 All right, so we have a recording, now minimize this and hopefully this is shared on Zoom. So we've got a great agenda today. I'm going to kick it off with discussion a little bit on tokenization and interoperability and Web3 based on a lot of work that we have done at Oracle in that area, right? We've always been about enterprises and enterprise blockchain, of course, since 2018 when we launched our Hyperlegia Fabric based blockchain platform, but the last couple of years we've really been pushing the envelope and taking it into the Web3 space is tokenization and Web3 integration and the centralized identity and you name it, right? We're trying to be as good of a Web3 citizen as we can, given that we are permissioned blockchains, there is always a certain limitations, but also certain attraction from an enterprise customer community, I think, so I'll share some of that with you. And then we'll have Peter from Accenture talk about Hyperlegia Cactus, a cacti, I keep going back and forth cacti now on interoperability and heart will talk about Hyperlegia Firefly. So we've got a really cool agenda. Let me bring up my deck and put it in representation mode here. Okay, I think that's good. I should point out by the way that Oracle has been selected for the third year in a row in Forbes blockchain 50. One of the very few large scale tech companies actually that's been in that Forbes list for three years in a row now, that's kind of neat. My role quickly is I'm responsible for product management of blockchain technology and strategy. In addition to our blockchain platform, we have a couple of other blockchain related solutions and products which I can tell you about afterwards if you want to come by and say hello. But primarily today we'll talk about the Hyperlegia based capabilities that we provide and what I'm going to try to do is quickly talk about my view of Web 3 world and what does it really mean? Because people throw the term around loosely and everybody means whatever it is I've got to sell today. Whatever is on my truck is Web 3. I'm going to try to give it some structure and then we'll talk about specifically tokenization and decentralized identity and the capabilities that we have developed on top of Hyperlegia Fabric specifically with Oracle Blockchain platform to do that and some customer use cases. I will show you some really good examples of how customers are using some of these capabilities, particularly tokenization. Centralized identity is still a little bit experimental and early there's a few opportunities that we're involved in but not really production but many others are tokenization use cases in production and then just share a bunch of additional materials. So I'd like to start with this question that one of my colleagues actually asked a while back out on Twitter to describe Web 3 in one world and people came up with all kinds of interesting answers all over the place. What does Web 3 really mean? Self sovereignty, community or identity, transactional, delusional, grift, exit liquidity and so on. So since we are in some sense driving this train forward from a blockchain perspective I think it behooves us to talk a little bit about our views. My view in particular is that we have two forces or two sets of forces if you will that are helping to define Web 3. One of them is the general sort of a desire to decentralize things, just intermediate things and move from a sort of internet consumer and browser to a publisher and creator world right where people can create things, they can own things, they create, they can monetize them and perhaps avoid some of the intermediate, some of the large platforms that have been taking advantage of what content people create and monetizing it for them. But then from the bottom up there's also a bunch of technologies that have been maturing in the last few years. Certainly the organization or portable digital assets for those who don't like the organization term because when I talk to the organization to some of our customers I think we're talking about credit card number tokenization, right? Very different use of that term. So I've started talking about portable digital assets. The centralized identities that's maturing particularly with W3C standards. The centralized identity verified credentials and there is now quite a momentum in that space we're seeing in the last year actual real world use cases. The centralized storage that's another big area and the centralized governance, right? There is a bunch of things that are happening in that space that I think is still emerging from an enterprise perspective because enterprise is all about centralized governance but you're beginning to see in the context of consortia and ecosystems emergence of desire to adopt some of the centralized governance capabilities. So you bring that together and I think what we're going to see is sort of a next generation of a lot of person to person business to business, government to person, government to business interactions that are powered by these technologies. Certainly there is some amplification from immersive technologies in a virtual reality, meta versus whatever term you want to apply there. And we're going to see this combination show up essentially as a set of complex services and non-demand capabilities with digital identities wallets, smart contracts, off-chain edge computing and Web3 will be kind of the large envelope into which all of us get stuff. So when people talk about Web3, it's going to be all of those things but there is going to be the score driver for decentralization as a North Star guiding principle and there's going to be this underlying technologies I think from the bottom up trying to actually help make this real. So drilling down on this, right? I try to put together a little bit of a table here that shows what are the relevant technologies in each of the series. Certainly from a tokenization perspective the standards, ERC standards of course, but also token taxonomy framework which is now owned by IWA came out of Ethereum Enterprise Alliance and I think here's some potential future because it provides a more general meta framework around which different tokenization standards can coalesce and we can create not just different standards but a structure of standards or family of standards. In centralized data storage of course you know IPFS everybody knows about IPFS but there are other solutions. We have an Oracle cloud department called Zero Chain which provides similar capabilities that are quite advanced. In the centralized identity you have DITs or DADs and DAD documents, verified credentials and this whole concept of what's called this issue holder and verify a triangle and the capability is that we probably know best from Hyperledge Indie and Hyperledge Aries Volo Technology. And then the centralized governance, right? If you think about the consensus mechanisms, particularly in the permission blockchain that's a model of governance, but also DAOs and how those DAOs are beginning to be used in variety of ways. One of the really interesting things I've heard recently in Oracle has been known to sponsor some sports leagues and teams and facilities. Larry Ellison, our chairman in particular is a great fan of sailing. He was a sponsor of America's Cup for a number of years but recently moved away from that to a new league called Sale GP. Sale GP is an international league. They'll be here in San Francisco Bay in May. They run catamarans on foils that go about 50 knots over 50 miles an hour on water. It's amazing stuff. I mean I'm a sailor myself, so it's what you know. Anyway, so I've been talking to them about some of the things I've been doing with near blockchains. I've been partnering with near for some time and they're talking about having individual teams convert into a DAO-based organizations where people and sponsors can buy into the DAO as stakeholders and through the DAO mechanism actually controls the decision-making process of that particular team. So this is a really interesting example of how those DAOs beyond just some financial significance that are going on and all of that people are thinking about using them. I talk mostly to our customers for enterprises, government organizations and they really want to know what's in it for them. Is this all stuff out there in crypto world that they don't want to touch or is there something real there? So I think there is a lot of real capabilities here that can be beneficial in an enterprise space, in business space, certainly for tokenization, protecting IP ownership to run FTs, traceable history of life cycle transactions that you get and the ability to do all sort of really interesting payments, B2B payments, micro payments and other kind of things, including most recently we started getting involved in central bank digital currencies around tokenization space. Verified credentials, the documents, there is a lot of value actually some companies are beginning to think they spend so much time and resources from a security perspective, managing their identity management ensures that that doesn't get breached. If all of a sudden a lot of it moves out to individual user wallets there's nothing to breach. It saves them so much from a risk perspective and cost perspective that they're beginning to think the centralized identity actually has something to offer to enterprises. And then you know centralized governance that's a harder sell to companies but I think if you work in a consortium setting where companies are working together and you have you know leagues, sports leagues and other things like that I think there may be something there as well. So they're just you know my thoughts on why that matters. Now drilling down on tokenization a little bit right I mean obviously you've been seeing adoption of this in enterprise use cases, you know ownership transfer or not ownership but just usage rights right you might have specific license rights that you want to be able to offer ability to verify ownership history allow fractional ownership to help increase liquidity. You can track digital assets of you know actual you know online only tokens but also digital trains of physical assets which is quite important in the number of companies that deal with high value assets for B2B transactions but also in BTC engagements and you can use a token mechanism and smart contracts to control the operations that your enterprise systems perform on those assets which is quite important right so you have agreed rules you know who's trying to make a particular state transition or state change and you can determine if that's you know going to be allowed or not and so on. So there is a lot of potential interest there in creating a bit more of a standardized mechanism for enterprise systems to manage it right of course you know we know the history probably everybody's familiar with the history of tokenization from bitcoin to NFTs but what we're beginning to see is emerging interest from enterprises for using fungible tokens and rewards and loyalty programs, royalty tracking, cross-border funds transfers, CBDC and other digital currency applications and NFTs as well in reward systems, component traceability and regulated supply chains and regulated production environments. We have some companies that are doing electric vehicle battery passports. A German government has created a coalition of local vendors that one of our partners in Oracle Blockchain is actually implementing a battery passport for a lot of German automakers and another one recently implemented the same single Oracle Blockchain for Ford where Ford electric vehicle batteries are actually in you know tracking the batteries with a passport identifier that has unique capabilities to identify not just a battery but certain components and as it's going through repair, reuse because batteries at some point not good enough to drive the car but it's good enough for other things that can be reused, repurposed and then ultimately recycled and so on. Electronic bill of lading, one of our consortium companies that we've been working with global shipping business network JSBN which is in this maritime shipping world that have contained the shipping company, sports, terminal operators of you know logistics and shipping started putting on electronic bill of lading capabilities on top of the blockchain to be able to provide essentially this negotiable document and transfer it electronically without anybody having to print it, courier and so on which is a really big thing and there is a lot of standardization effort happening around that as well. So just a bunch of examples, I think those are questions there. Just two line context, I've been working on Rewards Royal PR line program for 25 years and one of my new companies attempting to do loyalty and rewards using the blockchain at different tokens and all of that and the number one problem we've run across in the enterprise and we're so fighting is a miscrust of the regular blockchain and crypto and complaining about you know all the stuff that's going on, is that kind of you guys who define it and you're working here? Yeah absolutely, we don't see that as much in the last couple years as it's been prevalent in the past so we often have to explain the difference and we often, well sometimes cautioned or advised by you know the people who's in enterprise that want to promote this to use the term distributed ledger rather than blockchain, that seems to go easier sometimes but definitely we have to do some education because for some people you know they read every day about cryptos, they read about you know FTX and everybody who is you know taking advantage of people there and they have questions right, I mean how is it related, how security is and so on so there is always some education that we have to do you know as we go into some of those opportunities with customers. And I'll share maybe a few examples but just a little bit to drill down on tokenization right, so our platform started in 2017 and we released it in 2018 is Oracle Blockchain Platform based on Hyperledger Fabric, we felt that this was the strongest and best permissioned enterprise blockchain technology out there and five years later we still believe that's the case but you've done a lot of work of course to extend this as well for enterprise customer needs. Now it does not have native token support but nevertheless we had you know a number of situations where customers, partners build application chain codes, more contracts to emulate years to 20, years to 721 and the like in order to provide the organization support and we said look why you know have everybody built it every single time from scratch, they can provide out of the box libraries that implement that and they have this cool local development tool, the build called blockchain upbuilder which generates code automatically from templates and specifications and so we said we create specifications for years to 20 or GTF based tokens years to 721 and the like and that's what you've done, it's basically started with token taxonomy framework structure, we created a meta model, we created the templates and then we automatically generate all of the lifecycle methods from that template based on the behaviors that you specify, vulnerable, mintable, transformable all of those things so that you could deploy them automatically and you know you can build on top of that if you want. I'm also here to do some optimization inside Hyperledge Fabric Peers to avoid MVCC conflicts which we've done so we can now do multiple token transactions per block at high speed and so on and we've added support for NFT of course years to 721 and the RSE 1155 over time as well so we have you know a lot of different tokenization engines now available just a little bit in a platform to give you a sense of how that was built right so in a standard Hyperledge Fabric you have PNodes, you have copies of Zellager, you have you know the running smart contracts as well, then ordering service nodes which are responsible for creating blocks from transactions through the rough consensus mechanism and then sending them back to the peers to be verified and appended to Zellager, there's membership service which basically is a Fabric CA that creates X59 certificates for identity management towards the components and all of those organizations and so on. We've added a bunch of things from an Oracle perspective such as operation storing, API gateway for REST API integration and event callbacks, we're looking at a builder which is a local developer tool to build smart contracts you know we're to operate with other capability public nodes so we have customers running across multiple clouds and multiple providers as well as on-premises version as well as it's available outside of Oracle Cloud integrated into Oracle database so they can feed the legend data in increasingly so you could do analytics, machine learning and other things and on the left-hand side you know provided a lot of integration capabilities through the same REST APIs as well as integration adapters to make it easy to integrate applications back off the systems of records that everybody kind of depends on so they're so pre-assembled managed service you know there is one screen, three or four fields you need to fill out to provision it 10-15 minutes later everything is there and ready to go and so you know very easy to use we've done a lot of work to add to the core community edition of Hyperledger Fabric around you know cloud provisioning and management, zero downtime patching, operations tooling we've extended a lot of security and variability features as well finding a master's control, launching audit log, integrity of auditation, you know block integrity of auditation, identity management implication and some of the things I talked about already terms of the local tuning, code generation but most recently atomic updates as well this is something that many of our customers really needed to be able to integrate blockchain with other resources or complex applications where you have transactions spending multiple channels, multiple chain codes on a blockchain in Fabric natively today you cannot commit them with the same atomic transactions actually overcome the issues to face commit and recently added Ethereum interoperability as well so you can now do atomic transaction across Fabric and Ethereum in the same basically location and some data management and other things so but as part of that you know this is just where to find it if you have some interest in playing with it you can go into Oracle cloud cloud.oracle.com is a set up an account there is a menu here you call a hamburger menu just those three lines and that gives you access to drop down into all of the different services under developer services you'll find blockchain platform a simple menu to provision it select the different shapes and the version and a couple other things and then it goes off and creates it and all of the infrastructure resources all of the nodes for Fabric itself all of the other components to mention are there in 10-15 minutes that you can go ahead and yes yes yeah absolutely I'll come to that I have a couple slides on that and I can I can share with that yeah this was the on-premise version that runs in VMware or virtual box it's basically virtual machine but the same package the same software pretty much all the same capability just for customers who various reasons want to run outside of Oracle cloud or in the third party cloud monitor and also build hybrid networks some of our customers want to run on-premise and in the cloud at the same time or the ecosystems rather there is a management operations console that makes it very easy to do the configuration management administration adding extending different nodes creating channels deploying chain codes all of that life cycle management of smart contracts as well either through the blockchain up builder which is a downloadable tool or directly through this web console and then you know monitoring troubleshooting here you can see the relationships of peer nodes different channels there is a lot of dashboards and ledger browser to be able to drill down on a particular channel to blocks to the blocks section inside the blocks and all of that kind of an admin view of course for applications you would build something very specific so you know this has been the words we've done to make it easy for enterprises to adopt that's why many enterprises have chosen Oracle platform but beyond the infrastructure there is also requirements around the applications themselves right the platform itself is going to platform so we have two things one is a portfolio of partners with industry solutions across many verticals and also the slow code dev tool called blockchain up builder and this is really a neat tool because it can automatically generate smart contracts from templates you can take existing templates and tailor them or you can create new ones there it in enamel adjacent were easy to use and we now extended that with templates for tokenization so you can create fungible token non fungible token chain codes as well in that environment it's a tool that you can download from the platform it runs in visual studio code as an extension so you can bring it up in a good environment there's also a command line version for CI CD and it manages entire process from editing the templates to scaffolding and creating the chain code regenerating TypeScript will go and then testing there is a built-in version of fabric for local testing deployment and then also deployment to the blockchain platform in the cloud for actual you know nodes in test or production environment as well kind of a simple flow here you start with a specification file that's a set of yamal adjacent file and once you tailor it you can generate the scaffold and the chain code and this will generate basically the crowd methods or if it's a token template it will generate all of the lifecycle operations necessary all the chain code methods for the lifecycle of the token you can extend it as custom methods if you want to or you could use it as is and deploy it directly you can deploy and test it locally there is a drop-down menu to execute all of the methods that we generate and then you have ability to package and deploy directly to Oracle Cloud environment so what is it to use tool and if you're not a blockchain developer and you've never eaten chain code this is a good place to start because it will generate basic stuff for you and you can run it directly through the rest APIs and then you can play around and extend it if you want to modify it because it's all in source code so we use this for tokenization support and this is how we started introducing tokenization to our enterprise customers initially with fungible tokens based on TTF model and later on with NFTs as well we have added support in the recent release to do liquidity pool exchanges for cross-currency or you have fungible tokens for example in the multi-brand loyalty program and they have different weights and you need to exchange so just this methodology called exchange pools or liquidity pools that here's somebody who has accounts on multiple token IDs and exchange rates that can be set by APIs so this is something that we've added recently but the basic mechanism is essentially you start with example KAC which is a fungible token example we define for not only motivators and parameters of custom properties you can add and then we'll generate account-based setup environment, role-based security as well and then the lifecycle message necessary to create you know mint transfer and born and so on those tokens so this is pretty straightforward environment this tokenization engine here's basically three layers there is an SDK layer for each of the different token types there is a set of wrapper functions that can unify it and provide all the management setup querying and so on as it can be customized functions and then role-based security added in there as well so you can specify the roles for who can mint who can burn and so on you can take all of this and run it directly expose through the recipes or you can extend it with your own custom code and you can essentially invoke those functions if you need more complex business logic or you can leave that chain code alone and create another chain code for your business functions that use cross chain code invocation to call the token chain code as well and this is what some of our customers have been doing last release we've added ERC 1155 this is a new standard for those who are familiar that combines fungible and non fungible tokens so you could have a single chain code now that allows you to manage both fungible and non fun and NFTs you could do batch operation so you could do batch minting batch transfers and so on and you can exchange fungible tokens for non fungibles and vice versa so some of the key capabilities are so we generate all of those methods from a description this is an example you have a demo actually of using this where you can buy an FT actually integrated with Ethereum so you could buy it with an ERC 20 coin and you know this is a mechanism that we're seeing many of customers going forward will start using because in many NFT applications there is also a need for fungible tokens as well and dynamic NFTs as well so this is the solicitation of liquidity pools where you have ability let's say you're doing multi-currency CBDC central bank digital currency so you need to be able to do exchange between multiple currencies so you have somebody which owns exchange pool accounts you have multiple tokens and balances there is a transaction request to set it up initialize at conversion rates etc you can then fund the balances in here either as percentage of the minting function you can put in a percentage of what you minted or just regular transfer methods from other liquidity providers and then you just call token conversion method and this is atomically going to exchange one currency for another using the swap basically separate and then pay out the other account in the closet currency comes in really handy so this is basically set by apis so in an enterprise setting you set whatever rates you want to set and if you want to introduce you know some delta factors as that's up to you the enterprise currently is accepting each side yeah you can change yeah it's an api base so you can change it any minute you want right yeah exactly yeah so one of the things I mentioned earlier that we did also was important is the concept of atomic transactions right so how many of you are familiar with some of the marble samples couple of the fabric samples right marbles everybody anybody play with that everybody it's basically shows an example for you have an object if you have some properties that color size etc and or no so you can transfer them so there is another sample sample called example zero two where you have transfer of some numeric value right from account eight or count b so let's say you actually want to deploy an application where somebody buys marbles and pays for them using the example tokens but you have marbles running on one channel you have a payment running on a different channel for scalability right when separate them out in fabric and you want to make sure that the payment and the transfer of ownership is done atomically right it was happen or nothing happens so we created the atomic transaction API if you can walk through our restaurant and gateway and you're basically specifying that any transactions with a chain code name parameters and the channel name and using two phase commit mechanism where we actually first do a prepare where transactions are stored as pending in the ledger with a pending flag and then if everybody agrees that you know prepare has completed then we do a commit and we then can commit it to the actual state world state so then or we can do rollback if somebody fails so this was kind of the capabilities that started us on the path of atomic transaction support where we said initially we had customers who needed to do this complex stuff across multiple channels all right so that was great uh the Zen said why don't we extend that by uh including other blockchains in that right so you know of course everybody wants to play with the theorem so we in our gateway here added support the database commit added yes client right this is a complementation of the theorem client that allows us to talk to any VM or a theorem based network and then we've orchestrated essentially what we call a two phase commit with a last last resource commit optimization the way this work because of the theorem side you don't have to face them it's not an xr resource so essentially we'll do a transaction atomic transaction we will do a prepare phase on our blockchain course we will then go and use the theorem client to make a call to do a transaction involved smart contract and in there we specify certain finality criteria so how many blocks to wait how long to wait time etc and verify and if that happens let me come back here and we don't commit and if this fails then we'll do a rollback this allows us to do without any bridging essentially atomic operations across multiple chains and uh since someone was asking you know what are some of the use cases i'll show you in a second but this is what it looks like from an api perspective where it gives us a quest in transactions so you're specifying on those in white this our calculator public transaction there's a ft need to see what that was that chain code is and then here the seller sees the theorem request and you can specify assigned to unsigned request you can specify the finality parameters check finality through or false blocks to wait all of that and then go ahead and do prepare execute this do the verification and then if everything's good we will go ahead and commit on the oracle side and you get a response back that shows you the transaction that you prepare transaction commit and then the transaction idea as well on the theorem side and if you were to go and look up the ether scan for that transaction you will actually find this transaction here as well because it happened in our case with test net using gory for that example here but this is essentially the mechanisms that allow us to do atomic transactions and those atomic transactions support things like atomic atomic asset exchanges so you know you might have a custodial wallet now tokenization system and you need to fund it and you can pre-fund it with ethereum transfer ethereum payment right or some other payment here's a 20 you might have an nft or oracle blockchain and to buy it you're paying with ethereum ethcoin or you're a 20 you know or you want to maintain an nft or oracle blockchain for confidentiality et cetera but then if somebody buys it you want to enable them to transfer it to a public chain like polygon which is an nvm chain for liquidity on the secondary market and so this allows you to do all of those things i think there's a bunch of other examples sometimes customers want to have a public proof of something private that happened on hyperledger fabric network which involves confidential data but then the actual proof the hacks of that transaction can be published because it's one like yes it doesn't disclose any data on public ethereum network for example so a couple things one is there's nothing to hack bridges are hacked frequently there is a time window where that asset does not exist on isa blockchain if you're using a bridge all right so whoever's operating a bridge it's more or less centralized all right it's under control of that entity and whether it's milliseconds or seconds or hours i don't know but you know we hear about bridges being hacked all the time this way it always exists either on one blockchain or another blockchain what is known between okay yeah okay sure yeah absolutely so let me wrap up here there's other things we've done as you know we do hear people that come to us from a ethereum solidity background and want to reuse those contracts so we actually provide the support to be able to run evm chain code on hyperledger fabric node with solidity chain codes and this is an example of a mixed idea where you can talk to Oracle blockchain and deploy solidity chain code but the next step was and this is what important because people want to connect wallets so we use the fab3 provider to actually publish the web3 apis ijs and apis apis and then be able to talk to you know hyperledger fabric peer running evm and this is now uh something that make a partner's customers taking advantage of in fact one of the companies will show an example liveplex sitting behind there using this so just a couple of chords on the centralized identity because we're beginning to see that as well that's an important part of web3 people are beginning to think about it from a variety of interesting use cases they had a call with some folks in japan because they're thinking about driver licenses potentially having the ad's associated with them some folks in us in one of the state governments where there is a lot of activity things being issued left and right by counties and they want to create a basically statewide account across all counties and state agencies backbone d ad registry so that everybody goes to the same registry for the ad's so we see a bunch of that there is a lot of value to actually provide identity back in the hands of the users right with wallets and so on an interoperability transparency and for organizations that manage identity it's really something that can save a lot of headaches compared to how they manage identity today so there's a whole bunch of use cases that w3c popularized you know if you're into the space probably familiar with them but what we've done is we've actually implemented a mechanism that allows us to implement gg registry on our blockchain on fabric with the front end servers that provides a standard verifier and issue of functions of colder and then the variety of integrations here was a wallet right so there's the studio wallet integrations as well as hyperlegia areas that can be used to integrate with that environment as well and this is the centralized identity thing is getting to be more popular from conversations that we're seeing so just very quickly a few examples here of actual enterprise customers we see a bunch of categories here we've worked in financial services retail supply chain manufacturing logistics web 3n kind of overlaid where tokens come in in some of those use cases right some fungible some non fungible but we're beginning to see you know that many applications that would have been implemented last couple years you know a couple years ago in a more custom manner and are gravitating towards using tokens as a standardized kind of framework for implementing right and so here's some examples of partners that implement ticketing application using our fungible tokens um we implemented a cbdc central bank digital currency sandbox it's actually running right now in a p o c in one of the larger countries in asia and this is using our blockchain our tokenization engine and then an application built on top for interbank transfers issue and so on so there's different roles for central bank and for the various financial institutions at the part of this environment and there's quite a bit of interest I think it might go into a more live pilot later this year we have a partner here live plaques sitting in the back of the room guys wave if you want to talk to them a little bit more they're providing a few marketplace solutions and this is essentially creating a web three framework with an infrastructure onboarding you know wallet management wallet custodial wallet generation and all of their governance on top of work on blockchain platform but also supporting other chains so you could do you know cross chain operations through that mechanism as well and they do a lot of work with you know immersive capabilities as well to actually integrate nft into all kinds of you know onboarding and education environments and fan engagement and so on another one also nft marketplace in europe being worked on around nfts as investments so this is basically taking kpi data fields that's coming from blockchain nodes or various partner companies creating through the nft generator factory is actually on nfts dynamically that he has relevant kpi data and turning them into alternate investments which is kind of interesting this was a product based nft so this is a company that does textiles but they don't do any works actually have materials and then everybody else does outsource manufacturing intermediate products fiber yarn fabric and then ultimately garments and so on such 7.5 they maintain constant body temperature and stuff you might have seen them in stores and they wanted to track they used to do all of the striking of inventory intermediate products and royalties that they collect using spreadsheets and we basically put them on a blockchain to provide real-time visibility instead of end of the month spreadsheets for this government grants program this is something interesting national science foundation issues a lot of grants and then those grants turn into sub-grants and sub-grants and they lose strikes they cannot follow more than one tier and then people have a hell of a time spending a lot of energy and resources and actually spending a lot of research time responding to all kind of data requests to provide reports on where to spend the money so we provided a demo for them it's currently in another stage of multi-tier grant management using fungible tokens with nfts for the grant letter awards but then the disbursements are down to fungible tokens and then a bunch of other things we've announced world of group recently transportation management basically freight transportation management the one in the middle is in india which is around basically a trade document so export import you know related documents and then on the right is the one I mentioned in europe which is this alternate investments nft marketplace right up i'll skip that this is just junior poor so just some concluding thoughts here i'll wrap up because we'll to give people a hard time as well to talk about their projects but I think we're going to see a lot more of absolute technologies permeating into enterprises there is values there if you can package it properly if you can position it and if you can provide it in an enterprise great framework right you know it's not going to go into things on public chains because there is always a lot of concern about security confidentiality scale performance all of those things throughput but in a permission blockchain it has the same capabilities they feel more comfortable so beginning to see you know technologies is just tokenization the centralized identity and so on actually getting some hearing and getting some adherence as long as they're being done in a kind of enterprise framework so I think there is a lot of potentials there I think we need to continue to provide in an enterprise great environment those capabilities as they continue to emerge understand what's happening in public chains but also then adopted into the permission chains all right we'll you know we're looking at a couple other hyperledger projects actually so we'll talk about tactile and firefly I just wanted to mention this obses C operations more contract hyperledger lab which is a governance project and I think this is going to be really interesting we're thinking about extending that beyond the chain code management so today when you deploy chain code you have to go through approval and commit process and that's what the current implementation focuses on we think it can go beyond and become a governance engine around who can join the chain who can create channels who can join the channel with voting and all of those things so that's going to be really interesting as we get to it in our roadmap looking at integration of hyperledger cocktail hyperledger firefly as well some of the web three stuff and there's a bunch of info there you know we have a lot of blogs published the resolution playbook for NFT marketplace you can scan that code we'll make the deck available as well we have the recording we have an e-book also that talks a lot about enterprise use cases so if you're interested to go into a bit depths of where this is being used in different industries take a look at that a bit link oracle underscore blockchain underscore e-book and then just you know if you want to play with it you can go get some free credits so there is I think an option to do $300 30 days pre-credit an Oracle cloud so you can easily provision and you can be within 30 minutes playing with this organization support all right I'll stop here and ask Peter to come up and while he's setting up I can take a few questions there was some work there was a project that I haven't heard much about lately so it's called but I think we need to check what happened it's been it's been at least six months since I've seen any updates from the hyperledger yeah from a hyperlogic community so I'm not sure if it's still going strong enough I think the whole industry on the non public change side is moving forward that one so we had one but I think we tried and it did not it didn't work right Wi-Fi password still did not work for you yeah and I was supposed to be sending like individual emails to everybody for thumbs up but since I did not have emails for everybody didn't get that so I tried to get a couple but for some reasons it didn't work oh um so zoom I uh let me see how can I do that you can connect to my zoom because you're not on my phone so what can you can you do your own start a zoom session and just record your session I can't yeah can you do it and then we'll just stitch the files okay join the same swimming as you used and then yeah but that's the problem is again join on the network it's going to get the wi-fi to work yeah transact is probably going to be end of life soon just a lot of people have a bit used to that being said wasm is permeating a number of different projects