Relay Chain Parity Technologies
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- Tecnologia
Relay Chain is a podcast covering blockchain development and building the decentralized web. We focus on the cutting edge of blockchain tech, including Substrate (https://parity.io/substrate) and Polkadot (https://polkadot.network).
Brought to you by Parity Technologies (https://parity.io), a core blockchain infrastructure company. Parity is creating an open-source creative commons that will enable people to create better institutions through technology.
Follow us at @paritytech (https://twitter.com/paritytech) and @relaychain (https://twitter.com/relaychain).
To be informed of new episodes, subscribe to the podcast and our newsletter (https://parity.io/newsletter).
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Innovating the Web3 Legal Space
This week, Jorrin Bruns (Support Engineer, Parity Technologies) is joined by Chrissy Hill, General Counsel, and Alica Schiffhauer, Legal Operations Specialist, from Parity’s legal team. This episode focuses on the legal side of Web3 and all that it entails, including the challenges of working within compliance for a codebase with no existing legal precedent.
They discuss the unique aspects of working within Web3 law, such as needing a working knowledge of complex technology, blockchain-specific terminology, staying on top of evolving blockchain regulation, as well as their recommendation to become familiar with the legal side of the blockchain space. In addition, you'll learn how legal teams support Web3, by bridging the gap between national laws (to avoid what happened with FTX, for example), identifying and mitigating risks, and how accountability works for breaches of the law within a decentralized system.
Links
Parity Technologies
The General Public License
Less Trust More Truth: DOT has morphed and is Software, not a Security
Coindesk policy and legal sections
Highlights
00:50 The journey from Web2 to Web3 legal
07:30 Working for a legal team in a blockchain company
17:50 Challenges as legal professionals within the blockchain space
25: 45 How Parity and the wider ecosystem benefits from legal knowledge
27:00 Compliance for a codebase with no exciting legal precedence
32:00 Open source licensing 101
37:00 DIsadvantages of open source licensing
40:45 Deciding on GPL as the license for Polkadot and Kusama
44:30 How to learn more about DOT morphing into software
47:00 Cross-ecosystem collaboration across legal teams
50:20 Code is law philosophy vs. rule of law
Special Guests: Alica Schiffhauer and Chrissy Hill. -
Polkadot Common Good Parachains Update: Blockchains to Benefit the Polkadot Community
In this episode, host Jorrin Bruns (Support Engineer, Parity Technologies) is joined by Joe Petrowski (Common Good Parachains Team Lead, Web3 Foundation) to talk about common good parachains (aka system level parachains), the layer-1 Polkadot blockchains dedicated to core functionality that benefits the entire Polkadot ecosystem. Since Statemint, dedicated to asset and NFT functionality, launched as Polkadot’s first common good parachain, many more have been in development. This episode explores how common good chains are evolving and what this means for the Polkadot ecosystem, from the new Collectives parachain, evolving NFTs on Statemint, to the upcoming Bridge Hub parachain, and many exciting projects coming out of the ecosystem.
During this talk, Petrowski describes how common good parachains are elected, categorized, onboarded, and eventually made available to users. He highlights the importance of the Cross-Consensus Message Format (XCM) for system-level parachains, and those which are ready to launch once XCMv3 is deployed. Finally, during the analysis of parachain transaction validation and finalization, we discover the eye-opening benefits of moving core functionality off the relay chain; Polkadot could support far more than 100 parachains, with far fewer than 1,000 validators needed to process transactions with the same security guarantees as before.
Links
Roadmap for Parity-developed common good parachains
Highlights
2.00 The humble beginnings of common good parachains
3.22 System vs public utility chains
12:00 Pallets abstracting work away from the relay chain
13:00 How transactions are processed on the relay chain vs a parachain
15:12 The benefits of taking core functionality off the relay chain: > 100 parachains!
17:30 System level common good parachains under development
22:45 The Collectives parachain
31:35 How to create a collective or DAO using Substrate's Collective pallet
36:00 Governance to set up the Collectives parachain
39.45 Developments and roadblocks to launching the Bridge Hub
51:10 Evolution of Statemine/ Statemint including evolving NFTs
56:45 Community shoutout for support - particularly deployment tooling
Special Guest: Joe Petrowski. -
Composable Finance Part 2: Envisioning the Valhalla of Cross-Chain DeFi
This week we have the second half of the conversation between Jorrin Bruns (Support Engineer, Parity Technologies) and 0xbrainjar, founder and CEO of the Polkadot parachain Composable Finance. Composable and sister parachain Picasso on Kusama allow smart contracts built on different languages and different chains to connect, enabling cross-chain DeFi applications and more.
If you missed part 1, have a listen here.
In part 2, they talk more about Mosaic, Composable’s transfer availability layer, and XCVM, their cross-consensus virtual machine. They look at how Composable approaches cross-chain bridging and communication, interoperability with ecosystems outside of Polkadot, and thinking outside the box for cross-chain applications beyond what’s already been done before.
Links
Composable Finance
Picasso Network
Angular Finance
Whirlpool Cash
Highlights
01:35 - Mosaic, XCVM and liquidity fragmentation
03:45 - Transaction fees w/ multiple blockchains
04:50 - Intro to XCVM (cross-consensus virtual machine)
07:15 - Interoperability with Cosmos and other ecosystems
11:32 - XCVM and bridging deep dive
16:30 - Cross-chain developer and user experience
24:30 - Angular, Substrate’s first money market
26:45 - Whirlpool Cash (zk mixing)
Special Guest: 0xbrainjar. -
Composable Finance Part 1: Unlocking Cross-Chain, Cross-Layer DeFi on Polkadot
Jorrin Bruns (Support Engineer, Parity Technologies) is joined this week by 0xbrainjar, founder and CEO of the Polkadot parachain Composable Finance. Composable and sister parachain Picasso on Kusama allow smart contracts built on different languages and different chains to connect, enabling cross-chain swaps and more. By simplifying and unifying DeFi (Decentralized Finance) with new interoperability standards, the project is accelerating this technology into the mainstream.
This talk covers Composable's solutions for developers and end users. 0xbrainjar describes building with Substrate and the new pallets they created, the native functionality of Composable and Picasso, and the various products and DeFi primitives they offer.
Additionally, 0xbrainjar discusses cross-layer NFT transfers, building oracles for price manipulation resistance, achieving protocol-owned liquidity, bootstrapping DeFi and what could be considered ‘DeFi 3.0'.
Links
Composable Finance
Picasso Network
Cubic Vault pallet
Highlights
01:35 Introduction to Composable
04:00 What problems does Composable solve?
06:10 Substrate pallets, customizations, new builds
10:31 The Pablo DEX
13:51 Protocol-owned liquidity (POL) within a DEX
18:40 Cubic: Composable’s modular DeFi vault pallet
22:20 Oracles and price manipulation resistance
29:20 'Mural', the Cross-Layer NFT transfer protocol
32:00 Mosaic — the transfer availability layer
36:20 Just in time liquidity & bot networks
39:27 Managed LP tokens
Special Guest: 0xbrainjar. -
OriginTrail: Decentralized Knowledge Graph & the Semantic Web3
This week, Jorrin Bruns (Support Engineer, Parity Technologies) is joined by OriginTrail’s Tomaž Levak (co-founder) and Žiga Drev (co-founder). OriginTrail is a Substrate-based blockchain that recently won a parachain slot on Polkadot. OriginTrail developed the world’s first Decentralized Knowledge Graph (DKG) to organize humanity’s most important assets, making them discoverable, verifiable, and valuable, often referred to as 'the google of Web3'.
This talk explores the real-world use cases of OriginTrail, and how through the synergy of knowledge graphs and blockchains, DKG forms the "semantic layer of Web3", enabling Web3 builders to organize, discover, and verify anything. It’s similar to the technology used by major Web2 giants like Google and Amazon to power their services.
The OriginTrail team explain how they moved into Web3 and achieved mainstream adoption, starting out on Ethereum as one of the first and most promising blockchain projects to address supply chain use cases, and evolving into a multichain decentralized knowledge network. They also discuss the OriginTrail parachain, enhancing the DKG with Substrate, unleashing network effects through Polkadot, collaborating with parachains, and how you can participate in OriginTrail, from running nodes to interacting with the community.
Links
OriginTrail
NFT Supercharger
The Trace Alliance
Highlights
02:00 What is OriginTrail?
04:45 Who’s using the Decentralized Knowledge Graph
07:00 What does OriginTrail solve?
10:30 Inception and expansion of OriginTrail
15:50 Existing across multiple blockchains
19:15 How OriginTrail works with the DKG
26:20 Forming the semantic layer of Web3
31:04 The OriginTrail parachain
40:15 Shout out to DKG Community members
43:20 How OriginTrail is being used
51:20 Breaking in to the mainstream
01:01:15 The Trace Alliance
Special Guests: Tomaž Levak and Žiga Drev. -
Centrifuge, Connecting Real World Assets with DeFi
This week Jorrin Bruns (Support Engineer, Parity Technologies) is joined by Cassidy Daly, token design and research specialist at Centrifuge, a Substrate-based blockchain that recently won a parachain slot on Polkadot. Centrifuge aims to bring an archaic financial system into the Web3 space, enabling users to unlock financing for their real world assets by bringing them on-chain.
Daly describes why the team chose Substrate to build Centrifuge and its canary network Altair, and why Centrifuge became a Polkadot parachain: to reconcile issues with Ethereum including scalability and fees, and the difficulty in maintaining an ETH bridge. They also discuss bringing the Tinlake DApp from Ethereum over to Centrifuge to tap into the specialization between interoperable parachains and drive efficiencies, lower the cost of financing and guarantee the custody and ownership of physical assets on-chain.
Useful Links
Centrifuge's website
Tinlake's website
Altair's website
Kilt's website
Highlights
01:47 What is Centrifuge?
07:27 Creating real-world assets on Centrifuge to use on Ethereum
12:10 Integrations with MakerDAO and Aave
15:55 Guaranteeing custody of physical assets on-chain
22:40 Centrifuge’s potential uses cases
26:15 Use cases of Altair vs Centrifuge parachains
33:25 Decentralizing Altair
36:50 Altair roadmap and the NFT studio DApp
44:10 Building functionality into the runtime
46:37 How Centrifuge fits into DeFi 2.0
49:20 Plans for Centrifuge as a Polkadot parachain
Special Guest: Cassidy Daly.