents without using Google Docs. The same is true of passengers on a plane, or shipmates on a cruise, or villagers in Nigeria. Local networks should suffice.
Software to unite communities
All this growing local infrastructure unlocks the potential for people to connect with one another on a local level without relying on the ISPs. However, until now there has been a lack of good software to run on this infrastructure. The platforms people use today are almost invariably centralized and require access to the global internet. Facebook, Twitter, Amazon, GMail, Apple, Microsoft, Instagram, WhatsApp, SnapChat, Etsy, Netflix, Uber, you name it – they get venture-funded, get a bunch of people on both sides of a market, and extract rents. They have 1 engineer per million users, or less. Customer support is non-existent. They choose what features you have and what interface you see. They have the people’s data in one place, and sometimes that makes an attractive target for governments and advertisers. In a recent article, we covered this situation in more detail.
Since Qbix released our first apps back in 2011, we has been steadily developing our Platform to power community apps. Now it turns out that this Platform is a perfect fit for the mesh networks springing up, allowing people to enjoy use apps running on local servers, and get high-speed connections to one another, without even needing to connect to the global internet. Once in a while, a message needs to be sent globally, but most of the time, what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas.
We recently paid a company called Antamedia to develop OpenWRT firmware that runs on many popular commercial routers. This firmware now allows communities to run our entire social platform and apps off of their local wifi. Imagine coming to class and having attendance taken automatically, because your phone connects to the local wifi hotspot. Imagine having messages stay private in the classroom, or unlocking rewards from actually being physically present at a concert, and so on.
As time goes on, we are continuing to push the boundaries of what’s possible in this space. Our next goal is to release software to turn an Android phone into a hotspot, allowing people to host a local community on demand wirelessly just from their Android phone. Even when they’re out camping. And the social apps built on our platform should work on all these networks, whether it’s a wifi router, an Android phone, a mesh network, or a website on the global internet.
Money to unite communities
In the last few years, all major social networks have added the ability for users to pay one another. It’s not just PayPal and Venmo anymore: you can now send money in GMail, Facebook Messenger, and now even iMessage. In China, WeChat (the chat application) has become a huge payment networkwithin a few short years. People can now pay with WeChat at restaurants and other businesses across the country, and cash is rapidly becoming obsolete.
With the recent proliferation of interest in crypto-currencies and blockchain software, we got to thinking, why not help communities issue and manage their own money supply? This was our vision for social networking, but translated to the realm money. Instead of having large, global one-size-fits-all currencies (US Dollars or Bitcoin) we could once again give communities the power to determine their own fate.
So, starting 2017, we launched a spinoff company called Intercoin Inc. to do just that. Where Qbix focuses on social networking, the Intercoin project focuses on building the infrastructure to run a secure and resilient payment network. Similar to Facebook and GMail, Paypal and Stripe, we would implement buttons that app developers and website publishers could easily add in order to seamless get paid in the local currency. Prices would be displayed in the currency of the user’s choice, and Intercoin would make cashing in and out of currencies seamless.
Just like Qbix Platform enables local apps where most actions work without access to the global internet, the Intercoin project enables innovations in local community fintech. Basic Income becomes achievable by any community. All citizens can see how the money is being used, spot issues and deal with them as a community. Governance can be done in a democratic manner. The money supply can be controlled by the people instead of the elites, leveraging the wisdom of the crowd.
Decentralizing the gatekeepers
There is another huge benefit of letting communities install and run open-source software. Qbix Platform and Intercoin enables a richer developer system (just like the Web has done). Developers of apps and plugins don’t have to worry about some gatekeepers kicking them out of the App Store, or revoking their API keys while they build a competing product. Each developer can market to entire communities, who can then recommend the app to one another. Communities can do the work of promoting the app to their own members, while the apps would make it easier for the communities to engage their members and give them tools to get together and feel connected.
So that’s the vision: empowering people, uniting communities. When communities need more apps, they can band together and organically raise funds to pay developers to build and maintain them. It’s an open ecosystem where collaboration leads to more and more positive feedback loops.
Communities don’t necessarily have to be local. A person can belong to several communities, including their neighborhood, city, and a poets’ guild. They can get $20 a day Basic Income from the city and another $5 from the poets’ guild. This can help decrease poverty, food insecurity, and lead to increased freedom and prosperity.




Description
Breath and movement meditation to cleanse the energetic field and enhance functionality of the body and mind.
Hopes & dreams
It is my joy and part of my mission to change the way we do business to include more receptivity, team coherence that leads to group intelligence, and enhanced creativity. An integral part of my philosophy of peak organizational performance and impact is "being before doing." Taking time to de-stress, de-clutter the brain, and reach a state of emptiness creates receptivity in a group. By creating a culture that allows space for the group to shift from stress into the flow state, a team can move mountains. The flow on effect of such a culture is bonding, playfulness, and fun.
Participation
Anyone can participate. Wear comfortable clothing that allow for movement.
Why participate
This class is meant to help participants to release tension and relax.
Session rundown
7:30 - 9am on Friday and/or Saturday
Contact
Carley Corrado
Clif Cox


Dr. Carley Corrado helps organizations enhance their impact through uniting teams around shared purpose. Her signature ENLIVEN Approach combines a simple strategy to access deeper wisdom as informed by the leading edge of neuroscience in tandem with strategic planning that is aligned with the team's vision and mission. Prior to becoming certified in Transformational Facilitation, her background includes a PhD in Chemistry and Postdoc in Physics from UC Santa Cruz where she helped create the greenhouse solar company Soliculture. Working with over a hundred farmers as the Director of Business Development, she discovered her passion for living soil, full of microbial life forms that together create fertile conditions for growth while mitigating climate change. This complex web of life inspired the development of her method to transform teams to be guided by that same innate intelligence of life.


Dr. Carley Corrado helps organizations enhance their impact through uniting teams around shared purpose. Her signature ENLIVEN Approach combines a simple strategy to access deeper wisdom as informed by the leading edge of neuroscience in tandem with strategic planning that is aligned with the team's vision and mission. Prior to becoming certified in Transformational Facilitation, her background includes a PhD in Chemistry and Postdoc in Physics from UC Santa Cruz where she helped create the greenhouse solar company Soliculture. Working with over a hundred farmers as the Director of Business Development, she discovered her passion for living soil, full of microbial life forms that together create fertile conditions for growth while mitigating climate change. This complex web of life inspired the development of her method to transform teams to be guided by that same innate intelligence of life.


Travels and spends his time performing, programming and making pictures. Since 2016 he has given over 65 lecture performances on Radical Digital Painting and related topics in the US and in Europe, often with collaborators Goodiepal & Pals, Julia Yerger, Artur Erman, and Casey REAS. He has taught at UCLA and Parsons The New School for Design and worked previously at the design studio Linked by Air. Jeffrey received an MFA in Sculpture from Yale University School of Art in 2013.


Travels and spends his time performing, programming and making pictures. Since 2016 he has given over 65 lecture performances on Radical Digital Painting and related topics in the US and in Europe, often with collaborators Goodiepal & Pals, Julia Yerger, Artur Erman, and Casey REAS. He has taught at UCLA and Parsons The New School for Design and worked previously at the design studio Linked by Air. Jeffrey received an MFA in Sculpture from Yale University School of Art in 2013.
Description
Raver Lights is a wirelessly synchronized LED animation and control system I created for offline environments (aka Burning Man). The system is power efficient (for WS2812b LEDs) and works well for wearables and portable art. Raver Lights has grown into a pretty robust system, and is designed to (hopefully) make it easy for other people to create amazing LED art without having to know things like clock-synchronization algorithms, writing an animation engine, networking protocols, etc.
Hopes & dreams *
My hope is for folks to get excited about creating small-scale LED art, especially those who don't think they have the technical skills necessary. My dream is for LED art, and indeed all art, to become accessible to everyone, not just nerds like me.
Participation *
Anyone with basic programming experience is encouraged to attend. There are many ways to interact with Raver Lights, from creating animations using easy-ish to use helper libraries, to working on the core animation and synchronization engine. Regardless of skill level, there's something interesting to work on!
Why participate *
Folks who are interested in creating LED art and/or are interested in offline distributed systems are encouraged to attend.
Material requirements;
Folks will need a laptop and a USB port (USB-C users will need an adapter). All hardware will be supplied by Bryan on loan for attendees. Attendees should install https://github.com/espressif/esptool and https://docs.platformio.org/en/latest/core.html prior to arrival, since internet may not be very fast at DWeb.
Relevant links
https://github.com/nebrius/raver-lights
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qc6qCKff2w8


Bryan Hughes is a Cloud Developer Advocate at Microsoft, long-time member of the Node.js and NodeBots communities, and tech activist. Bryan is the creator of Raspi IO which provides Raspberry Pi support for the Johnny-Five JavaScript robotics library. Bryan also created Raver Lights, a distributed wireless lighting system designed for festivals, Request Inspector, a Node.js performance diagnostics tool, and Contact Scheduler, an app that helps him keep in touch with friends. Outside of tech, Bryan is an active member of the LGTBQ community, a photographer, an occasional writer, a once upon a time pianist, and a wine aficionado.


Bryan Hughes is a Cloud Developer Advocate at Microsoft, long-time member of the Node.js and NodeBots communities, and tech activist. Bryan is the creator of Raspi IO which provides Raspberry Pi support for the Johnny-Five JavaScript robotics library. Bryan also created Raver Lights, a distributed wireless lighting system designed for festivals, Request Inspector, a Node.js performance diagnostics tool, and Contact Scheduler, an app that helps him keep in touch with friends. Outside of tech, Bryan is an active member of the LGTBQ community, a photographer, an occasional writer, a once upon a time pianist, and a wine aficionado.
A memorial to biodiversity loss, hosted on the p2p web
There are 41,415 species on the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Red List of Threatened Species, and 16,306 of them are threatened with extinction. It makes up 27% of all assessed species, 40% of amphibians, 25% of mammals, 14% of birds, and 70% of assessed plants. Early this May, the United Nations released a report on global biodiversity loss, finding that it is in unprecedented decline as a result of human activities.
Take a deep breath and hold that in your mind. As we try to preserve and rebuild our world, we must also bear witness to the losses that came from our past carelessness.
The Svalbard Global Seed Vault is a highly secure seed bank meant to preserve genetic information for future civilizations located on a remote island in Norway. Increasingly, it serves as a memorial, but it’s not accessible to most people as anything more than an idea. Remembering network is also a kind of monument - but one that is collaborative, local-first, diverse, and resilient - to lost and threatened wildlife. It will contain crowdsourced images and genetic information of currently threatened and endangered animals.
Attendees are invited to submit images of animals, to be packaged in archives on ipfs and other peer to peer protocols. Much like the seed bank, which is built to withstand many kinds of extreme climate and weather, peer to peer protocols are similarly designed to withstand network failures and takedown attempts. We'll put our memorial in the safest place we know: all over the world, everywhere.


Arkadiy has worked on creating sustainable communities on the web for the past decade. He is currently the Collaborations Coordinator with Protocol Labs and advising Ampled, an artist support co-operative. Previously, he was the CTO at Mediachain Labs (acquired by Spotify in spring 2017) and worked on The Hype Machine, an influential music blog aggregator.
Videos from the summit:


Arkadiy has worked on creating sustainable communities on the web for the past decade. He is currently the Collaborations Coordinator with Protocol Labs and advising Ampled, an artist support co-operative. Previously, he was the CTO at Mediachain Labs (acquired by Spotify in spring 2017) and worked on The Hype Machine, an influential music blog aggregator.
Videos from the summit:
Research Library Services, a DWeb Camp project led by Brian Newbold of the Internet Archive’s Fatcat (https://fatcat.wiki) project, will provide a convenient content set / corpus for people experimenting with distributed storage and communication systems on-site.
Research Library Services proposes:
- A catalog of about 100 million papers, with fulltext copies for 10-20 million of those
- a small wired front-end server (4 cores, 16+ GB RAM, 2TB+ SSD) to provide HTTP access to the catalog, with metadata (but not fulltext) search
- A fileserver with about 50 TByte of disk storage laser printer with consumables to print about 200x 5 pages hard copies
- single-seat workstation (raspberry pi and a monitor) attached to printer
- available over wired ethernet, bridging to whatever mesh/wireless or dweb tunneling folks are interested in
- A booth will offer designated service hours to help folks look things up and discuss distributed libraries.


Bryan finally joined the Archive in 2017 after spending more than a decade as an enthusiastic user of Wayback Machine. Over that same time period he climbed up and down the ladder of abstraction, obtaining an undergraduate degree in physics (at MIT), operating under-ice robots in Antarctica, developing open hardware lab instrumentation for large-scale brain probing (at LeafLabs), cataloging hundreds of millions of electronics components (at Octopart), and improved production service reliability at Stripe (a financial infrastructure start-up).
Bryan is a transplant from the East Coast and enjoys the road biking, large trees, generous salads, used book stores, and world-class tech non-profits found all around the Bay Area.


Bryan finally joined the Archive in 2017 after spending more than a decade as an enthusiastic user of Wayback Machine. Over that same time period he climbed up and down the ladder of abstraction, obtaining an undergraduate degree in physics (at MIT), operating under-ice robots in Antarctica, developing open hardware lab instrumentation for large-scale brain probing (at LeafLabs), cataloging hundreds of millions of electronics components (at Octopart), and improved production service reliability at Stripe (a financial infrastructure start-up).
Bryan is a transplant from the East Coast and enjoys the road biking, large trees, generous salads, used book stores, and world-class tech non-profits found all around the Bay Area.
Description
Reusi Dat Ton is a Traditional Thai Medicinal practice.
It is the root-base of what evolved now into what is commonly practiced as facilitated Thai Massage. Reusi Dat Ton is a restorative self-care system that consists of energetic breathing exercises, self-massage, and practicing mindful presence. It is a slow paced, gentle and low-impact self-healing system that is suitable for all body types. Reusi Dat Ton improves flexibility and the range of the motion of the physical body, it facilitates circulation and mobility, increases energy and vitality, and boosts the functionality of inner organs. Reusi reduces joint pain, stiffness, and muscle aches, aids in the relief of neck, shoulder, back, hip, and knee pains. Reusi is not suitable for folks who are pregnant, who have heart and blood pressure conditions and who have slipped disks or osteoporosis.
Session Rundown
Sessions can be held in the mornings or in the evenings depending on preference of participants. Sessions typically require 90 to 120 minutes.
Participation
Practitioners need to be present on a light stomach.
Practitioners will need an exercise/yoga mat and they are also encouraged to bring a cushion for support should they need/desire.


cynthia el khoury received her Reusi Dat Ton instructor certification from LoiKroh massage school in Chiang Mai in 2017. cynthia is an aikido practitioner, a somatic experiencing practitioner in training, and a traditional healing student of ancient Kemet. cynthia is working with APC as gender and women’s engagement coordinator for community networks.


cynthia el khoury received her Reusi Dat Ton instructor certification from LoiKroh massage school in Chiang Mai in 2017. cynthia is an aikido practitioner, a somatic experiencing practitioner in training, and a traditional healing student of ancient Kemet. cynthia is working with APC as gender and women’s engagement coordinator for community networks.
Description
Photobooth that both prints a film strip and posts the pictures to scuttlebutt. Ideally the physically printed version will include a QR code link to where the photo can be found on the scuttleverse.
Hopes & dreams
I’d like to eventually build an actual booth for this but so far it’s just been a computer without any structure
Participation
The basic functionality is 1 button to take 3 photos. But if you want the digital version you have to get on scuttlebutt!
Why participate
Fun!! It’s a fun installation that shouldn’t require much maintenance and can work hand in hand with other projects/parties
Session rundown
Hopefully I can just set it up at the beginning and leave it on. If people are interested how it works I could do a little explanation!
Contact
Trav Fryer


Trav Fryer is a computer guy. Trav Fryer does computer stuff. Trav Fryer likes plants and reducing waste. A great way to reduce waste is to mend your own clothes. It adds character to see a visible mend. And things with character are more loved by those who use them and thusly less likely to be buried in a landfill. Mottainai is a Japanese word which roughly translates to, "too good to waste". Trav thinks that's a pretty solid philosophy with which to see the the things in the world.


Trav Fryer is a computer guy. Trav Fryer does computer stuff. Trav Fryer likes plants and reducing waste. A great way to reduce waste is to mend your own clothes. It adds character to see a visible mend. And things with character are more loved by those who use them and thusly less likely to be buried in a landfill. Mottainai is a Japanese word which roughly translates to, "too good to waste". Trav thinks that's a pretty solid philosophy with which to see the the things in the world.
Scuttlebutt aims to harmonize four perspectives of life:
Environment reflecting Technology reflecting Community reflecting Society.
We acknowledge the natural, the virtual, and the social environments. Our responsibility is to recognize which resources are abundant, which are sufficient, and adapt accordingly through efficiency.
Technology is simply the means by which we communicate. We use local-first publishing so that each person owns their words and actions. Our solutions are piecemeal upgradeable, replaceable and incrementally improvable. Tending and pruning are not a stranger's duty, it is through near moderation and free listening that we improve our surroundings. Infrastructure is a voluntary act, multimodal welcoming is how we on-board people via diverse connectivity modes (technological acts of
inclusion) as well as with greetings (words of inclusion). No one "signs up" but everyone is invited.
Our community is a web of friendships: relationships defined not by a follow button, but by the flexibility of subjectivity. We cherish the freedom to be independent, but it is this same freedom which encourages – not coerces – us to be interdependent. We know we can at any time fork, but when individually recognizing the whole being greater than the sum of its parts, we tend to develop the collective. We value disagreement when it's supportive, and see it as generative and bond forming.
Society is not made of homogeneous people, so we must allow pluralism of cultures to flourish. The edges of the social graph must extend to include all people and their diverse values, interactions, and customs. No one of us can build a welcoming place for all groups, because the very concept of welcoming is subjective. We must instead design platforms that are easy to re-design, removing us as arbiters of other communities.


Scuttlebutt was created by Dominic Tarr, a Node.js developer with more than 600 modules published on npm and who lives on a self-steering sailboat in New Zealand. It is here, from the need for offline connection with the outside word, Scuttlebutt emerged.
Videos from the summit:


Charles builds and maintains applications on Secure Scuttlebutt, with a focus on integrating external systems and protocols into the platform; current projects include git-ssb, ssb-npm-registry, and patchfoo.
Videos from the summit:


Mikey is working to solve group coordination problems. He's currently building peachcloud.org, a hosted Scuttlebutt pub-as-a-service platform. Every week in Wellington, New Zealand, he organizes arthack.nz, a local gathering to open space for creative energy.
Videos from the summit:


Scuttlebutt was created by Dominic Tarr, a Node.js developer with more than 600 modules published on npm and who lives on a self-steering sailboat in New Zealand. It is here, from the need for offline connection with the outside word, Scuttlebutt emerged.
Videos from the summit:


Charles builds and maintains applications on Secure Scuttlebutt, with a focus on integrating external systems and protocols into the platform; current projects include git-ssb, ssb-npm-registry, and patchfoo.
Videos from the summit:


Mikey is working to solve group coordination problems. He's currently building peachcloud.org, a hosted Scuttlebutt pub-as-a-service platform. Every week in Wellington, New Zealand, he organizes arthack.nz, a local gathering to open space for creative energy.
Videos from the summit:
Hopes & Dreams
Meet your internet friends in person! Find people you want to talk with later and self-organize plans.
Participation
This is a totally unstructured gathering.
Why Participate?
There are 30+ Scuttlebutt people coming. Let's meet up early so we can find each other.
Session Rundown
Hang out, make plans for later, meet people.
Contact
Cinnamon


Interested in safety, accessibility, harassment & abuse prevention, UX related topics.
Also procedural art, analog art, and music!


Interested in safety, accessibility, harassment & abuse prevention, UX related topics.
Also procedural art, analog art, and music!
Seedpod is a semantic desktop built around a decentralized database filesystem, designed to empower knowledge workers with composable applications.
Background + Goals
Previous personal information managers (WinFS, BFS, Haystack. . . ) laid out what could be achieved if a knowledge worker stores her personal information in a database filesystem, a filesystem where files can be accompanied by typed, queryable metadata that’s stored in a system-wide, shared database. “Tagging” your documents with (typed!) metadata makes it possible to build reusable data processing pipelines out of composable applications, applications whose inputs and outputs are well-defined in terms of mutually-understood types.
While these tools haven’t quite caught on, recent developments in decentralized tech present great opportunities for new experimentation. A decentralized semantic desktop provides the same storage/query interfaces, while also giving users the features they expect from modern, empowering storage system:
1. Version control: All edits should be retained in timelines, which can be
rewound, branched, and forked. 2. P2P syncing: Any version of a filesystem can be shared and synced with a
single link. 3. Easy backups: An archiver is just another peer that eagerly synchronizes
every change. 4. Multi-user collaboration: A filesystem need not live on a single machine –
multiple users must be able to work together.
(These features are achieved by building on the Dat stack, described below)
What is it?
Seedpod currently runs as a cross-platform Electron application. It’s primary UI allows users to create workspaces, isolated information stores oriented around a common task or context, into which they install applications. App developers are provided with familiar File (mirrors NodeJS’s fs module) and Database (similar to MongoDB) APIs. Each application must declare its data model (described in an interface file) to the Seedpod package manager at installation time – this provides a pathway for dynamic composition through schema sharing.
Once an application has been authorized to write to a workspace, it can use the Database API to store documents that match the schemas defined in its interface file. Seedpod will automatically expand these documents into sets of RDF triples, stored in the workspace’s shared graph database, which can then be explored using a SPARQL-like graph query language.
Seedpod’s core data structures are built on top of the Dat stack (specifically hyperdb and hypercore), which provides workspaces with many of the powerful


Andrew is a freelance software developer based in Seattle. He’s primarily focused on building tools for empowering knowledge workers, using decentralized storage systems. Previously, he worked on the Fuchsia operating system team at Google, and was the lead developer of the Binder project, a cloud service for creating reproducible environments for hosting Jupyter notebooks (now a part of the Jupyter ecosystem). Andrew also actively contributes to multiple open-source projects, including Idyll and Dat.


Andrew is a freelance software developer based in Seattle. He’s primarily focused on building tools for empowering knowledge workers, using decentralized storage systems. Previously, he worked on the Fuchsia operating system team at Google, and was the lead developer of the Binder project, a cloud service for creating reproducible environments for hosting Jupyter notebooks (now a part of the Jupyter ecosystem). Andrew also actively contributes to multiple open-source projects, including Idyll and Dat.
Description
Peer-to-peer databases are on the cutting-edge of what's possible with the decentralized web. Under the umbrella of eventually consistent model/view architectures, peer-to-peer databases are tackling problems using a variety of approaches to architectures, storage, indexes, user identities, discovery, and syncronization. There are a lot of open questions with a variety of partially-solved answers. This is a meet-and-greet and workshop for folks who are actively building these peer-to-peer databases, as well as for new people who are interested in getting involved. Participants will introduce themselves, their interests, and what they think are the biggest challenges that need attention. We will then create self-organized breakout groups to identify and discuss various approaches to these challenges.
Hopes & dreams
After DWeb Camp, these discussions would ideally lead to some common approaches or even common code that can be shared between disparate projects that have overlapping interests.
Participation
Everyone interested in contributing to peer-to-peer databases
Why participate
Ideally this discussion would be held on Friday, so that folks who are interested in these topics are able to identify each other a little bit easier over the weekend. For those who are new, they could come out of the discussion with some ideas of how to get involved in projects.
Session rundown
Unconference style, 30 minutes of introductions, 1 hour of breakout, 30 minutes of report back (if desired)
Contact
Karissa McKelvey
Paul Frazee
noffle


Karissa McKelvey is an open source software developer, writer, project manager, and activist supporting an equitable web. She develops and maintains a wide variety of tools and services for Digital Democracy. She is also a board member of Code for Science and Society and a Director of the Dat Foundation. Formerly a data scientist, her work studying online political communication resulted in multiple peer-reviewed papers and press in outlets such as NPR and the Wall Street Journal. In addition to an experienced software and web developer, she leads teams to success with diverse projects in academia, non-profits, and industry. In her spare time she plays the trumpet and volunteers at The Debt Collective as a technology consultant.
Videos from the summit:


Paul is the co-creator of the Beaker browser and an active contributor to the Dat protocol. Previously Paul helped found the Secure Scuttlebutt project, and has a history of working at small Web development agencies. He's here to talk about peer-to-peer computing and how the Web can become a live environment.
Videos from the summit:


noffle is a hacker (the kind that DIYs together chunky fixes to problems), aspiring woodsperson, and anarcha-buddhist. They try to balance computer time with adventures in nature & with friends.


Karissa McKelvey is an open source software developer, writer, project manager, and activist supporting an equitable web. She develops and maintains a wide variety of tools and services for Digital Democracy. She is also a board member of Code for Science and Society and a Director of the Dat Foundation. Formerly a data scientist, her work studying online political communication resulted in multiple peer-reviewed papers and press in outlets such as NPR and the Wall Street Journal. In addition to an experienced software and web developer, she leads teams to success with diverse projects in academia, non-profits, and industry. In her spare time she plays the trumpet and volunteers at The Debt Collective as a technology consultant.
Videos from the summit:


Paul is the co-creator of the Beaker browser and an active contributor to the Dat protocol. Previously Paul helped found the Secure Scuttlebutt project, and has a history of working at small Web development agencies. He's here to talk about peer-to-peer computing and how the Web can become a live environment.
Videos from the summit:


noffle is a hacker (the kind that DIYs together chunky fixes to problems), aspiring woodsperson, and anarcha-buddhist. They try to balance computer time with adventures in nature & with friends.
The web means Javascript. The decentralized web means your Javascript
interacting with other people's Javascript, both of which might be
buggy, exploitable, malicious, or simply confused. The user's agent will
be combining different code from different authors, each with their
own set of motivations and interests. We benefit greatly from close
interaction between these components, but we must also guard against
accident or malice.
There are ways to safely run mutually-suspicious code inside the same
program, using small language modifications to enable an approach named
Object Capability Security. Our Secure ECMAScript ("SES") environment
replaces the unsafe one-argument eval(code) with a safe two-argument
eval(code, endowments): we call it "safe" because the new eval() does
not grant access to the caller's global scope, from which it might
access storage or the network. The evaluated code's only access to the
outside world is through the endowments, and the code doing the
evaluation can grant or withhold those however it wishes.
SES also freezes the so-called "primordials": objects like Math, String,
and Array that provide Javascript's built-in functionality. Frozen
objects cannot be modified, preventing the evaluated code from doing
surprising-yet-legal things like changing the behavior of Array, which
could interfere with the correct execution of unrelated (and
unsuspecting) programs.
A close analogy to this feature is the popular use of Lua as a plugin
language for videogames. These plugins can modify the behavior of the
game, but do not get the authority to e.g. read/write arbitrary portions
of the host's disk, or speak directly to the network (perhaps to inject
ads or spy upon the player). The plugin comes from a different author
than the game it modifies, and the game is trying to mediate between the
interests of the plug-in author and the player of the game, who wants to
enhance the game somehow without risking more than the integrity of
their gameplay.
The SES environment is available for testing now, in both web and
Node.js contexts, at https://github.com/Agoric/SES . We're still working
on documentation and examples, but a few demos are available in the
repository. It depends upon a Javascript feature named "Realms" which is
currently available as a shim, but which is also on the TC39 standards
track to become an official part of ECMAScript.


Brian builds Tahoe-LAFS, a distributed storage system that safely uses untrusted servers, and Magic Wormhole, the easiest secure file transfer tool ever.
Videos from the summit:


Brian builds Tahoe-LAFS, a distributed storage system that safely uses untrusted servers, and Magic Wormhole, the easiest secure file transfer tool ever.
Videos from the summit:
Sharing and Preserving Cultural Heritage Materials Using Scientific Digital Representations
We will demonstrate open source software tools that produce scientific digital representations captured with off-the-shelf digital cameras and photo gear. These tools greatly simplify metadata collection, essential to the scientific documentary imaging of “digital surrogates.” The tools organize these digital surrogates and metadata into standards-based Submission Information Packages (SIPs) for archival delivery and intake. This archival package includes all the information necessary for informed data reuse by others, both now and in the future. The tools are for use by cultural heritage practitioners in museums, libraries, and historic sites, as well as by local citizen caretakers around the world.
The tools are designed to support imaging methods based on computational photography. These include Reflectance Transformation Imaging (RTI); photogrammetry for 3D model creation; and spectral imaging.
The current project is funded by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities. It builds on prior work that has already produced two tools: DLN:Capture Context, for collecting rich metadata about the capture of image sets; and DLN:Inspector for validating image sets against rules for each technology. These tools form the basis of the Digital Lab Notebook (DLN). The DLN serves the same function as a written scientist’s lab notebook, enabling data inspection and reuse by others. Metadata is produced as Linked Open Data mapped to the CIDOC Conceptual Reference Model (CRM) semantic ontology. The CRM is an ISO standard created by the International Council of Museums (ICOM) and was recently adopted by the International Federation of Library Associations (IFLA). This is the first time the international museum and library communities have agreed to recommend a shared metadata standard.
The lead organization for the project is Cultural Heritage Imaging (CHI), A non-profit based in San Francisco. The project’s primary grant partner is the Institute for Cultural Informatics at the Institute of Computer Science of the Foundation for Research and Technology Hellas (FORTH) in Heraklion Crete.
The Design Principles for the project require that the software tools must be:
-
Easy and efficient to use
-
Flexible to allow users to input as much or as little information as they deem appropriate
-
Free of perceived complexity: All of the complexity of the semantic ontology– the CIDOC Conceptual Reference Model – and Linked Open Data standards, must be “under the hood” so users need not know about them.
-
Open source –to promote sustainability and customization by others
-
Internationalized so the tools can be translated and localized to other languages and cultures
We at Cultural Heritage Imaging believe the treasures of humanity are worth saving. Our goal is to democratize the use of imaging tools to save humanity’s imperiled cultural legacy.


Carla Schroer is co-founder and director of Cultural Heritage Imaging (CHI) a non-profit corporation that develops and implements imaging technologies for cultural heritage and scientific research. Carla leads the training programs at CHI along with working on field capture projects with Reflectance Transformation Imaging and photogrammetry. She also leads CHI’s software development activities. She spent 20 years in the commercial software industry, managing and directing a wide range of software development projects.


Carla Schroer is co-founder and director of Cultural Heritage Imaging (CHI) a non-profit corporation that develops and implements imaging technologies for cultural heritage and scientific research. Carla leads the training programs at CHI along with working on field capture projects with Reflectance Transformation Imaging and photogrammetry. She also leads CHI’s software development activities. She spent 20 years in the commercial software industry, managing and directing a wide range of software development projects.
We are communicating ALL the time through our body language and subtle social cues as we move through the world. Learn what those cues are and what they actually mean to other people.
This workshop you will help you understand the evolutionary purpose of attraction and how to harness it in your life for professional empowerment and for all of your interpersonal relationships. Our feeling of connectedness is integral for a happy and balanced life, you will be more effective in your life for a longer period of time if you feel you have the support of a tribe.
What would your life feel like if you could walk up to anyone and strike up a conversation with relaxed confidence?!


Devon O’Brien Ash is the co-founder of Social Fluency, a training system that has transformed the lives of tens of thousands of men and women to become more confident and outgoing so they can build the professional, social and romantic lives that we all dream of. Devon has traveled the world teaching this methodology so that we can create a more interconnected world of open communication. He and his wife Stephanie, live in Vancouver BC where they have helped develop a beautiful thriving community of conscious relationships.


Devon O’Brien Ash is the co-founder of Social Fluency, a training system that has transformed the lives of tens of thousands of men and women to become more confident and outgoing so they can build the professional, social and romantic lives that we all dream of. Devon has traveled the world teaching this methodology so that we can create a more interconnected world of open communication. He and his wife Stephanie, live in Vancouver BC where they have helped develop a beautiful thriving community of conscious relationships.
Solid is an exciting new project led by Prof. Tim Berners-Lee, inventor of the World Wide Web, taking place at MIT. The project aims to radically change the way Web applications work today, resulting in true data ownership as well as improved privacy.
Solid (derived from "social linked data") is a proposed set of conventions and tools for building decentralized social applications based on Linked Data principles. Solid is modular and extensible, and it relies as much as possible on existing W3C standards and protocols.
At a glance, here is what Solid offers...
True data ownership
Users should have the freedom to choose where their data resides and who is allowed to access it. By decoupling content from the application, itself, users are now able to do so.
Modular design
Because applications are decoupled from the data they produce, users will be able to avoid vendor lock-in, seamlessly switching between apps and personal data storage servers, without losing any data or social connections.
Reusing existing data
Developers will be able to easily innovate by creating new apps or improving current apps, all while reusing existing data that was created by other apps.
The Solid team has encapsulated several years of research and prototyping by a talented group of contributors, led by Tim, into a Node.js based implementation of the Solid server specification, and a basic data browser to allow users to play with the system.


Sir Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web in 1989. He wrote the first web client and server in 1990. His specifications of URIs, HTTP and HTML were refined as Web technology spread.
Sir Tim is the Director of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), which oversees the technical standards development of the Web. Sir Tim is the founder and a Director of the World Wide Web Foundation which was launched in 2009 to coordinate efforts to further the potential of the Web to benefit humanity. He is a Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in the Computer Science and AI Lab (CSAIL). His research group, the Decentralized Information Group (DIG), works to re-decentralize the Web. He is also a Professor in the Computer Science Department at the University of Oxford, UK. He is President of and co-founded the Open Data Institute in London. In 2017 Sir Tim was awarded the ACM A.M. Turing Prize, called the "Nobel Prize of Computing” and considered one of the most prestigious awards in Computer Science. Tim is a long time defender of Net Neutrality and the openness of the Web.
Videos from the summit:


Ruben Verborgh is a professor of Semantic Web technology at Ghent University – imec and a research affiliate at the Decentralized Information Group at MIT.
Videos from the summit:


Sir Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web in 1989. He wrote the first web client and server in 1990. His specifications of URIs, HTTP and HTML were refined as Web technology spread.
Sir Tim is the Director of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), which oversees the technical standards development of the Web. Sir Tim is the founder and a Director of the World Wide Web Foundation which was launched in 2009 to coordinate efforts to further the potential of the Web to benefit humanity. He is a Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in the Computer Science and AI Lab (CSAIL). His research group, the Decentralized Information Group (DIG), works to re-decentralize the Web. He is also a Professor in the Computer Science Department at the University of Oxford, UK. He is President of and co-founded the Open Data Institute in London. In 2017 Sir Tim was awarded the ACM A.M. Turing Prize, called the "Nobel Prize of Computing” and considered one of the most prestigious awards in Computer Science. Tim is a long time defender of Net Neutrality and the openness of the Web.
Videos from the summit:


Ruben Verborgh is a professor of Semantic Web technology at Ghent University – imec and a research affiliate at the Decentralized Information Group at MIT.
Videos from the summit:
Subsect installs as a standard app and does not require root access. Subsect could be best described as a personal web server (PWS). It is based on the concept that every human being on the planet should have logical and physical control of their data and generated content in a convenient manner. This objective is currently best achieved by hosting on a mobile device.
Subsect is a functioning product although it is still alpha grade software. It is an open source project.
Subsect is not an alternative architecture. It is consistent with the current web model of a server answering requests from a browser. It does allow for extensions to the current arrangement which does not expect each user to also have their own server. Designing web software with this assumption opens many new avenues with regard to interfaces and storage. Due to limitations on accessing port 80 on mobile devices, Subsect uses WebRTC for transport. This is a minor limitation and doesn’t impede exploring what can be done in a PWS environment. This may be a transitionary product on the path to the day when all people have at least one fixed IPv6 address as a birthright and a device to make use of it.
Individuals are powerless if they do not control their own data. Legal rights to access need to be clear with 2nd parties who could be forced into entering into EULA type agreements. Handing data over for only usage rights and then expecting to influence later behaviour is hopeless. Physical possession of data with the retention of copyright is the strongest position for balancing the asymmetries that exist in the current web model.


Mark Kudlac graduated with degrees in engineering and computer science from the University of Toronto in 1985. He founded Conxsys with a partner in 1990. Conxsys developed a turnkey Linux based ERP system, Drive 2.0, for car dealerships. After a successful exit in 2000 Mark developed a voice controlled email system for mobile phones, VerbalFusion, which was crushed by the rise of BlackBerry and later smart phones.
After a period of retirement travelling and spending time with family a number of other products were developed which focused on using mobile devices as data servers. This track has culminated in Subsect which is a light weight general purpose platform for serving web content from Android and iOS devices.
Videos from the summit:


Mark Kudlac graduated with degrees in engineering and computer science from the University of Toronto in 1985. He founded Conxsys with a partner in 1990. Conxsys developed a turnkey Linux based ERP system, Drive 2.0, for car dealerships. After a successful exit in 2000 Mark developed a voice controlled email system for mobile phones, VerbalFusion, which was crushed by the rise of BlackBerry and later smart phones.
After a period of retirement travelling and spending time with family a number of other products were developed which focused on using mobile devices as data servers. This track has culminated in Subsect which is a light weight general purpose platform for serving web content from Android and iOS devices.
Videos from the summit:
Subspace: A Decentralized Database of End-User Devices
Ownership and control over user generated data on the Internet is one of the defining social and technical issues of our time. These concerns have led to a renewed interest in decentralized web technologies among application developers who want to build services which allow users to own their data. A purely peer-to-peer storage network would allow users to have full control over data they generate on the Internet without going through a remote server. Users could host their data directly on devices they already own, while replicating it across other devices on the network in a secure and persistent manner. Subspace is a decentralized key-value store with a familiar Javascript API that makes it easy for developers to build apps where users may own their data.
Subspace Database (SSDB) allows developers to easily manage application state within a decentralized app, or dApp. dApps provide services over the Internet without a central server. Current constructions rely on blockchain based smart contract platforms such as Ethereum for application code and Decentralized Storage Networks (DSNs) such as the Interplanetary File System (IPFS) for file hosting. Mutable application state management, in the form of a decentralized database, remains an unsolved problem. In Subspace, data is stored across a peer-to-peer (P2P) network of end user devices who act as hosts by pledging free space in return for subspace credits.
SSDB is massively sharded amongst a network of internet enabled host devices that may include mobile phones, tablets, desktop computers, and traditional servers. A javascript client library with a simple put(), get() Application Programming Interface (API) is provided to developers, allowing them to store and retrieve data inside any web, mobile, desktop, or server-side app. Anyone who uses these apps has full ownership and control of the data they generate, through their private key.
Hosts pledge free space to the network in return for regular distributions of subspace credits from client apps and users. These agreements are encoded as smart contracts on a distributed ledger secured by Proof of Space consensus. All records are stored off-chain, while being replicated and encrypted at rest in a cryptographically secure schema spread across multiple devices, with a verifiable proof of replication. Each record stored in SSDB is guaranteed to persist with a replication factor (R) in a manner that is self-healing as hosts leave the network. Space utilization is load balanced across all hosts proportional to the amount of space pledged. Subspace aims to be a simpler construction of a decentralized storage network focused on developer usability that seeks mass adoption by end users.
To learn more please contact Jeremiah


Jeremiah is an entrepreneur with a diverse background. He received a BS and MS in Cultural Geography from Texas A&M University, where he conducted field work in Sierra Leone, West Africa. He then spent eight years in the United States Army as Infantry Officer with service in Iraq. After leaving the military Jeremiah worked as a project manager at several IoT Startups where he learned to write code and build hardware. His interest in P2P networking and decentralized protocols eventually led him to start working on Subspace, where he is the founder and chief hacker. He enjoys coding in javascript, tinkering with hardware, and bringing new products and services to market.


Jeremiah is an entrepreneur with a diverse background. He received a BS and MS in Cultural Geography from Texas A&M University, where he conducted field work in Sierra Leone, West Africa. He then spent eight years in the United States Army as Infantry Officer with service in Iraq. After leaving the military Jeremiah worked as a project manager at several IoT Startups where he learned to write code and build hardware. His interest in P2P networking and decentralized protocols eventually led him to start working on Subspace, where he is the founder and chief hacker. He enjoys coding in javascript, tinkering with hardware, and bringing new products and services to market.
"People come into a casual/lounge space and are given name tags. Instruction is that you don't put your name or where you work on that name tag– instead, you list three things that you're currently working on/excited about.
The goal is to have people meet and connect in line with interests and passions– a way to start conversations that don't start with name or workplace.
There will be light facilitation to help people flow and mingle."
Hopes & dreams
I hope that this can be the beginning of connections and conversations that last through and beyond DWeb Camp!
Participation
Anyone can participate, kids are welcome, and no materials are required!
Why participate
This is a way to meet people and have good conversations that can continue throughout the other activities.
Session rundown
An hour is probably a good length of time
Relevant links
https://github.com/dweb-camp-2019/projects/issues/21
Contact
Kelsey Breseman


I'm one of the leaders of the Tessel Project. I'm also a neural engineer, a lover of the woods, and an adventurer.
I'm currently writing a book, "Climate Change for Changemakers," exploring how engineers and entrepreneurs can get up to speed on fighting climate change.
Some things I care about:
- Community, transparency, and openness drive innovation.
- It is important to work on things that contribute to a future you want– ideally with a majority of your time.
- Living well includes breathing deeply, being outside, and going to sleep tired at the end of the day.


I'm one of the leaders of the Tessel Project. I'm also a neural engineer, a lover of the woods, and an adventurer.
I'm currently writing a book, "Climate Change for Changemakers," exploring how engineers and entrepreneurs can get up to speed on fighting climate change.
Some things I care about:
- Community, transparency, and openness drive innovation.
- It is important to work on things that contribute to a future you want– ideally with a majority of your time.
- Living well includes breathing deeply, being outside, and going to sleep tired at the end of the day.
Textile Photos is a decentralized photo app that allows users to sync, share, and secure their photos. We are opening up the Textile beta to everyone at the #DWebSummit!
Textile Photos is available on the iTunes App Store and the Google Play store. Every app install adds and IPFS node to the user’s mobile device and connects them to the IPFS network. IPFS is used to transfer media and enable peer-to-peer communication between members. Once installed, a user’s photos are encrypted using a per-user private key and per-use file encryption keys, all of which are created on device. Photos are then backed up on IPFS nodes or on the user’s other paired devices (e.g. a desktop computer) Users can create “Shared Threads” where they can invite other people to share and comment on photos. Users can share specific photos with any thread. Threads become living channels of communication between group members. They are private and securely encrypted so only members can view the content or invite new members.


Andrew Hill is the CEO at Textile where he is working on building a high quality user experience for the decentralized web and sharing the process and results with the everybody. Before Textile, Andrew helped build CartoDB and received a PhD in Biology in Boulder, CO.
Sander Pick is CTO at Textile where he is building the technology to help decentralize our personal data and build the epic consumer apps of the future. Previously, Sander worked at Apple and Mission Motors.
Videos from the summit:


Andrew Hill is the CEO at Textile where he is working on building a high quality user experience for the decentralized web and sharing the process and results with the everybody. Before Textile, Andrew helped build CartoDB and received a PhD in Biology in Boulder, CO.
Sander Pick is CTO at Textile where he is building the technology to help decentralize our personal data and build the epic consumer apps of the future. Previously, Sander worked at Apple and Mission Motors.
Videos from the summit:
DWeb technologies are the key to many new applications. But some implementations are deeply flawed, and some are outright dishonest. How do we start telling which is which? For example: Bitcoin's more open than Ether ... but many feel that this hasn't made Bitcoin more trustworthy. And not all DWeb implementations even need the full set of tools in the kit. Some of the tools (e.g. decentralized ledgers) have existed for decades. How will even experts look to build DWeb systems that can deliver the vision? How can semi-expert users find ones they can rely on? What needs to be "standardized" and how?


I love getting up to my elbows in the tough stuff of new technologies. How much of decentralized is essential to achieve the best outcomes? How much of our lives do we really want to be online and digital, and preserved for the ages?


I love getting up to my elbows in the tough stuff of new technologies. How much of decentralized is essential to achieve the best outcomes? How much of our lives do we really want to be online and digital, and preserved for the ages?
The InfoCentral Project is..
A Long-Range Architectural Approach to Decentralization
InfoCentral proposes an information-centered architecture for decentralized systems and dynamic user environments. It is primarily concerned with data portability, semantics, and interoperability – while making all information social and collaborative by default. Rather than starting with APIs or protocols, information is the platform -- a neutral foundation that software and networks can evolve around.
A Unifier of Decentralized Internet Technologies
Many projects have produced valuable ideas and inspiration. Unfortunately, their contributions are often difficult to combine. Consensus on shared foundations is needed to integrate the best ideas into a unified technology ecosystem. InfoCentral's minimalist, graph-oriented data model provides a foundation to promote collaboration and cross-pollination among decentralized internet technology projects.
A New Hypermedia for the Information-Centric Internet
The InfoCentral Persistent Data Model is an extensible, cryptography-minded, legacy-free standard for containing, linking, and layering all types of data, with no dependence on particular infrastructure. It is not a blockchain, but it can support these and other higher-order data models. We propose the Persistent Data Model as the "thin neck" of the future decentralized, content-addressed internet. By mandating independence from centralized components and hierarchical structures, InfoCentral's hypermedia design ensures that all information is fluid and recomposable by users and software agents.
A Post-Application Software Architecture
The software architecture native to decentralized graph information brings a whole new paradigm for user environments. The future is app-free computing – fully integrated, composable, and adaptive software functionality that comes alongside neutral information rather than creating artificial boundaries or limiting users to certain interactions and modalities. Post-application software architecture makes heavy use of declarative programming paradigms. This promotes runtime composition and customization, giving users total control and flexibility. It is also is a great fit for future AI software agents that are currently limited by clumsy human-centric UIs and APIs.
A Fresh Vision for Social Computing
Collaboration, contextualization, and community-building need to become default, baked into the architecture of information rather than relying on particular services or networks. The modern world needs an internet that is robust against misinformation and extremism – where the best quality and most useful information rises to the top. Societies need portable digital trust and other tools that make it easier to build community. Consumers need empowered to act rationally through reliable, unbiased information. These sorts of issues are largely dependent on the ability to reliably reference and neutrally layer information with third party annotations, a primary design concern of our Persistent Data Model.
Learn more: https://infocentral.org


Chris Gebhardt is a software researcher with diverse tech background and specialization in distributed systems and databases. In the last couple years, he's been working on formalizing a comprehensive architecture for decentralized information systems and dynamic software environments to make best use of them. He is especially passionate about how decentralized technologies can make the internet more civil, collaborative, and community-oriented.
Videos from the summit:


Chris Gebhardt is a software researcher with diverse tech background and specialization in distributed systems and databases. In the last couple years, he's been working on formalizing a comprehensive architecture for decentralized information systems and dynamic software environments to make best use of them. He is especially passionate about how decentralized technologies can make the internet more civil, collaborative, and community-oriented.
Videos from the summit:
What will You learn?
Data and discrimination


Rick Wesson is a farmer and reformed coder. Between moving rocks on his seven acre urban farm in the bay area. He prefers to study manufacturing firearms, brewing beer and direct current brain stimulation. Mr Wesson has served on ICANN’s Security and Stability committee for 15 years. He serves as a member of the Board for Groundwork Richmond which focuses on teaching at risk youth nutrition, agriculture and technology. Groundwork Richmond is committed to planting trees with wifi antennas to both beautify the community and provide free wifi to low income residents. Mr Wesson is Dyslexic and is a founding member of the Bay Area DEN - Network of Dyslexic Entrepreneurs
Videos from the summit:


Rick Wesson is a farmer and reformed coder. Between moving rocks on his seven acre urban farm in the bay area. He prefers to study manufacturing firearms, brewing beer and direct current brain stimulation. Mr Wesson has served on ICANN’s Security and Stability committee for 15 years. He serves as a member of the Board for Groundwork Richmond which focuses on teaching at risk youth nutrition, agriculture and technology. Groundwork Richmond is committed to planting trees with wifi antennas to both beautify the community and provide free wifi to low income residents. Mr Wesson is Dyslexic and is a founding member of the Bay Area DEN - Network of Dyslexic Entrepreneurs
Videos from the summit:
The extractive attention economy is tearing apart our shared social fabric.
The mismatch between our natural human sensitivities and the exponentially growing power of technology opens the door to massive extraction and monetization of our thoughts, emotions, and actions—generating a slew of harmful side effects, such as:
- Shorter attention spans
- Outrage over dialogue
- Addicting our children
- Polarizing democracies
- Turning life into a competition for likes and shares
While we’ve been upgrading our technology
we’ve been downgrading humanity.
The Way Forward
This is a historic moment– never before has technology had the power to so profoundly change the beings that create it. We are at a turning point where we can either allow that power to continue unchecked, or contain it by building Humane Technology that protects our minds and replenishes society.
Humane Technology requires that we understand our most vulnerable human instincts so we can design compassionately to protect them from abuse.
We envision a world where Humane Technology is the default for all technology products and services. A combination of new design processes, new goals and metrics, new organizational structures, and new business models would drastically reduce harmful externalities, actively supporting our individual and collective well-being.
Center for Humane Technology cofounder, Aza Raskin, will present an overview of CHT's proposal and then engage in a deep dialogue about this turning point and our roles moving forward.


Aza Raskin helped build the web at Mozilla as head of user experience, was named to Inc and Forbes 30-under-30 and became the Fast Company Master of Design for his work founding Massive Health, a consumer health and big data company. The company was acquired by Jawbone, where he was VP of Innovation. Before that, he founded Songza.com (acquired by Google). For Aza, the problem is especially personal: his father, Jef Raskin, created the Macintosh project at Apple with the vision that technology should help, not harm, humans.
He is a co-founder of the Center for Humane Technology with Tristan Harris.
With co-founder Britt Selvitelle, Aza is leading the Earth Species Project, capturing, preserving and mapping animal language to human language with AI tools.


Aza Raskin helped build the web at Mozilla as head of user experience, was named to Inc and Forbes 30-under-30 and became the Fast Company Master of Design for his work founding Massive Health, a consumer health and big data company. The company was acquired by Jawbone, where he was VP of Innovation. Before that, he founded Songza.com (acquired by Google). For Aza, the problem is especially personal: his father, Jef Raskin, created the Macintosh project at Apple with the vision that technology should help, not harm, humans.
He is a co-founder of the Center for Humane Technology with Tristan Harris.
With co-founder Britt Selvitelle, Aza is leading the Earth Species Project, capturing, preserving and mapping animal language to human language with AI tools.
Description
In the journey to connect the unconnected and to ensure access to those who are not on the web, we often times find ourselves in conversations around community networks where technology and the web itself is valued as an ends without engaging in any conversation around its purpose and the value it brings, nor how it (might) affect the individuals and communities that it was designed for.
The value of the network and the values of the community that needs to govern the community network becomes invisible and rendered secondary. The concepts and feelings are valid when we are part of communities and when start to understand what things are like from a community perspective.
In this moderated introspective workshop session Sol and cynthia will facilitate a playful session to help all of us address complex concepts, affects and questions: How are we weaving relationships around technology? What are the core values embedded with technology and access to the web? How do we bring the introspection to translate it into our scenario and in our work?
How do we weave this deconstruction into our scenarios? How do we connect? What groups are there that we can carry on beyond DWeb? What is the language that we are using? What input do we give as communities and how does that weave back into the designer’s work?
User vs Consumer and The seesaw of power and responsibility
Where is our line of our responsibility when we are exposing people to X (replace X with safety, privacy, access to a consumerist world that has nothing to do with village living) – what are our ideas around responsibility and care? What do we understand by information, transparency and guidance? What are the effects on a community with a product or a policy that someone designs from the outside?
What is the middle ground? What are our boundaries and where does our peace and freedom lie?
You neither impose nor take on anyone else?
We don’t have to constrain ourselves but rather question our positionalities.
We will take a break from our busy minds and take a walk outside of our heads and land into our values. (ethics and care).
This session is not only about introspection, it’s about connection.
Session Rundown
We expect the session to last around 75 mins.
We would want to be a in a cozy and fun space that allows people to move and sit relaxed on the floor.
We would also need paper, tape and different colors pens.


cynthia el khoury received her Reusi Dat Ton instructor certification from LoiKroh massage school in Chiang Mai in 2017. cynthia is an aikido practitioner, a somatic experiencing practitioner in training, and a traditional healing student of ancient Kemet. cynthia is working with APC as gender and women’s engagement coordinator for community networks.


Sol Luca de Tena has spent her life living and working between South Africa and Spain, and calls both countries home. She has over a decade of experience in strategic project management within technology development, capacity building, social impact and policy – with a focus on utilising technologies to address environmental and social challenges. She develops collaboration networks between often diverse interests, including communities, academia, industry and administration, and shapes projects that respond to critical needs. Sol is passionate about creating positive, meaningful change through equitable, sustainable interventions. She is currently a director of Zenzeleni Networks NPC, South Africa's first community network, as well as the vice-chair of the Internet Society’s global Community Networks Special Interest Group (CNSIG).


cynthia el khoury received her Reusi Dat Ton instructor certification from LoiKroh massage school in Chiang Mai in 2017. cynthia is an aikido practitioner, a somatic experiencing practitioner in training, and a traditional healing student of ancient Kemet. cynthia is working with APC as gender and women’s engagement coordinator for community networks.


Sol Luca de Tena has spent her life living and working between South Africa and Spain, and calls both countries home. She has over a decade of experience in strategic project management within technology development, capacity building, social impact and policy – with a focus on utilising technologies to address environmental and social challenges. She develops collaboration networks between often diverse interests, including communities, academia, industry and administration, and shapes projects that respond to critical needs. Sol is passionate about creating positive, meaningful change through equitable, sustainable interventions. She is currently a director of Zenzeleni Networks NPC, South Africa's first community network, as well as the vice-chair of the Internet Society’s global Community Networks Special Interest Group (CNSIG).
For more than 20 years the Internet Archive has been backing up much of the public web. Those archives are freely available via the Wayback Machine.
Through the Web, mobile apps, browser extensions, and APIs, hundreds of thousands of people each day discover and replay web pages that may no longer be available via the “live web”.
Less than 100 days pass before the average web page is removed or changed. As such creating and preseving archives is critical to helping ensure a record of our times is available for future generations and to help hold those in power accountable today.
More than 1.5 billion URLs are archived by the Wayback Machine every week including more than 100 million news related URLs. One measure of the usefulness of the Wayback Machine is that it as been written about, or archives from it referenced, in more than 1,000 news stores since the start of 2017.
Learn more about how you can help preserve URLs you can submit on demand, explore some of the advanced features of the service, and discover how you can help shape the future of the Wayback Machine by joining our growing family of beta testers, developers, designers and researchers.


After working for a Japanese computer company as a researcher for 17 years, Kenji joined the Internet Archive in August 2010 to implement a system archiving everything on the Internet. Being a positively lazy engineer, enthusiastic about making computers work for humans with least effort, he likes mixing tools and programming languages to get things done. Loves handicrafts, cooks pasta and bakes biscotti.


Mark Graham has created and managed innovative online products and services since 1984. As Director of the Wayback Machine he is responsible for capturing, preserving and helping people discover and use, more than 1 billion new web captures each week. Mark was most recently Senior Vice President with NBC News where he managed several business units including GardenWeb and Stringwire, a live, mobile, video platform for collaborative citizen reporting. Mark was Senior Vice President of Technology with iVillage, an early Internet company that focused on women and community. He co-founded Rojo Networks, one of the first large-scale feed aggregators and personalized blog readers (sold to sixapart.)
In the early days of the net he managed technology and business development at The WELL and lead their effort to build the first web-based interface for online forums, and also helped bring the pre-web Internet to millions of people by running AOL's Gopher project as part of their Internet Center. He managed technology for the pioneering US-Soviet Sovam Teleport email service and co-founded and managed PeaceNet, one of the first online communities for progressive social change, and later IGC.org, one of the world first ISPs. He also co-founded the global NGO, APC.org. Mark's early training and experience with computer-mediated communications was acquired while he served in the US Air Force, spending more than 3 years working at the Air Force Data Services Center at the Pentagon. Mark's nonprofit work includes volunteering with the open education library http://oercommons.org and as a board member of http://openrecoverysf.org.


After working for a Japanese computer company as a researcher for 17 years, Kenji joined the Internet Archive in August 2010 to implement a system archiving everything on the Internet. Being a positively lazy engineer, enthusiastic about making computers work for humans with least effort, he likes mixing tools and programming languages to get things done. Loves handicrafts, cooks pasta and bakes biscotti.


Mark Graham has created and managed innovative online products and services since 1984. As Director of the Wayback Machine he is responsible for capturing, preserving and helping people discover and use, more than 1 billion new web captures each week. Mark was most recently Senior Vice President with NBC News where he managed several business units including GardenWeb and Stringwire, a live, mobile, video platform for collaborative citizen reporting. Mark was Senior Vice President of Technology with iVillage, an early Internet company that focused on women and community. He co-founded Rojo Networks, one of the first large-scale feed aggregators and personalized blog readers (sold to sixapart.)
In the early days of the net he managed technology and business development at The WELL and lead their effort to build the first web-based interface for online forums, and also helped bring the pre-web Internet to millions of people by running AOL's Gopher project as part of their Internet Center. He managed technology for the pioneering US-Soviet Sovam Teleport email service and co-founded and managed PeaceNet, one of the first online communities for progressive social change, and later IGC.org, one of the world first ISPs. He also co-founded the global NGO, APC.org. Mark's early training and experience with computer-mediated communications was acquired while he served in the US Air Force, spending more than 3 years working at the Air Force Data Services Center at the Pentagon. Mark's nonprofit work includes volunteering with the open education library http://oercommons.org and as a board member of http://openrecoverysf.org.
Participants contribute tokenized art to an open collection for the purposes of public exposure and record. Open access to submissions and equal exposure to all works are central, however the focus is to push Creative Commons into tokenization by utilizing send memos and other protocol level methodology of declaring licence for reproduction upon delivery. While any user may submit any work of art, only sends from the origin account will be authorized to declare usage rights.
The intention is not to only use CounterParty, Ethereum, and Namecoin, but any blockchain (or similar) fitting to the industry as the utilities become available. Visual art is currently only accepted if it has been approved in another collection. Original content in the form of text based content is invited to be registered in the poem/ namespace in Namecoin to be included in a truly decentralized digital ‘zine.
Attendees at rare.af (Rare Arts Festival) in January 2018 were invited to contribute to an exquisite corpse of great length. This collective illustration was the first physical submission to the collection. It
is scheduled to return to the second blockchain art conference in NYC of the same name later this year, but first it will be made available at the DecentralizedWeb Science Fair 2018. Illustrators will be encouraged to “tokenize” their addition on their own or in cooperation of the attending volunteer. Content creators who are better with words than pictures will be invited or assisted in registering their own entries on the spot as well. Participants at the science fair will retain all of their issuance in the process if funded individually otherwise it will be delivered within 24 hours.
Those who follow through until the end of the process will have a unique memento of their contribution to this work of art which can be shared, traded or sold on the open market using CounterParty. Tapping into such a resource as the universal applicability of these tokens will secure the ability to use these novelty tokens well into the future.


Duncan is an artist from Kalamazoo, Michigan who has recently traveled to NYC and Tokyo to meet with other cryptoartists in real life. After selling a tokenized print of an illustrated parody on stage at the actual first auction of visual art made for the blockchain, he became inspired to found artMuseum.io to be the world's first decentralized open-submission museum of cryptoart for any blockchain.
As a direct result of being empowered by publishing in someone else’s system, this independent artist felt compelled to forge a collection of his own which is not as exclusive in theme but aims to reflect best practices in greater indologies of decentralization and consensus. Growing from the understanding for the root word of token being “to teach,” this telegram user assists artists all over the globe to participate in other the various community based cryptoart “games” which have launched in 2018.
Having accrued enough reputation and body of knowledge from all the odd jobs which made this outlier specialized he was selected by EverdreamSoft to curate the Memorychain and OasisMining collections in Book of Orbs. He began with updating the two Japanese whitepapers into one solid plan, drawing an action plan together with other compatible projects.
As a curator this visionary has launched a word of mouth only cryptoarto collection whose mechanisms push the boundaries of experience by inverting most of the rules. As a student in Marketing at Western Governors University this entrepreneur learned that a successful endeavor is based on giving the market the service it needs. Contrary to all the tokenized games to be announced since mid-2017, his “Proof of Parody” offers a novel upgrade to the joystick battle genre.


Duncan is an artist from Kalamazoo, Michigan who has recently traveled to NYC and Tokyo to meet with other cryptoartists in real life. After selling a tokenized print of an illustrated parody on stage at the actual first auction of visual art made for the blockchain, he became inspired to found artMuseum.io to be the world's first decentralized open-submission museum of cryptoart for any blockchain.
As a direct result of being empowered by publishing in someone else’s system, this independent artist felt compelled to forge a collection of his own which is not as exclusive in theme but aims to reflect best practices in greater indologies of decentralization and consensus. Growing from the understanding for the root word of token being “to teach,” this telegram user assists artists all over the globe to participate in other the various community based cryptoart “games” which have launched in 2018.
Having accrued enough reputation and body of knowledge from all the odd jobs which made this outlier specialized he was selected by EverdreamSoft to curate the Memorychain and OasisMining collections in Book of Orbs. He began with updating the two Japanese whitepapers into one solid plan, drawing an action plan together with other compatible projects.
As a curator this visionary has launched a word of mouth only cryptoarto collection whose mechanisms push the boundaries of experience by inverting most of the rules. As a student in Marketing at Western Governors University this entrepreneur learned that a successful endeavor is based on giving the market the service it needs. Contrary to all the tokenized games to be announced since mid-2017, his “Proof of Parody” offers a novel upgrade to the joystick battle genre.
As Brain Computer Communication comes online in the next few years our privacy issues may escalate, because our inner most thoughts could go online, and in fact need significant process power to decode. What is the responsible way to address?
Hopes & dreams
We determine a distributed way of assuring only those that have the thoughts and those they wish to share with have access, and that access is as ephemeral as desired.
Participation
anyone
Why participate
next generation of communication - with thought alone
Session rundown
90 minutes
Relevant links
http://longnow.org/seminars/02018/oct/29/toward-practical-telepathy/
Contact
Mary Lou Jepsen
John Ryan
Others TBD


Dr. Mary Lou Jepsen is the founder and CEO of Openwater, (https://www.openwater.cc/). Previously, she was Co-founder and CTO of One Laptop per Child (OLPC) and a former executive at Facebook, Oculus, Google, and Intel. Other highlights: former MIT Professor. Founded 4 hardware companies. 250 published or issued patents. TIME named her one of the hundred most influential people in the world.
Her latest company, Openwater, aims to create an inexpensive, noninvasive, portable medical imaging device that rivals MRI quality imaging at a fraction of the price and size.


Dr. Mary Lou Jepsen is the founder and CEO of Openwater, (https://www.openwater.cc/). Previously, she was Co-founder and CTO of One Laptop per Child (OLPC) and a former executive at Facebook, Oculus, Google, and Intel. Other highlights: former MIT Professor. Founded 4 hardware companies. 250 published or issued patents. TIME named her one of the hundred most influential people in the world.
Her latest company, Openwater, aims to create an inexpensive, noninvasive, portable medical imaging device that rivals MRI quality imaging at a fraction of the price and size.
Urbit is a secure peer-to-peer network of personal servers, built on a clean-slate system software stack.
A personal server is a virtual computer which stores your data, runs your apps, and manages your connected devices. We believe controlling your own data, code and identity is the definition of digital freedom. We believe everyone needs digital freedom, not just a few hackers. We believe the only tool needed to solve this problem is a general-purpose server made for human beings. Your urbit is your cryptographic identity, personal archive, application platform, and device hub. It's as easy to manage as an iPhone.
In Urbit, network identities are cryptographic property, like Bitcoin. If Bitcoin is money and Ethereum is law, Urbit is land. Urbit is designed to become a digital republic: a network of individually owned nodes with no central point of control. Like a well-planned city, the friendly network is decentralized but connected, safe but free.
An ordinary person can't manage a Unix server on the Internet. The Unix-Internet platform was a brilliant system, but it's almost 50 years old. Urbit is a new clean-slate, full-stack server. It's implemented on top of the old platform, but it's a sealed sandbox like the browser.


Chris is a web developer / UX designer who turned to decentralization after a decade of stagnation in social media innovation. He quit Twitch in April of 2017 to do decentralization research and found the broader community. Now he works at Tlon, finally building the next-generation web interfaces of his dreams.


Morgan is a product manager working on Urbit with a background in media art. His current work is on security UX, and long-term he's interested in calm, timeless interfaces.


Gavin is a designer working on Urbit. Most recently he has focused on visualizing cryptographic data like public keys and other identifiers.


Chris is a web developer / UX designer who turned to decentralization after a decade of stagnation in social media innovation. He quit Twitch in April of 2017 to do decentralization research and found the broader community. Now he works at Tlon, finally building the next-generation web interfaces of his dreams.


Morgan is a product manager working on Urbit with a background in media art. His current work is on security UX, and long-term he's interested in calm, timeless interfaces.


Gavin is a designer working on Urbit. Most recently he has focused on visualizing cryptographic data like public keys and other identifiers.
Web3 is a new kind of web, and today is a decentralised movement, envisioned and further developed by Dr. Gavin Wood in 2014. It is “a reimagination of the sorts of things that we already use the Web for, but with a fundamentally different model for the interactions between parties.” (http://gavwood.com/web3lt.html). We call this the “more truth, less trust” model.
The Web3 Foundation was founded by Dr. Gavin Wood, Co-Founder of Ethereum and Founder of Parity Technologies, as a non-profit organization that focuses on the development, deployment and maintenance of “Web3”, promoting the development of innovative technologies and applications in the field of cryptographically-enabled decentralised software protocols.
The Web3 Foundation developed a framework to visually display the Web3 technology stack and to lay out the different protocols comprising Web3. This forms the base upon which the decentralised applications of the future will be built. The Web3 tech stack is used as a roadmap for teams to coordinate efforts and push development forward collaboratively (Web3 tech stack: https://twitter.com/web3foundation/status/1006218412069150720).
The Web3 Foundation nurtures and stewards cutting-edge technologies and applications at all levels of the Web3 tech stack. Our focus is on the research, development, deployment, funding, and maintenance of Web3 technologies, plus advocacy and education, developer-adoption, support of middleware, and base-layer/demonstration applications. Because of our experience building major components of the Web3 tech stack and their respective communities, we are uniquely positioned to assemble and align the diverse set of teams building the protocols that make up the Web3 tech stack.


Peter is the Executive Director of the Web3 Foundation which aims to bring about a more secure, efficient and trust-free web. He obtained his Masters of Engineering degree at the University of Oxford, reading Engineering Science where he focused on Bayesian Machine Learning.
He has worked across defense, finance and data analytics industries, working on mesh networks, distributed knowledge bases, quantitative pricing models, machine learning and business development. As a principal engineer at Parity Technologies, he contributed to the Parity Ethereum Client development, in particular implementing consensus algorithms, as well as driving enterprise solutions built on the Parity technology stack.
He has given multiple talks at conferences (TOA, BPASE, DevCon, EdCon) and meetups.
Videos from the summit:




Jack works from Berlin, Germany where he is helping to launch the Polkadot protocol and coordinate all protocols within the Web3 Tech stack. Jack leads various community and communications efforts in the domain of decentralized technologies at the Foundation.
Jack served an Associate and Head of Crypto of Ulysses Holdings. As an Associate Jack provided support to the CFO, Head of People, and other Ulysses Partners in the form of investment research, financial modeling, and operational functions. As Head of Crypto Jack led the firm’s cryptocurrency and blockchain related investments and partnerships.
Previously, Jack was an Analyst at Bain Capital in Boston, MA and the Founder and President of Cypher League Media in Brooklyn, NY.


Dina is a member of the Web3 Foundation which aims to bring about a more secure, efficient and trust-free web. She is helping to launch the Polkadot protocol and other technologies that build the base for decentralized applications. Previously, she served on the management board of Parity Technologies where she helped to build the organization and operations.
She obtained her Masters of Engineering and Business degree from the University of Karlsruhe in Germany, and she worked for 5 years with McKinsey & Company where she advised a variety of global companies in strategy, organizational development and operations.
Videos from the summit:


Peter is the Executive Director of the Web3 Foundation which aims to bring about a more secure, efficient and trust-free web. He obtained his Masters of Engineering degree at the University of Oxford, reading Engineering Science where he focused on Bayesian Machine Learning.
He has worked across defense, finance and data analytics industries, working on mesh networks, distributed knowledge bases, quantitative pricing models, machine learning and business development. As a principal engineer at Parity Technologies, he contributed to the Parity Ethereum Client development, in particular implementing consensus algorithms, as well as driving enterprise solutions built on the Parity technology stack.
He has given multiple talks at conferences (TOA, BPASE, DevCon, EdCon) and meetups.
Videos from the summit:




Jack works from Berlin, Germany where he is helping to launch the Polkadot protocol and coordinate all protocols within the Web3 Tech stack. Jack leads various community and communications efforts in the domain of decentralized technologies at the Foundation.
Jack served an Associate and Head of Crypto of Ulysses Holdings. As an Associate Jack provided support to the CFO, Head of People, and other Ulysses Partners in the form of investment research, financial modeling, and operational functions. As Head of Crypto Jack led the firm’s cryptocurrency and blockchain related investments and partnerships.
Previously, Jack was an Analyst at Bain Capital in Boston, MA and the Founder and President of Cypher League Media in Brooklyn, NY.


Dina is a member of the Web3 Foundation which aims to bring about a more secure, efficient and trust-free web. She is helping to launch the Polkadot protocol and other technologies that build the base for decentralized applications. Previously, she served on the management board of Parity Technologies where she helped to build the organization and operations.
She obtained her Masters of Engineering and Business degree from the University of Karlsruhe in Germany, and she worked for 5 years with McKinsey & Company where she advised a variety of global companies in strategy, organizational development and operations.
Videos from the summit:
What is WebTorrent?
WebTorrent is the first torrent client that works in the browser. YEP, THAT'S RIGHT. THE BROWSER.
It's written completely in JavaScript – the language of the web – and uses WebRTC for true peer-to-peer transport. No browser plugin, extension, or installation is required.
Using open web standards, WebTorrent connects website users together to form a distributed, decentralized browser-to-browser network for efficient file transfer.
Why is this cool?
Imagine a video site like YouTube, where visitors help to host the site's content. The more people that use a WebTorrent-powered website, the faster and more resilient it becomes.
Browser-to-browser communication cuts out the middle-man and lets people communicate on their own terms. No more client/server – just a network of peers, all equal. WebTorrent is the first step in the journey to redecentralize the Web.


Feross is building WebTorrent , the first torrent client that works on the web in the browser. He is bringing P2P to the masses with accessible, WebRTC-based P2P protocols.
Videos from the summit:


Feross is building WebTorrent , the first torrent client that works on the web in the browser. He is bringing P2P to the masses with accessible, WebRTC-based P2P protocols.
Videos from the summit:
WeTrust uses blockchain technology to create a decentralized, financially inclusive, socially impactful ecosystem. In support of this mission, many products and strategic initiatives are being cultivated to ensure a robust environment for all stakeholders. Spring is our platform for collaborative finance and the flagship product. It is a saving and donation platform that will evolve to incorporate many different types of financially collaborative models.
Other foundational products from WeTrust include our Platform Sidechain, Platform QA Tools, Ethanic Wallet, and Subscription Module. Each of these products will augment our ecosystem in unique ways. Strategic initiatives to grow the business will come in the form of partnerships, incubation, business/technical advisory, and investment facilitation. At the center of of all this will be our TRST token, which is the cornerstone of our entire ecosystem, and will be used to facilitate interaction amongst everyone in the system.


Alfonso is the Product Manager at WeTrust, a blockchain technology company creating a decentralized, financially inclusive, socially impactful ecosystem. Previously the co-founder of Rosca Finance (rosca.io), the only product on the market that allowed consumers to build credit history through saving and investing their own money. A former banker for over 12 years, he's worked at renowned international financial institutions across the globe, spanning US, Taiwan, Spain and China.
Mike is a Business Analyst at WeTrust. Although having entered the cryptoeconomy full-time only recently, Mike has been mining, trading, blogging, and observing the cryptocurrency world for years. Prior to joining WeTrust, he was IT & Operations Manager at a successful telecom consulting firm headquartered on Union Square in SF.


Alfonso is the Product Manager at WeTrust, a blockchain technology company creating a decentralized, financially inclusive, socially impactful ecosystem. Previously the co-founder of Rosca Finance (rosca.io), the only product on the market that allowed consumers to build credit history through saving and investing their own money. A former banker for over 12 years, he's worked at renowned international financial institutions across the globe, spanning US, Taiwan, Spain and China.
Mike is a Business Analyst at WeTrust. Although having entered the cryptoeconomy full-time only recently, Mike has been mining, trading, blogging, and observing the cryptocurrency world for years. Prior to joining WeTrust, he was IT & Operations Manager at a successful telecom consulting firm headquartered on Union Square in SF.
Description
We intend to present a few community network cases, focusing on the community aspects of community networks, instead of just the technical ones, although they are inseparable.
Hopes & dreams
We hope to start conversations around the importance of community building, self-governance, economic resilience, sovereignty, human and ecological diversity and what else comes up, which are of fundamental importance in a world which seems to not recognize the ongoing colonization thru globalization.
Participation
Everyone is welcome, kids and all, without any additional requirements beyond an open mind and heart.
Why Participate?
Anyone who believes local empowerment is important, as we'll share methods, tools and stories around that topic.
Session rundown
The session will start early morning as we'll gather around a circle in an open space if weather permits. We'll introduce our communities and their haves and needs. Those of us who are part of a community-(mesh)-network will present a few stories, to start a conversation around the topic of how technology relates to community organizing. The session will last for about 2 hours.
Relevant links
http://ssb.mikey.nz:8807/channel/moinho-mesh?showAll
Contact
Luandro
Nico Pace


Luandro is a developer who does regular contributions to projects aimed at decentralizing communication such as Libre Router and Secure Scuttlebutt. He’s been living in Moinho, quilombola village, for over 5 years, building together with his neighbors a community network.


Nicolás Pace is a member of AlterMundi A.C., a grassroots organization supporting rural underserved communities in their pursue for creating their own telecommunications infrastructure, their own piece of internet. In doing so, Nicolas has traveled to more than 15 countries, getting to know most of the community networks out there, and getting to understand the diversity and complexity of the matter. One of the latest actions he has been undertaking has been working together with REDES A.C., a grassroots organization from Mexico in supporting first nation communities. Within AlterMundi he has also been involved in the Decentralized Repository of Culture, a P2P project that tries to find a way around the digital culture distribution, involving everyone in the process: creators, curators, enthusiasts.
Videos from the summit:


Luandro is a developer who does regular contributions to projects aimed at decentralizing communication such as Libre Router and Secure Scuttlebutt. He’s been living in Moinho, quilombola village, for over 5 years, building together with his neighbors a community network.


Nicolás Pace is a member of AlterMundi A.C., a grassroots organization supporting rural underserved communities in their pursue for creating their own telecommunications infrastructure, their own piece of internet. In doing so, Nicolas has traveled to more than 15 countries, getting to know most of the community networks out there, and getting to understand the diversity and complexity of the matter. One of the latest actions he has been undertaking has been working together with REDES A.C., a grassroots organization from Mexico in supporting first nation communities. Within AlterMundi he has also been involved in the Decentralized Repository of Culture, a P2P project that tries to find a way around the digital culture distribution, involving everyone in the process: creators, curators, enthusiasts.
Videos from the summit:
Description
We'll discuss ways that people can Have A Bad Time on a social network, specifically Scuttlebutt. How will creative harassers get the attention of their targets? What specific UX features can head off those attacks? What do we need to do to make Scuttlebutt safe and easy for everyone? Blocking, accessibility features, privacy settings... how can we ensure that our software is supporting our values and limit the harm it can do? We'll start with a listening session to learn about peoples' experiences. Then Cinnamon has principles and proposals to share from the Abuse Audit; we'll brainstorm more and discuss user needs, technical details and systemic implications of these changes.
Hopes & Dreams
We'll walk away excited to make our software safe and accessible for everyone, with concrete next steps.
Participation
This is a facilitated roundtable discussion about users' needs and how developers can meet those needs.
Hoped-for participants:
- Developers of SSB clients
- People with experiences of online harassment
- People with accessibility needs
Why Participate?
For users, to share your experiences.
For developers, to listen to users and to prioritize and plan safety features.
Also for developers to build personal relationships with each other so we can support each other in this work, which will be an ongoing process.
Session Rundown
1. Listening session
2. Discuss findings of Abuse Audit and work on specifications for mitigation features
Contact
Cinnamon


Interested in safety, accessibility, harassment & abuse prevention, UX related topics.
Also procedural art, analog art, and music!


Interested in safety, accessibility, harassment & abuse prevention, UX related topics.
Also procedural art, analog art, and music!
ZeroNet is a decentralized and P2P web solution. It especially focuses on multi-user and real-time updated sites.
Main features:
- Full Tor network support to hide the client's IP address
- Built-in SQLite database for fast data access
- Namecoin domain names
Current challenges:
- Fighting with Great Firewall of China
- Scaling to 10 000 of users on the same site


Tamas is a self-taught web builder from Hungary who has been in love with the Internet since the dial-up era. He is the founder and programmer of ZeroNet (https://zeronet.io), which allows you to create decentralized, P2P and real-time updated websites using Bitcoin cryptography and the BitTorrent network.
Videos from the summit:


Tamas is a self-taught web builder from Hungary who has been in love with the Internet since the dial-up era. He is the founder and programmer of ZeroNet (https://zeronet.io), which allows you to create decentralized, P2P and real-time updated websites using Bitcoin cryptography and the BitTorrent network.
Videos from the summit:
The application was named as an homage to the ancient Library of Alexandria, a perfect but tragic example of the problem with centralization, because it is intended to be an open public space for all information. Web information architecture today is vulnerable because it relies on centralized hubs to store and distribute information. Applications like Alexandria that are built on Open Index Protocol offer transparency, resist censorship and protect information access because they are built on a decentralized and permissionless system.
We will share about how to publish content to a decentralized system anchored to a blockchain, and the ways blockchain content distribution will benefit creators & audiences.
See more at https://www.alexandria.io/


Kristoffer Newsom is a content creator at Alexandria.io and a multidisciplinary artist, focused on the intersection of scientific thought with creative expression and intuition. Kris has worked as a Photographer for Print and Web, in Film/TV as a Cinematographer, Colorist, Editor, Producer, and Director, and as a Designer, Machinist, and Product Developer in the Automotive and Consumer Products industries. He thinks the decentralized web will bring a new era of unparalleled creativity and economic development.


Devon Read James is the inventor of Open Index Protocol (OIP), a blockchain specification for an open and permissionless database, and CEO of Alexandria.io, where you can find anything published to the Open Index. He has worked for Apple and Sony, deployed twice overseas as a US Marine infantryman, contributed to Emmy & Oscar winners as a post-production artist, and co-founded a small design/manufacture/import business. He is obsessed with how decentralized technology can make the web more open, transparent and trustworthy.
Videos from the summit:


Amy James is the co-lead author of Open Index Protocol, a blockchain specification for an open and permissionless database, and co-founder of Alexandria.io where she serves as strategist, writer, speaker and advocate for artists. She has previously worked for nonprofit arts organizations, political campaigns and as an independent writer/director. How blockchain will benefit creators, audiences & the web is the most exciting story she’s ever told.
Videos from the summit:


Kristoffer Newsom is a content creator at Alexandria.io and a multidisciplinary artist, focused on the intersection of scientific thought with creative expression and intuition. Kris has worked as a Photographer for Print and Web, in Film/TV as a Cinematographer, Colorist, Editor, Producer, and Director, and as a Designer, Machinist, and Product Developer in the Automotive and Consumer Products industries. He thinks the decentralized web will bring a new era of unparalleled creativity and economic development.


Devon Read James is the inventor of Open Index Protocol (OIP), a blockchain specification for an open and permissionless database, and CEO of Alexandria.io, where you can find anything published to the Open Index. He has worked for Apple and Sony, deployed twice overseas as a US Marine infantryman, contributed to Emmy & Oscar winners as a post-production artist, and co-founded a small design/manufacture/import business. He is obsessed with how decentralized technology can make the web more open, transparent and trustworthy.
Videos from the summit:


Amy James is the co-lead author of Open Index Protocol, a blockchain specification for an open and permissionless database, and co-founder of Alexandria.io where she serves as strategist, writer, speaker and advocate for artists. She has previously worked for nonprofit arts organizations, political campaigns and as an independent writer/director. How blockchain will benefit creators, audiences & the web is the most exciting story she’s ever told.