Building on ARC: Crypto's Command Console

Recorded: June 22, 2023 Duration: 0:56:31

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Hello everyone. If you can hear me right, just drop some emoji so that I know it's working.
Hello, hello, how are you? I'm good, I'm good. Looks like we are going to have a really good crowd today. We are super happy people are going in, which is a good sign.
I'm glad to see all the new faces.
We are also waiting for
a few more guests.
So if you're here, can you request so that I can add you to the stage?
Actually, my teammates, they might be hopping in intermittently here. Unfortunately, they're not feeling very well today.
But I know where you're from. More than happy to handle the questions.
Awesome. I think we can wait for a few seconds, but for everyone who's listening in, I would love if you can reshare, read with this space, so like a lot of other people can join in because we're just starting out the chat. We have amazing amazing
team right here. They're building an amazing product and I was actually diving deeper into what you guys are building and it's like at one point I just got lost. I was like, okay, this is a lot of things, right? And you're a virtual machine going on. You have
your own compiler, you have your own GUI, for coding, editing, generation of books. And then you have your own language as well, if I'm not wrong. Yeah, yeah, it's a semantic language. So it maps existing languages into diagrams. Wow.
interesting. This is all of the things that we are going to dive into in today's session. I think there are a lot of people who have just wanted them to be waiting for a couple of times. I think we can just dive right.
before we put that before we go into what you're building, what are things. I would really love you can introduce yourself, test how your journey has been so far in Web 3 and like how did you started building this? Yeah, I can definitely go ahead.
and do that. So I've been in a space for about four years now. Prior to Web 3, I was actually trading 4x at a small local proprietary firm. And, you know, I was just, I would generate some returns trading 4x, but when it came to DeFi and when people
people are doing with meme coins, it kind of just blew me out of the water. So I decided like why not investigate this web through space a little bit more. And that's exactly what I did. I started watching videos, started learning more about the principles and the ethos behind web 3 and needless to say, I
I fell in love. I started consulting for a couple projects. Eventually starting my own, which is a multi-market aggregator, built that up for a raise of 250K to over $300 million value weighted. We had over 50,000 users.
you know, life is pretty good and then we faced a major exploit. Someone used a float attack on the liquidity pool, they sold their tokens, the same time people broke agreements with us and they were selling tokens. So, you know, I had to work through the wreckage
of that company started a new one and still honor the people that I had dedicated my life to my team and I for the past year. And that's exactly what we're doing here at ARC. We're building some exciting developer tools and infrastructure for Web 3 in general.
And yeah.
Yeah, I think with all of the scams, I think this is the part of the journey. I think everyone goes through that little heart period and then you learn a lot of things and you will like, okay, next time, like any other thing that we are building or if it isn't, if you are continuing building the exact same product, you have to
like now we know how to deal with the upcoming challenges, right? So that's amazing. And I know that you're also building a security tool like auditing tool, right? Do you want to talk about that, maybe? Yeah, absolutely. I can. And just to relate to your point, you know, it's just like the classical
hero's journey this space. But yeah, in reference to the audio tool that you mentioned, what we're doing is we're flipping the current audit business model on its head. So as it exists right now, a project or community. Whatever it may be, they pay
a certain amount of money upfront, right? And then the auditors, they manually go through the code, it takes them anywhere from weeks to months. And then there's still the risk that, of course, they didn't catch exploits. But then there's the risk that as soon as the audit's done, you know, save, they add your code,
And then that audit is just kind of obsolete. But what we're doing is we're allowed anyone to create generative audits at any time. They're by like empowering just that average user in the space to create their own audits with with our AI tools.
So imagine you're on our platform, you know, instead of saying, hey, here's $10,000, please get this audit done in a month. You just go into our Swaps platform, you know, pull up an asset that you want to swap to and then it generates an
right there. You can click on the audit and it opens up an entire brief with objective scores across the utility community as well as most importantly security. And then on me, on actually like the developer side of things, you know, we don't just have that in a concert hall.
application that we're building right now. But we also have that built into the dev side to where users will be able to use our GUI and simply talk to the GUI, ask where the potential exploits are and it'll pull them right up. I mean we found exploits in
Very big works projects course I can't mention them here, but just in demos with VCs They just ask about a project we pull it up and there would be like 65 less missing from the GitHub and this was to be a full open source project or there'll be constant
errors in a certain vector alignment to the right, potentially opening up that contract that DDoS attack. We have a deep breadth of AI tools because of the core that the company sits on, which is the reactor.
Awesome. So I have a lot of questions, just to follow up questions to that, but I'm going to like put off a little bit of, but just for those who might not be familiar like what art is, in you summarize, like, how do you pitch this project to anyone who's new into this space or like anyone who's curious because there's just a lot of
tools and a lot of things that you're building. Just to summarize, if I have to tell someone else, this is a team and they're building something. So what is that something? Absolutely. So to pitch ARC and its entirety, I would say our company and what we're focused on is
just democratizing Web 3 through elevating the collective understanding of every single user, developer, and auditor in this base. You look at Basic, Indos, and the level of abstraction they had back in the day. The language's name is Basic, it's very basic. It was hard to create advanced applications with that.
And it's similar to what solidity is now, right? And what a lot of these chains run on now and what ARC is doing is abstracting way that complexity and making it so anyone can understand what's going on underneath. You know, as we peel back the layers, we actually show graphically exactly how functions interoperable.
with each other. Sorry, AI integrated. You'll be able to ask plain text questions in just natural language. Like, what does this contract do? What are the risks associated with it? Talk to me like I'm a project manager. Tell me, you know, give me the nuances on access control within this smart contract repository.
And it'll be able to explain things from different perspectives. Thereby, a lot of people don't understand just Web 3 better in general, which I feel like is a huge problem right now. People don't necessarily understand it. And that leads to the rug pulls in the space, exploits, that leads to people
just creating copies, endless copies of projects with new UI and new UX, and then marketing that is important, right? And, you know, with a tool like this, we're just democratizing the ability to interact with smart contracts as well as understand them and create your own applications.
fascinating. I think it's a query we just to see the comprehensive soar of tools that ARC is building right now. For most parts, I think we have discussed all of the problems that ARC is trying to
solve one's security auditing. Of course, like a lot of people when they join into the web free space and they're trying to do certain thing, they might be just because of this
And Steve cost of learning or Steve cost probably like auditing as well. Like these are one set of problems, right? But what are other challenges that are trying to solve with the web 3 landscape right now? Like why did you think that if this is something that is needed?
Not just by developers, but for the wider audience and WebT. Especially like consumers, users, product managers. Because a lot of the problems that people face in Web3, they're not just on the developer side. Yes, the developer side is like the foundation, right?
you create as you have access to better tools and more knowledge about Web 3 generally, you'll be able to create more sophisticated applications. But on the consumer side, on the project manager side, there's a lot of problems that aren't necessarily at the smart contract level. So like a rug pull, for example, could just be because the toe
economics is screwed up, right? Or a community could be highly invested in a project that says they're the best swap in the world or they're the best farm aggregator in the world. And the thing is it's hard to validate and verify those claims if you're not a
Highly advanced developer in a space, but with our tool, you know, you'll just be able to talk to it just like I Hate to say it. You know, just like chat to you PT and it'll also it'll diagram the semantics in the code Show you exactly where is unique where is it unique and explain
to you from different perspectives like you know the access control perspective the consumer/trader perspective and of course for you guys the the developer perspective which personally I'm most excited about that but I love how our tool and how the company has implications for everyone in the industry
Yeah, that's true. And also, so you mentioned about AI itself. And right now it's a talk of a downright. And I think it's just amazing to see that we have an actual use case for building and integrating both AI and Web 3 together in the context of
is making web 3 development easier for a lot of developers or like a lot of teams who are building into this space. I just want to dive deeper into our exploration like how do you integrate AI and like if I especially in terms of auditing right, so security is a crucial element. I can
not trust AI fully. I mean, again, like depending on the precision, depending on the accuracy, so like, how did you figure out like, what's the best way to like go about integrating AI with Pepsi? Yeah, so now I totally understand what you're saying, right? Lots of times
the popular AI models that exist out there right now, they hallucinate. Like if you said the same prod, it'll produce different results that don't correlate over and over again, right? And when we thought about getting AI into the reactor, we've been thinking about this
It's September of last year, like really thinking about it. We had talked about it before, but we start really thinking about it then. It's like how do we create a system that's objective that, you know, it doesn't just empower us and aggregating data and building it off the database.
it provides utility to a decentralized community. And that's why we acquired the AI engine that we did. It's called Leechee AI. At the time that we acquired it, it had about 500 stars on GitHub. There was a lot of different people playing around with it.
I'm sure more would have post chat GPT if we didn't take it private. Essentially the way Meechi works is it's a multi-evolutionary and multi-agent system. The audits that are generated and the code that is generated can be cross-referenced and cross-referenced.
analyzed by multiple AI agents in the system. So until I really break it down, I really wish I could screen share up in here. But the reactor are made tool that GUI that interfaces with all the different AI. It's basically a semantic engine. So it tastes
the code and then it maps it into the simple to understand DAGs or directed a cyclic graphs which can be utilized better by AI to create more performing outputs as well as access data faster if you follow companies like Pine Cone what they're doing a vector embedding
That's sort of what we do with the reactor, but we do that a lot and in concert and our graphs are composable But so we have that semantic engine right and then it interacts with the AI module which the module can be gbt 3.5 4.5
GPD for all, GPD for free, agent and GPD, the different models that exist out there. So it's like a hybridized layer of AI modules, which connects to our database that we're building. So our semantic search data. And then
our leechie AI sits at the end of that process. So you go from engine to AI modules to the semantic search database to the native AI modules. So there's cross checks in there. And then by that time, if we hadn't already mapped that question in the past,
And we can't analyze like a certain amount of it within the graph of thought we're creating Then we'll just re-refer to it through the AI layer But if we can like if someone's asked that question before or created that audit or Developed that code before and we have that mapped we pull it directly
directly from that graph of thought that's been created and reinforced over time and provide the answer from there. So I know there's like a really long run answer, but essentially the way that we solve the problem of AI hallucinating and AI providing these outputs you can't
process, we have the AI cross check itself and by the time the data gets to you and it's displayed, it has already been analyzed, it's already been validated in that network. But if it say it doesn't serve your purposes, it's just completely hallucinated, which
might happen sometimes. We're not the AGI yet, right? It will still show it in the diagram so you can easily understand where it fell short because it'll have that diagram there and I'll explain it to you and then you can just change it with another plain text at it.
I think at this point I would love to have screen share. It's just kind of hard to get it. I think at this point I would just kind of want to shift gears and discuss
about your contribution in the D5 space because that's one part which we kind of missed when we're talking about all the things that you have been doing. So just out of curiosity, I want to understand how this arc enhances the D5 space and what's the unique value that
our kids bringing into the ecosystem. Absolutely. So we enhance the Deep Eye space because of that the core that we created. Right. So people can understand what's three easier and they can interact with it more efficiently through our platform. But then in the Deep Eye space
We take a lot of the native processes that exist already and we expedite those. So I briefly mentioned it earlier, the Swaps AI, for example, where we have Swaps integrated with the AI module. People can generate audits at any time. Those audits cover security.
community and what that does is you know, to anyone that's a sophisticated investor at least likes to think they are, they perform market research, right? And it takes an objective stance on that market research, it reads through the code through it, either scan API,
It provides an audit score as well as community and the other scores through the different APIs and that AI module that we have access to. So on the DeFi side of things, we're pretty excited for what we're building there too.
I'll just talk about the Swaps AI as of right now, but there's some other AI products that we plan to build in there. I know I keep throwing that word around, but I really think it's important that we focus on our foundation rather than just trying to ignore it. I'd rather ride the wave than drive underneath it.
Absolutely. I think when we talk about the foundations, when we talk about just building products that adds value to the community, I think one of the things which is also important is the community participation and developer engagement, right, which absolutely plays like a
I just want to understand because there are a lot of segments that you're working with. There's segments in the user's, the segments and consumers. There's segments in the use cases that you're building. So I just want to understand how our kids post string that community involves
And like what are the opportunities because I know that this space is full of developers who wants to build and contribute to the RP ecosystem. So like what are the opportunities that are available for any developers to contribute to this project or just get involved? Oh, I love that question. So we're always looking
the Builder Open Source community of devs and we've been focused on building the documentation, APIs out and just a, you know, specialized community for devs within the ecosystem because we want to be able to hand off certain pieces of the infrastructure
future so you can iterate on it and build your own open source versions of it. One of the things we just developed for example is an API to the reactor that allows anyone to create their own theme diversion of the reactor simply through that API
or plug-in and if you guys just if you want to get involved just feel free to join our community and We can go from there. We can get you in the reactor for testing for QA for just building if you want access to the plugins and the APIs I'm glad to discuss
love that. I really hope that a lot of developers will join your Discord channel because we're thinking you a lot. That'd be great. And like excitement around the products that you're building. I think one of the things, so this is something that is
a question that I particularly asked to literally every project that I talked to and this is something that it's kind of like a hard-fought problem. We're like, okay, you're building products, but like what are the challenges that developers use to face or are typically facing when they're building on Web 3 and how do you
How do you work on the developer experience and how does our address the challenges are like how do you support developers in their web series? I think the problem is existing like true routes. So one is lots of developers don't have access to to read
resources or an open source community that is as robust as what exists in Web2. And then the incentive for developers in the space, unfortunately, has been to build projects that aren't, you know, they're just a refresh with new UI, UX, another
but another farm. But if we change the tool and if we give people access to something where they can build something pretty special and streamline a lot of the processes while also cross validating what's already created out there, I think it will
Elevated developers to to higher levels where they'll be focused on creating sophisticated apps. They'll be focused on Creating new groundbreaking innovations in the space and because unfortunately it's like if it was a ratio I mean
I would say that most developers are focused on building, slight iterations to swaps, farms, etc. But R2 was really for the people that are building the innovations, projects that are focused on sustaining
For example, projects that are they're building them on more efficient change or they're building more efficient pain itself that utilizes multiple languages and I feel like if we Allow people to to just do that more efficiently
and they have an entire community to where they can be building these things open source. It'll elevate the entire space for it's because if anyone can just use our tool in the future and easily tell everyone just through a screenshot that yeah what these guys are creating is smoke
and if we can do that to most of the projects in the space, we'll also building actual innovations and specialized projects with the reactor, then it's going to have a dual effect in driving the space forwards.
right? I think at this point, we've covered a lot of the brown, a lot of good insights into the problems that developers are facing problems, other segments of the audiences are
are facing right now. And also get this point. I just want to announce that if anyone here, anyone who's listening, if they have any questions, feel free to just raise your hand or just
So I just request to speak and I will get you on board it to the stage so that you can ask all of the questions away. Otherwise, I have really like all of the follow up questions because initially when we were starting or this
We mentioned about the language that you are building. This is a personal opinion. I was like, okay, so there are a lot of projects for building their dedicated or specialized languages.
But then it also adds to a learning curve that a lot of developers were transitioning from Web2 to Web3. They have to go through. So instead of that, why not we work on already existing?
languages like Solidity maybe or or just preferred languages that we have in web 2. So like what are the developer experience points, especially whatever languages you are building? I think it's an art. That's what it's called right?
Yeah, it's the art programming language. Right. So like how does that improves the developer experience? If someone has to come in and they have to work in the web 3 space, like what are the key pointers or usp's that this language, like I would be like, okay, I am joining in the space and this is the language that I should
be learning because these are the benefits. So what are the signals for other benefits? How does that work? Well, so let me break that down. So our programming language, it doesn't necessarily change the underlying code. It's just a better and more efficient way to
to display that code. So like for an example, if you guys want to check it out on our YouTube, we took GMX, which is highly complicated, decentralized for petrile exchange. We mapped their code and we pushed them to ZK roll up with some edits that we did.
we're compiling everything in about 20 minutes. And you know, that code is written in Solidity. And what we do with our language is we take the Solidity that exists and we take existing programming languages and we display them in these things called graphs of five.
I mentioned that earlier in that they display the semantics of how code interacts within itself. So for every line and the function, you'll have a node. And you can see the exact representation of how that node operates within all of the other nodes in a code base.
So it's kind of like mapping the code as if they were neurons in your brain. And it takes the connections between those different pieces. It tells you simply yes or no and how it interacts with those pieces and what generates errors. And that's what it displays to the user.
So it's easier to understand the code from that perspective. But the real part, you know, when that utility kicks in is as we move towards AI being fully integrated into the platform to where the AI can, instead of just reading massive text files,
it will actually read these graphs. And that's where it will be able to produce much better outputs for the user. And then once it creates the output, the user will be able to understand it much faster. So like if you look at the disparity between us and large language models that exist out there right
now. Yes, sometimes they hallucinate, sometimes they don't provide utility to whatever you're using it for. But most people are using them right now because they do, right? And they write significantly faster than the humans can write.
as humans like when we're reading we can only process certain amounts of bits per second very minute amount but if we move towards visual processing we'll be able to read much faster so the primary utility of our language is bringing us young humans to a level of
to higher level of read capability to match what AI is doing right now with its right capabilities. Will also bringing AI forwards through providing graphs of thought in our language rather than having it rely on chain of thought and what exists out there currently.
awesome. I think this gets me like, sorry to just explore what you're building, like how that works. One thing that I, when I was sharing about your project,
Yeah, of course. One thing I was reading about your language particularly, it says that when you write, I think it has something to do with deployment of smart contracts to like all of the EVM compatible scenes. That is true. I want to explore more because that's a big thing.
like it just diplo every blockchain out there, I think it's one step into their operability. So like how does that work? >> Yeah, so what you mentioned in our operability, like right now we support all EVM teams.
our own virtual machine. You can do all the processes that you naturally do as a developer besides of course deploying to the internet in an offline environment. I have sit in AMA last week actually where I disconnect my computer from everything and put on airplane mode so people could see the
The engine is still working offline because we require no back end which is another thing like we really emphasize that ethos of being decentralized and yeah I get it we're not fully decentralized yet but our infrastructure is because it doesn't require back end.
related to the interoperability, because we can connect to these languages and because our language is like a hybrid layer that explains the semantics behind a solidity, we can actually move it towards the languages as well. So as of right now, we support solidity
You will and buy code, but in the future we plan on supporting Rust, GoLang, Python, especially Python, and other languages. So like let's say people from Web 2, they want to take their infrastructure and migrate into Web 3 faster. They'll be able to do that with our
product because it could translate over. But that also increases interoperability between everything that exists right now. I think it was way back in November when we took GMX and we forked them over, edited some of the code
code from I believe arbitrum to phantom took us 40 minutes. Then we upgraded our compiler more so it can auto compile fully without a back end not occurring any cost on our end. And then we actually took GMX and we pushed more edits than we did
last time and actually pushed it to a ZK roll up EBM, Polygon CK Testnet in 20 minutes with the platform. And this process will be even faster in the future because as people can create faster and more efficiently with the AI, you'll also be able to access it to deploy to other chains and it'll prompt
You know your Metamask wallet to get ready to deploy you hit deploy it can push and as we integrate more languages, it's gonna be easier to translate To new chains like I know people in Bitcoin right now they're trying to Move infrastructure like I
And the answer and certain smart contracts the order on ecosystem is just very difficult We're exploring with a group That's working at Bitcoin right now to figure out how we can do that by integrating you know C++
plus into the reactor. And once we integrate a language into the base layer of our system, it becomes hybridized so it can be multiplied by that layer of AI modules that we're creating. It can be multiplied by that graph of thought that we're creating.
As users generate responses as we generate graph and as people just continue to query the reactor, it'll be like an evolving model, if you will. I don't want to say it's an evolving out of land, but it's sort of like an evolving, directed vector model, if you will.
I think that's absolutely what we want. More language supports that we don't have to go through all of the darks and re-I feel on the things. But I think it's super exciting about what's coming up for the sequel.
system for what you're building, especially with AI, with low-code tools, GUI, virtual machines, and all of the other things that you're building. I think this ends like, rounds up, like, just me asking you another question. Did I miss any more tools that you're building?
Not necessarily. We have all these tools that are kind of disparate right now. If people want to get into our ecosystem and build separate applications through the API and the plugin they can.
is we fully get towards integrating our app. We're going to have all these tools essentially available from one space and it'll be fully composable. So you won't have to navigate between all the different tools and that page you'll just be able to
Compose the entire suite from a chat box Yeah, I think you covered it all are no back end compiler our virtual machine our interoperability to programming language itself so
Awesome awesome. Also for anyone who's listening in if you have any burning questions, if you have any thoughts to share, don't be shy. I think this is your chance to just join the conversation, ask your questions. And if someone is not comfortable asking, you can
also type your questions in the chat. So we have this thread going on. So you can just type that TM developer, now we'll be checking all of these questions or if you want to connect with our team, you can drop by the discord, you can
follow TJ you can follow their team on Twitter account and I know I for sure that they'll be available to like answer all of your questions and whatever queries that you have but again if you want to join in the conversations please request or raise your hands so that
I can bring you up on the stage. Yeah, well actually I want to bring that up so someone in my community says that they can't raise their hand for whatever reason. It's allowed them to raise their hand. Yeah, all right, so can they request to speak
Hey, can you summon request to speak? Anyone interested in hoppick on stage or more than glad to take your questions?
Yeah, I'm just gonna beat.
Let's see.
Let me have in my AMA questions channel as well on my community.
And the people are still having issues raising the hand.
Like it's not showing up. I think someone just requested and didn't come through.
Yeah, I love guys. It's where space just starts behaving. At least it didn't run past. So like that cool thing. If you guys can't raise your hands, feel free to like just leave a comment as well.
in this thread.
Oh, I got one more question from someone. So they're asking, are there any upcoming partnerships or collaboration that RK is excited about?
Oh, absolutely. So there's an L1 that we're working with right now, fully integrating their chain to be like it's already accessible, but to make it more accessible within our ecosystem. And we're planning to actually create a native version of the reactor right now.
right on their dev portal. So that will give devs all kinds of access to our platform. Whenever someone visits their site and when it develops, they will potentially be able to develop using a reactor just from there. So that's an exciting partnership.
And then there's there's other ones that we're working on and particularly the Bitcoin space. So there's I mentioned that group earlier. They're connected with well over 50 of the of the biggest startups that are working in that space right now.
This ordinal is really started on movement in the Bitcoin space. So we're working with them discussing what type of infrastructure we could create. And then yeah, I mean, just individual partnerships with some smaller companies and some L1s are in our pipeline right now.
Well, actually there's so much in our our BD process there is a VC that we've been talking to recently who wants to use the reactor to investigate and potentially do deal flow with So any project that they might invest in
to or that they might portfolio companies and our network might connect with and partnership with they'll be able to do DD easily through the reactor and what I see this as is just a snowball and you know as we make the reactor stickier easier to
We use easier to onboard and we release it publicly. The snowball just continued to pick up momentum because all the native Web 3 processes right there through a semantic GUI and you can interact with it all just through natural language.
I hope that answers the question. There's another question they're asking. So what is our approach to governance and what is the utility of the token and how are decisions being made within the project? So our approach to governance is with
And I want everything to become fully decentralized. And mention it earlier, we don't exist. Is that right now, although our important infrastructure does. So our, the reactor, it doesn't require a back end. All of the code is obfuscated through the front end.
as well as the programming language and all of its processes. We don't require a server for that. We just require a server for the AI module and that grab a thought we're creating. On the other side of sort of,
of the governance and of the tokenomics, our token, our cash tag arc, it's used to government decisions in our DeFi ecosystem. So as we develop features for our swaps, for our farms, for any
of our aggregation protocols. Our users will be able to vote on that. Just through a decentralized process, a Twitter or through a vote that will hold on our site. And they'll be able to drive that forwards. But the eventual vision is to just hand it off, like, hands those products off to
to our holders so they can manage those. And as our open source community of devs builds, the future will come closer and closer. As far as the primary utility of the token, it's for the governance, but it's for access to our tools. So we want
want to get certain access to the reactor, get access to certain features with ARC tokens. So you have to hold ARC in your wallet to be able to access those features. And people that hold ARC will have access to those features, for example, months earlier.
But then on the DeFi ecosystem side of things like let's say people just want to generate audits they want to be able to complete their research tracks or for projects they might invest into they'll have to hold ARG as well and they're well able to access those tools. So it's really all around.
So we have just one last question. It says that are there any specific industries or sectors that are getting for adoption?
Sorry, what was that? What was the word "proceeding sectors"? Was it "aft"? Can you tell me again?
Yeah, so they're asking like what are the industries or sectors that are trying to target for the adoption of the technology, especially like WebSphere as a whole. So, you know, I talked about traders, I talked about auditors, I talked about project managers trying to understand access control.
But our main focus is people that are building. So I know that's kind of broadly encompassing, but the people that build the most are the developers, right? I want to focus on those developers as a long-term goal, and I believe that will come
through just making our tools here to use and then allowing people to just use it to cross validate anything that exists out there and to build their own projects more quickly. That utility will kind of just come out of the mold as the adoption picks up.
definitely develop as long-term. Yeah, but also just to zoom in or zoom out, what kind of industries do you want to target? So security as a whole is something, it's kind of an action, right? We have to fix this thing. But when we zoom out, where do you see security being?
the most important feature that would be like gaming or that would be again like defies one space but then finance and all of the other things especially like medical records or important documentation like all of the sectors where you want to tap into. Yeah, it's definitely
I would say DeFi as it stands right now, but as these other sectors build like you know healthcare data, important data related to people's financial records like let's say when people get a real estate on chain and they're working out
estate planning on chain and how to create the complicated legal agreements. Actually put them on chains are infallible. I think the reactor will have implications across everything in Web 3, but it kind of brought me answer your question.
first main utility I see is the security aspect moving into the developer aspect. So I say that because the tool will create more security overall in the space through anyone being able to cross validate any project that exists out there. And as that
happens, people realize they want to create with the reactor because you don't want to create it with a tool that you have to do everything manually or if you don't want to create a tool that to make it easily just create a project that's something that easily just map in the reactor and reveal that you're not creating anything special.
people use the reactor. You know projects in the space will be cross validated, those audits will be generated and displayed publicly. They can just post it on social media. Projects will be forced to rug pulls and exit like the bad actors in general be forced to pick up and
of CAP and as that happens, you know, more real money will be attracted to the space, more people wanting to build special things that are tired of all the scam artists want to build in the space. And from the act of improving security, we'll improve the space for developers in general.
Awesome awesome. I think someone requested to speak. Let's wait if they are here. Yep, they are here. Okay, that's working now. Love it.
Do you have any questions any comment? Yeah, I do have a question. So for DJ, I have like on the on his video, I have no idea what arc is what like your project does. I'm just catching up on the last 10 minutes since I joined, but one question
Any project in any protocol are those smart contracts audited and then can you disclose like who buy it has a possibility and then I'm well I'm way free to answer that and then see see what feedback I get from it.
Yeah, what smart contracts are you talking about specifically? Are you talking more around our pool or like our token smart contracts or like how are
Google audit other smart contracts? Yeah the tool itself because it's not a small contract for the token because that one should be pretty self-explanatory basically.
Yeah. No, so the way it audits is it's through an objective AI system. And I won't get into as in depth as I did earlier with this, but essentially it's a multi evolutionary multi agent system, which means that
There will be different AI agents, so pretend like that GBT is one agent, pretend like Bart is one agent. And as a smart contract is audited, it will be passed through one agent and then it will be handed to another for like cross verification. Right. And when that audit is performed, then it will
be handed to the user and the user can decide what they want to do with it from there. They want to ask more pregnant questions or concise questions around specific things they find in the audit they can, which can be generated into a brief buyer tool. So the idea
is we're not going to allow people to just be gate kept by these big centralized companies that charge thousands of dollars to audit. They take forever to do it. And as soon as the audit is done, another one to be added and potentially the contract be exploited. The idea with our tool on the security
So, the very sad of things is to allow anyone from anywhere to be able to generate audits at any time, and these audits will provide objective data points related to the project that they can show. And then let's say the company wants to argue, let's say someone finds a rug pool or an expert.
and the people want to argue about it, the project, you know, that audit will also be able to show the graph of exactly where the potential error is showing if users want to include that in a brief that they release. But it will be like taking what exists right now and instead of people
people only having to deal with the centralized authority for an audit and only be kept in check by that authority. Anyone will be able to generate an audit and projects will have to hold a higher standard because they'll be responsible for everyone generating audits of their project constantly.
I mean to a certain extent is is okay to have code being audited by AI.
Sorry, can you can you hear me developer down? Yeah, I can hear you. Okay, because the house was picking and I'm not sure if you should. I'll say. But yeah, I do have a question for you to say so. So that's like. So if the code is audit by a
AI by different type of AI. We all know and I have seen this already that AI is not 100% always accurate. Right? So wouldn't it be better to have like a human input to give the curve like the last push the
finished the last glance and be like okay this is actually okay this is actually you know the code is written on it should be and then like you know the tool and the protocol is doing what it should supposed to be doing no hidden malicious code in there or like no back doors and whatnot yeah so is that is that the case for for arc yes
100% the case. So, part of language, it takes the existing languages that are out there right now like Solidity, you will buy code, eventually rush to go laying Python, these popular languages and it breaks them down in a much easier to understand way for humans, but especially a
So what we'll have with our audits and with just development in general is people will be able to create much more performant outputs with our tool and with our AI and When like let's say you are generating a lot of let's say just hallucinates like it doesn't
pick up on an obvious rug pool that you know exists or it can choose the data in an incorrect way. The user can just interact with the audit. They can interact with whatever they're developing on through plain text. So in the tool, as it generates diagrams of the logic
logic within the audit, you'll also be able to ask questions along the way. And when you ask those questions, that would be recorded in a log so people can see the path of logic. And then every time you ask a question, you have a new query, you generate a new response, you generate a new graph.
flash diagrams through the reactor that will be stored in our semantic database. So if someone asks that question in the future, it can pick up on previous knowledge and present a better answer to the person. So think it sort of be like an open source decentralized
language model that picks up in real time and applies those new applications and new learnings in real time versus a model that's trained every year on data and then it gets outdated as time goes on.
But yeah, the human element is, oh sorry, I kind of, you know, I went really into depth on another tangent there, but the human element was important and the reactor, like our company, our
Yeah, let's do everything with AI. Just trust us. Just trust the AI. Just trust something that you know, let's donate. The idea is to bring humans to a similar level of AI in that
we'll be able to read this process AI right because we'll be using our visual processing rather than reading through code line by line when people use our platform. So our data throughput will go a child.
Thank you for that. That was a great answer. Cheers. Awesome. Thanks for asking questions. Well, yeah, that's rappers are in Tartware space. Thanks for everyone joining in. Also, like make sure to check out the documentation, all of the resources.
that's available for ARC. Join their Discord channel, join their community who's connected, engaged. Also follow the speakers here. And yeah, thanks all for joining us. And of course, like we always look forward to seeing you next time. And yeah, keep
We have a lot to build. I know that there are some improvement or product release is coming up. Make sure you are tuned in and connected with the ecosystem. Absolutely. We have our open beta coming soon guys. Make sure you
So stay tuned in, join our community. I'd love to have you. We have our discord, our telegram, and just ask any questions you have around what we're building and potentially if you want access to the API, so the plugins, if you want to join our open source team that we're going to be building. And especially if you just
Just want to play around with the tool in the future. You're going to be able to do that. But join our community. Stay tuned and you are an excellent host. Thank you, Chris. Thank you, everyone, for attending today. Appreciate your time. Awesome. Thanks for joining in. All right. See you, everyone. Bye. Pleasure. Bye.