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Why 99% of the world population still don't trust to any blockchain/crypto project ? And among the 1% left why is there such a big REcentralization of value ?

On April 27 we gonna meet and learn from 4 different communities that successfully established trust both with and without blockchains. From life-extension enthusiasts, to representatives of one of the largest political grassroots movements, to one of the most mediatized non-profits.

We'll try to answer what distributed, hyperlocal and local communities have in common and is that tokenizable ? Can we build a trusted inner- and inter-community economic framework and infrastructure attractive for external businesses, so existing startups and businesses can help community power grow and become self-sustainable ?

We going to learn from our experts in crowdfunding and community organizing, presenting their success stories.

How to organize scientific research community and enthusiasts for crowdfunding.
Keith Comito, founder http://lifespan.io

Framework for an inner and inter-community economy: how existing startups and businesses can help community power grow.
Alexey Potapov, co-founder http://kriorus.ru/en

Trust as the main barier in tokenization revolution. Beyond double spending, 51%, governance and voting rights,
Constantin Kogan, Ph.D. Founder Adwivo & Abotmi.

Empowering community economy with blockchain, crypto and DAO (Distributed Autonomous Organization).
James Waugh, http://BushwickGenerator.com

We will use an interactive format of short presentations and group work to see our collective agreements and disagreements, the practicality or uniqueness of presented cases.

The importance of the topic is underlined by Vitalik Buterin,
https://cointelegraph.com/news/vitalik-buterin-crypto-must-leave-behind-the-individualism-of-the-early-cypherpunks

On March 23, 2019 Buterin argued that today’s crypto advocates and developers should evolve away from the fierce individualism of the cypherpunk movement and from an excessive focus on maximizing autonomy and privacy.

Money, he argued, is fundamentally and profoundly social, and the potential of cryptocurrencies and blockchain technology is to advance an explicitly political, collective agenda. This, he argued, includes rethinking models of social governance, formalizing identity and community membership, facilitating the equitable funding of public goods, and rehauling ownership structures.

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