 Hey everyone, this is Sam Patterson from the OpenBazaar project. Just wanted to make a quick video today showing people what the OpenBazaar beta 1.0 network looks like. So once you get everything started and you're in the browser, you can see connected markets over here on the right. It shows you that there's 35 stores connected on the network right now. And you can just click on these stores to view the store front and the items that they have as well. So this person's not a test to really selling these products. It's a raw and pasteurized nani juice from Hawaii. That's neat. Check out some other stores. Bullet pens. This person's selling pens made in Australia that look like bullets. Interesting. That makes sense. If you were to purchase these, of course you can change how many you want to purchase. It gives you your shipping and your total. You can put in a note to the merchant if you want. Then you would go and choose your notary. This is the third party that is going to have the third key and the two of three multi-seg to make sure that you aren't taken advantage of. Look at some other stores here. This person's selling some organic garlic, climbing shoes, save a chicken. Let's see if that looks interesting. So you can help support this chicken who is now too old to lay eggs. So if you want to keep a chicken alive, you can do that. Some cinnamon, some homemade sauerkraut, some neat stuff. A lot of these are, as you can see here, default, default marketplaces. These are folks who started up nodes but didn't put in their store name. They probably don't have products or any details about their store. Because this is beta, that's great. We want people to come on the network and test it out, find out what works and what doesn't work. As you can see, there are also people also selling legitimate items as well. The nonsense store products. This person's selling an image of French toast. Actually, I purchased that product the other day. So now if you go into your sales, you can view the things that other people bought from you, of course. But my purchases, you can view things you bought. As I said, here's the French toast. What it'll do is tell you that you need to send this certain amount to this multi-seg address. If you click here, it's going to open your default Bitcoin wall on your computer and put in this payment information. Of course, you can scan the QR code. When you've done that, you mark it as paid. The seller will then see that you've paid. They will ship the product to you and then they'll put in the address that they want to receive the funds from the multi-seg. Then once you, the buyer, receive it, you mark that you've received the product if you're happy with it and everything went as it should. That's two or three signatures and the funds will be released to the seller. If there's a problem, that's where the notary comes in. If you're looking to sell something, you can go into contracts, add a contract, put in your details. Let's say that we're selling a pair of headphones, put in your product description, the price you want to sell it for, let's say, how much shipping, the quantity you have, the condition they're in, whatever keywords you want to tag it with and then you can add an image. Once you publish it, it'll show up in your contracts here locally, but it also pushes it out to the network. Other folks will be able to view that product either by looking at your store as we were doing earlier with other stores or they can do it by searching. There's just something that we're still working on through the betas. It's not working very well right now, but down the road, that'll be one of the primary ways that people will find goods. That's where we're at with Beta 1.0, we're going to be putting out new beta releases at the end of each month until the end of the year where we hope to put out the full release. If you're interested in becoming a beta tester, there's a link in the description below that'll walk you through setting up a store like this. Thanks for watching.