Thank you
Full Transcript
hi this is Charles hoskinson broadcasting live from warm sunny Colorado always warm Always Sunny sometimes Colorado today is February 23rd 2022 and I'm making quick video to thank all the people who have sent me some lovely gifts and accoutrements it's always fun when you guys do things so I want to show you a few things I've gotten all right so first we have this lovely book from Lone Wolf and cup and it's a big thick one it's actually a manga the English version and it came from a gentleman named Dr David Allen and include a little quote here it's says because the world is not only a stranger than we suppose it is Stranger than we can suppose pretty good quote Lone Wolf and cuff so thank you Dr Allen then I got something from a another group the veterans of War they gave me some swag they gave me a caduceus and their little logo right here through difficulty to honors and they also gave me a nice Polo so kudos to those guys there you go look at that Veterans of Wars yeah they help a lot of people out and then the mill team sent me something interesting and they included a little bit of a little note here said dear Charles managing the community of any crypto project inevitably comes with some repetitious questions the most famous of all being quote winmoon you get irritated by it we get irritated by it everyone gets irritated by it it's such a common question that it has been elevated to meme status and virtually every crypto Community thankfully a clever artist in the community Twitter handle har zero ld16 started making cute anthropomorphic GIF GIF whatever that's pronounced I've never figured that one out myself versions of all the major dap projects logos and mass goes vigorously matching a big blue when button our CMOS named our version meldito and when he cites before you in corporeal plushie form now anytime someone asks when moon on the stream you can roll out this cute little guy to match the win button so the mail team sent this to me look at that when a little button when Moon and got one of these cute little plushies from the Melt team it really is amazing to see the amount of growth we've had in cardano ecosystem there's hundreds and hundreds of dapps building interesting things there are up days and down days has been a pretty depressing week for me but All Things Considered what makes the job worth it is you guys the fans and the supporters and the people doing interesting things in fact I have a lovely letter right here which I'm going to grab and read there we go and this is from pav Hughes so let me go ahead and read it off all right dear Charles first firstly I want to begin by thanking you for your for your inspiration and Ingenuity in the blockchain space my husband and I are very new to this space and we've been captivated by all the work cardano and your team are achieving there's a specific reason for me to reach out to you I hope that you have the time in your busy schedule to review this email and kindly provide your thoughts on my request well we're doing it right now congratulations I live in the United Kingdom and have worked in the adult sector care sector for over 10 years I would describe myself as a professional and expert in my field I'm passionate about my work I have a friend who with who has learning disabilities mental health problems and behavioral needs he has helped shape me as a professional guided me through my work common problem within the care sector is that most of adults who require care and support are not able to advocate for their own needs wishes and choices they rely on their families or friends and all of those who don't have Representatives rely on the social Care Systems to keep data and Records which should guide all Health Care Professionals on the delivery of their care often people's needs are not correctly identified consequently they have unmet needs this leads to depression mental health problems and isolation staff and Care teams feel demoralized because they do not know how to support the individual because they lack information on the person's history or Journey information is often not recorded correctly or not passed on between care administrator or Commissioners or providers understanding a little how the Attila prism would result providing millions of people with an ID and securing their academic achievement credentials I believe this technology would help resolve the problem in our current health and social care sector when children enter the social care system from a young age any information about them should be stored as they progress through life this information helps them inform their care and support for decades later and possibly until their last day most people go on to develop dementia and Care staff cannot recognize or understand certain behaviors if they had access to Vital Information from their childhood or younger years it will help tailor a person-centered care plan and then she goes on to ask a little bit about fake news but I'll address the question about dementia so some of I have personal experience with dementia because both my grandmother on my mom's side my maternal grandmother and my grandfather and grandmother on my dad's side my paternal all died of neurodegenerative disorders and all three of them suffered from some variant of dementia my grandmother was dementia unspecified grandfather was Alzheimer's and my grandmother on the other side had Parkinson's and Lewy Body dementia in all cases we watch them go from people that we loved and knew to people who were unable to communicate they couldn't speak they couldn't remember their own names they had difficulty doing basic tasks and eventually couldn't care for themselves in any capacity and it was very hard having a phone call with my grandfather who at the time had lived in Hawaii for more than 30 years telling me he had just moved there and he's really excited about establishing some roots and not realizing he was talking to his grandson and not a friend and then eventually having a conversation where he didn't recognize me or my dad or any of his other four children so this is a topic that is near and dear to my heart and there's a broader issue in medical ethics about the notion of informed consent so this is where you're told something you understand whatever the treatment is you understand the risk and reward of treatment as many who are in the health care field are aware not everything that is done to you is safe it may be effective it may not be but there's always a risk for example if you have to get brain surgery potential risk that after the surgery is done you never walk again or you lose vision or your right hand's paralyzed or something like that a lot of people have debilitating back pain and when they get a procedure done that debilitating pain they hope will be resolved in some cases it actually makes it worse as many people have learned as they've gone through spinal surgery so how do you get consent from people who are incapable of providing consent either the mentally challenged or from people who suffer from memory disorders or from people who are in vegetative States or Comas and this is a difficult one and then there's a question of how do you give good care to people especially when dealing with people who are chronically ill and people who are in a situation of neurogenerative disorder we'd like to believe that everybody involved in healthcare is compassionate and they treat each person as if it's the first patient they've ever seen and they're filled with joy and love but the reality is that the nature of the job can wear down on you especially in settings like hospice or Memory Care patients are combative angry patients often suffer from depression and no matter how hard you work your job is to manage the decline to the inevitable end you can't treat or solve the problem and compassion is a finite resource people get worn out and tired which means the standard of care tends to deteriorate over time based upon how long the Personnel have been working there couple that with the fact that because of the nature of these conditions many things are missed it's hard for a dementia patient tell you that they're throwing up blood or they're having some pain somewhere they might not know how or they might forget to tell you so so it's very difficult these settings in it requires pretty special people to go in every single day and do these things so the question is how can you apply what we do blockchain technology to these types of settings and so there's an interesting question about well medical records should never be lost and key facts about a person should never be forgotten especially when those key facts are quite relevant to a person's treatment and so there's been a lot of questions about the aggregation and convergence of medical records to blockchain technology and some people listening probably are involved in that so the question there is how do you do that in a way that preserves privacy and also how do you do that in a way that enables medical records to be more portable and secure to date I am not aware of any blockchain based system for medical records that is both HIPAA compliant and widely adopted that's not to say it can't be done but it's a big technological Challenge and it's something that because I now own a biotech company that happens to own a clinic that we're setting up in Gillette we've had a lot of discussions about our electronic medical record system and is it possible to augment or enhance that system in a way to include a some form of a blockchain component if anything for an Integrity check but then there's this issue of completeness in what constitutes a good set of medical records for a patient one of the things we're going to do at our Clinic is that we're going to sequence the entire Genome of each patient that comes in used to cost three billion dollars to do that it could be done for under a thousand dollars so we have the entire genome and we could do things to understand the epigenome and how that changes over time in addition to that Physicians are trained to do extensive histories if they have the time and the ability so the genomic data combined with an aggressive set of labs combined with extensive history on the patient and scans can contain a beautiful fingerprint and Baseline that you can then move forward from the problem is it's not just a data question it's a data analysis question and it's a question of cognition you need agents on a regular basis to review the medical records of the patient so that can be AI assisted guys probably have seen things like Watson which helps build differential diagnosis and these types of things but also peer review of Physicians charts and Care teams can definitely provide a lot of value in the discussion of whether the medical records are complete and all also the history of actions on the patient are complete we don't do that commonly in the United States and frankly in the world which is why so many people have been lost in the Health Care system they have chronic ailments or unresolved issues undiagnosed issues or misdiagnosed issues that linger for years to decades that dramatically deteriorate the quality of life so I this is a problem I do think about and unfortunately there aren't very easy answers and it's something we're going to have to solve in our own clinic and as we go through it we're going to learn a lot more but I do appreciate it and and I respect and appreciate the hard work that you do and and as I mentioned it's hard to stay compassionate and it helps to have people close to you that inspire you every day and remind you every day that that is the duty and burdens of those in health care always be near and dear to my heart now one final gift this one is pretty special from time to time we have artists in our community and I really do apologize to this one because there apparently was a note with this and the note got accidentally thrown out with shipping package but we we've been in email content and this is comes from Crystal badua and she painted this I think it's a watercolor it looks like one took her a hell of a long time and then shipped it to our office and I said wow this is this is pretty special so I wanted to show and share all of you guys and I think she has a birthday coming up so it would be fun if you all said happy birthday to Crystal thank you so much for this let me show you isn't that crazy it's a beautiful painting so I can't believe how much time that probably took it was probably weeks or months and it's it's always humbling I I don't know what to do with these things because if you hang them in the office then you come to office and I get a lot of Charles stuff you just walk into this area where there's nothing but Charles paintings and Charles drawings and Charles nfts and so forth and and then people are like wow this guy is really narcissistic so then you don't hang them and then you put them in you put them in a warehouse or something and then you're like well that person put all this effort into doing this and wants me to have it so it's a difficult one I have another one painted of me and that's an oil painting from the Netherlands I think this one comes from the Philippines and it's me with a falcon on my shoulder the famous Mongolia pitcher and I still have that in my office but I haven't figured out what to do with it I'm probably gonna give it to my mom or something like that but but anyway I really appreciate these things the thought really does mean a lot to me and it still makes me embarrassed a bit when people send me these things because I'm not used to this kind of stuff and it just shows you how great our community is and how lovely all you people are it's tough being the founder of a cryptocurrency and helping an ecosystem along you carry the burdens of so many on your back the hopes and dreams of so many people and yeah things are getting tough now we're in the fight stage of cardano's Life the reality is that in short order cardano is going to start changing things and that's great for the world but it also means that some of the people who lose the entrance interest the centralized power structures they start utilizing the predictable tactics the politics of personal destruction and all kinds of tools so it's going to be a tough year in a certain respect where there's going to be lots of people writing horrible things and saying terrible things and then all kinds of chicanery and for me that noise is reassuring because it means that we're in the part where we're winning the reality is that eight years ago I went to Bermuda on an invitation and did a TED Talk where I talked about the potential use cases of cryptocurrency and I said economic identity is the big deal and remittances and microfinance these things are worthwhile Pursuits of a lifetime and if we achieve them we change the lives of billions of people the reason why people make these blue buttons and they send me these gifts it's because they've been inspired to participate in that journey together I was alone back then it was just me opining on my thoughts old Charles no one cared and now as you see by all these things there are millions of people and they're asking fundamental questions in their own areas of expertise whether it be how do we give economic identity to people or liquidity to those who don't have it to artists who are finding inspiration and believe they can be part of the Revolution to people who are personally impacted by the inefficiencies and some cases lack of compassion in the Health Care system it's a pretty amazing thing to be in the Nexus of all of that and see all the hopes and dreams and feelings of so many people and be able to provide some Solace and potentially at least a sounding board for how we can do better as a society now predictably the people who benefit from the way the world is today warts and all will resist change but despite them we have to find a way to change ourselves our communities and society as a whole because too many people are being left behind too many people have a bad deal and it's not moral when you have the ability to do something not to do something every single one of you I'd like to believe if you see somebody collapse in front of you you see somebody drowning you see someone fall that you'd walk over and try to give them a hand it's just human nature I believe in the better angels of our nature I don't think we're intrinsically bad I think we're intrinsically good and what we are witnessing as a world is collectively billions of people drowned and fall and have a hard time and the only reason we don't go over to help them is because we're watching from a distance behind glass there's nothing we can do the problems of Africa the problems of Southeast Asia the problems of South America the problems of the economically disenfranchised areas of America itself they seem so far away this is the first time in all of our lifetime where we actually remove the glass and everything that's far away is now close to us I'm going to go back to Bermuda in October and we're going to bookend that TED Talk and we're going to show all the progress we've made and everything that we as an industry and we as an ecosystem cardano have achieved in the last eight years and there's a lot to say more than you can imagine and that's our small part and my belief is that the inspired Millions who now belong to cardano the ones who paint these pictures and send these buttons and these lovely letters you too will have your own TED talks and you too will build your own things and make the world a better place that's a movement and you can't beat that you can use the politics of personal destruction you can criticize people you can say whatever the hell you want whenever you want but you can't criticize a movement especially one that has history on its side and one that is selling ultimately a better world this is a challenge that our entire industry has to face we haven't as an industry been the best of custodians of that message and that's because of the human nature itself you see the one truth that is quite Universal as human beings will always let you down always there are no exceptions that's what it means to be human in some area some way we make a mistake but the other side of Being Human is building institutions processes procedures policies that are resilient enough to admit the occasional mistake and Evolution itself is a process of mistakes random mutations that every now and then lead to something special and have taken us from a single celled organism to who we are today and Beyond and so the point is that we keep getting back up and we keep trying and we keep pushing forward and the Beautiful Thing is what we've constructed together as an industry these systems cryptocurrencies are born of the mistakes of the past to help us not make them again they come with their own challenges and mistakes and problems and the Next Generation that uses them will fix the ones that we weren't good enough to fix but because they exist it gives me hope that in the 21st century we can do better than the 20th and after all that's the challenge of each generation so thank you all for being here thank you all so much for the love and support and the gifts and I just wanted to make a video to say that and showcase the people who've sent things to me and tell me you are heard at College I do get them from time to time and let's just keep chipping away at the work good night
Found an error in the transcript?
Help improve this transcript by reporting an error.