IPFS Camp 2024 Schedule

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Thu, Jul 11

πŸ₯ Breakfast πŸ§‡

8:00am - 10:00am

Room: All Welcome

Opening Keynotes

9:00am - 10:40am

Room: Royal B

Capacity: All Welcome

Scheduled Talks

Time

Title

Speakers

Description

9:30 am

Welcome to IPFS Camp 2024

Michelle Lee

Welcome to IPFS Camp

11:25 am

Group Photo

Everyone

Building Apps

11:00am - 4:30pm

Room: Royal B

Capacity: All Welcome

Scheduled Talks

Time

Title

Speakers

Description

11:30 am

IPFS and Dapps: Obstacles and Opportunities

Daniel Norman

IPFS has been with us for 10 years. In that time, it has played an important role in the Dapp ecosystem. This introductory talk will take you on a walk through the Merkle forest, exploring why IPFS has been successful and what challenges and opportunities lie ahead for IPFS in the (D)App development ecosystem.

11:45 am

Decentralized Super app. Local First + Blockchain.

Zhanna Sharipova

What advantages local first architecture gives when combined with blockchain. Practical challenges of scaling Anytype to the hundreds of thousands of users we have today, and what challenges remain.

11:55 am

The State of IPFS in JS

Alex Potsides

What's new in the IPFS-in-JavaScript ecosystem since the last camp? What have people been building - Helia, verified-fetch, service worker gateways and more from the community.

12:10 pm

Offline and Trustless: The Future with In-Browser IPFS Gateways

Russell Dempsey

In a world of local-first development, and roaming devs, being able to access the content we need without hassle is more desire-able than ever. Ensuring the content we access is exactly what we expect it to be is more vital than ever. With a Helia instance acting as an IPFS gateway in a service-worker, we can deliver an experience where any website distributed over IPFS can be trustlessly verified and cached by users for offline use. We will learn about some of the challenges we’ve overcome, some challenges still needing addressed, and what the future of users everywhere running their own IPFS gateways in the browser looks like.

12:20 pm

Lucid & Tiles β€” Simple, secure, and hackable IPFS dApps

Robin Berjon

The IPFS family of technologies contain a Petri dish of great ideas. However, many of them have a high degree of optionality that can render interoperability challenging, and several were created in a way that does not always mesh well with other parts of the wider web stack. LUCID is an experimental project to subset and apply IPFS technologies in ways that are readily interoperable, relatively easy to understand to newcomers, and that work well with the web as generally practiced by developers. This talk gives a quick demo and explanation of web tiles using LUCID.

12:30 pm

IPFS & HTTP: The Blueprint for Radical Interoperability

Lidel

Come to this talk if you want to learn how the IPFS and HTTP story evolved, how it looks today, and how we want to leverage HTTP to move away from centralized gateways we have today.

12:40 pm

Pinception: Decentralized Crypto-Economically Incentivized IPFS Pinning Service Built on EigenLayer

Wes Floyd

EigenLayer is a platform for shared security for Web3 Projects. The goal of project "Pinception" is a network IPFS node operators that are crypto economically incentivized to pin a subset of files. Pinception is an Actively Validated Service (AVS) that uses the core mechanics of EigenLayer (payments and slashing) to provide economic security for the service and incentivize healthy node operations. https://github.com/wesfloyd/pinception

12:45 pm

Researching and Designing a Decentralised, Cloud Database

Jim Kosem

Participants will learn how Textile used user-centred design and research to learn more about how developers use their tools. Covering everything from how CLIs and UI play well together or not to metrics and UI assumptions, there's something to learn for everyone interested in how decentralised software is designed.

12:45 pm

LUNCH BREAK

LUNCH BREAK

2:00 pm

What's New in UCAN 1.0

Brooklyn Zelenka

This talk gives an overview of what's new in UCAN 1.0. These new features enable features in storage (e.g. W3S), compute (e.g. Homestar), databases (e.g. Rhizome), ad hoc inter-app communication, and more. We will also briefly discuss related standards such as IPLD, DID, Varsig, and IPVM.

2:20 pm

Building CRDT Objects for P2P Multiplayer Applications

Jay Oak

Participants will be introduced to the Topology Protocol. They will get a basic grasp on CRDTs, Conflict-free Replicated Objects (CROs), and some potential use cases. They will also learn how we are currently using libp2p to fulfill p2p messaging for CROs.

2:40 pm

Building Decentralised Social Media with IPFS

Pavel Fedotov

Attendees of my session will gain a comprehensive understanding of how the integration of IPFS, Mina Protocol, and zkPassport, along with the decentralized social media platform Pin Save powered by Mina blockchain and o1js, can revolutionize decentralized social solutions in the Web3 space. In addition, we will explore how IPFS (InterPlanetary File System) is utilized within Pin Save to enhance decentralized moderation and privacy, introduce NFT standards, and provide decentralized file storage solutions in the Mina ecosystem. The inherent decentralized nature of IPFS aligns well with the decentralized and user-controlled features of Pin Save, such as decentralized feed, comments section, profiles, and storage solutions. These aspects contribute to a more secure, resilient, and open platform for sharing images and videos while prioritizing user privacy and data protection. Attendees will leave with a deep understanding of how these technologies, including IPFS, work together harmoniously to shape the future of decentralized social solutions in Web3, promoting trust, privacy, efficient data storage, and decentralized content sharing in blockchain ecosystems.

2:50 pm

Introspection tools for Helia/js-libp2p

Alex Potsides

IPFS is a bit of a black box full of moving parts with lots of sharp bits. Let's lift the curtain on the internals and see how we can observe node behaviour using simple tools like console.log or complex ones like Graphana and browser DevTools plugins.

3:00 pm

SHORT BREAK

BREAK

3:10 pm

Inline IPLD: A Human-Legible Alternative to CAR Files

Brooklyn Zelenka

IPLD's hash-linking brings many data structure techniques to the distributed web, including persistence, structural sharing, BFT CRDTs, and authenticated data. Unfortunately, many of these lead to data layouts that are difficult for humans to work with directly, and worse: the dreaded data availability partial failure. Inline IPLD addresses these with a standardised format & Rust/Wasm implementation which is human readable, works with non-IPLD JSON and CBOR tools, and retains full interoperability with the IPLD ecosystem, and efficient to transmit.

3:40 pm

Solving Global PKI, Decentralized Identity, and Provable Provenance all At Once

David Grantham

An introduction to cryptographic IPLD data structures for universal and provable data provenance. Use cases for provenance logs (p.logs) include: 1. Abstracting key histories to finally create a unified global web-of-trust. 2. Tracking the provable provenance of any and all data. 3. Full IAM control in Git repos with no external data or servers. 4. Late-binding, corroboration-based security for automating identity related policy and regulation compliance (i.e. DeFi). 5. End-to-end and provable intellectual property regime for AI training inputs, model iterations, prompts and generated data.

4:00 pm

BREAK

BREAK

4:20 pm

IPNI: A federated pathfinder to just about any CID

Masih Derkani

Imagine a traceable, content-addressable web of hashes linked to one another. Imagine it happened; billions upon billions of hashes. Then what? We face a discovery problem. For content to be useful to its users, there needs to be a discovery mechanism that scales on a planetary level, with support for churn in content as a first-class citizen. Enter IPNI: a content routing system that catalogs billions of hashes daily across IPFS and Filecoin networks, using a federated set of servers that guarantee one-hop lookup at tens of milliseconds latency. IPNI offers built-in reader privacy by encrypting the lookup records using the double hash of data. This talk will cover how IPNI achieves this scale, providing a window into the operational experience of running a federation across the planet and discussing the challenges ahead. Join us to explore the future of content discovery in a decentralized web.

4:35 pm

Better Indexing and Faster Retrievals for Decentralized Hot Storage

Alan Shaw

🚨 Mad Science klaxon 🚨 Dissecting CARv2 indexes, experimenting with new formats and (ab)using IPNI to enrich humble provider records with all sorts of additional information. Join me on a journey of discovery, attempting to forge a path in better indexing and faster retrievals for our decentralized _hot_ storage network - Storacha.

Open Science

11:00am - 6:00pm

Room: Amsterdam

Capacity: All Welcome

Scheduled Talks

Time

Title

Speakers

Description

11:00 am

Kickoff: Open Science

Ellie DeSota

In this track, we'll explore the field of open science and how systems like IPFS can help transform science for better.

11:15 am

Stardust: Innovative Digital Tooling for Earthly Science and Education

Liting Chen, Francis P. Crawley

This talk launches an exploratory voyage into identifying value in the digital cosmos and appreciating its impact on Planet Earth. Acknowledging the rapidly evolving landscape of data and AI research, the focus will be on developing a launchpad for innovative tools to enhance the assessment of research outputs and the application of data and AI in research evaluations. This approach envisions utilizing comprehensive digital packages, or β€˜research objects,’ to enable more precise, nuanced, and reliable evaluations. These research objects encompass not only the research outputs but also the supporting data, software, and methodologies, all while adhering to frameworks of integrity, value, and impact. The journey is programmed along the pathways of integrity, transparency, and reproducibility in research. Our spaceship will visit standardized badging systems examining them as docking stations that might denote adherence to best practices, streamlining the evaluation process and making it easier to identify research that meets integrity standards. This mission is part of a broader effort to enhance the efficiency and trustworthiness of research assessments, aligning with CoARA-ERIP's objectives to create a more open and transparent research ecosystem based on ethics and integrity. The talk looks forward to three days of digital exploration a reliable and efficient explorer of digital stardust that reflects our human-centered values in earthly science and education.

11:45 am

IPFS for Science

Adin Schmahmann

Adin will give an overview of IPFS, how it works for scientific data, and explore how it can promote data sovereignty. In this session, he'll focus on gaps in IPFS for science and open it up to a discussion afterwards to understand the improvements we would need to make before it can meet the needs of scientific infrastructure.

12:15 pm

Funding IPFS for Science

Michelle Lee

The IPFS Implementations Fund was established in 2022. We provide financial support for integrations, extensions, and new implementations that make IPFS accessible to more developer communities across a variety of languages, platforms, and systems. In this session, you'll see examples of prior grantees, hear about funding priorities for 2024, followed by a group discussion/Q&A.

12:30 pm

LUNCH BREAK

LUNCH BREAK

1:30 pm

Implementing the FAIR Principles

Erik Schultes

This talk will focus on describing the features that open data should have in order to make the most of them. It introduces the FAIR principles and how they can be implemented. It presents the FAIR Implementation Profiles, which provide information on implementation options and point to FAIR Enabling Resources.

2:00 pm

Universal and Reproducible Compute

David Aronchick

My talk will offer practical insights on using Bacalhau to manage compute jobs across diverse environments, addressing challenges like data availability and network resilience. By showcasing non-commercial and academic use cases, such as scientific research, collaborative data analysis, and distributed machine learning, it will advance the discussion on decentralized computing and AI, promoting efficiency and innovation in these fields. Imagine analyzing global health data or detecting financial fraud across institutions - without compromising security. Sound impossible? Enter Compute over Data (CoD): the game-changer in data sharing. We bring computation to the data, not vice versa. Result? Enhanced security, slashed costs, and seamless collaboration. But how does it work? What are the challenges? Join us to explore patterns for delivering scalable and collaborative compute over data architectures, real-world applications, and demonstration of how to implement using open source platforms like Bacalhau Don't miss this chance to glimpse the future of data collaboration. Your next breakthrough might depend on it!

3:00 pm

Observing Together: Co-Creation as the Missing Ingredient in Data Sustainability

Taylor Hulsman

Taylor explores the historically tepid relationship between technological means of data sustainability and the culture through which it grows and opines on the position and potential of IPFS to create a new relationship between (hu)man, machine, and society

3:30 pm

Levels and Clusters Approach to Data and AI Ethics; a New Ethics Frame for a New Era”

Dr. Elif Ekmekci

This presentation focuses on the high dissemination and diffusion capacity of AI and data into various domains. It emphasizes the importance of addressing ethical issues specific to each domain, as well as issues that cross multiple domains, particularly in the context of data sharing and AI governance. It gives a short glimpse of a new ethical frame called levels and clusters approach to initiate a discussion on how this new approach can be implemented to facilitate open science and impact of science on different societal problems.

4:00 pm

From FAIR principles to FAIR implementation

Barbara Magagna and Ellie DeSota

In this workshop, we'll work through the FAIR principles, identify tools that rely on these principles and identify gaps in the current web3 infrastructure.

4:00 pm

Workshop: Valuation of Data Collections

Francis Crawley, David Aronchick, Dr. Elif Ekmekci, Liting Chen

We have limited ways of supporting collective decision-making around data collections and deciding if they are worth supporting, accessing, or visiting. These decision making processes meet lack of transparency regarding the data in the collection, lack of documentation, and a need to spend significant time evaluating the integrity and reliability of the data before even being able to have a discussion about that data. Often it is impossible to track back to the creator of the dataset or understand the manipulations to the data.

🍝 Lunch πŸ₯—

12:30pm - 1:30pm

Room: All Welcome

β˜•οΈ Break πŸ«–

3:30 - 4:15pm

Room: All Welcome

πŸŽ‰ IPFS Camp Opening Dinner 🍽️

6:00pm - 10:00pm

Room: Wolf Market

Capacity: All Welcome

Fri, Jul 12

πŸ₯ Breakfast πŸ§‡

8:00am - 10:00am

Room: All Welcome

Libp2p Day

10:00am - 6:00pm

Room: Royal B

Capacity: All Welcome

Scheduled Talks

Time

Title

Speakers

Description

10:00 am

Kickoff: Libp2p Day

libp2p

10:15 am

Bridging networks: DHT interoperability

Guillaume Michel

We will try to give a definition to DHT interoperability and explore how it can be achieved. We'll discuss the tangible benefits of interoperable DHTs, such as bridging networks and overcoming connectivity challenges posed by various transport protocols. By examining concrete examples, we will demonstrate how enhanced interoperability can lead to more robust and efficient decentralized systems.

10:50 am

Punching Holes in the Firewall: How LibP2P's DCUtR Solves NAT Traversa

Susmit Lavania

* Understand the challenges of NAT traversal in peer-to-peer networks * Learn how LibP2P's DCUtR protocol solves NAT traversal issues through hole punching * Discover a synchronization protocol for direct connectivity that eliminates the need for signaling servers and relays * Gain insights on improving the reliability and efficiency of peer-to-peer communication in your own projects

11:25 am

Peergos: The Architecture of Privacy

Ian Preston

Privacy is essential for democracy to function. A deep dive into how we achieve privacy in Peergos, including extensions to libp2p.

12:00 pm

Distributed programming on libp2p with Spritely Goblins and OCapN

Christine Lemmer-Webber

Learn about Spritely Goblins, a distributed secure programming system following object capability semantics, and its underlying protocol OCapN, the Object Capability Network. See demonstrations of interesting Goblins programs running over OCapN's new libp2p support!

12:35 pm

libp2p over HTTP

Marco Munizaga

HTTP is a well understood, widely deploy protocol for communicating over a network. Let's see how libp2p can leverage the power and reach of HTTP to enable a new class of networked application.

1:00 pm

LUNCH BREAK

LUNCH BREAK

2:00 pm

AMA with libp2p maintainers

libp2p Maintainers

Ask me anything with libp2p maintainers Alex Potsides (js-libp2p), Guillaume Michel (go-libp2p, rust-libp2p), Ian Preston (jvm-libp2p). Bring any and all questions!

2:35 pm

SWOT Compiling / Roadmapping

libp2p

3:00 pm

Adaptive Sharding Using a PID Controller

Marcus Pousette

A technical deep dive into how Peerbit uses a PID controller to adaptively rebalance replication duties in order to prevent replicators from running out of memory or getting bottlenecked by their CPU performance. This allows databases built on top of this system to be replicated efficiently, regardless of whether mobile phones or powerful desktops are participating

3:00 pm

Introduction to WebRTC with Libp2p

Daniel Norman

In this workshop, you will learn how to use WebRTC and js-libp2p together to establish direct p2p connections between browsers and node.js. By the end of the workshop, you will have a deeper understanding of foundational concepts in libp2p: PeerIDs, multiaddrs, and transports, circuit relay v2, NAT hole punching, how those relate to WebRTC, and how they are used in practice.

3:45 pm

BREAK

BREAK

4:15 pm

Programming Distributed Algorithms In Libp2p With Aqua

Dmitry Kurinskiy

Continuation of EthDenver Libp2p day introduction of Aqua. 60 - 90 minutes would be an ideal allocation.

4:15 pm

Writing Custom Protocols with js-libp2p

Alex Potsides

Attendees will discover what the engine underneath IPFS is and how to harness it's power. Starting with connecting two nodes together, then on to opening streams and defining custom protocols and getting deep into common usage patterns from simple byte transfers, to structured data, request/response style access through to fully featured RPC with callbacks, promises and other magic.

Gaming & Streaming

10:00am - 6:00pm

Room: Amsterdam

Capacity: All Welcome

Scheduled Talks

Time

Title

Speakers

Description

10:00 am

Kickoff: Gaming Track

Brendan O'Brien

IPFS has made major inroads in both gaming and media streaming in the last year. We'll go straight to half day of demo-packed presentations, then transition into a future-facing group discussion about how to go about building the future of streaming & gaming

10:15 am

Storacha x 3s Game Studio: Decentralized storage powering games via Unreal plugin

Alexander Kinstler & Adam Grodzki

Discover how decentralized storage is revolutionizing game development with Storacha (previously web3.storage) and 3S Game Studio. In this talk, you'll learn how 3s Game Studio's Unreal Engine plugin empowers developers with scalable, and high-performance data solutions built with Storacha. Gain insights into real-world applications and understand the future potential of integrating decentralized storage in gaming.

10:45 am

The Future of Gaming is P2P

Guido Pardini

This session is walkthrough on the Shaga Journey, including product demo and group gaming session. We will have a brief presentation introducing what is Shaga, then we're gonna have a more entertaining section where we let attendees use Shaga to play games in a p2p fashion, showcasing the possibilities enabled for Gamers, in the new paradigm of Distributed Gaming Network.

11:30 am

Scaling Decentralized Low Latency Infrastructure with Huddle01

Arush Kurundodi

This talk dives into the system architecture of Huddle01's dRTC (decentralized Real-Time Communication) network, highlighting design decisions and modularity choices that ensure scalability with minimal latency. We discuss these strategies in parallels to the gaming industry to provide valuable insights for optimizing multiplayer gaming netcode and enhancing real-time gaming experiences.

12:00 pm

IPFS at Web Scale

Hannah Howard

How do we build IPFS applications that have billions of users? Is it possible for IPFS applications to be reliable, fast, and easy to use without trading off on decentralization and data ownership? These are the questions we're asking ourselves as we build Storacha, a hot storage protocol for the distributed web. In this talk, we'll look at how hot storage networks unluck massive opportunities that will bring a whole new generation of developers and users to IPFS.

12:30 pm

Agentic Product Development

Erlend Sogge Heggen

'Agentic Developers' are the infrastructure-minded partners of 'Barefoot Developers'. Agentic development is happening when we build products based on the principles of local-first and end-to-end (p2p) combined, maximizing for user agency by way of user-centric design. Weird is an open software product that's trying to solve for agency in the digital space. Built with the 'IPFS system' Iroh, Weird introduces a meta-protocol designed to de-fragment digital identity. Guided by real-world use cases, we'll talk about the formative tenets of agentic product development.

Public Records and Human Rights

10:00am - 6:00pm

Room: T'serclaes

Capacity: All Welcome

Scheduled Talks

Time

Title

Speakers

Description

10:00 am

Kickoff: Public Records and Human Rights track

Lindsay Walker

Introduction to the projects and inspiration for the track

10:15 am

IPFS in Action: Conflict Zone Use-case

BegoΓ±a SesΓ© de Lucio

During this talk, we will present real-world examples of how to use IPFS and how we have leveraged IPFS to register and preserve files coming from conflict zones over the last year. This process supports accountability efforts by holding evidence that could be used by investigators and analysts in war crimes reports. It has the potential to scale to other types of files and use cases and we can mention some of them and some wishes we would like to make to the IPFS team.

11:00 am

Securing Taiwan's Election Integrity with Blockchain Technology

Natalie Wang

In this talk, we will explore how Numbers Protocol, in collaboration with Starling Lab, is addressing disinformation in Taiwan's 2024 election. By leveraging blockchain technology, we ensure the authenticity and immutability of media, enhancing public trust in election reporting. Learn about the innovative use of decentralized archiving to preserve key election moments and counter misinformation.

11:15 am

Hands-On with Media Verification for Blockchain Provenance & Integrity Proof

Natalie Wang

Join us for a practical demonstration of how blockchain technology is used to verify and preserve media in the context of Taiwan's 2024 election. Using tools like Capture Cam and the Numbers Dashboard, we'll show how journalists and the public can securely capture, store, and verify election-related content. See how these technologies help combat misinformation and maintain digital trust in election coverage.

11:45 am

Capture, Store, Verify with Authenticity by Design

Lindsay Walker

A highlight of the methods and impact Starling Lab has had over the years - from setting investigative precedent to hold war criminals accountable, to giving underserved and overlooked communities the ability and opportunity to hold leaders accountable, to providing tools to help countries across the world protect against election fraud. In this talk, we will break down the Capture, Store Verify framework used by Starling Lab for our projects and prototypes, then delve into how Authenticity by Design principles drive our work and innovation. We will highlight how our powerful community of software developers, journalists, and Human Rights advocates have prototyped a new standard for keeping media and truth safe from link rot, denialism, and misinformation.

12:30 pm

Securing the Scientific Record with Ceramics

Joel Thorstensson

This talk will explore how the Ceramic team has extended the primitives that IPFS provides to give developers tools for dealing with provenance of data, e.g. who and when.

2:00 pm

Humanitarian App Distribution & Demo

Paul Mayero

Internet outages and blockages are becoming more common with the rise of authoritarian regimes. Internet access is a human right that needs to be protected. The essence of this talk is to demonstrate how the Guardian Project uses F-Droid to provide apps that enable users to circumvent internet blockages. There will be a demo on how to create IPFS supported app stores. Demo: We will start with a deep dive demo into how to make IPFS compatible F-droid repos and then do a deep dive into proofmode and proof audio. From there, we will take Proofmode/ Proof Audio

2:45 pm

Demo & Workshop: Authenticity Tools in Action

Paul Mayero, Lindsay Walker

Get hands on with several of the tools in the Starling Lab Capture, Store, Verify prototype workflows. Using demo Android phones, play around with FDroid, Proofmode, Proofaudio, and using GDrive API endpoint, experience the Integrity Pipeline. Register digital media that you capture to create digital media with true provenance, and get a demo of the CLI for the Authenticate Attributes tool.

🍝 Lunch πŸ₯—

12:30pm - 1:30pm

Room: All Welcome

β˜•οΈ Break πŸ«–

3:30 - 4:15pm

Room: All Welcome

Decentralized Justice

10:00am - 6:00pm

Room: Madrid

Capacity: All Welcome

Scheduled Talks

Time

Title

Speakers

Description

10:00 am

Kickoff: Decentralised Justice

Sneha Vijayan

This introductory talk will lay the foundation to the Decentralised Justice track. It will briefly address pain points in justice systems across the world and how we can leverage decentralised tech to build tools to address this. The talk will also address how one can participate in the space irrespective of their technical/legal background. Such as devs/builders who want to build legal-tech tools, legalists who want to support builders in the course of building legal-tech platforms/tools, and those who want to contribute and earn benefits, as participants in the justice delivery space ( much like how people participated in the DeFi space).

10:20 am

Making Justice Accessible

Sneha Vijayan

This talk will address why justice isn’t accessible, with emphasis on conflict resolution. The talk will then focus on how elements of conflict resolution may be automated with decentralised technologies. This talk is primarily for builders who want to explore what legal-tech tools/platforms can be build.

11:30 am

Decentralized Justice: Technology Overview

Gnana Lakshmi

This talk will focus on building tools and platforms for conflict prevention and resolution. The session will cover building smart legal contracts and automated conflict resolution models, managing on-chain commercial contracts and evidence, juror selection and decision enforcement contracts.

12:30 pm

Application of Tech Q & A

Sneha Vijayan and Gnana Lakshmi

The talk will also address how one can participate in the space irrespective of their technical/legal background. Such as devs/builders who want to build legal-tech tools, legalists who want to support builders in the course of building legal-tech platforms/tools, and those who want to contribute and earn benefits, as participants in the justice delivery space ( much like how people participated in the DeFi space).

12:45 pm

LUNCH BREAK

LUNCH BREAK

2:00 pm

Leveraging Decentralized Storage for Evidence Management

Nandit Mehra

This talk will address how we can leverage IPFS to build evidence management tools, and its role in conflict prevention and resolution.

3:00 pm

Demo: Exploring Participation in a Decentralized Justice System

Sneha Vijayan

Users can explore what it feels to participate in a decentralised dispute resolution process, by participating in demo disputes.

Sat, Jul 13

πŸ₯ Breakfast πŸ§‡

8:00am - 10:00am

Room: All Welcome

Community & Governance

1:30 - 6:00pm

Room: T'serclaes

Scheduled Talks

Time

Title

Speakers

Description

1:30 pm

Community & Governance Kickoff

Michelle Lee

Welcome to the project + community track!

1:45 pm

Why Is It That We’re Here Again? All Tomorrow's Planetaries

Robin Berjon

A talk about computers and change, and how we organize for success.

2:00 pm

State of IPFS Public Utilities

Cameron Wood

Update on the ipfs.io and dweb.link gateways, and the changes that have happened since the beginning of this year. Discuss some of the new initiatives we've been working on, and also share our plans for the future.

2:15 pm

Workshop: Post-Gateway Future

Michelle Lee

Workshop to map the journey towards decreasing dependence on IPFS gateways: components, transitions, people, timelines.

3:00 pm

BREAK

BREAK

3:30 pm

Workshop: InterPlanetary Market Fit: 2024

Bumblefudge

There is a big backlog of interop possibilities and specs that we COULD work on soon. But prioritizing these needs to support short- and medium-term customer needs. What are today's rough edges about moving CIDs between today's divergent "flavors" of IPFS? What's urgent?

4:15 pm

IPIP Protocol Improvements: Review & Working Session

Lidel

In this session, we'll recap how the IPIP process is going and what's next, followed by breakout sessions to collaborate on in-progress proposals.

4:45 pm

Open Convo: Shared Success

Everyone

Brief intros around the room from each project + what success looks like, followed by breakout convos.

5:30 pm

Wrap-Up

Everyone

Capture all the links and artifacts from the day.

Climate Resilience and IPFS

10:00am - 6:00pm

Room: Amsterdam

Capacity: All Welcome

Scheduled Talks

Time

Title

Speakers

Description

10:00 am

Kickoff: Climate Resilience

Caitlin Moore

In this track, we'll explore the intersection of climate resilience and IPFS.

10:20 am

Intro to Nova Energy

Marc Johnson

Nova Energy is at the forefront of sustainability in the web3 space. We specialize in developing solutions to monitor and mitigate the environmental impact of compute environments, including web3 node operations, AI models, and data centers. Our mission is to forge a future where every kilowatt of energy and every byte of data contributes to a more sustainable digital landscape.

10:45 am

IPFS and recycling to build a greener future

Thalita Braga and Marcelo Chiarella (GAIA GreenTech Founders)

We are GAIA, a ReFi company dedicated to reboot the "take, make and dispose" model. This model has been generating a huge waste of natural resources, accelerating climate change and harming people’s health. In 2022, we generated 62 billion kg of electronic waste in the world and almost 80% of this amount had an uncertain fate. Discover more about how GAIA is using IPFS to provide transparency around e-waste disposal and increase the recycling rates.

11:15 am

Climate Networking Break

11:45 am

Decentralized Storage for Climate Data

Marcus Aurelius

Examples of use cases of decentralized storage for climate data. Unique advantages of decentralized storage for climate applications.

12:00 pm

From the Factory to your Garage/Closet/Table: IPFS Enables Sustainability through Digital Twins

Eric Falk

In this talk I will talk about how Filedgr, using IPFS, helps users to understand where their food comes from, how factories operate, and how much your car is currently worth in its lifecycle. We will dive into those topics to understand how the better informed user will take better decisions, and why it matters.

12:30 pm

LUNCH BREAK

LUNCH BREAK

Startup Showcase

Room: TBD

Capacity: All Welcome

Building Apps - Dev and UX Workshops

Room: Madrid

Scheduled Talks

Time

Title

Speakers

Description

10:00 am

Fast, friendly user accounts for Web3 apps w/ Privy

Colfax Selby

Privy lets developers easily provision user accounts for all users, whether they know about crypto or not. This means letting users connect with their existing wallet (MetaMask, Coinbase Wallet, etc.) if they already have one, and provisioning an embedded wallet for those who do not. In this workshop, you'll see a live demo of how to get started with Privy, and be able to work & discuss along in real-time.

10:50 am

Scale your Ethereum app using EVM on Flow

Sean Robb

Flow has a major network upgrade coming later this year brining EVM equivalence to the network. Soon EVM developers will be able to build natively on Flow blockchain and scale their app for mainstream consumers by simply running on Flow.

12:30 pm

Account Abstraction: OnBoarding the Next Billion using Open Source SDKs.

Emmanuel Oaikhenan

Participants will learn how Account Abstraction simplifies user experiences by integrating transaction processes and security protocols directly into smart contracts, paving the way for broader adoption. This session will also explore open-source SDKs that facilitate the development of these solutions, enabling developers to onboard the next billion users to blockchain technology.

2:00 pm

Brand Lab: Reverse-Engineering Your Project’s Reputation (no design skills required)

Ira Nezhynska

Workshop preview: https://nezhynska.com/brand-lab As with any other complex system, the reputation of everything can be reverse-engineered. When combined with speculative design techniques, these reverse-engineering results can give momentum to any new project β€” big or small β€” a chance to be noticed by people and be chosen over other alternatives. I will take participants on a hands-on tour through the process of brand engineering. Together we will be mixing brand science with DIY fun to get to the brand hearts of their projects: 1. what is a brand stack and how many layers should (or can) your brand include? 2. why is onboarding users as hard as building relationships, and how can you speed-up the process? 3. what is your brand personality, and how to define one? 4. how do you explain the abstract terms in a visual way? The workshop will be useful for those who lead a project or are thinking about starting one, as well as for those who want to shape the reputation of an established organization or initiative they contribute to. This workshop has already been a part of educational and mentoring programs at ETHDenver Camp BUIDL, Regens Unite, Funding the Commons Builder Residency in Berlin, and ZuConnect Hacker House during DevConnect in Istanbul.

3:40 pm

Landing Page UX Clinic

Ira Nezhynska`

Submit your landing page for the UX clinic: https://iryna21.typeform.com/to/g3ByT8Qs This workshop is for: 1. Teams who keep all the information about their project in well-built docs but don’t know how to summarize everything on one single webpage. The first part of the workshop is for you: a 15-min crash course on how to β€œread” visitors’ minds and build a website which is a dialogue with your audience about them, not a monologue about your product. 2. Teams who have a landing page or a few-page website but don’t have the conversions they want (meaning, the visitors don’t do what you want them to do). The last part of the workshop is when we will talk about YOUR websites. 3. Everyone who wants to learn how to spark interest and desire for your project within a few thousand pixels or in less than 54 seconds. The middle part of the workshop will equip you with hot tactics for keeping visitors’ attention. The workshop rundown: 15 min β€” information architecture crash course, or how to read users' minds 15 min β€” tactics and UX details that capture attention. We will also review a few AI tools. 15 min β€” attendees' websites clinic (submitted in advance, questions are answered first) Additionally, attendees will walk away with resources and design hacks that will allow them to DIY (design-it-yourself) their landing pages or improve existing ones.

🍝 Lunch πŸ₯—

12:30pm - 1:30pm

Room: All Welcome

β˜•οΈ Break πŸ«–

3:30 - 4:15pm

Room: All Welcome