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All right, well, we get set up for our next presenter.

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I'm going to go ahead and do a recap and a pre-cap.

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The recap is not just to tell you what you missed out on.

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You actually can see these videos by going to the Boston website.

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So if any of these sound good to you and you happen to miss them before, you can always

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go back and see them later.

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Oh, those of you wondering, yes, this is indeed a spatula.

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We make too.

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So our first presentation today was by Moshli.

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She gave us a practical talk on the lessons from the IPFS ecosystem on decentralizing

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the web.

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After that, we had David Thompson talk about a proposal to re-architect web browsers as

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minimal-awesome run-times using safe modular extensions and functionality to reduce centralization.

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In Jakosha, it gave us a demonstration of Akupa, which is an open source project that

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fetches content via a bit torrent over toward a mitigate centralization and censorship.

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And then it was gone.

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It was gave us a defense of Gnub, a PG that frames user-owned cryptographic keys as the

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defense against digital feudalism.

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After that, Harry Helpin and Alexis Russo did a presentation on NIMVPN, which is a decentralized

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mix-net that covers traffic and packet mixing to defeat global passive surveillance.

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After that, Hendrick talked about technical introduction to ZKTLS and TLS Notary, which utilizes

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multi-party computation and zero-knowledge proofs to allow proof of authenticity for private

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HTTP-S data.

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Jeremy Rand from NIMCOIN talked about how the NIMCOIN blockchain can replace centralize

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CAs to provide a decentralized PKF retor and regular web browsers.

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Finally, Morgan just showed us gossling, a rest-based protocol for building decentralized

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P2P applications that inherit both the metadata resistance and anonymity of tour onion

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services.

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Moving on, after this, we're going to talk about radical peer-to-peer code collaboration.

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That's going to go from 1245 to 135 or 1315, I guess I'll say 1315.

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Then we're going to have peer-ghost capability based access control for an encrypted

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web from 1315 to 1345.

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After that, we'll have OCAPIN, the secure decentralized protocol, the future from 1345 to 1410.

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We'll have IRO, P2P connections from 1410 to 1435.

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We'll have next graph, E2EE, decentralized platform and framework from 1435 to 1505.

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We'll do walk-away stack, radical infrastructure, independent peer-to-peer systems.

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From 1505 to 1535, then we'll have reticulum RS, porting the trustless mesh from Python

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to Rust from 1535 to 1605.

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We'll have Qualbot Net Internet Independent Wireless Mesh Communication app from 1605 to 1630.

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Then we'll finish off with multi-relate chat messaging and cryptographic identities with

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Delta Chat and chat mail relays from 1630 to 1655, and then I will be doing a little

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closing talk at from 1655 to 17.

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That's what we have going on for the rest of the day.

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We have a couple more minutes.

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We're going to go in wait till the exact start time to get started officially just for

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those who are checking in on the stream and wanting to watch that way, so give us just

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about 60 more seconds and I'll go ahead and introduce to you, Lawrence.

