How will Crypto impact the Financial Equality? - Charles Hoskinson | ATC #511

Primary Topic

This episode delves into how cryptocurrency can transform financial equality, featuring Charles Hoskinson, a prominent figure in blockchain and crypto technology.

Episode Summary

In this enlightening episode of "Around the Coin," hosts Faisal Khan and Mike Townsend engage with Charles Hoskinson, co-founder of Ethereum and creator of Cardano. Hoskinson discusses his multifaceted entrepreneurial ventures and deep dives into the potential of cryptocurrencies to democratize financial access globally. He sheds light on his investment strategies, ranging from innovative tech projects to lifestyle businesses, emphasizing the role of blockchain in enhancing these sectors. Additionally, Hoskinson articulates how crypto can serve the unbanked and underbanked, proposing solutions like blockchain for identity verification and financial transactions, aiming to reduce compliance costs and barriers.

Main Takeaways

  1. Charles Hoskinson’s approach to investments spans lifestyle interests and strategic business ventures, using blockchain to enhance these areas.
  2. Crypto has the potential to revolutionize financial services for the unbanked by minimizing the cost and complexity of financial transactions.
  3. The implementation of blockchain can ensure secure and efficient identity verification processes, crucial for financial inclusivity.
  4. Hoskinson advocates for regulatory frameworks that accommodate new technologies without stifling innovation.
  5. The episode explores how decentralized technologies can address broader issues, including privacy concerns and financial disparities.

Episode Chapters

1: Introduction

Charles Hoskinson is introduced, discussing his background and the broad applications of blockchain beyond traditional uses.
Charles Hoskinson: "Blockchain is not just for financial transactions, but a tool for innovation across various sectors."

2: Investment Philosophy

Hoskinson explains his criteria for investments, highlighting his interest in projects that merge his personal passions with business opportunities.
Charles Hoskinson: "I invest in projects that align with my interests and where I see a potential for significant impact."

3: Blockchain's Potential

Discussion on how blockchain technology can address the needs of the unbanked and underbanked populations globally.
Charles Hoskinson: "Blockchain can drastically reduce the barriers to financial entry for the world's most underserved communities."

4: Regulatory Challenges

Hoskinson speaks on the challenges of navigating regulatory environments while innovating with crypto and blockchain technologies.
Charles Hoskinson: "Navigating regulations is challenging but essential for the broader adoption of crypto technologies."

5: Future of Crypto

Insights into the future developments in blockchain and cryptocurrencies and their impact on society.
Charles Hoskinson: "The future of crypto involves integrating it with everyday technologies, enhancing security, and improving accessibility."

Actionable Advice

  1. Educate yourself on blockchain technology to better understand its potential and implications.
  2. Consider how decentralized technologies can be integrated into your business or sector.
  3. Stay informed about regulatory changes and how they might impact the use of cryptocurrencies.
  4. Explore opportunities for investment in blockchain technology, considering both financial and social returns.
  5. Engage with communities and networks focused on cryptocurrency to exchange ideas and collaborate on projects.

About This Episode

In this in-depth interview, host Stephen Sargeant talks to Charles Hoskinson, CEO & Founder of Input Output Global, shares his thoughts on a wide range of topics beyond just blockchain and cryptocurrency. He discusses his investments in groundbreaking projects like bringing back the woolly mammoth and his approach to business across different industries. The conversation also delves into how blockchain can serve underbanked populations, the importance of decentralization, and insights into his ventures in synthetic biology and construction. Additionally, Hoskinson shares updates on Cardano, including his excitement about governance on the platform, and touches on broader interests like anti-aging research and creating glow-in-the-dark plants. The talk offers a rare glimpse into the mind of a key figure in the crypto space, showcasing his deep thought processes and the wide array of initiatives he is involved in.

People

Charles Hoskinson, Faisal Khan, Mike Townsend

Companies

Ethereum, Cardano

Books

None

Guest Name(s):

Charles Hoskinson

Content Warnings:

None

Transcript

Stephen Sargent

Hey everyone. This interview is with none other than Charles Hoskinson, co founder of Ethereum, creator of Cardano, CEO running input output global that has midnight protocol and many others. Hes just a complete genius if I had to be, if I had to use a word. But this great conversation wasnt just about blockchain. I wanted to discuss with him more so on investors what he looks to invest in.

And he's investing in things like bringing back the woolly mammoth. You know, he has a bison rant, a construction company, and we really dissect how he approaches all these different businesses and how blockchain and cardano can actually help some of these use cases and his thoughts about what's keeping blockchain back from banking, the under banked and underserved and unbanked. This conversation goes really deep into the mind of Charles Hoskinson. I suggest you get a coffee, get out your pen and paper and get ready to take some notes because I think this is one of the unique conversations with Charles that's not just about Cardano, that's not just about blockchain and cryptocurrency and goes deep into his mind about all the different aspects of his business and his career. Listen to this one and let me know what you think.

This is your host, Stephen Sargent. And this is a special episode of around the coin. We get to meet Charles Hoskinson. This is not his first time on the podcast, but first time I get to interview him. Charles, it's great to meet you.

I'd love to kind of hear, give little people a little bit of your summary, if they haven't already heard about you. The godfather of crypto and blockchain. Well, Steven, thank you so much for having me on. I'm a cryptocurrency entrepreneur and I've been in the industry for about twelve years off and on, and created a lot of interesting projects that people have used. I was a co founder of Ethereum, created Cardano, and also I work on a lot of other interesting things like Atala Prism, which is a self sovereign identity framework.

Charles Hoskinson

We got midnight, which is a computational privacy system that has all kinds of cool stuff under the hood. Serial entrepreneur. I founded a boatload of companies, too many dimension and running around the world doing cool stuff in crypto. I'm curious, before we jump into all the crypto stuff, you talked about being a serial entrepreneur. What do you look for when you're investing in these companies?

Stephen Sargent

Because I think a lot of the people listening to this episode, they're entrepreneurs, they're building, they're trying to get funding. What are the things that you're looking for? Because it sounds like you're not just investing in crypto related projects. I could be wrong, but I'm curious. A couple of projects maybe that you've invested in, and what were the things that made it a no brainer for you?

Charles Hoskinson

Well, I have three categories for my investment vestment thesis for my family office. One is lifestyle. So if it's connected to something I'm interested in and I have fun with and I enjoy, then I try to create a reality where I make more than I spend. So my, you know, I own a jet, and my jet, the way I've structured it, I actually make a profit on it. So while I have this amazing private aircraft, it's actually a profit center instead of a cost center.

Same for the real estate portfolio. And also my ranch up in Wyoming. It's 11,000 acres, but I have 600 bison on it. I run a bison hunting operation, and that offsets the cost of ownership for the ranch. And so lifestyle is one category, and that's basically to preserve and protect what I have and to enable the things that I'd like to do and make sure that they're at the lowest possible cost.

The second category that I look at is, do I want to be the guy who runs it, or do I just want to have money in it? If I just want to have money in it, then what I look for there is that something that I know a lot about. It's kind of my industry, and, you know, I'm very passionate about these types of things. And do I have a high degree of trust in the team. It's strategy, its agility, and its ability to execute.

And so, you know, you look for things like the age of the team, the experience set, the credentials, what they've already created, their ability to talk to customers, the temperament, the culture. You know, everything is on a case by case basis. For example, I co founded a company called Ghostfire with Ben Lam, and Ben is a proven entrepreneur. He has claimed the famous colossal. It's a company that's resurrecting the woolly mammoth at the moment that I also invested in.

That's how I met Ben. And they're at a billion plus dollar valuation, and they're de extincting animals. And before the end of the decade, we're going to have herds of these things running around. So I loved working with Ben, and I said co found a company together, and he's very good at navigating the synthetic biology world. He got the deal with George Church, who's like a legendary synthetic biologist at Harvard.

He's really good at building solid research teams and motivating those teams and doing a lot of complex work very shortly. So I kind of come in and provide a lot of high level strategy and advice about how we should navigate the channel, partners and the markets, intellectual property, and these types of things. And he does the execution side of it. So where I take a passive role is where I sit at the board level and give advice, or I help sculpt the big arc strategy, the big s, and then they take the CEO role. The third category is where I'm directly involved, meaning I own a super majority of it.

In many cases, I'm kind of the de facto CEO, or the CEO is reporting directly to me, and we're both doing execution together in our own way. We kind of split things up. But the long term intention for those two categories is to have those categories completely autonomous at some point, meaning they have their own governance structure and CEO's and these things. And I kind of fade back after we've accomplished some sort of major milestone that I'm significantly interested in. And every venture has a different set of milestones.

Stephen Sargent

How do you step back and ones that you're not too hands on, but you obviously know how to operate the business as well. Do you let the people that are hands on kind of learn as they go? Do you try to, like, see, you know, let them, you know, fail on their own and learn? Or is that difficult for you to, like, kind of give someone the reins even though you're like, hey, we could get it a little bit better over here, but, hey, maybe they might come up with something a lot more interesting or a new way of doing things. So you really, you have to set your goalpost of what is the definition of success.

Charles Hoskinson

And you never step back until you've had your success, but you change your roles as the project evolves. So Cardano is a great example of that. In the beginning, it's small thing, and it requires just like, a little kid, you know, a lot of hard work to raise the kid, but then at some point, you know, the kid's fully grown up, it's in college, and you have a very different relationship, but the directionality is always the same. You want kids to grow, thrive and be happy. Well, analogously with Cardano, it's now fully decentralized, and it has all this amazing use cases and utility.

So my role is outside of the. At the fact that I was a founder is more what problems can I solve and what utilities can I build in this ecosystem? So, with respect to problems, a lot of people say, is there a way you can contribute significantly to scalability inside the system? And is there a way also that we can make the system more useful to the entire cryptocurrency industry? So the partner chains in ouroboros Leos are two low hanging fruits where input output is uniquely suited for that type of role inside the ecosystem.

We think we've solved the blockchain trilemma, and we're going to put up or shut up. You have to showcase that solution. And then there's a question of how do we get it done? And then the partner chains creates the service layer that allows you to sell Cardano services across the entire cryptocurrency industry, ethereum, bitcoin, and other things, without requiring them to migrate their network effect. So both of these can create gargantuan amounts of use cases and value for Cardano as an ecosystem.

So this is where I'd like to spend a chunk of my time, in addition to all the governance concerns that Cardano has, which is now decentralized, thanks to Chang. So the mission is, we want it to be a happy, healthy, decentralized, thriving, useful ecosystem. And every year you have to re evaluate and say, okay, how do we change the role? The same for any of the things I invest in as an entrepreneur or I get involved in. I say, okay, am I there in the C suite?

Am I there on the board? Am I there just as a strategic advisor? And they call me up and ask for some advice, these types of things. And whatever that role is, the point is that it should contribute to the mission and vision of the organization and where we want to go and how we want to get there. So you have to go into a specific venture.

Now, there is also a fourth silent category of venture I invest in. And usually this is a capability that I build to reduce cost. And something else I do. For example, I own a construction company. I'm never really going to pursue an outside investment.

And a construction company. You can have lofty mission like, hey, we're going to sustainable construction or this new technology or whatever, but I built it because I got tired of paying $600 a square foot for stuff, and I want to pay 150 because I build a lot of stuff. And so suddenly I had to learn about the concrete business. I went to world of concrete, 25,000 people at that conference, huge conference in Vegas, and I had to learn all about how contracting and subcontracting works and how to build commercial structures and warehouses and order steel kits and insulation and all these things. I've learned an enormous amount of construction, and I have a really good CEO for that company.

But at the end of the day, that company serves the needs of the broader portfolio. And when we're not using those needs like the jet, other people contract it and it actually pays for the asset. So you get a free construction company, and it subsidizes the cost of construction for large scale things. Like my clinic, for example. It's at 10,000 sqft.

It's growing to 70,000 sqft. Wow. You know, massive facility, hyperbarics and pharmacy, and it's got primary care and surgeries coming, and it's got full big lab that does all kinds of really advanced lab tests and these types of things. And you can do physical therapy inside of it, and audiology. It's a huge medical campus that we construct because I built it for medical research, so I could do anti aging, regenerative medicine research.

I also built it for business model testing, so I could test direct primary care and concierge care there to change the way that primary care is delivered. But if you just go and try to build something like that, it's a horrendously expensive proposition. So actually, it was cheaper to build an entire construction company and then go and build the clinic than go and hire a construction company and do that, which is just absurd, but it shows you how messed up that industry is. And it's so funny that you think like that, because I think most people would go in, you know, I'll hire the best people, I'll spend the most amount of money. Where he was like, hey, we can still get the best product, but we can reverse engineer.

Stephen Sargent

What does that final product look like and what's the cheapest way I can get it done? And for you, that was building, you know, creating a construction company on your own. How do you get into all these different industries? You've named off about five industries. None of them seem connected.

You have blockchain health construction, bringing back woolly mammoths. I'm assuming you get a lot of opportunity. Like, how do you have the time? Like, how does someone come to you with a new opportunity? Like, yeah, I have time to sit down and discuss this and flesh this out.

Or does it happen as you're building the building? You're like, hey, we need to create something that makes us a lot cheaper. Let's start our own construction company. I'm curious how these final ideas and innovations get to you. You can always have blockchain get involved if you want to.

Charles Hoskinson

In a legacy business, for example, in the synthetic biology side, we do bioluminescent plants. I would like to have those plants, when you purchase them, have QR codes and you register them as nfts and they sequester carbon and you can measure that. I think there's a very strong blockchain play there. And Cardano would be uniquely suited to do that very well. And also there's a practical reason to do it, because these are transgenetic organisms, you probably should know how they're being used and where they're at, how they interact with the environment as a whole.

USDA is interested in that and other people, because these have never existed before and now they're in the ambient environment. And what does that actually mean for all the legacy plants? So we have to understand and study that stuff. And blockchain is an example of this. We always say supply chain is the big thing in blockchain.

So that's an example of it. Healthcare, it's actually intimately connected as well, because you have medical records and anything to do with the mining of medical records, the privacy, the access control systems tightly coupled with self sovereign identity and blockchain systems, especially when you want to federate them and connect them. So medical record portability, how do you own your medical records, move them around and extract value from them without compromising your privacy as a consumer. So by having a clinic, we already have 7000 patients. Our anticipation is to grow to about 12,000.

And that's about the market. Gillette, once we get to that scale, then I can imagine building an open source EMR and then actually showing how to build that around graph, database and dids and other things, and then add a blockchain layer to it and then show how to connect these systems to each other. So that would be an example where you blockchain it. It's not the primary purpose, but it's an augmentation of the business model that gives you something, maybe more patient safety, or record portability, or a format that allows you to analyze all those records. For artificial intelligence, for example, I'm very interested in using large language models to help in the care of patients.

My concern is I don't feel super comfortable handing Sasha Nadella or Sam Altman, or Google Gemini your personal medical data. I just don't feel comfortable doing that. I think that would be a violation of the trust the patients have given us, given the track records of these companies, regardless of what they say. So I would actually like to run a local large language model to do all these types of things, but computationally speaking, that might be difficult. So maybe it makes sense to build a decentralized large language model and bring it into the Cardano network and then combine it with technology like midnight, where you can analyze records, but you do it privately, and you get a cryptographic guarantee that they can't be unblinded other than the intended recipients.

Maybe that's a good compromise for these types of things. So we're exploring these types of things, and they have huge impacts on patient care, because I could do real time continuous auditing of the patient's charts and verify that they're receiving the standard of care. Also, we can look at, use them to build differential diagnoses. We can look at the formal area and see what drugs the patients are on and revise that against best practices. You also can use it for a lot of things, like AI, upscaling of images, anomaly detection, pattern detection.

You know, for example, when we do MRIs and CAT scans and other things at the facility, we actually have a system from Siemens which uses a gargantuan amount of compute and petabytes of storage that actually upscales the MRI images and the CAT scan images and other things to higher resolution automatically and can annotate them. So I could take a low Tesla MRI and upscale it to like a 1.5 Tesla, or three Tesla, depending on upon the modality, and also put little red circles around areas of concern for the radiologist. So they can do a dual read, they can read it naked and then take a look at the AI suggestion to double check, almost like in a math. You know, you solve your homework problems and you look at the back of the book for the answer, you can do the same thing that catches an enormous amount of mistakes in healthcare. Enormous amount.

We call it the 445 on a Friday radiology problem. So last film of the day for the radiologist to read, it's 445. He's just about to get done, and he's going to go have dinner with the wife. And, you know, they say, oh, I got the stat read for you. Oh, yeah, it looks pretty good.

Yeah, everything's fine there. Yeah, I'll just type up that report real quick. Okay. Well, I can take multiple cases where there has been like breast cancer or other things that they're standing for and overlay that over what they're seeing and then make their own suggestions based on what they're seeing, which would just enhance that radiologist job, because now they're able to focus on the key areas based on, you know, all this historical data. Yeah.

Whether it be a human brain or a computer, there's this phenomena that it's typically extremely easy to verify, something much harder to know it's there in the first place. So if you're looking at some picture and you're looking for Waldo, it might take you a while to find him. But once I point to you that that's Waldo, you're like, yeah, that's Waldo, because you know what he looks like. So, analogously, when you're looking at on the radiology side, you know, if there's a tumor or something, you might miss it, especially if it's subtle. But once I point it to you, you're like, oh, yeah, that is a tumor.

Look at that. And then you really zero in, and you can understand all the things. So just by having AI involved in the process, it acts as a. As a check and a guard, and it almost always removes all those stupid mistakes that people make. But even if it's an anomaly, like, for example, the AI has misclassified something by really looking at it.

You can say, oh, no, that's actually not that. We don't have to worry too much about it. And that's why you send a radiologist to residency, and they go through all this advanced training. They have the ability to differentiate these things. They just have to know it's there.

And sometimes they have trouble seeing it or for whatever reason, because of the time or circumstances or exhaustion or whatever, they miss it. And just having that check and balance makes it so much better. But this is an example of what we do at the clinic, is we try to think about integrative care and layering next generation technologies like whether it be llms for the whole pipeline of patient care to merging different fields of medicine, you know, network and functional medicine, as well as lifestyle medicine combined with the traditional osteopathic and allopathic approaches. When you put these things together, you can end up having a much more balanced patient care. You know, a great example would be sleep apnea.

So if you go to a standard physician, you say, ah, man, I'm so tired. They say, oh, we'll do a sleep study. So you go and do a sleep study, and they say, oh, you got sleep apnea. Here's your score. I say, what do I do?

CPAP mask? Here you go. For the rest of your life. Okay. And I got to travel with it.

Do all this stuff. And millions of Americans, that's their story. Well, there's all kinds of other interventions you can do. Night lays is one that's FDA approved. Excite OSA, actually electrocutes your tongue and changes your muscle fibers inside the tongue.

And it's FDA approved, and even, even gets covered in certain insurance cases. And you do the treatment strengthens the tongue, or it's night laser actually is the soft palate, actually hardens it a little bit. And in many cases, it improves sleep apnea. There's another thing you can use the homeoblock appliance, or the ALF appliance, that actually grows bone and widens the mouth. And so you have more room for your tongue and airway.

And that was tongue training actually can substantially reduce or eliminate many cases of sleep apnea for people now. And if those are all available, you go to a normal physician, they know nothing about it. They don't even talk about it. They're like, what the hell is Alf? I know Alf.

That was like an alien in the eighties at eight cat. One of the best shows back in the days. Yeah. And so that's the problem is most practitioners either not incentivized, or just simply don't know. Cause they're over specialized.

A more holistic view of care, which can take a look at diet, or exercise, or alternative treatments, which many cases have actually been reviewed and studied with double blind, placebo controlled studies. Photobiomodulation is another example of. That's just red light therapy. And we're actually looking at it right now for traumatic brain injuries. We're looking at it right now for all kinds of neurological treatments for people.

Because we're in Wyoming, we've got a lot of rodeo stars that come to us that they fell off the horse too many times, the bull too many times, they got all these concussions. And if you look at the risk factors for developing Alzheimer's or Parkinson's or dementia, it's significantly higher because of all the traumatic brain injuries. So, what do you tell a patient who's 40 years old and say, hey, when you get to your fifties and sixties, you're going to have memory problems, and you're going to be like one of those football players that got hit in the head too many times, and you might, you're almost certainly going to probably descend into a neurodegenerative condition, like, wow, that's really shitty. To hear that in 1020 years, that's going to be a problem. Well, it turns out you can intervene and hyperbaric and photobiomodulation may actually be able to substantially blunt that or prevent it.

And again, most physicians don't think this way. But then you look at thousands of studies, and in some cases, it's already FDA approved. Transcranial magnetic stimulation is another example that is FDA approved as a second line therapy for depression. And in about a third of the time, it improves it. It's actually better than SSRI's, which is the first line therapy that people use.

Stephen Sargent

Well, how would it work for your clinic? Because I know I'm in Canada, so we technically have free healthcare. You get kind of what you pay for up here, though. But in the states, it's extremely expensive. So are you able, because you're building these facilities, you're bringing in the research and development in house, does this make it less expensive?

Does this make it quicker that they can actually find treatment? Because a lot of people that do have plans, I feel they take a long time to. To get to things like mris or. I could be wrong. In Canada, it's a huge wait to get an MRI.

Charles Hoskinson

I'm not sure I can do it the same day. But, you know, God bless America. So compensation is always a tricky one. So we do accept insurance, and we accept the major providers at United Hoskins and health, like Cigna and Blue Cross and these things. But then also we're pioneering direct primary care model, where you just pay a subscription every month, and then there's a whole menu of services that are provided.

And we're still working through the economics on how to do that, but it's usually substantially cheaper. And the reason being is that when I bill an insurance company, about 40% to 45% of the time, they actually pay me. That's just national standard. So let's say they owe you $10,000, maybe you get 4500 if you get it. Wow, that's fucked up.

But that's how it works in the United States. And, oh, my God, they do all kinds of crazy games. The state of Wyoming, for example, when we get a new physician, usually it takes 90 days to get insurance credentialed for that physician. So we're basically told either tell them not to practice medicine, but stay on the payroll for three months, or all the stuff you bill, we're not going to reimburse because they're not credentialed yet, even though they're actual physician, everything, it's just the insurance company processing paperwork. So in practice, what we do is we just have them practice medicine and don't get reimbursed for three months when that physician comes in.

So I lose a fourth of the year just because the insurance company's dragging its feet to credential a physician who probably is already credentialed in their insurance network in a different state. You know, it's so out there now. We, this is by design companies worked with to create these incestuous laws. We try to change them when we can. So that's why we like stepping outside of the insurance side, if it's possible.

And direct primary care allows you to do that. And the reason I built an all inclusive clinic is I wanted to do some business model innovation, but also worked with the state of Wyoming to change the laws in the crypto space. We worked with them and the crypto space got about 31 laws passed the state of Wyoming that created a whole regulatory framework for cryptocurrencies. We want to change the regulatory framework in the state from the insurance side and the healthcare side, because that would allow Wyoming to be one of the best states in the union for receiving health care. And it just takes some moderate changes that really improve the state of affairs with providers, especially for pre approvals and pre existing conditions.

All just thousands of these edge cases that are really problematic in the practice of medicine. If you become a doctor, one of the problems in America is you seldom practice medicine. You do medicine, but you spend actually more time doing non medicine. Either it be paperwork or dealing with bureaucracy or all this other stuff. And that's why so many physicians burn out, leave.

By the time you get to 50, you're like, don't go into medicine. And either you're staying in medicine because you can't afford to leave, or you leave medicine, or you change the relationship, you go to part time or something like that. So there's a bunch of brain death in the industry right now where providers are just basically burnt out and they just don't want to do it anymore because they're not compensated for quality of care. A couple of times, sorry to interrupt you, you mentioned id a couple of times. I took a little mental note about that because many people are saying, you know, the fact of id is why we're not seeing bitcoin reduce the amount of underbank and unbanked.

Stephen Sargent

Even in the US. I think 5% of Americans are either underbanked or unbanked. Do you think that is the key to finally giving access to banking to everyone around the world? Or is there other factors that are keeping things like blockchains and cryptocurrencies from reducing the amount of unbanked and under. Bank individuals, well, is a phenomenon of the cost of compliance more often than not.

Charles Hoskinson

So if you went to a bank and said, anybody can open an account and you don't have to collect any information, 100% of America would be banked, no harm, no foul. It's just because it's easy. And there's banks everywhere. You just walk in your bank. I want to.

Sure, here you go. But if you say you have know your customer, know your business, you have anti money laundering, you have suitability guidelines, SAR requirements. There is a certain threshold of customer value you have to get to, to justify the cost of onboarding and maintenance of that account. So if that customer doesn't have that value to you, then you're just not going to bank them because you lose money on that customer. So when you look at your unbanked level, that's telling where those thresholds exist for that economy.

So when you go to Africa, to Southeast Asia, you go to LaTaM. In some cases, a third or more of the populations are underbanked, and that's because the cost of banking them is actually higher than the value per person. So why we look at crypto as a potential option is that the cost of onboarding a crypto person is de minimis. They download some software, they do some stuff, and there is no Kycml to start with. So you don't have to have a national id, you don't have to have a pre existing bank account, you don't have to have some representation there.

Then you get into the details of, well, what exactly can you do with it? Can you create bridges where they can go from crypto to a stable coin to actually transact with it and actually have a cash like experience, but make it very digital? The answer is, I think we're getting there as an industry and we're almost at that threshold now. This is causing governments to panic because you're creating a digital cash economy that is not built with the same compliance and oversight guardrails that they're used to. So you'll see the Elizabeth warrens or the others of the world coming in and saying, we have to reinstall those guardrails in.

And they say, that's the only way we can do it. But it's not going to hurt people like me. I'm hyper complianced, okay? I filled out so much paperwork, you wouldn't believe it. No, it hurts minorities and underrepresented communities and, you know, it hurts all the people who normally can't go through that process for whatever situation.

Reason they have. Undocumented immigrants are another example of that. You know, if they live in a cash economy and they're not going to go through that process, those are the people you exclude when you put these tough compliance regimes on top. But somehow that political party seems to not care, even though they say they do. I don't understand that.

So it is a quagmire at the moment, and it's not a technology problem. It's a regulatory problem at the moment and a business model problem. And we're getting very close to closing the gap with the business model and get to friction free digital commerce. I think within three to five years, the rails will be so mature that that's going to be instant. Now, the last mile is the identity side of it and how compliance is going to work.

So we have a company called Atala Prism. It's led by Dave Harding, and it built a framework that's now a Hyperledger project. And Prism is a framework specifically to create digital identities in the cryptocurrency space that potentially could be upgraded to be compliant identities. And we've been trying to figure out, how do we do that at a cost of less than a dollar per person to get through all their stuff. And if that's the case, then your cost of compliance is low enough that you can onboard the vast majority of people in the entire world.

I mean, it's one time cost everybody in Congo $100 million. It's not a bad deal if you think about it from a World bank perspective or an IMF perspective or these things, to do that, what's nice is they're self sovereign identities. So what that translates to is you own your identity, not the government. And so you're able to then prove properties of yourself through things like a non creds without revealing them. And the example I like giving is like the bar you go to go drink.

You say, hey, I want a beer. They say, oh, show me your id now. They don't want to know your name. They don't want to know if you're an organ donor. They don't want to know your address.

What they're really looking for is a very specific thing. Are you at or over the age of 21? That's a binary question. Yes or no? So if you use a non creds, you can prove that attribute in your identity without revealing anything else.

You'll see, Steven, is, you know, at or over the age of 21? Yes. They don't even know if you're 21. They just know you're at or over the age, so you're suitable to serve. Compliance should work this way.

Settlement should be compliance. So if you send money, the transaction clears if you pass the compliance regime. But the person who's on the other side of it shouldn't be collecting your personal data. They should just be asking suitability questions that are yes or no. And once you've answered enough of them through zero knowledge proofs, then they get to a certain threshold where they say, we're comfortable with this.

And then you move on, you know, and then you always are in compliance. The current system is so fucked up. You take the money, and then after the fact, you're like, oh, I guess maybe I shouldn't have had that money. I got to file a suspicious activity report and freeze your account. And then now I have frozen customer funds, and what do I do with them?

And all this. That's why it's so expensive to run a bank or these things, because none of that actually produces any value for your business. You don't make any money from it. It's a liability, and it's a cost of doing business. And every time you get it wrong, you get big fines.

That's what puts CZ in jail. Was not him stealing customer money or anything. It was compliance issues. At the end of the day, at the end of the rainbow. It's funny that you mentioned drinking here in Canada during the pandemic.

Stephen Sargent

You had to show your medical records to a 15 year old that can drink, but she's the one analyzing your medical records to see if you've had a backseat or not, to let you in, you know, to an arena to see your son play hockey or something of that sort. So, so interesting. How do we balance this privacy and then regulatory requirements where. Because, you know, you talk about decentralization. Where's that medium?

Is there a median? Is there a part that you believe regulators should have access to and should come in with the KYC compliance? And then, hey, if we want to go use a decentralized protocol, we're able to without having KYC and AML guardrails? Because I think that's the biggest argument back and forth between government. We have the side that values privacy, and I'm in Canada.

So we saw during the freedom convoy when Justin Trudeau all of a sudden started knocking down every cryptocurrency exchanges door, asking to who donated to the freedom convoy. And now that's being proven as maybe he over used some of the emergency act. How do we balance all of this? Because I think if we can answer this, we're closer and closer to the truth. Yeah, I'm a libertarian at heart, and anytime I'm told that I have to show documents to go to the coffee shop, I think you're living in a dictatorship.

Charles Hoskinson

You're not living in a free society. And I think it's perfectly reasonable to talk around suitability guidelines for the safety of doing business with people, whether that be transport or financial relationships. We do this all the time. Credit scores are a great example of that. If you say, hey, should I give Charles money or not, well, at some point you need some metric to look at it and subjectively make the assessment, if I'm credible, I'm going to pay you back or not.

It's not a guarantee, but you have to measure risk. Insurance is the same situation. Private enterprise does this very, very well. It's problematic when a government comes in and then it mandates we're going to create underclasses of society unless you politically agree with us. So if you say the wrong things, you do the wrong things, you are disenfranchised.

We have this issue in America with felons, so our criminal code is voluminous. And a whole bunch of people, especially under our represented groups, they get tangled up in the law for whatever reason, they become felons. The minute you're a felon, you're there forever. Really hard to get out of that group. And basically you're a sub citizen.

You have second class citizen rights, and you're limited from participation in society. There's no real path to redemption there. So they create a statutory underclass, and then they ask the question, there's all this recidivism. We just don't understand. Why are people committing crimes more?

Well, they can't get a job, they can't participate in society, and you just send them to criminal college prison. So they learned how to be a better criminal. So suddenly surprised that you've created this outcome. Ah, you know, we should do form another committee and they'll talk about it. So I don't like societies that create underclasses and societies that institutionalize these things, and then you create checks that basically decide whether you can go to the coffee shop or not.

This is terribly dystopian, and I think this is why dids exists and this is why crypto exists, because it allows you to create a different economy and a different way of talking to each other, improving things to each other, without any government institution involved in that process, you don't need the government to regulate it. You don't need a government to handle the payment rails. You don't need a government to be involved in the transaction because the blockchain acts as the regulatory function. If you want consumer protections, you put those into the smart contract. If you want the ability to assess risk, you put that into the cryptography and the design of the system, and then you can build marketplaces.

If this customer doesn't do what you think they do, somebody else can actually sell you an insurance policy to cover those failure points. Like just recently you had that ship crash into a bridge in Maryland. There's an insurance policy there, so they didn't do the right thing. At some point, somebody somewhere along the way is going to pay, and the company that had the ship probably bought a policy, and that policy is probably going to pay a big chunk of that and clean up the whole situation. Well, that's how the private market works.

You don't necessarily need the government to get involved in a lot of these different things. You need to get involved where there's a safety issue, there's an issue with respect to life and death or national security issue. You know, these are the types of things. And then you have to really say, okay, is it well defined? Is it finite, and is it objective?

And were the people included in that decision? So in America, we have this concept of due process. Some jurisdictions don't have it, but with our due process, if we accuse you of something, it's not good enough just to accuse you of that thing. You have to have a trial of your peers, and then they make a decision whether you're actually guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. And then once and only then can we start punishing you for that thing.

And what's happened is every time stuff has fallen apart, it's been a direct consequence of a violation of that principle. Like all the cryptocurrency enforcements, you have regulatory bodies that come in and they just say stuff. And no courts really had a deciding. There's no trial. Or they just say, oh, you are this thing.

Stephen Sargent

Are you talking about saying, just so I can understand, are you talking about maybe sanctions like decentralized tornado cash, any. Of these things like tornado cash or the securities law or these types of things that just come in and say, we have this belief. No courts weighed in on it, no juries decided it, no lawmakers had anything to say about it. But because we believe this, we now can influence the market. Who gets liquidity?

Charles Hoskinson

Who doesn't get liquidity? What you can buy what you can't buy. Is that really a fair. And did you vote for that person? Is there any democratic consent in the decision?

No, there are unelected people that make these particular decisions. So this happens all the time. And that's usually where you have a significant governance problem. And, you know, I say, hey, I can't change the government. It's very hard in the federal sense.

So I'm going to opt out and create a private system, and we're just going to go play with our friends in that private system. And then when they found out that enough people are doing that, now they're trying to go and invite themselves into that private system and then say that we have to accept the very system that we left, which is absurd. It's absolutely absurd. It's like banning somebody from your club and then being told that you can't do that. It's like, we don't want the vampire here because the vampires cause so much harm.

We're not happy with the legacy system. It's racist. At its core, the legacy system is blatantly unfair. It's rigged against poor people. There's a huge amount of wealth disparity inside of it, and at the end of the day, it finances large multinational companies.

At its core, it doesn't serve any normal person's interests or goals. And so we said, let's go build a better system. And we go and do that. And then they say, well, that better system has to go and be like the old system, or else we'll ban it. Do regulations impact now the way, like, Cardano developers build and what maybe products they do?

Stephen Sargent

Because there is that kind of overarching, like, hey, the developer of ten o the cash didn't say, hey, let's create a smart contract where potentially north korean hackers could send funds through, but that's what they're getting punished for. Does that play in the mind at all when you're building blockchain? No, it doesn't. For me, what I do is I build capabilities, because the thing is that there's a lot of jurisdictions out there. Us is important, but there's also Mika in Europe.

Charles Hoskinson

There's also the Middle east and the ADGM with Abu Dhabi. The Riyadh has its own regulator. China has its own regulatory standard, the monetary authority. Singapore has its own regulatory standard. It would be absurd to say you pick a winner and everybody else is subservient and a slave to that, especially in a multipolar world.

So what you do is you build a generic framework as a protocol. You build libraries of capabilities, and then you let the individual Dapp, developers, daos, and companies adhere to the laws of the requisite user bases and jurisdictions. That's why we created midnight, because you have a selective disclosure regime and you have other things, but that's not at the protocol level. That's at the application level where it should be. Because if you did it the other way, that would be like saying, if you found a business in my town here in Longmont, Colorado, we have to get a bank license.

You're like, but I'm a coffee shop. Yeah, but every business built here has to be a bank. You can serve coffee, but you have to get a bank license even if you don't use it. That's literally when you build regulation and the protocol, you're saying that for every single thing, regardless of its use case, what the regulatory regime has to be, it doesn't make any sense. Instead, what you do is you say, okay, it's land.

You build a business, and then you put a framework on top of that based upon the nature of the business. And there's going to be a different regulatory framework if you're processing toxic chemicals versus if you're selling coffee versus if you're a bank versus if you're a hospital. Each and every one of those, of course, has. And that makes common sense. Yet when you talk to these older regulators, they're like, oh, well, no, everything is a bank.

And all these are license, and you need to put it in the protocol itself and say, okay, boomer, they're so. Worried to call, then they don't let anyone call themselves a bank. They want everyone to be banks, but they hate when, you know, companies that aren't exactly banks call themselves banks. You mentioned consumer protection quite a few times. We saw, I think it was 2023 or 2022.

Stephen Sargent

There was like, these Defi hacks under control. I think chainalysis said over 800 million. Most of that was probably the Ronin hack and other bridges. What are some of the solutions here? How do you think about it when you're building on Cardano?

What are some of the things that people can do to implement better consumer protection when they're building these decentralized, smart contracts? Well, you know, it's always helpful to have a use case and really drill into a use case, because then you can kind of reason around what a consumer protection regime would look like. So NFTs are a great example of that. So in the NFT space, you got rug pulls. They happen all the time.

Charles Hoskinson

You know, some people go, we're going to issue all these collectibles and then the founders disappear and take the money. Well, what if instead of founding, what you do is you have this concept of rug pull insurance and it's actually built into the, how the assets are issued and how the treasury of the system is governed. And then what that does is if the founders leave, for example, that regulation contract basically says the project automatically gets turned over to the NFT holders and they get access to the project financing the treasury of it, and they actually can decide on the mints and they can elect a new management team for it. So does it then matter if the management team leaves or not? Well, if the NFT holders are in charge and there's a large community, those NFT holders have the ability then to replace that management just like a board of directors or shareholders.

Effectively. What, so you can put governance structures in place at the protocol level that basically conserves and protects things. And what's cool is those consumer protections are templatable once you've designed it. Once it's reusable as a standard that people can apply again and again. And then with the wallet people, the exchanges, all these things, they can show green check marks.

If people are adhering to standards of quality, this has been audited. Like Certik is a great example. You know, they have their little check mark that they have. Well, you, this, this adheres to rug pull insurance according to this standard and these types of things. And then you as a consumer, if people deviate from the standard, you start saying, hang on a second here, I'm not so sure about this.

Why am I buying this if, if you guys don't have rug insurance? Oh, well, we are, we don't need that. We're above all of that. Okay, well, what have you put into place that's equivalent to it? Maybe you disagree with the standard for these reasons.

That's fine, but I need to see the alternative. Oh, we don't have that alternative. So in other words, you want the freedom to steal my money. So the problem is, if you don't have that artifact, you don't have that basis upon which to have the conversation with. So in the 19th century, there was no regulation about being a physician in the United States.

So people just call themselves doctor. They go around, sell you mercury and cocaine all mixed up and maybe little heroin on the side. It was a pretty crazy time. So then they start creating state medical licenses. And the minute that they had a state medical license, if you saw a doctor, you'd say, are you licensed, doctor?

According to state, they could show you a piece of paper. Now, if they're not, you're like, hang on a second here. I need to know a little bit more, because now there's a standard that we have that adheres, that somebody's checked you out. So I think that's how you achieve consumer protections is through licensing, through standards, through templates and external auditing. And it's just a matter of consumer education then, that these are the standards of doing business.

And then usually you get 95% of your consumer protection taken care of through that process. There's going to be this 5% sliver, and we call those black swan events where they just happen and they create catastrophic harm, and they're hard to predict. And you can always refine your system after they occur to close that gap that exists. But generally, you got to do the broad brush strokes. You know, just kind of like Bob Ross when he's making the painting.

He does the mountains first, and then he does the lake structure. Then he starts filling in the trees, and then he beats the devil out of the brush, and then he starts, you know, cutting and putting those leaves in, and he gets those fine details. So we don't even have the mountains painted right now in the cryptocurrency space. And that's what you got to do. You got to paint those mountains, and then you got to paint that lake.

Then once you have that, then you can start talking about, you know, that, that, that fine detail stuff that really takes care of the consumer and for the most part works out. Is it perfect? No. However, once you have that there, law enforcement, regulators, and other people, they have very strong grounds to stand upon because when they're pursuing a case, criminal or civil, they usually are pursuing that because you've deviated from an industry. Best practice.

Stephen Sargent

Practice. Yep. You know, and they say, why didn't you follow this? And then a jury looks at that and they're like, fuck, yeah, why didn't they follow that? Those guys, they're evil guys, you know, and so that, that helps the regulator, that helps law enforcement, and you're now partnered with them because they also can write the standards with you.

Charles Hoskinson

You know, you can talk with them and say, what? What would make you guys more comfortable? We need this and this and this, and then you kind of work your way through it, and then it, you know, gets where it needs to go. You mentioned Alpha and Bob Ross in the same podcast. I feel like we grew up in the same household.

Stephen Sargent

Charles, all my favorite shows to watch. And you did this TED talk in, I think it was Bermuda. Got to be about before Cardano. So maybe 8810 years ago, 2014. It was 20.

Yeah, ten years ago. Perfect. Do you have some of the same thoughts then? Like, you were talking a lot about, you know, access to documentation. Some of the things that we've been talking about today leads to a happier life, but we're seeing, you know, especially North America, you know, maybe our children or friends or family, they have access to almost too much.

It doesn't seem like they're living a happier life. And I think when you did that talk, social media wasn't as, you know, as impactful as it was now. What are your thoughts then, taking back that talk? Are people more happier with access to documents, access to capital and those things? Oh, we're getting there, man.

Charles Hoskinson

And we have a whole venture in Kenya called real fi that John O'Connor leads. And we took all of our Africa operations, we aggregated them together after spending more than half a decade on continent, going through the whole ringer, civil wars, change of government, you know, all the stuff that you could imagine that comes up in developing countries. We put it all together. We created, actually a whole microfinance stack, and I put $5 million of my own money into that microfinance stack. And now it's actually being lent out, and we're gathering an enormous amount of data, and we're going to create blockchain based credit scores and peer to peer ways of lending.

And the long term goal is to integrate that into wallets. So just like Kiva, where you go, you see people, you click the lend. We can have that there as an open standard. Regardless of your wallet wallet interface, you can just integrate the marketplace and that people can lend out money to people abroad, and they pay a much lower interest rate. The default rate goes way down normally, the NPL for loans.

So underperforming a default is 40% in microfinance. Ours are 2%, 20 times better. And the top end of microfinance in Kenya is 85% interest. Ours is sitting at about the teens, about 15, 18%, depending upon where the loan was originated. 85 down to 15 and 40 down to two.

That's not bad. And competition makes that number go even lower. What that means is that the poorest people in the world pay the same interest rates then as us. So that's what crypto can do. It changes the world.

And you own your own identity, which means you own your credit score. Not equifax, not these big credit agents. So it's a very powerful concept, and you can use stable coins for the whole thing, and you don't have to use banks for it. And also it helps you with sovereign volatility. Like if your local currency has got 100% inflation rate, you can be pegged to something that's immune to inflation.

So it's a very different way of looking at things. So we've made huge progress. When I did the TED talk, it was a hypothetical concept. Ethereum didn't exist. None of these things existed.

It didn't have those capabilities. And now, in 2024, not only does it exist, we built it and we're testing it, and millions of dollars have been deployed to human beings in Kenya. And then we're going to expand pan Africa, and then expand Southeast Asia LAtam market and make it a global marketplace. So in just ten years, time to go from a concept that some overweight guy in a red shirt is talking about to today, actually a real life thing with real human beings is extraordinary. And for all that technology to be open source, for all that technology to be global first, and to be owned collectively by the Commons as opposed to controlled by a single company, that's an extremely powerful thing as well, because it means that people can build on top of that and carry the torch themselves.

Stephen Sargent

Are you able to go 15 minutes over? I don't want to bother if you can't. I got about five more minutes. Five more minutes. Okay.

Do you ever look, do you ever watch your old content? Do you ever go back and watch those videos? Say, like, hey, what was my thought process then? Or, hey, I said we were going to do something back then, let's try and pursue it now it's ten years later, we have the blockchains to do, we have the decentralization. Well, I mean, if you look at the old, you know, the old content, there's a guy hosksed.com and he takes all the old stuff that I did and actually transcribed all of it, made it searchable, and so you could actually see what I had to say in 2018 on the topic and these things.

Charles Hoskinson

And a lot of people come and see, wow, you know, for that sociopathic, pathological liar that these guys in Ethereum say, you're remarkably consistent, guy. I say, well, I have a bad memory. So you just basically say the same thing again and again. You just tell people what you think, and it's become more nuanced and I've changed approaches. I originally wanted to do a government company model for Africa contracting.

And after getting screwed for six years. We said, let's just go straight retail and go directly to people. So you change your strategy and approach, but you don't change the philosophy and the mission. The goal has always been bank the unbanked, and the goal has always been create a fair and equal system for everybody in the world. We've never deviated from the peer review process.

We've now written 209 papers, and they always go through peer review if we can get them through. And we've never deviated from high assurance software development. We feel that these are moral imperatives for systems that work. And everything's Apache too. Everything's creative commons.

And so all the stuff we produce is for everybody, not just for us. So we've never deviated on the big ticket items. We deviate on the strategy and the execution paths, because facts and circumstances change, regulations change, marketplaces change. When I started bitcoin as like a buck man, it was a small space where nobody cared. Mount Gox was the big exchange, and that was just getting started.

Gives you a sense of how long ago that was. Now, today, here in 2024, it's a radically different world. And what's so cool is that it's exciting because new people come all the time and they come with new ideas, they come with new perspectives, and it keeps you young because you can see what they have to say and you can take that, internalize it, push it forward and get it done. Overall, we're pretty happy. Cardano has never been stronger.

It's great, vibrant ecosystem, and the research stands on its own legs. We have a certain degree of resilience and confidence that we didn't have in 2014. You know, today it's truly a movement and that there's an inevitability behind getting these missions done. Might take a lot longer than we think, but where, what else are we going to do? Where else?

Stephen Sargent

You know, I love it and I really appreciate you. You know, I know we could have talked about Cardano for the whole episode. And, you know, all the episodes I've watched of you on podcast, you really dive deep into technical. I really just wanted to hear about Charles and what you're excited about because, you know, this, I love this conversation. Just hearing the things they're excited about, hear your knowledge, but, you know, I knew you had a breadth of knowledge, but how deep it is on things that you're passionate about in the last two minutes.

Tell me about what's Charles looking like for 2024 and beyond? What are you excited about? What projects are you like hey, I might just. I might just do this if I have some free time this weekend or for the next 16 weekends. Well, you know, I'm super excited about the realization of governance on Cardano.

Charles Hoskinson

You know, we have made more progress there than I think most. And to activate that community is going to be the privilege of lifetime, because you're showing how to do a government at scale with millions of people in a completely decentralized way. Pretty crazy if you think about it. It's like building a nation state. So it's a lot of work, but it's an incredibly exciting thing.

I'm also very excited that we're really starting to make serious progress with the synthetic biology and healthcare portfolio. Like the anti aging stuff, we think we have ideas to reverse aging by five to ten years. That's a remarkable achievement if we can pull it off. So the fact that I can do placebo controlled clinical trials and work with the FDA and get that through, that's exciting. And especially given that's using off the shelf techniques that we've known for a long time in medicine, they just haven't been combined in this particular way.

So that's super cool, because you change and transform people's lives. You make them happier and healthier, and you give them more time to spend with their loved ones. Because people died too quickly. Yeah, we get old too quickly. So I'm very excited there.

The synthetic biology said glow in the dark plants. I mean, that's insane, man. The fact that you can take something, engineer it, and then it's just sitting in the corner and it's just glowing 24 hours a day with this beautiful green glow or what have you, that's going to change the world. Organic lighting, golf courses, trees, all kinds of stuff. It's avatar, man, and we're able to bring that to the world.

But once you have a platform for genetically engineering plants to modify the environment around them, it's going to solve climate change, it's going to help remediate Superfund sites. You can do thousands of things with that capability, and that capability only grows over time. And the fact that all of that can be brought into the blockchain space and we can do really cool and interesting things, it's going to really help the ESG movement along, to be anchored in a productive, not destructive way. I'm deeply concerned that a lot of these capabilities can be co opted to gain power for the few. Every single thing we do, the unifying thread, is push power to the edges and restore power to the people.

So whenever we see a business model or market where it relies on a choke point, we say, well, how do I go kill that? It's like Roto rooter, let's go clean up the pipes. Let's get the crap out of it. Because unfortunately, most of society is built around choke points, and they control and mandate to you how you should live your life, how you should do your business, how you should make your money, and ultimately, whether your life is productive and successful or fun or if it's dystopian, you'll own nothing and be happy. Hell.

So, you know, the whole point of our labors is to get you back in charge of your life, regardless of the approach that we take. Charles, this has been such a fascinating conversation. I really appreciate your time. Where can people get a hold of you? Do you respond on Twitter?

Stephen Sargent

Do you like. People could send you messages on LinkedIn. When people are fascinated with this episode, how should they keep in touch with you? Oh, yeah. Twitter is probably the easiest way.

Charles Hoskinson

If you're in the Cardano ecosystem, intersect MBO is the way to go because that's the aggregation hub, the entire community. But, you know, it's. It's not just me. It's just input, output, group, and, you know, all of our people there, and, and then also just the broader ecosystem as a whole. There's so many amazing people there.

So I encourage you, just look at Cardano and start there. And there's so many wonderful things in that ecosystem to find people to partner with and do things with. And you have your conference, I believe, coming up at the end of the fall. Yep. October.

The Cardano foundation summit's there. There's a big community conference called Rare Evo, which is in Las Vegas in August. I'll be at both. And, you know, you can see me in person there. And, of course, I joined Twitter spaces from time to time.

Always fun. So I try to be as accessible as I can. We truly, truly appreciate. Thank you so much, Charles. Enjoy the rest of your day.

Cheers. Thank you so much.