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CD121: BITCOIN IN AFRICA WITH KG - FOUNDER OF MACHANKURA

CD121: BITCOIN IN AFRICA WITH KG - FOUNDER OF MACHANKURA

Released Monday, 25th March 2024
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CD121: BITCOIN IN AFRICA WITH KG - FOUNDER OF MACHANKURA

CD121: BITCOIN IN AFRICA WITH KG - FOUNDER OF MACHANKURA

CD121: BITCOIN IN AFRICA WITH KG - FOUNDER OF MACHANKURA

CD121: BITCOIN IN AFRICA WITH KG - FOUNDER OF MACHANKURA

Monday, 25th March 2024
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0:02

Austin, Texas. A place that's widely regarded as the Bitcoin capital of the US.

0:07

Bear or bull market, Bitcoiners have flocked to the city because of a combination of pro crypto policies,

0:13

abundant renewable energy, and an ever growing network of some of the brightest developers and miners on the planet. Bitcoin was found in 2009. A lot's happened post financial crisis.

0:23

Also, it was already emerging as that tech center and, you know, enter Bitcoin, and it just became the logical home. The clubhouse for all these Bitcoiners

0:32

is a place called the Bitcoin comments, which is on the city's iconic thoroughfare called Congress Avenue that leads to the Texas state capital in the heart of downtown. We help, early companies to work out of here. They don't necessarily have the the means or funding to have a full office. The Bitcoin Commons host a regular monthly meetup called BitDevs.

0:50

The topics of conversation run the gamut from detailed discussions about code to concerns that the Microsoft run GitHub may pose a greater

0:58

existential threat to the Bitcoin network since much of the development work is carried out on that platform. The Bitcoin commons is a venue that also played host to multiple events on the sidelines of South by Southwest.

1:10

There's so many people in town. There's not a great South by Southwest Bitcoin track, and so we host the Bitcoin takeover here in Austin. Another part of the Bitcoin programming in Austin focused on a major hackathon.

1:21

Francisco Chavarria

1:23

was born in Mexico City and spent time in Salt Lake City, but 3 years ago he made the move to Austin to be part of a community of like minded thinkers.

1:31

His company, Yopaki, which is a neobank for Bitcoin focused on the Latin American market,

1:36

just won first place in the hackathon.

1:39

If you talk to other builders in in the competition,

1:42

a lot happens here. There there definitely is a sense of I don't need for others to lose, for me to win. There really is a relationship and a collaboration for Bitcoin to succeed. Right now, it feels like we're all winning because of the prize, but those of us who have been building in the bear market, we know. The VC appetite for Bitcoin projects building on top of the blockchain is really heating up. Grant Gilliam spent 15 years working in private equity in New York before pivoting to run a VC fund focused on Bitcoin called 1031.

2:12

Now since launching, it's invested a 100 and

2:15

$25,000,000 of equity in aggregate over the last 5 years with more than $100,000,000

2:21

deployed in the last 2 years during the bear market. We invest across the Bitcoin ecosystem, across every major theme,

2:29

anything that is relevant to

2:32

Bitcoin infrastructure. We like to say the picks and shovels of companies building

2:38

products and services,

2:41

for holders of Bitcoin. Grant, who spent a few years commuting from New York to Austin every month for the BitDevs meetup, tells CNBC that some of the l two Bitcoin investments are more hype than substance,

2:53

but he's still bullish overall on the deal space. There's been a lot

2:57

of l two,

2:59

hype lately, mainly driven by

3:03

the ordinals and inscriptions

3:06

developments or innovations if you wanna call it that. It's our

3:10

firm view that the ordinals

3:14

will prove to be a passing fad.

3:17

But, generally, we're focused on

3:21

basic building blocks of the ecosystem such as companies that are providing

3:27

financial services which could be

3:30

custody, trading, lending. It's

3:35

lightning oriented scaling

3:38

companies that are operating on the the Lightning Network. Meanwhile, Bitcoin mining remains a big part of the narrative when it comes to Texas.

3:46

Every 4 years, Bitcoin undergoes a market making event known as the halving. It cuts the production of new Bitcoin in half, and it typically comes before a major run up in the price of the coin. For some, it may prove an armageddon level event. Others have braced for impact by swapping out their fleet of machines for more efficient rigs. West Texas miner Jamie McCavity has a 16 megawatt mine that runs on a part of the grid that is 90% powered by a mix of solar and wind power. This go around, if prices and difficulty stay where they are, it's not gonna be that big of a deal. I project very few miners will come offline

4:21

if pricing difficulty stay where they are as of right now. McCavity, who previously worked for 10 years as a trader on the floor of the New York Mercantile Exchange, added that ETF flows have helped to change the pricing dynamics for the world's largest coin. Though any sort of reduction in supply is likely to have some impact on the market price equilibrium,

4:40

The spot ETF inflows have been so massive that reducing the available supply of newly mined bitcoins from 900 to 450

4:48

is probably going to be immaterial relative to that. Number goes up is a big mantra in the Bitcoin space, but as a community evolves, so too does the thinking about the price of the coin. So price is relevant. The price is really an output of many inputs

5:04

of human beings

5:05

building tools to make Bitcoin both more secure and a greater utility.

5:10

Price is the best indicator of more people coming to the conclusion that Bitcoin is money, and it's a better store of value, so it is very relevant. It's just the output of a lot of hard work, a lot of trial and error, and and the output of labor of a lot of good people.

5:58

Happy Bitcoin Monday freaks. It's your host, Odell, here for another Citadel dispatch.

6:04

The interactive live show focused on actionable Bitcoin and Freedom Tech discussion.

6:10

That long intro clip you either just saw or listened to was CNBC

6:15

focused on Bitcoin takeover

6:19

and, ClubLab's hackathon that happened 2 weeks ago in Austin.

6:24

Vibes were high there. It was a great event. It was an honor to be a part of it.

6:29

I was actually one of the judges, who helped

6:34

decide that Yopacchi, Francisco, and his cofounder Carlos,

6:38

won that award, which I believe was a $10,000

6:42

prize. Really great to see. Yopacchi is based out of Mexico.

6:46

But, anyway, vibes were high, and it was, like, pretty crazy to see,

6:50

coverage on CNBC. We've come a long way. But, anyway, with all that said, I got my good friend, KG, here.

6:58

How's it going, KG? It's all good, Matt. How is it going with you? Very good. Very good. So KG is the founder of Manchancura,

7:08

which is a Bitcoin payments company,

7:11

based in Africa. I believe it is,

7:16

Afrikaans for money. Am I correct there?

7:20

No. It's slang. It's South African slang for money.

7:25

So what, like, people just on the street when when they say, let me get paid, they they say how do I pronounce it?

7:32

Machancura.

7:33

Machancura.

7:35

Yeah. So

7:38

as in give me money.

7:40

Give me money. Fair enough. Well, great name. Makes sense.

7:45

Uh-huh.

7:46

So, I mean, you've been you've been kinda quietly building out there at least at least for Americans. I mean, I I feel like you haven't necessarily been on on people's radar, but you've been getting a lot of traction,

7:58

building a a Bitcoin wallet that's easy to use for Africans. How how do you think about that?

8:04

Yeah. So

8:07

but you mean, how did I the foot process that went into starting much on Google?

8:13

Yeah. What what is what are the

8:15

why have you found success? What what is let I guess, let's start with let's start it with what is the product.

8:22

If you're if you're African user, if you're someone using matching Koda, how how Mhmm.

8:29

How do they interact with the product? What is the product?

8:32

Cool. So Machangura,

8:34

as it is today, is effectively a USSD service that a person can dial on to from any device from any mobile device

8:44

as long as it has a cellular connection.

8:46

So, effectively, you don't need a smartphone to send or receive Bitcoin. Alright?

8:52

And it's a custodial wallet, similar to wallet of Satoshi.

8:57

You can just access it via dialing the USSD code, which is star 134 star 7714

9:04

in South Africa. Or if you're in Kenya, you'd dial star 483

9:09

star 8 triple triage for Kenya.

9:13

And yeah. It then gives you a text based interface that you could

9:19

interact with. Yeah. How you I usually explain it is like a decision tree, where the first few options will lead down

9:29

more options and more options and more options. So the first few options are similar to what you would see on a normal wallet. Send Bitcoin, receive Bitcoin,

9:38

balance history, and all of these other things. And then from there, whichever option you choose, you then get to see other options.

9:46

And, yeah, since it takes space, it's limited to 160 characters or

9:53

140 characters. And so everything we put in front of the user has to fit within that character

10:01

set. And that's, I think, the nutshell of it all.

10:04

So, I mean, specifically, this is for users that don't even have a smartphone. Right? This is,

10:10

they're using, like, Nokia phones and, like, those brick phones that are just t nine. They only have the 9 characters. They only can do basic text messages. They can't they can't access an app or a web browser.

10:22

Right?

10:23

And, I think other people have smartphones, but

10:27

or especially the older generation,

10:30

they prefer the simp, well, it's not simpler, the slower interface.

10:35

Because, since it takes space, it takes maybe, like, a second to move between screens, and some people prefer that pace to interface with,

10:45

tech.

10:46

Wait. So even people that have smartphones will use this service?

10:50

Yes.

10:52

Right. So, of course yeah. Yeah. And, of course, the African continent, the other thing a lot of people don't know is that USSD

11:01

is actually the preferred interface for most digital payments because of M Pesa 1.

11:07

And, the second reason is

11:11

Internet coverage is not uniform.

11:13

So you may be in an area like the city that does have good Internet coverage, but then when you go to the township or the village or the farm,

11:22

you your Internet coverage may not be as good as it is in the city. So a lot of people prefer US50

11:29

because they will know that it will be uniform.

11:32

Okay. So

11:33

I'm quite proud that dispatch has a global audience.

11:38

Mhmm. You know, when when when you do podcasts, you get, like, this rough analytics. It's not, like, the best analytics in the world, but you can see where people download stuff. And

11:48

every continent in the world, there's

11:51

that listen to dispatch, but we're primarily

11:54

still an American focused show.

11:56

Mhmm. So I I I really want to,

11:59

I was fortunate enough to get to meet you,

12:02

earlier this year, and we had Who was that? In in-depth conversations about

12:08

everything you're building over there. But I I wanna make sure that that people from America kinda understand, you know, your perspective and and what's going on.

12:15

Mhmm. So USSD, what is USSD?

12:21

Yeah. So USSD has a meaning, which,

12:24

I don't care much what the meaning is because it's too complicated. It's like universal supplementary,

12:32

something something data. And

12:35

it's effectively how you would start an SMS session

12:40

between yourself and a service on a telecom.

12:43

So some people I think when it started, it was like the web,

12:48

w a p, a website, you know, that didn't have pictures and everything could be ported to

12:54

work on USSD as long as it would interface

12:59

all your inputs would be text based instead of clicks and stuff like that. Right? So, yeah, think about it like that. Technology that we used to have way back in the day that still runs on the GSM network on most phones,

13:15

that you could build something like a website,

13:18

but on a cellular device. So it's the protocol that lets you do the text based commands and interface with the server?

13:27

Yes. So then what and then what is M Pesa?

13:32

M Pesa is effectively built on top of USSD.

13:36

It's a mobile money, digital payment system,

13:41

and it's basically the biggest digital payment system in Kenya.

13:47

Each country has its own version of M Pesa.

13:50

And in it was launched around 2,008,

13:54

around the same time as Bitcoin was launched. And within a year, it had, like, over a 1000000 users

13:59

in Kenya. And then now, I think most of the Kenyan economy

14:04

runs through, PISA.

14:07

So how many users have been PISA right now, do you think?

14:11

I don't know, man. I think, like, 50,000,000, I think,

14:15

in Kenya. But that may be who? Oh, yeah. Because, well, Kenya has a population of 50,000,000 people. So It says over

14:28

M Pesa is over 56,000,000

14:30

customers in total across Africa,

14:33

and it's over 30,000,000 in Kenya.

14:36

Okay.

14:37

Cool. That's insane. Okay. So Mhmm. So people use M Pesa to transfer

14:44

local currency, like low digital local fiat. Can they transfer dollars using M Pesa?

14:50

Nope. Okay. So they're comfortable they're they're they're doing a lot of their commerce already through the same exact interface

14:58

that you basically adopted, but you you do it with Bitcoin.

15:02

Yes. Effectively.

15:04

And then

15:05

okay. That's badass. Okay. So how many,

15:08

you you mentioned Kenya. You mentioned South Africa. You're based in South Africa. Correct? Mhmm. Yes.

15:14

How many countries are do you support? Do you support only Kenya and South Africa?

15:19

No. I'm in 8 countries.

15:22

Like, I think yeah. Eight countries, South Africa, Kenya, Namibia,

15:28

Nigeria, u Zambia, Uganda,

15:32

and Malawi. I don't know if I skipped yeah, Ghana as well.

15:38

That's impressive.

15:40

I mean, that's a lot of people. And do you do you have a lot of users in Nigeria specifically?

15:45

No. Not that many, sadly. I think it's, like, 2,000

15:49

users.

15:50

Oh, wow.

15:51

That's kinda tiny. Nigerian. Why is it so small in Nigeria?

15:57

Because

15:58

I'm not in Nigeria, and I think I need to actually be there to push it. Right? Fair enough.

16:05

There's a lot of, small hurdles that people have

16:09

that until I'm there, I wouldn't know about it. Until I see them using it in Nigeria,

16:15

I wouldn't know that, oh, this is actually one small hurdle,

16:20

these users have.

16:21

I mean, Nigeria is over 200,000,000 people live in Nigeria.

16:25

Fucking massive country. And they I think they love Bitcoin. They at least love, quote, unquote, crypto.

16:31

Mhmm. Well, I no. I think they love Bitcoin most definitely.

16:34

Right? So some some point in this year, I'll be making a trip there to see how things are on the ground.

16:42

I mean, the regulatory environment's kinda dicey over there right now.

16:46

Yeah.

16:47

Especially if you're a big company like Binance and, you know Yeah. They're going after Binance. It's hard.

16:54

Uh-huh.

16:57

Okay. Cool. Does does

17:00

does Manchancoda, support

17:03

fiat?

17:06

No. Not at all. Bitcoin only?

17:08

No Tether, nothing?

17:10

Mhmm.

17:12

And what what is the decision behind that?

17:16

Okay. So,

17:18

the decision oh, and the other thing is people cannot buy Bitcoin on Machanglu. They can only send and receive. It says send and receive a lot. Got it. Yes. Alright. And the reason is because,

17:33

at the time that I started building it out, a lot of people were saying Bitcoin is banned in a lot of the countries that we are already in, Nigeria being one of them, Namibia being another.

17:44

And, technically, if you read,

17:48

the circulars from the central banks of Nigeria, Namibia, Kenya, Tanzania, and everything else,

17:54

they were just saying, financial institutions

17:58

should not do business with Bitcoin companies. Right?

18:01

So you could still build a wallet, you could still do whatever you wanna do with Bitcoin, but you couldn't integrate with the financial institution.

18:10

And, yeah, that's why p two p is so big in Nigeria as well because people were so forced to do p two p as well as in Kenya,

18:19

instead of a normal exchange. So,

18:21

yeah, that informed my decision to do Bitcoin only, not even do, buy or sell,

18:28

functionality on the service.

18:32

Because as I was talking with the service providers that I'm using,

18:36

they also needed to be convinced that this was

18:41

a legal thing to do. Yeah. So that is why it's like that now. And, sadly, things have changed, and now I can do some of the stuff like,

18:52

add buy and sell functionality, which is one of the

18:56

hurdles that most users are presented with in these countries because

19:02

the exchanges and the on ramps and the off ramps really do not cater for a person without an Internet connected device.

19:09

So Right. A person registers, and then they don't have any way to acquire their Bitcoin. So then they stop using the service, or they don't tell anyone about the service.

19:19

Is there a way to do, like

19:21

I mean, it seems like the dream would be like M Pesa to Bitcoin.

19:27

Yes. Right?

19:29

And there's a history there. Because somewhere

19:32

in 2013, there was a service that was doing that. I think it was called

19:38

Capucha. Let me see if I can find a link. Yeah. Capucha Pay.

19:43

This is their Twitter, and then you can maybe see some of their history. I'll just send it to you.

19:50

And they were effectively doing that where you could,

19:54

on ramp and off ramp via M Pesa.

19:57

What ended up happening is as they gained some traction,

20:01

M Pesa didn't like that. Right? So M Pesa ended up,

20:06

removing their integration partner or telling their integration partner that, yo, we are not comfortable with your use of,

20:14

mobile money for, Bitcoin. And so they lost the

20:19

integration, and then they didn't see value in being a Bitcoin wallet at that time.

20:25

And, yeah, maybe it was valid. On chain fees were high as well. Lightning was never closed. They have, like, a bunch of Roger Verretweets there. So

20:33

I kinda and then I lost the plot at some point there.

20:37

Yeah. And I didn't even see that. Funny enough.

20:40

The

20:42

yeah. I mean, that makes sense. Right? Like, M PACE is a centralized

20:45

entity, obviously. It's I mean, to Americans, you can kinda think of it like a PayPal or something like that.

20:50

So And it's still like that today. If they don't like you, they can just cut you off.

20:55

Uh-huh. Exactly. But it does seem ideal for your product

20:59

specifically because it's the same a similar interface. Right? Like, if someone's used to M Pesa, they can they can grok your interface. Right?

21:07

Yes. Alright. And

21:11

I agree with you, but I also think

21:15

that M Pesa is blinding us at the same time to,

21:20

the reality of the situation.

21:22

I think I saw this,

21:25

article where they asked the one of the Mastercard CEOs or Mastercard or Visa CEOs,

21:32

who has put his competitor is in Africa.

21:35

And he said it's cash, right, Because,

21:39

most of the African economy is still a cash based economy.

21:43

So I think the solution would be to build something that works quite well

21:50

for cash, cash on ramps and cash also. Like cash cash points?

21:55

Yes. Right. And not necessarily ATMs because I don't think, the infrastructure is also there for ATMs.

22:02

But yeah. BESSA worked because they set up an agent network

22:07

that is effectively a normal store. You walk into the store with your cash, and then you give them your cash, and then they credit your Inpessa account.

22:17

So when you give them your you give them cash and you give them your phone number, and then your account gets credited? Is that how it works? Yes. Exactly.

22:24

So All you need to do is I mean, easier said than done, but a similar concept. Right? You walk into a storefront.

22:31

You give them cash. You give them the phone number, and then you have Bitcoin in your wallet.

22:36

And then the store gets a cut, presumably. Right? Like, that's how you spread it out.

22:41

Mhmm. And, yeah, that is better than, you know,

22:46

being at the mercy of Safaricom, which is a company behind Vistra.

22:50

And, also, if it works for whichever country, you can take the same model and the same interface and the same infrastructure,

22:58

do that in any country in the world.

23:01

Yeah.

23:03

Awesome.

23:04

Freaks, we got, like, about 300 of you in live streams right now.

23:09

The live chat is a little bit dead.

23:12

I'm I don't ask for much, but I I would like to see some more activity in the live chat.

23:17

If you are listening if you're watching via Twitter or via YouTube, the live chat that's shown on screen is at citadel dispatch.com/stream.

23:27

It uses Nostr. Bitcoin is integrated so you can send zaps

23:31

while you're watching, but you do not need to have a Nostr account or know what a Nostr account is. You just go to dispatch.com/stream

23:38

if you wanna participate in the live chat.

23:44

Okay. So is that what you're gonna that's the plan? You're gonna roll that out? The

23:48

At at some point

23:50

yeah. At some point, we're gonna try to build something like that.

23:57

Sorry. I'm I'm just chuckling at the live chat.

24:00

Mhmm. Someone just

24:02

well, who do we have here? We have, Sean Kibler said, here's a chat. I'm not creative. Sorry. Not sorry, but I appreciate you trying.

24:12

Okay. Well, if you guys have any questions for KJ, feel free to put them in the live chat.

24:17

The live chat is what one of the things that makes dispatch so unique,

24:22

that I'm not like the host alone here. The rider dive freaks also help.

24:27

Okay. So where where do you have

24:31

I'm trying to figure out where I wanna go with this conversation because I I

24:35

I'm incredibly grateful to have you on here. I think you've been crushing it over there. Where where do you have the most users? Is the most users in South Africa?

24:43

Yes.

24:44

That is where the most users are, and that is where most

24:48

integrations are. Right? I think we are now at

24:53

3,700 users on SA.

24:58

And yeah. A person could you 37100

25:02

users?

25:03

No. 3,700.

25:05

Oh, yeah. Yeah. It's the same thing. I'm so You said the same thing. You're good. You're good. Cultural

25:09

differences. And yeah. So a person in the essay could effectively

25:15

live on Bitcoin using Matangura,

25:19

thanks to all the nice Bitrefill integrations,

25:23

Azteco integrations, crypto convert integrations.

25:28

Let's talk about those integrations.

25:30

How does that work?

25:32

Yeah. So I'll start in reverse.

25:35

Okay. But let me start in the life cycle way.

25:38

Effectively, a stethoscope would be how a person acquires Bitcoin. Right? Right. And,

25:44

this person would be as the ideal user in in my,

25:48

case, being a person without an Internet connected device.

25:53

They just go to a store that sells Azteco

25:57

integrated vouchers. In South Africa, I think they're called EasyPay vouchers.

26:02

And Okay. And not another one is called Equin vouchers. And then they just type out

26:08

the 16 digit voucher they get, and then

26:11

we redeem it on their behalf. So

26:14

it's the closest thing to that agent network,

26:17

I was talking about earlier. You're kinda latching on to Azteca's

26:21

agent network. Yes. Exactly. Right? So that redeem process, how does that so they're getting, like, a receipt with a voucher code, and then they're putting it into your

26:31

text based app? Mhmm. Yes.

26:34

And then it's automatically credited to someone with Bitcoin?

26:38

Yes. Alright.

26:39

And that is effectively the same experience they would have if they were topping up their airtime, which is, their prepaid,

26:48

phone credits.

26:50

Right.

26:51

Mhmm. And Okay. So that's where they get Bitcoin into the app if they don't have Bitcoin to begin with.

26:56

Mhmm.

26:57

And then the other integrations are for actually using the big spending the Bitcoin to to live. Right?

27:03

Yes. Exactly. Alright.

27:06

So CryptoConvert, their earliest,

27:10

product was electricity. So you could pay your electrice prepaid electricity

27:15

using Bitcoin via lightning. The cool thing about how they did it was a Huddl invoice.

27:21

Right? So they give you a Huddl invoice. You pay the Huddl invoice. They don't settle the Huddl invoice because then they try

27:30

to issue your voucher for the electricity bill.

27:33

If they fail to issue that voucher to your meter,

27:37

then they fail your payment, and then you get your SATS back effectively.

27:42

Right? And, the SATS never left your balance anyway.

27:46

And this is so cool because

27:49

you don't need an account with them effectively. Alright?

27:52

And they only settle the payment if they succeed to issue

27:57

your voucher, your electricity voucher. And

28:01

then they also don't need a refund policy because you will always keep your SaaS if Right. Something goes wrong. Yeah. And then the other thing CryptoConvert

28:11

did was the Pick n Pay thing. Pick n Pay being the biggest grocery store

28:16

in South Africa. And, yeah, they

28:20

effectively allow you to send them Bitcoin,

28:24

and they settle your bill for you. Right?

28:28

At the tip. So the grocery store doesn't know they're accepting Bitcoin?

28:32

Yes. Effectively.

28:34

But so how how does that work? So I'm I'm stand I'm in the grocery store.

28:39

I got my I got my Nokia phone. Right? I got Munchkin Koda on it.

28:45

Yeah. Okay. So let me How am I how am I paying for my groceries?

28:50

So, currently,

28:52

you cannot use that directly. Right? Okay. So you would need

28:57

a smartphone because the Pick n Pay system.

29:01

Yeah. Yeah. Exactly. The Pick n Pay system shows you a QR code. Right? Okay. And so your Nokia will probably not be able to scan the QR code,

29:12

and, they don't even show you some text at the bottom of the QR code that you could use

29:17

as a placeholder, or as an alternative

29:21

to

29:22

the QR code that you have. Is just a lightning invoice?

29:26

No.

29:27

Sadly. Right? So It's not even a lightning invoice? Yes. Not even a lightning invoice, but,

29:34

CryptoConvert then have an app, and that app

29:38

will re scan that QR code and produce a lightning invoice for you to pay.

29:44

Okay. So I'm scanning it with my phone.

29:46

I'm scanning the QR code with

29:49

the CryptoConvert app Yes. On my phone, and then it's showing me a lightning invoice. And then I'm, I guess, leaving

29:57

that app and paying lightning invoice with, like, a Phoenix wallet or something like that while it was in touch. With Bitcoin wallet. Yes. Right? And yeah.

30:06

Effectively.

30:08

We could also do lightning invoices

30:11

via WhatsApp because of the 1 960 character limit. Right? So, yeah, you can then copy that, put it in WhatsApp, and then it's the same interface but on WhatsApp. So,

30:22

yeah, the payment goes through and then you get You support WhatsApp?

30:27

Yes.

30:28

But those are all smartphone users that are using it on WhatsApp.

30:32

Weird enough, no. WhatsApp also works on some feature phones. Oh, shit. Really? Okay. Yep. So that would be one of the apps, yeah, that come with the feature phone.

30:45

Okay. I mean, that makes sense. The voice app, like, runs the world, so

30:49

they they they put it on the feature phones now.

30:52

Yeah.

30:53

Okay. That's that's cool. Okay. So then where does bitrefill come into all of this?

30:58

Cool. So Bitrefill

31:00

is the thing you would do if you wanna pay at Pick N Pay, but you don't have a smartphone. Right? So Okay. We have API access to Bitrefill, so we can buy the voucher for you,

31:14

using your Bitcoin balance and then deliver it back to you via SMS, and then you just show them the voucher code at the store.

31:27

And how am I showing the voucher code the voucher codes on my feature phone? Yes.

31:33

And were they manually typing it in?

31:36

Mhmm. And it's essentially a gift card?

31:40

Yes. Effectively.

31:41

And that works all through the feature phone. Don't need a separate app. Nothing.

31:45

Yes. Yeah. You don't need WhatsApp.

31:48

That works via USD as well. I think people

31:51

a lot of Americans and even Europeans, I think, don't appreciate,

31:57

like, how much Bitrefill helps people around the world. And, also, like, the Bitcoin company like, these gift card companies. Like, it's a nice little hack in the meantime while we're waiting for merchants to actually accept Bitcoin directly.

32:10

Like, if you actually wanna live on Bitcoin, and and and you don't have access to, like, a, you know, like, a fully regulated Bitcoin exchange or brokerage or, like, an app like Strike or something,

32:24

the gift cards are are really good stopgap. Like, people people use them frequently.

32:29

Yes.

32:30

And weird enough, even if you do have access to an Exchange, Stripe,

32:36

whatever else, Bitrefuel is great because it's not

32:43

it it doesn't suffer from the banking hours.

32:46

Right. So

32:48

if you wanna buy something on a Sunday or on the long weekend,

32:53

will work for you there and there.

32:57

So So Yeah.

32:59

I mean, so you effectively have you just don't control them, but you have on ramp, off ramp on

33:06

Mount Chincoda through Azteco as the on ramp,

33:09

or I like to call it, like, a Fiat off ramp. But but you have you have Azteco you have Azteco from fiat to Bitcoin, and then you have bit refilled from Bitcoin

33:18

to whatever you need to buy. Yes.

33:21

But I guess you can make that flow better if you actually integrated it yourself. And

33:26

Yeah. No. But I think they're doing a great job. Both of these companies are doing

33:31

a better job than I would ever do if I did it myself.

33:36

Okay. I mean, I have a bunch of different places I can go with this.

33:40

I guess my first question for you before we continue

33:43

is Mhmm.

33:47

I think

33:49

people love telling the story of Bitcoin

33:52

is helping Africans and people in LatAm and the rest of the developing world.

34:00

How much how much of that is bullshit,

34:04

like engagement, you know, bullshit, and how much of that is real? Like, is is Bitcoin actually

34:11

is is Bitcoin actually helping Africans?

34:15

Yeah. So let me say this. It's funny,

34:18

because, the cases where it's actually helping are not the ones that are mostly spoken about.

34:27

Okay. And yes. A lot of the times,

34:31

you think the beauty of Bitcoin is that how

34:39

and the people that use it well

34:43

don't broadcast it, don't broadcast the fact that, oh, I'm actually

34:47

doing this with Bitcoin. Right? So for Nigeria,

34:51

one of the biggest use cases is,

34:55

importers use it to pay their Chinese suppliers

34:59

because there's capital controls,

35:02

that the banks have to adhere to, but they could easily just pay the what's this?

35:09

The supplier using Bitcoin or get somebody who would pay the supplier

35:14

in China, and they just send the Bitcoin. Alright?

35:18

And there, the other interesting thing is there's a lot of companies as well

35:23

that are leaving the Nigerian market because of capital controls. These are big companies like Emirates,

35:29

Ping P and G as well, who

35:32

effectively then have, money stuck in Nigeria that they cannot get out

35:37

because of capital controls. And Bitcoin is one of the ways that

35:43

some of them have used, to actually move money out of Nigeria.

35:49

And yeah. So that is, you know, I think one of the stories that is,

35:55

finally getting attention. And

36:00

yeah, outside of that, there's smaller businesses that allow people to

36:05

explore, opportunities

36:08

between, you know, the capital controls, p 2p markets where people become traders and,

36:14

end up being rich because they are then, you know,

36:19

doing arbitrage off of that. And, yeah, it's not a major

36:24

use case, but, yeah, I think there's a lot of examples of people who do that, across the continent.

36:32

The

36:34

the importers thing is super interesting. I mean, those people are I mean, they're professionals, essentially. Right? Like, they need to move money across borders. They're moving product and money across borders.

36:44

Mhmm. That that's super fascinating to me. So do you think they are they using your app? Or

36:52

Nah.

36:53

I don't think they're using the my app. And I also don't think they are way

36:58

that they're even using Bitcoin. Right? Because

37:02

someone approaches them and says, I know a guy.

37:05

And

37:06

then the guy takes care of the deal for them. So they're, like, giving the guy cash, and the guy is handling it.

37:13

Yes. Exactly. And there might be a guy like that on the other side that's doing the same thing, receiving it and then paying out in cash.

37:20

Mhmm. Right. And Yeah. From what I've seen, these guys use Binance a lot.

37:26

Right. And, yeah, Trust Wallet and all of these different Right. Trust Wallet is Binance's self custody wallet.

37:34

Mhmm.

37:35

Most most popular self custody wallet in the world. It's a piece of shit. Horrible wallet.

37:41

That does not work well. We gotta do better. We gotta do better. Yes. We do have to do better.

37:49

Mhmm. So, like, how how I guess.

37:56

So, like, what is what is missing? Like, why

38:01

mean, like, I don't like, okay. So so you have, like, nearly 4,000 users in South Africa.

38:07

Mhmm. How many users do you think you have across,

38:12

all the continent?

38:15

It's over 13,000.

38:17

Okay. 13,000 users.

38:19

Mhmm. Do how do we how do we grow that? Like, why like, how do we what is the biggest limiter to to user growth in your opinion?

38:30

Well,

38:32

so this is what I've seen,

38:34

over the past almost 2 years now. Alright?

38:39

Right. The service has days where it goes back or days where

38:44

in one country, over a 1000 people

38:48

get onboarded. Right? And

38:51

there, I'm like, oh, okay. So there is a huge,

38:55

what's this? First for Bitcoin across the continent in different countries. This has happened in Ghana. This has happened

39:03

in Tanzania. Happened in South Africa yet. Right? So

39:08

for that, I see that, okay, what usually happens is

39:13

somebody in the right community

39:16

picks it up and, shares it with someone else, and then they share it with someone else. And then, you know, how virality

39:24

usually happens. And where it stops is okay. In my case, oh, I cannot buy Bitcoin using this ring. Oh, okay. That was fun while it lost it. So

39:36

the thing that needs to happen is that it has to be a seamless experience

39:40

from start to finish. Right? Yes, you get the wallet, but where are you gonna get the Bitcoin?

39:46

And yeah. So we would need to have that embedded in the wallet,

39:52

or in the interface where the person can clearly see, oh, I can buy Bitcoin

39:57

using cash or using whatever I'm using

40:00

right on the interface. Right? And

40:03

we sadly couldn't do that because, of course,

40:07

of years of the legal landscape

40:09

and everything else.

40:12

So, I mean, I I wish we had Bernard here

40:17

from Bitnob. Mhmm. Yeah. So, I mean, Bitnob is a African based exchange.

40:22

I believe he has, like, a smartphone apps as well.

40:26

Yes. And so do do you do you think do there is there any overlap there between, like, Bitknob users and your users, or is this, like, a whole different group of people?

40:39

No. There is an overlap, actually. Right? And,

40:42

yeah, I think we're working on something that would add

40:48

a widget, to Bitnub

40:51

in the countries that Bitnub operates.

40:55

Okay. The what do you mean by a widget? Yeah. Well, it would be something that we have to build from scratch and have, well, use API access to that. Like a text based widget.

41:07

Yeah. That's what you mean. Right?

41:09

Yes.

41:10

So, like, press 7 to link your Bitnub account or something.

41:14

Exactly. Okay.

41:18

I mean, I for example, I don't know if this is,

41:23

I I don't know if this is translating via audio if you're listening on the podcast feeds or if you're watching the livestreams.

41:31

But it's, like, it's crazy. Like, when KG shows it to you in person,

41:35

like, when you're, like, actually looking at it, it's, like, they're they're able to use Bitcoin

41:41

on just a dumbass feature phone. Like, it it's just a like a text based feature phone. Anyone can set so does every user get a Lightning address?

41:51

Yes.

41:53

By default, the lightning address is their phone number at 8tripletrade.mobi.

41:58

Okay. So it also set a username.

42:00

8333.mobi.

42:02

Right? And their phone number. So if I have a relative in Africa,

42:07

and they Mhmm. They sign up for your service,

42:11

I can I can go on to strike or Phoenix Wallet, and I can

42:16

and I can just type in their lightning address, and I could just instantly send them Bitcoin across the world for

42:23

basically no fees?

42:25

Exactly.

42:27

So do we have a lot of people using it for that? I mean, remittances has been a thing that people have been

42:33

Well,

42:34

there's a few people trying to use it for that. You know? Right.

42:38

And outside of these people, I wouldn't know

42:41

what a person is using it for. I just see Bitcoin moving around.

42:47

And, yeah, it's like, okay. Cool. This is happening.

42:51

But, like, our remittance is

42:53

Bitcoin remittance is a thing in Africa, or is that bullshit that, you know, white people in America and Europe just say that doesn't happen?

43:01

It happens.

43:03

If you go back to, like, the importer paying a Chinese supplier Right. The other thing is somebody paying

43:11

their kids, tuition

43:15

at Right. University or the country. Right?

43:18

So that is the opposite of, remittance.

43:22

But over the long term, the same student who has then

43:27

graduated would be the one sending money back

43:30

using the It's still a cross border payment.

43:33

Yeah. I mean, I think, like, it should excel, and that should be the use case that it excels

43:37

in. I mean, I I Yes. It's amazing to me that more people don't use it that way.

43:42

Yeah. And,

43:43

this is why it doesn't. Oh, this is why I think it doesn't. Right? So

43:50

let me just take Southern Africa. Right? South Africa, Namibia,

43:54

Lesotho, Switzerland, Malawi, Zambia, Zimbabwe.

43:59

Right? Botswana as well. So that's a lot of countries, but, basically,

44:04

Southern Africa, all of them have a different currency. All of them have a different,

44:10

financial system. 3 of them share financial system. South Africa, Lesotho,

44:17

and, Namibia share, and and Swaziland share South Africa's financial infrastructure.

44:23

Right. They all use the rand?

44:27

Packed to the rand. 1 to 1. Okay.

44:29

Yeah. So Namibia has a Namibian dollar pegged to the rand, 1 to 1.

44:34

But for the longest time, they were using the South African infrastructure.

44:39

So I could send a payment directly to Namibia

44:42

as if I'm sending it to a person in South Africa. Alright?

44:46

So as of last week, that's no longer the case.

44:50

Right? So now it has to go through the Swift network

44:54

and blah blah blah blah blah. Right? And so the issue becomes

45:01

South Africa is effectively the economic powerhouse for Southern Africa.

45:06

Alright? So Okay. The other countries don't have as

45:11

many exchanges there as you would want and as you would need

45:16

to do something like remittances using Bitcoin. Right? Because where is the exchange in Namibia

45:24

going to off ramp or on ramp if it needs to off ramp and on ramp?

45:29

Where's the person receive Bitcoin. Right?

45:32

Yes. Right. And then we have can they use but they could use Bitrefill. They have the Bitrefill integration.

45:39

Bitrefill is not big in Namibia.

45:41

Bitrefill is big in South Africa, the economic powerhouse in Right. Of,

45:47

you know, sovereign Africa. So they they have no way to actually use the Bitcoin?

45:54

No easy way. No easy way. I mean, there's always when there's a will, there's a way. There's always a way. Yes. Yeah. Right. And it's, by easy, I mean, as easy as it would be in South Africa. So,

46:05

yeah. So there is, on ramp in Namibia,

46:09

one called Landifa, landifa.com. Okay. But it's still, you know,

46:14

compared to the ones in South Africa, then you're like, okay. There's a lot of potential, but, you know,

46:21

we we there's a lot of difference as well. And there, Malawi is even worse. I don't know of,

46:28

on ramp or off ramp focused on Malawi,

46:31

and they also have capital controls. And Zambia, similar story.

46:36

And then you move to Nigeria. I think it's West Africa,

46:41

where Nigeria is the economic powerhouse, and all of this Bitcoin attention is there. Right. But then not so much in the neighboring countries, not so much in Benin,

46:51

not so much in Togo. Right? So what you would wanna do is effectively

46:58

what is this? Have

47:01

as much Bitcoin companies

47:04

in all the countries, in all these different regions, and not just the economic hubs.

47:10

Right? So in East Africa, Kenya would be the hub, and you could do all of these cool things in Kenya, but then not so much in Tanzania, not so much in Uganda.

47:19

Right.

47:20

Mhmm. So I think that is one of the biggest blockers for why,

47:24

remittances has not been picking up in Africa.

47:30

Yeah. I mean, I know like, strike is trying to

47:34

provide access to as many African countries as possible, and it's, you know, it's a process. It's not Mhmm.

47:43

It's not as straightforward as one might hope.

47:46

Yeah.

47:50

Okay.

47:52

What about yeah. Go on.

47:54

So the weirdest thing is if you do set up

47:58

or successfully set up an exchange or an off ramp or an on ramp in

48:05

most of these countries, you are usually

48:09

you will usually end up with a problem where

48:13

most people just wanna buy Bitcoin, and not too many people wanna sell Bitcoin.

48:17

Okay. Even in Africa.

48:19

Yeah.

48:20

I because, obviously, a lot of people would wanna get rid of the Nigerian naira.

48:27

Right. Because all the currencies there are are are fucking shit.

48:31

Yes. Right? So there,

48:34

you would need to do a lot of interesting stuff and a lot of

48:39

new stuff to actually

48:41

get rid of your Bitcoin. Right. Get rid of your naira,

48:46

obviously. Getting rid of your Bitcoin is easy enough to do. But then for the person who sets up the service and the exchange, you need to do a lot of cool stuff

48:55

to get rid of the naira. Because you end up with a ton of naira. Yes. Which is what Bitnop does very well if you ever do have a conversation with him,

49:06

and he's comfortable sharing how they've built out their company,

49:10

it would be one for the ages.

49:13

Yeah. I've had

49:14

some I mean, Bernard is a fucking legend. I've had some really great private off the record conversations with Bernard. Mhmm. He has not been on dispatch yet.

49:24

Yeah. Yeah. I know. It is, when currencies fail, man, is a kind of crazy phenomenon, and I think it's gonna happen more and more.

49:34

Mhmm. So what about what about Tether? Like, are are are people are are Africans

49:43

are Africans fly so their currency is failing. Right? And this is a a story we've heard many times.

49:49

And instead of going to Bitcoin, what is often heavily in demand is is dollars.

49:56

Mhmm. What do you see in terms of, like, Tether demand on the ground?

50:01

Yeah. So let me start by saying for countries like

50:05

Zimbabwe and Nigeria, yeah, the dollar has

50:11

been used quite a lot in the economies. Right? Right. But in South Africa, not so much.

50:19

And I think it's the same for a a lot of other African countries where

50:24

we have not yet experienced, significant

50:28

economic collapse or currency collapse

50:31

to the point where we would need to rush to the dollar.

50:35

Yeah. So Egypt, I've heard, yeah, Egypt has a lot of,

50:39

demand for the dollar. But yeah. So it's, like, I think, 5050,

50:44

across the continent, countries that have demand for the dollar.

50:48

And Tether, I think, yes, Nigeria

50:51

has a lot of demand, but not so much in South Africa, not so much in

50:56

Malawi. And, yes, in Zim but, yeah, in Zim, I also don't think there's that much too,

51:03

because I don't think there's too many crypto companies

51:07

working in Zimbabwe due to the sanctions.

51:10

Okay.

51:12

Mhmm.

51:13

That's quite interesting. Or tech companies for that matter.

51:19

I mean so I mean, the what I hear is that, like, Binance just completely dominates Africa.

51:26

That'll, like Parts of Africa.

51:29

Yeah. I mean

51:30

so, I mean, what like, people are using it to get dollar exposure. Right? Are they using it to gamble on shitcoins? Are they using it to buy Bitcoin? Like

51:40

Yeah. I think gamble on shitcoins is number one priority.

51:45

Yeah. People like to gamble.

51:48

Yeah. I mean, I was like I so, like, one of my goals of this conversation

51:55

is, you know, Bitcoin's pumping. We got ETFs going on. We got the suits are here.

52:01

The suits just discovered Bitcoin for the first time.

52:05

But, you know and it's a little bit of a meme. Right? But, like, I've,

52:10

I'm I'm in Bitcoin for the freedom. I I mean, I would like to get wealthy at the same time.

52:16

Good money should increase in purchasing power over time.

52:20

But, like, to me, like, I want I want Bitcoin

52:23

to be as powerful of a tool for freedom as possible.

52:27

And, you know, I I want Africa to be more than just a

52:35

I want Africa, Latin America, like, to be more than just a meme,

52:40

that that gets you engagement on Twitter or something. Like, I I wanted to actually be a a a powerful tool for for freedom and empowerment,

52:51

on the continent. Like, what are we miss like, what are we missing? Like, why,

52:57

like, why hasn't it been more so? I I don't know. Is that, like, a ridiculous question?

53:03

No. It's a very valid question.

53:06

So, this is my observations. Right?

53:10

Right.

53:12

What I've seen

53:14

is obviously, for it to happen, you'd need a lot of the young

53:24

developers, the young people who are coming in to actually do it.

53:29

Right? Or you get the older developers in the space more experienced to do it.

53:34

So oh, and this is gonna be a long answer. I'm sorry. I can see I like the long answers.

53:39

Yeah. With the young guys,

53:41

they are still trying to gain confidence. They're still trying to build,

53:46

or learn how to build. They don't need know how to build, and they're still trying to gain confidence. And they still believe

53:53

in the system as, we were

53:57

raised into it. So if they don't believe in their country system, they at least believe in America's

54:04

system or Europe's system. So they would either

54:08

work towards ending up in America or Europe or whatever else. Right? So,

54:14

yeah, so the I don't think there's anything you could do about that per se because

54:20

a person would have to Then just take care.

54:24

Yeah. You know? And

54:27

so this also touches on

54:29

how the some of the older guys are not building on Bitcoin as they should. Because what would usually happen is

54:38

for them to gain that experience, they would have already

54:43

been seen by existing companies who would hire them and pay them very well

54:49

and move them out of Africa, and then they could go build in Europe or America or wherever else they choose to go. And so

54:58

I don't think you can build for Africa unless you live here. Right? Yeah.

55:03

Yeah. I think Bernard, Eric, and

55:06

a few other people are great examples of that.

55:10

And yeah. So

55:13

there comes the other side of the issue,

55:16

which is how do you keep talent in Africa so that people could actually come up with these ideas.

55:22

And companies like Binance, as as much as we can give them shit for what and how they choose to do business,

55:30

they do it quite well, right,

55:33

at giving the people what they want, even though what they want the what the people want is maybe gambling and,

55:40

you know, a number go up over a night. Right? And so

55:46

they also do a great job at

55:49

spotting young talent, right, and then hiring young talent,

55:53

but they make the

55:57

process harder because a person would want to build out a web 3 company

56:02

for Mac. Right. Right? And

56:05

they are slowly seeing how web 3 is working in other places, and then they want to use their energy and resources

56:14

to build a Web 3 company, but then they get dragged. And then if they still have the heart to stay in the

56:22

space, they would still try again. And at that point, the person is a web 3 builder full time. They are never gonna stop or building on web 3. So

56:33

the other thing is if a person chooses to build on Bitcoin

56:38

and they don't get traction,

56:41

that is sad. Right? Because

56:44

Right. Then they feel like, this Bitcoin thing

56:47

isn't going anywhere. I I should just rather build on web 3 because the web 3 guys

56:54

are great at being flashy, are great at showing

56:57

traction that after a year dies out.

57:00

And then they can bring in all these new devs and all these new people. So

57:07

yeah. So how does that look in practice? Is, like, Binance coming in and just paying massive salaries? They're, like, funding companies?

57:16

Binance is coming in and hosting events.

57:19

Okay.

57:20

Right?

57:21

It's not too much of

57:24

a budget. But, yeah, in some cases, they do spend

57:27

a lot of good money, like, when they host, sponsored the,

57:32

the African Cup of Nations soccer tournament.

57:35

Right. And, yeah, the visibility they got out of that was massive. Right? But the most pivotal thing that they do well is regularly host events and bring these people in and give them something to do. And

57:51

yeah. It's like there's no road map in Bitcoin. Right? So Right.

57:55

If a person arrives in Bitcoin, they have to

57:59

figure stuff out for themselves. And,

58:02

yeah, I used to watch The Matrix quite a lot. Right?

58:08

The movies.

58:10

The the well, the first one.

58:12

Maybe even the second one a bit. Right? And yeah. The movies. And

58:17

the thing of a person unplugs from The Matrix,

58:20

and there's a group of people there to fetch that person

58:25

and, you know, show them what the real world is and rehabilitate them and Right. Train them.

58:33

Yeah. So I think that is one of the missing things for Africa. Right? Because in Africa, it's not just about Bitcoin. It's really,

58:41

you are a developer, 1st and foremost, and you are getting paid however much you're getting paid.

58:48

So how are you gonna compete

58:50

globally if you're getting paid what's relevant to your country salary?

58:57

Right. Uh-huh. So, yeah, let let let me talk to the kids a little bit because it seems like they're having fun.

59:04

Give me 2 seconds. You got this.

59:09

So while KG is gone,

59:12

handling household manners, We we love, we're a family friendly,

59:17

show here at dispatch. Grow your families.

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donate. All of our relevant links are at silldispatch.com.

59:54

But I just wanted to thank everyone who continues to support the show.

59:58

I had got some advice from a freak

1:00:00

to put the top supporters, since the previous dispatch on the bottom of the livestream.

1:00:07

But our top supporters this week was God Family BTC with a 123,000

1:00:11

sats. Thank you, sir. We have at nitrosoil

1:00:15

with 55,000 sats, Eric 99, rider die freak with 50 k sats,

1:00:20

Pringle Stacks with 44 k sats,

1:00:23

and Mav 21, who's the only one listed who did not donate via podcasting 2 point o. He do donated through the livestream last time with 21,000

1:00:32

sats. So I'm gonna list the top 5,

1:00:35

on the bottom going forward, during the livestreams. I think that's a nice balance. And,

1:00:41

last but not least, I know Bitcoin's pumping. I know you guys are trying to accumulate as many sats as possible.

1:00:48

If you if you cannot part ways with your sats, the easiest way to support the show is share it with friends and family.

1:00:54

We're available on every single podcasting app. You just search ciel dispatch.

1:00:59

We're on YouTube until we get banned. And then after that, you can find us on Noster. But, anyway, KG, you're back.

1:01:07

Hola. Let

1:01:08

let's pivot to,

1:01:11

let's pivot to your product, specifically.

1:01:15

Mhmm. So so right now, it's custodial.

1:01:24

Mhmm. What do you and it's custodial, and you don't have an app. I guess my first question for you is, are you gonna release a smartphone app? Does that make any sense?

1:01:34

What are your thoughts on that?

1:01:36

Yes. It,

1:01:37

makes all the sense. Actually, a lot of the users have asked for the app.

1:01:42

So I've developed the app. It's on my laptop, but I don't feel like releasing it. Right?

1:01:50

My reasons are there's already a lot of good apps, you know, like one of the Satoshi,

1:01:57

Blink, a lot of great custodial apps in this space, and I don't think I'd be adding any value by releasing 1.

1:02:09

So, yeah, I will one day when I'm

1:02:14

in a in the mood to do it, to release the Maconkle

1:02:17

app, But, yeah, so far, I've not. Yeah. There's no rush.

1:02:21

Yeah. So to the users, though, the app is ready. Just know that the app is ready, though. I don't does that help?

1:02:28

Why would if I was a user, I was like, okay. Now I know the app's ready, but you're not giving it to me. I'm like, that works.

1:02:34

Comfort, man. It it is comforting

1:02:36

the heart. So yeah.

1:02:39

But then, with regards to the custodial, man, the self custodial My my next question.

1:02:46

Uh-huh. Alright. Yeah. So

1:02:48

oh oh, you wanna say a question? Or should I? No. I mean, that's my question. I mean, I I think Oh, yeah. That's the elephant in the room. Right? The elephant in the room is that it's custodial. And because it's custodial, you have 2 main risks. The first one is that users, you know, have to trust you that you're not gonna steal their money.

1:03:04

And then the second risk is that you have

1:03:08

more exposure to regulators because you're holding people's Bitcoin for them. So how are you thinking about that?

1:03:14

Yeah. Cool. So,

1:03:16

the South African regulators have already started moving, by the way. So they've already

1:03:23

put out some regulations that we have to adhere to,

1:03:27

blah blah blah blah blah. But,

1:03:31

what we are then working on is the self custodial version of the project.

1:03:38

And the core of it all is that the SIM card is programmable.

1:03:42

Right? The SIM card already does cryptography.

1:03:45

The SIM card already stores a few private keys.

1:03:48

So, yeah, we're working on something here.

1:03:52

Let me see. Oh, yeah. That's some good quality.

1:03:55

So that's, chip, Java card chip. Oh, nice.

1:04:00

Production is high quality. So that's a Java card chip that you can put on your normal SIM card. And once you put this on your normal SIM card oh, and it's kind of very thin. So let me see.

1:04:14

Okay. Cool. Oh, yeah. So it's kind of very thin there. Right? So, yeah, you could program this in Java card if you know a lot of Java card projects in this space, like Spectra, Java card, Satoshi chip.

1:04:31

I don't know if, what's this?

1:04:34

Tap Signer is Java card as well, but I think they are maybe Java card based. And

1:04:40

a few others, Status key card is Java card based project.

1:04:46

So what I was thinking was, like, oh, there's already all these,

1:04:50

healthy Java card projects that sign Bitcoin transactions and do all of these other cool stuff. Why don't we just,

1:04:58

build on top of them? Right? And what we need to do is effectively

1:05:05

was this create a UI, and the UI would be called the simtoolkitapplet.

1:05:11

So depending on which network you're on or telecom you're using, if you have a SIM card in your phone, there will be something called a SIM toolkit applet

1:05:20

already installed, which comes with the SIM card. Right? Not all telecoms,

1:05:26

deploy 1, but most of them in South Africa and, of course, the African continent do.

1:05:31

So, yeah, what we would need is to build that SDK, which would become the UI of the wallet,

1:05:40

and then create an interface that allows you to,

1:05:45

access blockchain data so that you know what you're signing and so that you know what your

1:05:51

balance is your Bitcoin balance is. So, yeah, that would be the thing that we are building on now, and that's how we are getting started with the project. It's called Project Super Saiyan.

1:06:02

If you don't know, I'm a huge fan of both, and rest in peace, Akira Toriyama.

1:06:08

Yeah. That's true.

1:06:10

And yeah.

1:06:11

Wait. So so this is a separate so I have my SIM card already. Right? It's in my Nokia.

1:06:18

I have to take this Java card.

1:06:21

And is it like a is it a sticker? Or do I just, like, I place it on there as I stick my SIM card in? Is that what's going on?

1:06:28

Yes. It is something like a sticker. Right? So as long as you put it there,

1:06:33

right, put it on top of your normal SIM card.

1:06:37

And then I stick it back in my phone.

1:06:40

Yeah. And then you put it back in your phone. Now your phone has another

1:06:44

SIM toolkit applet on top of your

1:06:47

network's normal SIM toolkit applet.

1:06:50

And so, like, that acts as, like, a hardware wallet in my feature phone? Yes.

1:06:55

Effectively.

1:06:57

And so then users will self custody to that in the future, hopefully.

1:07:02

And I guess, so then I have 2 questions for you. The first one is, I mean, with on chain fees, right now, we're we're seeing high priority is is 42 stats per byte. There's a 130 transact a 130,000

1:07:15

transactions unconfirmed. Mhmm. You know, on chain fees have have

1:07:21

a a it they will probably increase with adoption. That is my expectation. That's

1:07:27

should be the expectation. Bloxpace is scarce.

1:07:31

So I guess there's a there's gonna have to be, like, a flow, right, where they, like, are custodial until

1:07:37

a certain balance is reached, and then it migrates to self custody or something like that? How do you think about that?

1:07:43

No. You're on the short answer or the long answer. And long

1:07:47

answer. Okay. Okay. Cool. So let me start with the long with the short answer. So the short answer is I think you could do lightning on Java card. Right? So Really?

1:07:57

Yeah. At some point, you will have lightning on Java card. Right? So

1:08:02

they have, like, a lightning channel? They'll have, like, an actual Sovereign Lightning channel?

1:08:07

Yes. So,

1:08:09

if you look at what the guys at Phoenix are doing, the architecture they have,

1:08:13

for me, it's some genius stuff because

1:08:17

the node that runs on your phone is lightweight.

1:08:20

It does very little. It just validates that the on chain,

1:08:27

stuff between your phone and the async node is Right. Valid. And then The LSP. And Yep. Yeah. Right? And then when it pays a landing invoice, it just passes the invoice on to the what's the word I'm looking for?

1:08:43

LSP, and then the LSP, the trampoline node makes the payment. Alright. Cool. And

1:08:49

if that's all the SIM card has to do

1:08:52

yeah. The SIM card could do that. So

1:08:55

yeah. So how I see it is, yeah, once we have on chain working, we could start working on lightning. And,

1:09:05

yeah, then the longer version of the answer

1:09:10

is I think the economics are gonna change. Right? So,

1:09:15

ultimately, we're gonna see incomes level out across countries or across people who use Bitcoin on a daily versus,

1:09:25

you know, locals and whatever else. So a person who uses Bitcoin would have the average global income.

1:09:33

Right. Because they're using Bitcoin, and then they get They're part of the global economy,

1:09:40

so they would have the average global income. Yeah. Yes. Right? So if the person the average person in this global economy can afford

1:09:49

to use, Bitcoin on chain, these people,

1:09:53

or my users would also afford over the long term. Right? Right.

1:09:58

And then yeah. I feel like, okay. Cool. As a savings tool, on chain would always work.

1:10:06

And Yeah. So, yeah, just give a person the technical option to make an on chain transaction.

1:10:15

Right.

1:10:16

Mhmm. That's interesting. So you're like Mhmm. You're thinking, like,

1:10:20

Phoenix Wallet on a feature phone?

1:10:23

Basically.

1:10:25

That's cool. Mhmm.

1:10:28

I mean, if you could pull that off, that'd be pretty awesome. I mean, you gotta

1:10:31

the cool thing about that is you could the Lightning channel obviously still requires an on chain transaction to open.

1:10:38

And then the way Phoenix works is,

1:10:41

they use splicing to add to that balance over time. But the cool part about that is,

1:10:49

the on the on chain free market is a is a proper free market. It's a global permissionless free market. So you could actually

1:10:56

do, like, interesting things there in terms of timing

1:11:00

Mhmm. Where, you know, their balance gets topped up by doing an on chain splice transaction

1:11:06

at a specifically low fee time of, you know, whatever the cycle or whatever.

1:11:13

Mhmm. There's a lot of cool things that could be done there.

1:11:16

Yep. That's awesome.

1:11:20

So, I mean, let me pull us back real quick. We were talking about, like, community. We were talking about events.

1:11:27

Bitcoin and Kazi has been making waves,

1:11:31

on the Internet in in South Africa.

1:11:34

Mhmm. How How do you view Bitcoin and Kazi? Like, are you very involved with that? Or, I mean, that's, like, a local community

1:11:40

in South Africa, I believe.

1:11:43

Yeah.

1:11:45

How involved am I there? Like,

1:11:49

I think last year, I was or the year before last, I paid them a visit at least once every 3 months

1:11:57

over the full course of the year. Alright?

1:12:00

And, yeah, they are great guys. They have a very

1:12:04

great initiative, and which has a long track record over 10 years doing what they were doing.

1:12:12

And, yeah, I grew up in the township. So Oh, wow. I know

1:12:16

some of the challenges that they are trying to solve for.

1:12:19

And I think as the years pass,

1:12:24

doing what they're doing gets harder in the township because of

1:12:28

what's the word I'm looking for? Just,

1:12:33

I don't have a word for it now, but things are definitely getting harder. And

1:12:38

they have a great approach. Just give,

1:12:41

and well, it started out with just Are you saying, like, the economic burden stuff in, like, like, the town is is getting worse in terms

1:12:49

of, like, people's economic status? Or

1:12:52

Yes. Regulatory? Or is it?

1:12:55

No. Or I think it's more of a mental thing. Right? So,

1:13:00

people have an expectation that the government is gonna do something about it,

1:13:06

about the situation. Right? So

1:13:09

as much as they are able and talented and skilled and whatever else, they don't

1:13:14

take the initiative to fix some of the issues that they are facing because

1:13:18

they have the expectation that they're gonna

1:13:22

the government is gonna do something about. I think one of the things that highlight this is,

1:13:28

the checks, you know, the checks that Bitcoin Akasti paints,

1:13:32

or with company logos. Right? If you look at the pictures over time, what you will see

1:13:38

is that there's more and more Shacks over time.

1:13:41

Right. So

1:13:44

we had the Machangkura logo painted on one of the shacks. At the time, it was on the edge of the,

1:13:51

tungsten. Right? But, I think

1:13:54

3 months ago, there were

1:13:58

2 more layers of shacks, 2 more layers of shacks added to the township. Right? Because the expectation is, oh, the government is gonna move,

1:14:08

the people in that community from those shacks

1:14:11

to houses that the government built for people. And as a consequence,

1:14:16

this creates, environment

1:14:21

that is not good to live in because you cannot build community

1:14:26

if everyone thinks they're just here for a temporary time. Right? There's no ownership.

1:14:32

Yes. Right. So what you need is always people who want

1:14:37

to live there, who would take the initiative

1:14:47

idea that the government is gonna do something. Right? So,

1:14:50

yeah, and what I liked a lot about

1:14:54

the Bitcoin Agassi project is, yes, it started out as a Surfer Kids

1:15:00

initiative, teach kids how to surf,

1:15:03

but then you are like, oh, the kids are not brushing their teeth. Or or well, before that, you're like, oh, some of the kids are not coming because they don't have anything to eat. Okay. Let's have a Right. Feed feeding program. Alright? So before they go into the water, they have some food. Oh, now they're eating, but they're not brushing their teeth. Oh, okay. Now we have

1:15:24

a toothbrush program. Oh, cool. Now they're here, but who's if they're here, who's helping them with homework?

1:15:31

Okay. Cool. Let's, you know, have a homework program and so on and so forth. So

1:15:37

yeah. And I think it's also great how

1:15:43

their adoption of Bitcoin has helped them.

1:15:46

If you hear Herman speak about it, you will hear him.

1:15:51

One of the stands is how he had almost gave up on the project because

1:15:57

he was burnt out from running it. Right? And,

1:16:01

them adopting Bitcoin kinda gave him a lot of energy to continue doing it because there's a lot of support.

1:16:09

And if you see their updates, you can see that, oh, there's really a lot of supports

1:16:14

on a global level. Yeah. Yeah. The project Big corners wanna help.

1:16:20

Exactly. Right? And, the sad thing though is that

1:16:24

projects like these are not replicable.

1:16:27

Right? Why not? That was my next question.

1:16:30

Yeah. It's,

1:16:36

the planets had to align. Right?

1:16:39

The right person doing the right thing also happens to be a Bitcoiner,

1:16:44

and that person also understands

1:16:49

why Bitcoin. And at the same time, somebody else

1:16:55

in halfway across the country in El Salvador

1:16:58

is doing a similar thing to what Herman is doing. This is Bitcoin Beach. Right. And Mike Mike Peterson. Right?

1:17:07

And Herman sees that, and he's like, oh, I could do that here. I could do what Hope House is doing. Shout out to Hope House. I'm I'm looking at the shirt here. And

1:17:18

he does it as well, and it works. Right? So

1:17:23

they wrote the white paper, the Bitcoin community white paper, and they highlighted some of the attributes that were, you need. Somebody who's trusted by the community, somebody who's

1:17:36

lived in that community. And,

1:17:40

yeah, just off of that one requirement

1:17:42

alone, it's very hard because a lot of the time, we move out of the communities we grew up in

1:17:49

to find works elsewhere and For opportunity. Connection. Yes. Right? We lose the connection we would need to actually do a project like this back in the communities that,

1:18:02

love and respect us. So yeah.

1:18:05

I mean, I guess it can just be distilled. Like, there's so much work left there's so much work to be done. Right? Like, it's Mhmm. Just, like, you're starting at such a low point.

1:18:13

Mhmm.

1:18:14

Right.

1:18:15

And you have to be, like, a little bit crazy to, like, actually fucking do it.

1:18:19

A lot crazy. Not a little bit will not cut it.

1:18:25

Fair enough. Well, shout out to Herman and everyone else who's running Bitcoin and Kazi over there.

1:18:31

Yeah. It's too early. Made a trip there. Yeah.

1:18:34

No. I haven't been on the continent of Africa yet. It's Oh, my god. It's something that I I need to do.

1:18:42

Unfortunately, I I do have a lot of friends,

1:18:47

throughout Africa now, that I've met through Bitcoin.

1:18:51

Mhmm. And I promised each of them individually

1:18:53

that I will make a trip, but it has not happened yet. But I I will do it. Okay.

1:18:59

The free schedule is then.

1:19:01

On on that note, we're hosting in adopting Bitcoin again next year, Jan.

1:19:06

It would January? Come to me. Mhmm.

1:19:10

Okay. Maybe I'll do that. Or I was I was thinking about doing the

1:19:15

the Bitcoin Africa conference. Was that just in the fall? Right?

1:19:18

Yeah. That's in

1:19:20

December. Yeah. Mhmm. So 1 month apart.

1:19:23

Yeah. I mean, free that is fucking awesome.

1:19:26

Mhmm.

1:19:27

Okay. That's also another person where you have to be a lot of crazy to do what she's doing. Yeah.

1:19:33

The good kinda crazy.

1:19:35

Yes.

1:19:37

Okay. Cool.

1:19:39

Well, I mean, before we wrap,

1:19:43

I think this has been great. Do you have any

1:19:48

do you have any final thoughts for audience before we wrap up?

1:19:52

Yeah, man. I have a lot,

1:19:54

but none of them are coming to mind right now.

1:19:58

Well, what what can we do if if we don't live in Africa, what can we do to help? Mhmm. Like, how do how do we help?

1:20:05

Yeah. Yeah. So I think, ultimately,

1:20:07

okay. So I'll say 2 things. Ultimately,

1:20:11

what I've noticed is everyone who's trying to

1:20:16

use Bitcoin and build for Bitcoin

1:20:18

in their own environment will ultimately help somebody else's environment. And I think this is a point I've mentioned a lot of times, but

1:20:29

the project Nachangura made sense for

1:20:33

me only after I explored the lightning address,

1:20:36

spec, where okay. It's a human readable and human writable thing.

1:20:42

And for a person who does not have a smartphone with a copy and paste functionality,

1:20:48

you cannot type out, what is this, a lightning invoice correctly. Yeah. If you're fucking insane,

1:20:55

t 9, like, t 9 a lightning invoice would be fucking ridiculous.

1:20:59

You know, we should probably have a contest for that and, a person who does the quickest things. But,

1:21:05

yeah. So then you're like, oh, VHF and Andre

1:21:11

pushed and championed that so well

1:21:14

that when we do it, it's just seamless. Right? And

1:21:18

then you look at what the guys at Phoenix are doing, and we're like, oh, okay. They have solved so many different problems that when the time comes for us to piece these things together,

1:21:30

it will be a walk in the park for us. Right? And even Moonwallet,

1:21:35

I love what they do too because

1:21:40

they solve so many weird problems that as

1:21:44

I'm building what I'm building, I'm like, oh, this is why Moon Wallet, went with the recovery code,

1:21:50

instead of, the 12 word phrase or 20

1:21:54

24 word phrase. Because

1:21:57

unless well, 1, there's no process for what's this?

1:22:03

Creating the word list in different languages. Right. There's no solidified process. So if you want to support multiple

1:22:12

languages or people in multiple countries that use multiple different languages,

1:22:17

the English word list is insufficient

1:22:20

for the properties or why you would wanna use it,

1:22:24

the word list anyway. Because if I'm not an English speaker,

1:22:29

memorizing 4 words of a different language is not my thing. Alright? It's it's

1:22:34

a foreign concept. But That's ridiculous. Yeah. Yeah.

1:22:38

Seeing a recovery code, it fulfills the purpose of security.

1:22:44

Right? And it is similar to how we used to have recovery codes on laptops and,

1:22:50

disks. I think games, if you bought a game Yep.

1:22:54

Your physical game, you had the activation code. Like the serial code. Yeah. Yes.

1:23:01

And so to some users, that works. Right?

1:23:04

Especially people who have who grew up on, you know, media or digital media. So, yeah, White Moon is doing that that I'm like, okay. Cool.

1:23:13

It's great. So to answer your question, I feel like as long as everyone is doing

1:23:19

what works best for their environment,

1:23:23

it will effectively spill over at some point in time somewhere else. Alright? And

1:23:30

yeah. The other thing is for me I mean yeah. Continue.

1:23:35

Okay. No. But, you can, make your comment.

1:23:39

I mean, to me, that's the cool part about Bitcoin. Right? Is that it's this interoperable,

1:23:43

permissionless, global network.

1:23:46

Mhmm. And and it's almost like a shared equity. Right? Like like, if you own Bitcoin the asset,

1:23:52

it's like we all share equity in, like, this almost like a start up equity.

1:23:56

Yeah.

1:23:57

And and anything we do, and a lot of times it's out of greed too. It's not out of benevolence. You don't have to be like

1:24:04

a charitable person. But, you know, like, if if if strike benefits from something or if CoinKite benefits from something or Unchained Capital benefits from something, then Manchancura in in

1:24:17

Africa benefits from it as well at the same time, which is like a crazy concept. Like, I I feel like people just don't really appreciate that. Also, though, I think it's a little bit of a cop out. Like,

1:24:27

I I'm not gonna, like, just sit here and be like, oh, like, I'm helping

1:24:39

otherwise But but until you mhmm. Yeah. Well well, but, the other side of it is if you do wanna help, you

1:24:46

have to make that trip to Africa. I know. I gotta you prefer.

1:24:50

Fair enough.

1:24:52

Yeah. And

1:24:53

whatever country you go to, you will see something that

1:24:58

you could contribute towards. And, yeah, this and you could use Bitcoin for that as well. Right? But,

1:25:07

the other thing

1:25:08

we need to be on the ground. Like, you you Yes. You don't you can't see the shit from the Internet Mhmm. Or, like Yeah. Exactly.

1:25:15

Video, audio.

1:25:17

Uh-huh.

1:25:18

Alright. And, the other remark is for me, I think there will be a day where,

1:25:24

1,000,000 new people use Bitcoin for the first time. Right?

1:25:28

And yeah. So I don't think

1:25:33

a lot of companies in the space are ready for that day. I don't think they are set up correctly

1:25:39

for that day. So

1:25:41

When you said a1000000, you mean a1000000000. Right?

1:25:44

No.

1:25:46

In a day, a billion, I don't I'm not sure what happened. Right? But I like I I like your thinking. Right? So even on that day where the 1,000,000,000 used Bitcoin,

1:25:56

for the first time

1:25:58

Yeah. We couldn't handle a 1000000 new users. Right now, we probably couldn't handle a 1000000 new users in a single day. Yes. Yeah. That's pretty crazy. Yeah. Mhmm. So

1:26:07

Coinbase is definitely gonna,

1:26:09

you know, freeze for a a few hours on that day. So what is the other people,

1:26:17

other companies doing to correct that? And

1:26:21

yeah. I grew up on rap music, by the way, and I feel like Bitcoin is gonna follow the same trajectory as hip hop or or rap did,

1:26:31

with regards to popularity on a global scale.

1:26:35

But what needs to happen is the people who

1:26:39

love the art art,

1:26:44

would have to figure out the things that they need to figure out so that when it becomes a globally loved and commercialized

1:26:54

thing, it's not by outsiders. It's actually by people who've been participating and who've been,

1:27:02

who do understand why, Bitcoin or why hip hop or why whatever helps. Right?

1:27:08

So, yeah, at this point, I don't think we are ready.

1:27:12

And if it does happen, it would be sad,

1:27:15

especially with regards to what's happening with ETFs now. There's a lot of new people who are learning about Bitcoin.

1:27:24

Using Bitcoin for the first time through the ETFs,

1:27:28

and some of these people may never

1:27:30

move away from the ETFs unless, you know, a lot of more work is being done.

1:27:36

So yeah. Do you think do you think owning the Bitcoin ETF is using Bitcoin?

1:27:41

Hell no.

1:27:42

Okay. Right? Yeah. So but I know it for a lot of people, the price action is satisfactory.

1:27:50

Right.

1:27:51

Mhmm.

1:27:52

But yeah. It's a it's a Bitcoin IOU with you get price exposure for it. Yeah. I mean, I the suits are here. The suits are here, and

1:28:05

and, you know, I I don't know if they'll ever stop being sued, so they'll probably just continue being sued. So, KG, I mean, also before we wrap up, I I have another way of framing the question.

1:28:16

Mhmm. So I do a bunch of different things in the Bitcoin space, but, like, where a lot of my time has recently been focused is on 1031,

1:28:22

which is, like, the venture side. The largest venture fund in the world. We support start ups, including Bitknob,

1:28:31

with equity with equity funding. Right? We invest. They give us equity.

1:28:35

And OpenSats, which is a 5 0 1 c 3 nonprofit.

1:28:39

We no strings attached grants.

1:28:42

Open Sats right now has over a 100 grants outstanding.

1:28:47

We've I we send out over $500,000

1:28:51

worth of Bitcoin a month, in Bitcoin,

1:28:55

no strings attached. Fucking insane. I,

1:28:57

like, I I still can't believe it's real.

1:29:00

I'm so proud of our team over at Open Sats, and I'm I'm so grateful to the people who who donate and support Open Sats.

1:29:08

Mhmm. What can we how how what can Open Sats do better

1:29:14

in term like, from with with an Africa lens on it,

1:29:18

with a KG lens on it, like, how does OpenSats

1:29:21

push the needle a little bit more? Like, part of OpenSats is, like, I just wanna, like

1:29:27

you know, I'm I I have low time preference. I'm willing to wait long term for things.

1:29:33

Mhmm. But, like, people need need help today. So, like, I wanna just

1:29:38

throw throw fire on the,

1:29:41

throw throw fuel on the fire. Had what is open set how can open sets do better?

1:29:47

Yeah. So,

1:29:49

from what I've seen, I think open sets is doing great. Right?

1:29:54

And, well, I I didn't know that you guys were,

1:30:00

paying out 500,000, dollars a month.

1:30:05

And, yeah, I think some things like that should probably

1:30:09

be on the website. Like, that should be the first thing I see. We have a, well, we have a we have a year end review blog post that, like, kinda has a nice chart that shows it.

1:30:18

Okay. Yeah.

1:30:20

Let the long term support for

1:30:23

The scale is fucking crazy. I mean, look, I yeah. I I agree. We should do better with messaging. I I think our biggest issue

1:30:31

is so I think a mutual friend of ours is is Femi.

1:30:36

Mhmm. And Femi got a little bit upset with me. He's like, why don't you support more?

1:30:43

Why doesn't Open Set? So Open Set is is is bigger than me by design. Like, that's the point. Yeah.

1:30:48

Mhmm. There's 9 board members. And

1:30:51

for a grant to be paid out, we need 5 of 9 board to vote, and that's to limit corruption.

1:30:57

None of the board members get paid. I do not get paid for open sets.

1:31:02

And we do have we have grant recipients around the world,

1:31:05

I think on every continent at this point except for Antarctica because no one lives on Antarctica.

1:31:11

Mhmm. For now. And Femi said to me for now.

1:31:14

Femi said to me, why don't you support more Africans?

1:31:19

And the single biggest issue is

1:31:22

we just don't have as many Africans apply. Like, opensas.org

1:31:28

slash apply. We just don't get the applications to begin with.

1:31:32

It's not it has nothing to do with like, we can't review an application that has never been submitted.

1:31:37

Yeah. I yeah. So I think I hear you on that point. And I think on the other side, I think

1:31:43

there's cultural differences. Right?

1:31:47

I think a lot of the African developers

1:31:51

have a lot of catching up to do

1:31:54

with regards to open source development,

1:31:57

1st and foremost. Right?

1:32:03

And so, going back to what I was saying earlier on

1:32:07

on the point of you an African developer

1:32:10

and you not getting paid as much as you should be getting paid on the global level,

1:32:16

until a person breaks out of that, right, they are not in a position to do open source development.

1:32:24

Right.

1:32:25

The only reason I was able to start working on Bitcoin stuff

1:32:31

is because I, 1,

1:32:34

started working as a researcher

1:32:37

at the CSIR, and I didn't like the researcher's salary as compared to what a software developer is getting paid in South Africa. So I moved to AWS

1:32:47

and got paid, relatively well

1:32:53

and could save money. And I had already discovered Bitcoin, so I was saving at least 10% of my income

1:33:00

in Bitcoin. And from, 2019 to 2020, Bitcoin price movement almost 10 x or to 2021, actually. So by the time that I left my job

1:33:13

at the end of 2021 or 2020,

1:33:16

because I'm bad with time due to the lockdown,

1:33:21

I had saved almost a year's worth of income

1:33:24

in Bitcoin, because Bitcoin's value increased off of 10% off of saving 10% of my income, it became almost a year's worth of income in savings.

1:33:35

So I could then experiment with Exonumia,

1:33:38

with, Machangura, and a few other projects. So

1:33:43

I don't think, at this point, there's a lot that anyone else outside of Africa could do to speed up that process because Right.

1:33:54

This is, things that

1:33:57

and there's a lot of devs that are working at a lot of African companies that are looking for a

1:34:08

even for me, when I when I started saving in Bitcoin,

1:34:12

it was during a dip. Right? And

1:34:15

I wasn't even sure if Bitcoin's price was gonna ever go back to what it was in 2017

1:34:21

with the peak that I saw because everyone believes in the things that they have seen. So,

1:34:27

yeah, I think it's gonna take a lot of time,

1:34:30

but, as time goes by, what we will see is,

1:34:37

a few more developers

1:34:40

pop up in the space. Alright?

1:34:42

But that requires a lot of work similar to what the Bitcoin Tardas are doing in Kenya.

1:34:48

Right? With their initiatives to just get women

1:34:51

brought into Bitcoin, it creates a certain visibility

1:34:55

that maybe one day, Bitcoin data will be the developer

1:35:00

pipeline for Bitcoin in Africa. Right? As they get more comfortable with the topic of Bitcoin and they start also building their own things, because I don't think you have to be a developer to build a tech company,

1:35:12

but they don't have that type of confidence to actually start. Right? So,

1:35:17

yeah, I think we just have to be patient in in some regards because, of course, we cannot

1:35:26

force something that's not yet there unless you wanna go poach the web 3 developers,

1:35:32

across the continent and say, yo, I'll give you this much for you to stop, doing web 3.

1:35:38

There are no shortcuts.

1:35:40

Yeah. Fair enough. Well, KG, I wanna thank you again for joining us. I thought this conversation was fucking awesome.

1:35:49

Mhmm.

1:35:50

I I hope the freaks enjoyed it as well. If you did enjoy it,

1:35:54

definitely leave a comment, in your favorite podcasting 2 point o app. I do read them all.

1:36:02

You'd be surprised. I I see all of your comments.

1:36:05

So so if you're if you're out there and and you're enjoying the show, you're not liking the show, I see those comments too. Feel free to to put a comment in the show. KG, you have my contact information. If anything I can do to help

1:36:18

provide feedback, advice, never hesitate to reach out. You're not bothering me.

1:36:24

I appreciate you, and I enjoy our friendship, and I'm I'm happy to

1:36:29

to help where I can to help where I can.

1:36:32

Thank you.

1:36:33

Good of having me.

1:36:35

Thanks for joining. I I was you know, this is a new thing that I've been thinking about. Like, I would love in, you know, like, 3, 4 months if we can do,

1:36:44

bring it back on. Like, we like, where where do we stand 4 months in the future? I mean, who knows what the Bitcoin price is? Who knows what suits we'll be doing at that point?

1:36:52

And it'll be cool to do, like, regular, updates. Right? And they could be shorter episodes or shorter conversations, but I would love to have you back on and and catch up. Maybe maybe we'll bring Bernard on for that one.

1:37:03

Most definitely. I'd I'd be happy.

1:37:07

Mhmm. And Freaks, I have a crazy,

1:37:10

week scheduled for us all.

1:37:13

Wednesday, we have the Noster Illuminati joining us. I have, Pablo, Fyotchaff,

1:37:20

Mike Dilger of Gossip Protocol to talk about Noster. That's on Wednesday, same time as this rip, 1700 UTC.

1:37:27

And then on Tuesday of next week, I got I got the CEO of of async of Phoenix Wallet coming on, Pierre Marie.

1:37:37

So we'll be talking Phoenix Wallet Tuesday,

1:37:39

next Tuesday, not tomorrow, next Tuesday at 1700 UTC.

1:37:44

I expect the live chat to be ripping, for both of those conversations.

1:37:48

Huge shout out to the freaks who joined us in the live chat. You guys make this special. And huge shout out to all the freaks who continue to support the show, whether that's through subscribing,

1:37:57

leaving reviews, sharing with friends and family,

1:38:00

or sending your precious sats, to support the cost that go to the show. It's literally just a one man operation. People don't believe it. I have no producer.

1:38:10

You know? All this shit is just Odell putting things together.

1:38:14

It's just just me. But so thank you, freaks. Thank you, KG. I appreciate you. Have a great rest of your Monday. I hope your week is is is amazing, and, I'm sure we'll talk soon.

1:38:27

Thank you for having me. Enjoy the week.

1:45:59

Move on up, freaks. Love you all.

1:46:03

Let's live life without permission. Stay on the stack sets.

1:46:08

Peace.

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