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1WEBVTT 2 31 400:00:00.000 --> 00:00:02.000 5Thank you. 6 72 800:00:30.000 --> 00:00:51.000 9So this is going to be a bit of a discussion starting with us three and I'll introduce myself and then allow the others to introduce themselves as well. 10 113 1200:00:51.000 --> 00:01:02.000 13But feel free to put your hand up at any point and participate. I hope there's this, the general topic is, which flows on really well from Natalie's talk. 14 154 1600:01:02.000 --> 00:01:11.000 17So thank you. That really set us up well. I was kind of looking back at Nate and our previous discussions and a lot of what we've talked about really resonated there. 18 195 2000:01:11.000 --> 00:01:22.000 21But overall we bring it to app protocol specifically and building a new sort of creator economy here. 22 236 2400:01:22.000 --> 00:01:33.000 25So from my perspective, I'm one of the co-founders of Spark. Spark is focused on content creators, the creator economy specifically. 26 277 2800:01:33.000 --> 00:01:43.000 29More like short form creators and that kind of really, really big influencer marketing ecosystem that's grown on these incumbent social platforms. 30 318 3200:01:43.000 --> 00:01:52.000 33And we work out of a space in New York called Versi, which is home to a lot of content creators. 34 359 3600:01:52.000 --> 00:01:59.000 37I think they have a combined over 10 million followers and these are predominantly spread across TikTok and Instagram. 38 3910 4000:01:59.000 --> 00:02:17.000 41And a lot of them, a lot of the discussions and workshops that they run there is basically all about how they can extract their audiences from these closed platforms because they're at the whim of an algorithm change or a policy change and their career could potentially end tomorrow in their livelihood. 42 4311 4400:02:17.000 --> 00:02:28.000 45And app protocol we see is a great solution for that. Their current solutions are pulling that out to things like sub stack, to newsletters, Patreon, Pay World Gardens. 46 4712 4800:02:28.000 --> 00:02:35.000 49But app protocol is a way for them to natively own that audience on where they actually get discovered. 50 5113 5200:02:35.000 --> 00:02:43.000 53And so that's a bit about Spark and my motivation for building in the atmosphere. 54 5514 5600:02:43.000 --> 00:02:47.000 57Sorry, I'm Joe Bassoff, by the way. 58 5915 6000:02:47.000 --> 00:02:52.000 61Thank you, Joe. My name is Josh Chiquette. I'm also New York based. 62 6316 6400:02:52.000 --> 00:02:56.000 65I'm one of the bad guys in the room like Natalie. I'm a venture investor. 66 6717 6800:02:56.000 --> 00:03:02.000 69I work at a firm called Sentinel Global. We're a multi-stage investment firm. 70 7118 7200:03:02.000 --> 00:03:09.000 73I've spent my whole career translating open protocols to real world problems and commercial opportunities. 74 7519 7600:03:09.000 --> 00:03:19.000 77So this started in the FinTech and digital asset space where I've done a lot of work investing in companies from the seed stage to even underwriting public ones. 78 7920 8000:03:19.000 --> 00:03:37.000 81I've done a lot of work in the open social web serving communities from Noster to Farcaster, Activity Pub, came across at Proto and Bluesky a couple of years ago and is really drawn to the affordance of data and identity portability that the ecosystem offered. 82 8321 8400:03:37.000 --> 00:03:47.000 85And super excited to be here today and talk about some of the new novel business models that this protocol and technology foundation enables. 86 8722 8800:03:47.000 --> 00:03:50.000 89So pass it over to Nate. 90 9123 9200:03:50.000 --> 00:03:56.000 93Hello, I'm Nate. I work on open source for most of my life. 94 9524 9600:03:56.000 --> 00:03:59.000 97And recently I've become really enamored with that Proto. 98 9925 10000:03:59.000 --> 00:04:13.000 101So I'm working on some SDKs for at Proto and then recently a music app, which has brought me into this problem of what ways can artists express how their content should be used. 102 10326 10400:04:13.000 --> 00:04:22.000 105As Joe mentioned, how do you retain ownership of the content that you create without being subject to random things? 106 10727 10800:04:22.000 --> 00:04:33.000 109So, yeah, I just think it's really exciting to sort of break open the problem that you get when you reverse the Faustian bargain that sort of she was referring to in the previous talk. 110 11128 11200:04:33.000 --> 00:04:37.000 113So I'm excited to get into it. 114 11529 11600:04:37.000 --> 00:04:39.000 117Awesome. Yeah. 118 11930 12000:04:39.000 --> 00:04:49.000 121I guess everyone, the reason why everyone's here, everyone understands the issues with current social and the kind of power dynamics that are there, especially with content creators. 122 12331 12400:04:49.000 --> 00:04:57.000 125Even looking at the creators, we're looking at catering to the most of their revenue sources that are not actually through the platforms. 126 12732 12800:04:57.000 --> 00:05:04.000 129They operate on the TikTok, Instagram, revenue sharing programs is actually a very, very small fraction of their revenue source. 130 13133 13200:05:04.000 --> 00:05:15.000 133And it tends to be these kind of third party brand deals and things like that that make up the large portion. 134 13534 13600:05:15.000 --> 00:05:28.000 137Yeah, Josh, you posted a really good leaflet recently about kind of redistribution, the redistribution of attention and especially with algorithms and feeds. 138 13935 14000:05:28.000 --> 00:05:36.000 141So, yeah, I'd love to if you could share your thoughts more on how that can impact the creator economy specifically in the context of that proto. 142 14336 14400:05:36.000 --> 00:05:42.000 145Sure. We'll do a quick survey. How many people post on social media? Put your hand up. 146 14737 14800:05:43.000 --> 00:05:46.000 149All right, everyone hands down. 150 15138 15200:05:46.000 --> 00:05:51.000 153Who makes meaningful income from their posts? Hands up. 154 15539 15600:05:51.000 --> 00:05:55.000 157I see one hand in the room. Congrats. 158 15940 16000:05:55.000 --> 00:06:06.000 161The reality is users and publishers are the stakeholders in these social networks that create value, but they're not the ones that capture the value. 162 16341 16400:06:06.000 --> 00:06:20.000 165And this is because the platform at the end of the day is the entity that owns distribution. They own what they're the ones who control what content users see and in what order. 166 16742 16800:06:20.000 --> 00:06:26.000 169And they also control the interface. So the screen real estate that users see. 170 17143 17200:06:26.000 --> 00:06:34.000 173And these are really the two things that enable the platform to capture a meaningful majority of value on these platforms. 174 17544 17600:06:34.000 --> 00:06:45.000 177And as the entity that captures the meaningful amount of value on these networks, the platform is also the arbiter of value. 178 17945 18000:06:45.000 --> 00:06:56.000 181It is the entity that decides how that value gets allocated across the various stakeholders in the social in its social network ecosystem. 182 18346 18400:06:56.000 --> 00:07:04.000 185And ultimately, these platforms serve not users. They don't serve publishers. They serve shareholders at the end of the day. 186 18747 18800:07:04.000 --> 00:07:12.000 189And so there's really little to structurally no incentive for these platforms to to share back revenue to creators. 190 19148 19200:07:12.000 --> 00:07:27.000 193There are some of these creator monetization programs that exist where maybe a small fraction of advertising revenue is passed back to users and publishers, but they're prohibitively high thresholds to participating in these programs. 194 19549 19600:07:27.000 --> 00:07:36.000 197And so one of the core affordances that I mentioned of app proto my intro was this decoupling of data from application presentation. 198 19950 20000:07:36.000 --> 00:07:51.000 201Everyone's data lives in their own personal PDS and applications tap into each user's respective PDS and create a an application view by tapping into this data. 202 20351 20400:07:51.000 --> 00:08:09.000 205And so one of the one of the things that happens as a byproduct of this affordance is users in app proto are able to create their own custom feeds and algorithms that live outside of the platforms control. 206 20752 20800:08:09.000 --> 00:08:19.000 209And the algorithm at the end of the day is the the thing that decides distribution that decides who sees what content and in what order. 210 21153 21200:08:19.000 --> 00:08:38.000 213And so I'm hopeful that in this evolution of social platforms adopting at proto and decoupling data from platforms themselves will actually be able to live in a world of user controlled algorithms versus platform controlled algorithms. 214 21554 21600:08:38.000 --> 00:08:53.000 217And that gives a lot more agency to the user and the creator as well. Number one, they get to take back control of distribution, which enables them to control what their audience sees today. 218 21955 22000:08:53.000 --> 00:09:05.000 221If you're a user or publisher and you're broadcasting out into the social abyss, you have no control over what content your audience sees and in what order. 222 22356 22400:09:05.000 --> 00:09:10.000 225And so this is a really bad sort of trade off for users and publishers. 226 22757 22800:09:10.000 --> 00:09:24.000 229But if publishers are able to take back control of distribution through public feeds or through custom feeds and custom algorithms, not only do they take back distribution, but they also take back control of value. 230 23158 23200:09:24.000 --> 00:09:37.000 233And now they become the arbiters of value in this ecosystem, not the platforms. And I'm hoping that with publishers and content creators becoming the arbiters of value in this ecosystems. 234 23559 23600:09:37.000 --> 00:09:51.000 237Now they're the ones that decide how that value gets allocated across the ecosystem. And I'm excited to see how this envelope of value could get distributed across various stakeholders at the very extreme. 238 23960 24000:09:51.000 --> 00:10:00.000 241You could imagine like Andra, for example, who runs the largest custom feeder algorithm on Bluesky, a verified news feed that she built with grays. 242 24361 24400:10:00.000 --> 00:10:06.000 245She could embed advertising and sponsor posts within her feed, which she's already done, not a massive scale. 246 24762 24800:10:06.000 --> 00:10:13.000 249And then redistribute all of that ad revenue that she generates to users or subscribers of her feed. 250 25163 25200:10:13.000 --> 00:10:27.000 253And you could start to imagine how this envelope of value could get distributed across these various stakeholders that actually provide value to the feeder algorithm that creates these new incentives and new forms of economic coordination. 254 25564 25600:10:27.000 --> 00:10:34.000 257I'll stop there. Yeah, that's really great. I think. 258 25965 26000:10:34.000 --> 00:10:42.000 261Yeah, go for it. 262 26366 26400:10:42.000 --> 00:10:52.000 265So when you're talking about the creation of a redistribution of value to the creators. 266 26767 26800:10:52.000 --> 00:11:12.000 269As a platform creator as a venture capitalist, presumably, this is actively against your core interests, right? Because in order for you to gain value from the thing you're creating, you need to control what people see because that gives your platform value that then you can extract for yourself, right? 270 27168 27200:11:12.000 --> 00:11:23.000 273So how are you reconciling that? Like, are you planning on somehow building record deals with creators where they pay you for access to a platform? 274 27569 27600:11:23.000 --> 00:11:37.000 277And if they are the ones who are the ones creating value, how does the platform or the venture capitalist add anything to that that makes it worth getting the share of the value in return? 278 27970 28000:11:37.000 --> 00:11:42.000 281Great, thank you for the question. It's obviously tough to be the bad guy. 282 28371 28400:11:42.000 --> 00:11:50.000 285No, no, no, look, I think the competitive vectors are going to change in this space and the points of demand aggregation will change as well. 286 28772 28800:11:50.000 --> 00:12:01.000 289Obviously, in this world, the creator has a lot more leverage as someone who controls their own distribution, owns their their portable feed that they can take with them from one platform to another. 290 29173 29200:12:02.000 --> 00:12:18.000 293I envision again, it's still really early. It's still it's still too early to say, but I envision, you know, companies like graze, for example, will build will almost become like the stripe for creators and build monetization tools for them that allow them to, you know, for example, 294 29574 29600:12:18.000 --> 00:12:29.000 297graze has already built an ad marketplace that allows for feed creators on graze to embed advertising and sponsored ads within their feeds. 298 29975 30000:12:29.000 --> 00:12:44.000 301And, you know, graze will probably impose some sort of take rate on on that transaction. And so, yeah, as more as more people use graze, as more feed creators come on to graze, as more attention concentrates and in graze feeds. 302 30376 30400:12:44.000 --> 00:13:00.000 305Yeah, I expect graze to potentially in the future, you know, participate in some of those economics where they're introducing advertisers to attention that takes place within these feed create within these algorithms or feeds that that creators produce. 306 30777 30800:13:00.000 --> 00:13:12.000 309And I think the platforms will also play a role in this. Ultimately, if you create a feed or an algorithm, you still need distribution for your feeder algorithm if you just create it and put it out into the world. 310 31178 31200:13:12.000 --> 00:13:29.000 313You, there's not much value in that you need people to view it and you know Bluesky is 40 million users they provide distribution for feeds, they'll probably want a piece of the cut as well whenever they render an ad within one of these feeds whenever a user looks at one of these feeds in the Bluesky client 314 31579 31600:13:29.000 --> 00:13:50.000 317and sees an ad, you know, that that envelope of value will get split between the creator, the, and the platform, and probably graze as well, who's like this monetization tool or infrastructure for for creators so that's my response. 318 31980 32000:13:50.000 --> 00:14:08.000 321Yeah, I mean, I'll just make a quick point and then we'll go to the question over there. From the perspective of someone that's, you know, building an app there. I think I echo Josh, a lot there and that there's still the distribution surface and I think it does flip the power dynamics but there's still 322 32381 32400:14:08.000 --> 00:14:37.000 325the requirement for the interface to get the creators content to the audience and there's costs involved with that but I think that the competitive nature changes and the power dynamic changes so you know the the creator in this case has a lot more power and say and arguably more, much more bargaining power in that transaction so you know the the apps that exist depending on what roles they play you know looking at at protocol specifically 326 32782 32800:14:37.000 --> 00:15:06.000 329there's lots of different components there's there might host your PDS which actually has your content stored on it. It might they might have the app view and then they might be running the fee they might be doing the moderation. They might have a full stack in which case they deserve a larger bit of that pie but ultimately the creator has a lot more bargaining power and and these kind of other components of the system fall further back into the, you know, into the background and you know they've been doing a lot of the things that they've been doing. 330 33183 33200:15:06.000 --> 00:15:21.000 333You know they basically play a role as a broadcaster or the rails for which a creator can access the audience and the creator has the choice over which apps that they use as the surface to reach their audience. Yeah, there was I think there's a question over there. 334 33584 33600:15:21.000 --> 00:15:50.000 337Hi, so I actually use grace to create feeds and I have one feed enabled for monetization. But what I found in general with the feed creators with grace is that most of us are trying to create these feeds but we're not necessarily out there. 338 33985 34000:15:50.000 --> 00:16:05.000 341We're not necessarily out there trying to market to get advertisers like that's not our main skill set, if you will. Whereas the creators themselves who are trying to monetize their work are skilled at that. 342 34386 34400:16:05.000 --> 00:16:29.000 345So I guess I wonder both what do you see as a way that we can actually get advertisers even wanting to be part of this system? Yeah. Like how do you make that happen when you kind of have this weird distribution of creator versus more of a developer general interest person? 346 34787 34800:16:29.000 --> 00:16:50.000 349Yeah, I mean, where there's eyeballs is going to be value. And right now, like, yeah, we there's there's over 40 million accounts on Bluesky but then there's even less if you look at the actual monthly active users and there are already interest in advertisers, whether that's through grades or people, you know, sponsored feeds or brands participating in the network. 350 35188 35200:16:50.000 --> 00:17:08.000 353And there's a lot of clear value there. There's eyeballs is attention. And where there's attention is there's money to be made, especially if we're looking at, you know, advertising models, but there's a lot of other models. Well, I think what should come about when permission spaces become a thing on that protocol. But yeah, good question. 354 35589 35600:17:08.000 --> 00:17:12.000 357More that becomes a real thing. 358 35990 36000:17:12.000 --> 00:17:17.000 361So, sorry about that. 362 36391 36400:17:17.000 --> 00:17:40.000 365I think I would like to ask Nate to pass it to you. I mean, we've talked a bit about more from this perspective of creators and ads and that being their kind of source of revenue, but for musicians and artists, it's a pretty different revenue source and algorithms, especially today with, you know, 366 36792 36800:17:40.000 --> 00:17:48.000 369apps like Spotify and Apple Music that have a real impact on how the music is created in the first place. 370 37193 37200:17:48.000 --> 00:17:54.000 373How do you see kind of at proto changing that landscape. 374 37594 37600:17:54.000 --> 00:18:01.000 377Cool. So, I'm really excited about what, first of all, has how many of you have heard of at proto fans. 378 37995 38000:18:01.000 --> 00:18:14.000 381Okay, a good chunk of you. For those of you haven't, it's sort of like you show up, you hook up your bank, and then other people can show up and pay you five bucks like coffee or something like this. 382 38396 38400:18:14.000 --> 00:18:28.000 385And so what's exciting to me is that in my music app today, you can say when you upload a track or something, you can say only allow supporters to consume this track. 386 38797 38800:18:28.000 --> 00:18:39.000 389And so I can just, as an app view or an application, just respect that stated support, which when permission data is a thing that can be private as well. 390 39198 39200:18:39.000 --> 00:18:57.000 393And so it's sort of more, it's just like Patreon style, like creators have relationships that they build grassroots with people that's sort of divorced from the classical conception of distribution or the advertising models, which is exciting to me personally. 394 39599 39600:18:57.000 --> 00:19:02.000 397And so I think the tricky thing. 398 399100 40000:19:02.000 --> 00:19:16.000 401So, the tricky part in my mind comes around when you ask a question like, if spark is going to present a cameo of a song that appears on a music platform where the content is gated. 402 403101 40400:19:16.000 --> 00:19:28.000 405How do you trickle the value back to the artist who owns it? How do you quantify the value that the artist is providing by allowing their content to show up downstream? 406 407102 40800:19:28.000 --> 00:19:43.000 409And so I think that is where I want to press and try to figure out how do I do a handshake with Joe and say how much is it worth to the artist for their content to appear there? 410 411103 41200:19:43.000 --> 00:20:00.000 413And I think that's a very tricky problem and I don't have any answers to that right now, but that is where I'm really interested in thinking because it does seem like the value of an impression depends entirely on what the content is, first of all, and then second of all, the place where you see it. 414 415104 41600:20:00.000 --> 00:20:08.000 417Because you can just hold up, you can have your phone in front of you, but you can just not look at it and the system might count that as an impression. 418 419105 42000:20:08.000 --> 00:20:22.000 421So it's like there's a lot of different human ways that I think we need to think about what the value of content distributing downstream is that I think is an important problem. 422 423106 42400:20:22.000 --> 00:20:37.000 425But one thing I'm really excited about is that if an artist doesn't like the way that Joe and I do the handshake, as far as respecting the value of their content downstream, they can just take their content and go to a different app because of AppProto, which I think is really cool. 426 427107 42800:20:37.000 --> 00:20:43.000 429And so maybe a different app does a better handshake in terms of respecting the value of their work downstream. 430 431108 43200:20:43.000 --> 00:21:00.000 433Yeah, I think that's a great point. I mean, I, you know, Spark and Playa, we're going to interoperate one day, I promise you, we'll have, you know, you can add songs to Spark posts that are, you know, Playa record. 434 435109 43600:21:00.000 --> 00:21:10.000 437So an artist song that they have on their PDS can start to propagate interoperate across lots of different apps, not just Spark, but wherever there's music. 438 439110 44000:21:10.000 --> 00:21:18.000 441And where these kind of value exchanges happen, I think there's, it's really important that there's some mechanism to share value there. 442 443111 44400:21:18.000 --> 00:21:28.000 445I think right now we're starting to see like intra app monetization models where, you know, Leaflet is launching Leaflet Pro and they have their monetization stream. 446 447112 44800:21:28.000 --> 00:21:37.000 449You can subscribe to Leaflet. You know, you can have this other apps that are starting to do pro things as well, or Grey's has their own advertising. 450 451113 45200:21:37.000 --> 00:21:52.000 453But, you know, even if you're looking at a Grey's feed, which, which happens to your question, a feed builder on Grey's could have ads in their feed and Bluesky that are actually taking on the majority of the costs and distributing that content is getting none of that. 454 455114 45600:21:52.000 --> 00:21:59.000 457And sure that works for now while they've got $100 million in the bank, but it's not going to be a sustainable ecosystem. 458 459115 46000:21:59.000 --> 00:22:09.000 461So I am a bit of a proponent for, and this came up in the previous talk, micro payments there for the inter app ecosystem. 462 463116 46400:22:09.000 --> 00:22:24.000 465So, you know, for example, a player song being used on a sponsored post on Spark and a percentage of the revenue being made on that sponsored post automatically being distributed to the artists whose song is being used there. 466 467117 46800:22:24.000 --> 00:22:42.000 469And that also could flow in the other direction where you have niche artists, which this exists on platforms today. There's this kind of shadow economies where an up and coming musician will pay for a popular content creator to use their song on their post as a great way to get discovered. 470 471118 47200:22:42.000 --> 00:22:53.000 473And we see TikTok has been such a great discovery mechanism for artists recently. And this doesn't just have to stay within the, you know, creators like artists and UGC creators. 474 475119 47600:22:53.000 --> 00:23:02.000 477It can propagate across every other component of the ecosystem, PDS hosts, moderation services, app views, labelers, whatever. 478 479120 48000:23:02.000 --> 00:23:09.000 481They can all become sustainable models that don't just rely on donations, but share in the value that's being created across the ecosystem. 482 483121 48400:23:09.000 --> 00:23:27.000 485So if everyone, if anyone wants to chat micro payments on that proto, then please talk to me. But yeah, I think we're that Christian. Actually, this is, I'm glad you're asking a question because I was about to reference your most recent post and proposal about more artists specific metadata on on app protocols. 486 487122 48800:23:27.000 --> 00:23:30.000 489So, yeah, we'd love to hear it. 490 491123 49200:23:30.000 --> 00:23:35.000 493Thank you that you introduce because if you want to talk about what you want, talk about that, please. 494 495124 49600:23:35.000 --> 00:23:45.000 497Yeah, my name is Hilke. I'm a musician myself and I run a music label. So I know a bit how the music industry works. 498 499125 50000:23:45.000 --> 00:23:57.000 501And well, if you talk about monetization downstream for music that is post on that is in a video, we have a system for that it's called copyright. 502 503126 50400:23:57.000 --> 00:24:05.000 505Yeah. And I think this has to play a role, even if it looks much too complicated for technologists like like many of us. 506 507127 50800:24:05.000 --> 00:24:20.000 509But this is actually the system in place that the music industry and the big players use. And I think we need to find out with with this protocol how we can map their data to that proto data. 510 511128 51200:24:20.000 --> 00:24:33.000 513And yeah, I think that opportunity was missed in the first wave of Spotify and stuff. And then the whole mess that was made, then they had to buy out a bit of majors. 514 515129 51600:24:33.000 --> 00:24:43.000 517And that's how all the indie musicians and players got fucked. So I think now we have the opportunity to do this mapping, mapping properly. 518 519130 52000:24:43.000 --> 00:24:53.000 521And then then the music industry, the labels will gather along hopefully with with with this ecosystem that we try to build. 522 523131 52400:24:53.000 --> 00:25:06.000 525So that is where that's the reason why I made a proposal for Lexicon, who does actually that to translate the copyright system to add proton. 526 527132 52800:25:06.000 --> 00:25:22.000 529Yeah, I think looking at like, tick tock as an example, you know, they have a pretty complete library of licensed music there and they have deals with these record labels and they tend to pay on average 30 cents per song used on a post. 530 531133 53200:25:22.000 --> 00:25:33.000 533And this is this is a very static dynamic and they are able to achieve that because they have, you know, economics of scale, they have a lot of bargaining power there and distribution. 534 535134 53600:25:33.000 --> 00:25:47.000 537And I think looking at at protocol and music on our protocol, at least for now, there's kind of two angles, which is one is that library completeness on one end, which requires a lot of capital, a lot of bargaining power that we don't have. 538 539135 54000:25:47.000 --> 00:25:58.000 541And then the other end, it's starting from the indie artists, the creators at the at the other end that are starting from nothing and and owning their content from the ground up. 542 543136 54400:25:58.000 --> 00:26:10.000 545We can then over time build that and build that bargaining power and then get those kind of partnerships with with real copyright and real respect for for the laws that are necessary to protect artists. 546 547137 54800:26:10.000 --> 00:26:27.000 549We don't have much time left, but I think there's a necessarily necessary topic to cover with the creator economy and that is AI, which is, you know, I think there's a lot of talk about gen AI affecting content creation and and verification. 550 551138 55200:26:27.000 --> 00:26:39.000 553Verification of what's real and what's not and that affecting the economies. Josh, as an investor, like I would love to hear your thoughts on on AI and in the creator economy at large. 554 555139 55600:26:39.000 --> 00:26:51.000 557Yeah, I think I think Natalie touched on this during the last talk pretty well. She spoke about how the covenant of the web is dead. Google scrapes websites in return. 558 559140 56000:26:51.000 --> 00:27:05.000 561Websites get traffic, but we're evolving from a system of search engines to answer engines where it's nine, 10 times harder to get traffic on Google now than it was 10 years ago. 562 563141 56400:27:05.000 --> 00:27:10.000 565There's some stat. It's like 750 to 1000 times harder to get traffic. 566 567142 56800:27:10.000 --> 00:27:20.000 569If your website from from open AI and entropic and some of these model providers. So users aren't going to websites anymore. 570 571143 57200:27:20.000 --> 00:27:30.000 573They're just getting all the answers fed to them with natively within an AI chat interface and AI agents don't look at ads. 574 575144 57600:27:30.000 --> 00:27:35.000 577Right. And so, you know, for publishers, I'm thinking more news organizations. 578 579145 58000:27:35.000 --> 00:27:49.000 581You know, the current business model of the web doesn't work with the way in which AI works because, you know, typically these news media organizations are monetizing traffic to their website and 582 583146 58400:27:49.000 --> 00:28:02.000 585monetizing that attention and selling ads against it. And so, obviously, Cloudflare, Microsoft are doing some interesting work around content data marketplaces. 586 587147 58800:28:02.000 --> 00:28:10.000 589Publishers create unique niche content. AI model providers need data to train their models. 590 591148 59200:28:10.000 --> 00:28:19.000 593There was an interesting stat. So I think it was I forgot which AI model provider it was. So I won't I won't say the name, but 594 595149 59600:28:19.000 --> 00:28:32.000 597for the same amount of data, I believe Reddit got paid. It was something like, you know, five to seven X times more for their data. And the reason for that relative to New York Times, sorry. 598 599150 60000:28:32.000 --> 00:28:44.000 601And the reason for that is because the New York Times is content is a lot more substitutable to a lot of other news publications out there, whereas the information that lives on Reddit is more unique and niche. 602 603151 60400:28:44.000 --> 00:28:58.000 605And as a result, a lot more valuable to the AI model providers. And so, you know, while we haven't figured out an AI interface for social yet, I think we still swipe through the short form video reels. 606 607152 60800:28:58.000 --> 00:29:09.000 609And, you know, we haven't really AI hasn't really solved the interface for social in an AI native way, like Sora just died last week, right? 610 611153 61200:29:09.000 --> 00:29:22.000 613It will be interesting to see how this business model evolves for for publishers. And I think micropayments will be a really big piece of it. 614 615154 61600:29:22.000 --> 00:29:25.000 617Anything to add there? 618 619155 62000:29:25.000 --> 00:29:32.000 621Yeah, pretty much done for time. If there's any last questions, otherwise we'll wrap it up. 622 623156 62400:29:32.000 --> 00:29:42.000 625Thank you. I think, yeah, we're all excited for that kind of there's a big kind of sea change coming for creators in terms of how much power and the power dynamics there with creators. 626 627157 62800:29:42.000 --> 00:29:48.000 629And we're building that on our protocol. So it's exciting. 630 631158 63200:29:48.000 --> 00:29:50.000 633Excellent. 634 635159 63600:29:50.000 --> 00:29:52.000 637Thank you very much. 638 639160 64000:29:52.000 --> 00:30:04.000 641Just want to acknowledge the people on stream there's been a lot of questions there's interesting other cases Hillcrest blog post is posted on there so all sorts of action popping up on screenplays so please check it out. 642 643161 64400:30:22.000 --> 00:30:28.000 645Thank you. 646 647162 64800:30:52.000 --> 00:30:55.000 649Thank you. 650