Zum Player springenZum Hauptinhalt springenZur Fußzeile springen
  • vorgestern

Kategorie

Menschen
Transkript
00:00:00Untertitelung des ZDF für funk, 2017
00:00:30Who can you trust?
00:01:00Fake news, lying politicians, corrupted banks, nations in free fall
00:01:05In a time of conflict, this is crucial
00:01:08When neutral media has fled the scene
00:01:11And all we are left with is ourselves
00:01:13The only thing certain is numbers
00:01:16In a time when information was kept secret and under the radar
00:01:23I put my trust in code
00:01:26Me and Reza were hacking whatever system we could get into
00:01:35Inserting worms, Trojan horses and spyware
00:01:40Hoping it would buy us and our family some time
00:01:43But we are running out
00:01:46Expecting anyone?
00:01:51No
00:01:51Hello?
00:02:08What was it?
00:02:14I don't know
00:02:14Someone left this
00:02:16With your name on it
00:02:18Creepy?
00:02:20What is it?
00:02:21From the moment I saw the photographs
00:02:26I knew somebody had trusted us with their life
00:02:31I know it sounds funny because
00:02:36That envelope was like a death sentence really
00:02:39But it gave me hope
00:02:41But it gave me hope
00:02:41We had some hard evidence
00:02:43And it was given to me
00:02:46Somebody had trusted us
00:02:49Trust is very hard to define
00:02:54An essential glue in the social fabric
00:02:57So a society without trust is not really a society
00:03:00Society
00:03:01It's a regional peculiarity
00:03:04And it's really important to understand that
00:03:06Right?
00:03:07You know
00:03:07The blockchain is a global technology
00:03:09It exists in places that essentially don't have society
00:03:12But of course
00:03:18In everyday life
00:03:20We trust technologies in a number of ways
00:03:23We depend on them
00:03:24So that means that trust runs very deep
00:03:29Also into the technological infrastructure
00:03:32That governs many aspects of our lives
00:03:34The chain cloud
00:03:47One of my first apps
00:03:49It was, well is
00:03:51A cloud service to upload
00:03:53Soar
00:03:54And share anything digital
00:03:55Built on the blockchain protocol
00:03:58Decentralized
00:03:59Secured by millions of computers working in sync
00:04:03That made it practically unhackable
00:04:05And only accessible
00:04:06If you know the cryptographic key
00:04:08Memorize the key
00:04:11And your stuff will be safe
00:04:13The blockchain
00:04:17Is this new network of trust
00:04:20That enables transactions to be validated on computers
00:04:25So now instead of going to a third party
00:04:28Instead of going to an intermediary
00:04:31That could be a bank
00:04:32Or a financial institution
00:04:33Or a corporation
00:04:35That we trust today
00:04:36The trust is going to be in the network of computers
00:04:40That are talking with each other
00:04:41That are always in sync with each other
00:04:44That always know about what each other is doing
00:04:47So that's why we say that the blockchain
00:04:49Is a trust network
00:04:51That was my last one
00:04:54Oh shit
00:04:55Start
00:05:01What?
00:05:03What?
00:05:03What?
00:05:04Oh
00:05:05Oh
00:05:05What?
00:05:08Oh
00:05:14Oh
00:05:15Oh
00:05:17Oh
00:05:21Oh
00:05:22Die Flüge ist nun der W-E-W-E-W-A-R-N-Q-R-H-W-N-F-Y.
00:05:52We have destroyed all the evidence, but also all our papers.
00:06:15I have been thinking a lot about that.
00:06:18Just a decade ago, it would mean erasing ourselves, but not then, not now, this just felt like
00:06:27freedom.
00:06:28So, 90 days from now.
00:06:31Yes, 90 days.
00:06:34This is fine.
00:06:39You too.
00:06:41You know, when I was a kid, all my communication services were provided by the establishment,
00:06:59by the government.
00:07:01My phone, my mail, my radio, my television, it was all provided by the establishment,
00:07:08by the government itself.
00:07:12My kids today, they don't use the government for any of those things.
00:07:16They don't need their phones, they don't need their mail, they don't need their radio, and
00:07:19they definitely don't need their TV.
00:07:22Because the internet was signaling the separation of communication and media from state.
00:07:29Just separated the two like there was a separation of religion and state, right?
00:07:36Today, much of the establishment is about serving the need of storing common repositories.
00:07:46Whether it's the most important common repository, the banks, who has how much money, or how much
00:07:52whatever.
00:07:53That's one repository, but there's also land repository, and there's also health records,
00:07:59and criminal records, and all those repositories that are managed by the state, by the government.
00:08:05They are not needed for that anymore.
00:08:09Is it anti-establishment?
00:08:10Eh, you know, the internet is anti-establishment, it's not anti, it's just a better alternative.
00:08:17It's just a more advanced technology to achieve the same thing without need for central control.
00:08:23The promise of this technology, coupled with others, provides the notion that, you know,
00:08:32the trust that used to be, or still is, within third-party organizations, is something that
00:08:41is questioned.
00:08:48Nassreen Aini?
00:09:05Vicky Jones.
00:09:06Nassreen, shall we?
00:09:12Okay, Nassreen, let's just go over this one more time.
00:09:15You are Nassreen Aini, 26 years old, and you lost all your ID papers when you fled.
00:09:23No, stolen. All my ID papers were stolen by traffickers.
00:09:28What I would like to know is, how did you get here without any papers?
00:09:37Well, have you heard about blockchain?
00:09:40Okay, what has the blockchain to do with you being here with no papers?
00:09:43Well, before I fled, I uploaded all my documents into a digital grab bag.
00:09:51Okay, so you know computing?
00:09:56Fundamentally, a blockchain can ensure that you can transact in a way which is safe, secure, and trusted.
00:10:05Now, most ways that we transact in society today, we're dependent on a third party to have established trust.
00:10:15But the blockchain eradicates, or can eradicate, the fact that trust needs to be established between these two people.
00:10:26And now, I'm not talking only about monetary transactions, because I think there is much bigger potential in other places before that.
00:10:37Identity is something which is massive, so once you start moving to those things, you're actually moving into the fourth industrial revolution,
00:10:49which is that technology, which is that technology will become an inherent part of our society.
00:10:57So, the bus will take you to the refugee center, and then you will hear from us when we have preceded your case.
00:11:10Okay?
00:11:11Okay.
00:11:15Good luck.
00:11:16Thank you.
00:11:17Thank you.
00:11:27At that point, my life depended entirely on the blockchain.
00:11:40That's what kept me safe.
00:11:42I was memorizing the cryptographic key as a matter of life and death.
00:11:48I remember thinking, this is how it feels to put your trust in numbers.
00:11:53... as Q-B-I-E-C-E-R and White.
00:12:16G lại skinning
00:12:20...
00:12:20...
00:12:21...
00:12:22....
00:12:22Act
00:12:23...
00:12:23Das war's für heute.
00:12:53Das war's für heute.
00:13:23Sticks and stones won't break my bones.
00:13:30Sticks and stones won't break my bones.
00:13:34Sticks and stones won't break my bones.
00:13:46Sticks and stones won't break my bones.
00:13:54Adil, how much?
00:13:59Fifteen hundred with papers.
00:14:00No paper.
00:14:02Fifteen hundred anyway.
00:14:05No, no, no, no.
00:14:06Bitcoin only.
00:14:07I don't, I lost my mobile.
00:14:09This is all I have.
00:14:10Please.
00:14:11Please.
00:14:16I'm getting.
00:14:22Fucking gosh.
00:14:23There was nothing special about my escape.
00:14:48I try to blend in.
00:14:49Never argue.
00:14:50Never laugh.
00:14:52Just disappear.
00:14:54Get on the boat, into the cars, the trains, past the borders, and avoid the authorities.
00:15:01Do you think these papers will work?
00:15:08I think so.
00:15:11We need to ask a deal.
00:15:13We have no choice.
00:15:14Would I still have left, if I knew how my new society would welcome me?
00:15:39We're stuck right now.
00:16:03Move.
00:16:04Move.
00:16:06Move.
00:16:08Move.
00:16:09Was ist die erste Sache, wenn wir da sind?
00:16:32Ich weiß nicht, es ist ein bisschen zu tun.
00:16:34Vielleicht ein Bier?
00:16:36Hey, stop!
00:16:39Stop it!
00:16:52Hey!
00:17:09Untertitelung des ZDF, 2020
00:17:39Next, drop your clothes in the freezer, you get your gear back in a couple of days
00:17:45But why?
00:17:47To kill your bugs
00:17:47Next
00:17:49Drop your clothes in the freezer, you get your gear back in a couple of days
00:18:09So that was a little bit about resident application procedure
00:18:31Now let's move on to personal economy
00:18:34The most common currency here is Eurobits
00:18:37It's the official cryptocurrency that can be used for anything from buying in the grocery store
00:18:44Shop online
00:18:45To pay for public transportation
00:18:47Does anyone know what a cryptocurrency is?
00:18:52Cryptocurrency is like money with a purpose
00:18:59So now we can program money to allow it to be transferred based on some conditions
00:19:06So we can do scenarios like if this, then that
00:19:11And that is why a lot of developers are very excited about the blockchain
00:19:15Because now they can program money in ways that were not possible before
00:19:20The easiest way to understand it is to say that right now I give you money
00:19:25I give you one dollar
00:19:27But the thing is I can now attach conditions to it
00:19:33So I can say you will only get this money if you spend it for this
00:19:38So for pocket money, let's say for a parent
00:19:41You are not total control of where the money
00:19:43If that money doesn't get spent for what we think it's going to be spent for
00:19:46It comes back again into my wallet magically by itself
00:19:50Now if I were to ask you 20 years ago or even 10 years ago
00:19:54How much would it cost me to issue a digital currency that anyone in the world can use?
00:20:02You know, you were probably going to tell me it's going to cost you
00:20:06You know, no money would be enough
00:20:08Now it costs a dollar
00:20:09Euro allowances, however, is restricted eurobits
00:20:16Hence the R
00:20:18They're only valid for buying food
00:20:21Hygienic products
00:20:23And local buses
00:20:25Necessities
00:20:26You cannot send them as remittances
00:20:29Or buying any international travel tickets
00:20:32You know, we all think that we live in a free market
00:20:34We don't
00:20:36A free market is a free market where you have a choice of currency
00:20:40We don't have that
00:20:42We have a monopoly of currency
00:20:44We think we live in a free market
00:20:46Which doesn't work for some reason
00:20:48We say, why does a free market doesn't work?
00:20:50Because it's not free
00:20:51Because it's very monopolistic
00:20:53Because it's not
00:20:56Free market is not just about the choice of
00:20:58How do you want to spend your money
00:21:00It's about the choice of
00:21:02How do you want to hold your money?
00:21:04Okay
00:21:05Let's try to transfer some of your allowances
00:21:08If you think about it
00:21:12Every currency is a community
00:21:14It's a community of its holders
00:21:16Which is what gives it value
00:21:19Because they value it
00:21:21When I'm choosing to change what I hold
00:21:26So instead of holding this currency
00:21:29I want to hold a different one
00:21:31Essentially I'm moving between groups
00:21:33And I'm making that group stronger
00:21:36Or making the group I left weaker
00:21:40So you have a lot of effect
00:21:42As an individual
00:21:45By the choice of how do you want to store your capital
00:21:49And you can argue that this choice is even stronger
00:21:55Than the choice that you apply when you vote
00:21:59Because it has actual and direct effect
00:22:02On these economies
00:22:04That you choose from
00:22:06This was my new family
00:22:16In spite of our different beliefs
00:22:19And cultural backgrounds
00:22:20We had something in common
00:22:22We had all experienced badly run governments
00:22:25Corrupted states
00:22:27Bribes and hyperinflation
00:22:29Manipulated elections
00:22:32Conflicts
00:22:33And now we share the same restricted currency
00:22:36My new family was born out of mistrust
00:22:40Team, please
00:22:42How is your company going, Muslim?
00:22:57Are you on...
00:22:59Peresal?
00:23:01Yes, please
00:23:01And are you well?
00:23:04It's okay
00:23:04To cast their votes
00:23:06We are so proud of you
00:23:08Hmm?
00:23:10You're good
00:23:11You're good
00:23:12That the integrity of the electoral process
00:23:16Has been compromised
00:23:16I'm going to let you know
00:23:17I'm going to let you know
00:23:18That's what the bastard is said
00:23:19That's what the bastard is said
00:23:21Now
00:23:22Let's eat
00:23:24After reports of people not being allowed to cast their votes
00:23:28Er...
00:23:30Well, it started being anti-establishment, right?
00:23:34And the idea that you were going to issue currency
00:23:36Without requiring a central bank
00:23:38Very radical
00:23:39But in those days it was called Bitcoin
00:23:41Right?
00:23:42And people pretty quickly realised
00:23:44That they were operating in a position
00:23:45Where they had lots and lots and lots of legal exposure
00:23:47Because although they had something that worked
00:23:50They didn't have something which could be governed
00:23:52Right?
00:23:53And what comes from this is this term blockchain
00:23:56Which is where you take the political vision of Bitcoin
00:23:58Split it away from the technology of Bitcoin
00:24:00And throw away the political vision
00:24:02Now
00:24:04A lot of people then think
00:24:06Well, you know
00:24:07We sold out and the game is over
00:24:08Actually
00:24:09You know
00:24:10I used to say
00:24:11Look
00:24:12I don't fear the state
00:24:13I fear that the state will collapse
00:24:15Before we have a meaningful alternative
00:24:20So
00:24:21I started worrying about a global financial collapse in 2003
00:24:24When it hit in 2008
00:24:26I was extremely surprised that the collapse didn't go further immediately
00:24:30Instead
00:24:31We were on a much slower path
00:24:32Where the American democracy is at a breaking point
00:24:35Not because they did anything anti-democratic
00:24:37But because America got into a position where the culture couldn't keep all of its promises to its own people
00:24:42Right
00:24:43You know
00:24:44We're in a position where you can legitimately see cracks on the facade of the world's most powerful government
00:24:51Into this we then put the Bitcoin story
00:24:55Well, if the dollar collapses
00:24:57What is the Bitcoin worth?
00:24:58Right?
00:24:59Bitcoin is still going to be worth a Bitcoin
00:25:00But if the dollar is worth a tenth of it is today
00:25:01You might see your Bitcoin is worth a hundred thousand dollars
00:25:03Not because Bitcoin is suddenly worth a lot more
00:25:05But because the dollar is worth an awful lot less
00:25:06Now
00:25:07In that scenario
00:25:08If Bitcoin then winds up heavily used to maintain global trade
00:25:10Because it is stable and not controlled by anybody
00:25:12Anti-government?
00:25:13Anti-establishment?
00:25:14Or is it the new establishment?
00:25:15I'm scared
00:25:16We'll stick to the plan
00:25:17I'm scared
00:25:18We'll stick to the plan
00:25:19I'm scared
00:25:20We'll stick to the plan
00:25:21Once you and me and our families are safe
00:25:28We meet where we're agreed in
00:25:33Release the document
00:25:34I'm scared.
00:25:45We'll stick to the plan.
00:25:47Once you and me and our families are safe,
00:25:49we meet where we are greeted and release the documents.
00:25:52The world needs to know, Nasrin.
00:26:04I'm so sorry.
00:26:25Restricted currency.
00:26:35What a waste of potential.
00:26:37Money should be moving.
00:26:55Restricted eurobids wasn't going to help me or my family.
00:27:02I needed to get hold of some real money.
00:27:22Hi.
00:27:22Hi.
00:27:25Are the eurobids?
00:27:45Are eurobids too?
00:27:47Bitcoin.
00:27:49That's 100 to 1.
00:27:51100 to 1?
00:27:52Yeah.
00:27:52That's...
00:27:53I don't know.
00:27:57Okay.
00:28:07Yeah.
00:28:09Okay.
00:28:11Um, could I borrow the computer?
00:28:15Yeah.
00:28:16Okay.
00:28:17Use free transfer.
00:28:25It's safe.
00:28:27Okay.
00:28:35Well, on the one hand, you have money that is programmable, and you can send it across the entire world,
00:28:41instantaneously, almost free, you can send it to old people, to young people, to poor people, to rich people, to people across races, ethnicities.
00:28:53I can send money to someone in Indonesia now, right now, if I want to.
00:28:59And with fiat money, there's... none of these things applies.
00:29:02Fiat currency is not going to go away the way we see it today, however, cryptocurrency is going to take an increasingly important and increasingly larger role.
00:29:16So, whenever someone comes and says, you know, here comes some technology, and it's going to make the industry obsolete, it's not... it never makes an industry obsolete, it changes it.
00:29:27So, the key is to change with technology if the technology has an impact on what you're doing, right?
00:29:34Who would spend Bitcoin to pay for a pizza today?
00:29:41I could buy a pizza to you, and we could have some beers, and then tomorrow, I could have bought three pizzas and 20 beers, right?
00:29:49It just doesn't make any sense.
00:29:51The fluctuating value of cryptocurrencies is... it's not a feature, it's not a bug either.
00:29:57It's more a symptom of something underlying.
00:30:01And the underlying here is what we call the monetization of the new assets.
00:30:04And 10,000 years ago, gold was monetized.
00:30:08Gold started out as just a normal commodity, and it turned into money.
00:30:12And it took many, many, many thousands of years.
00:30:15But gold ended up as something having massive value.
00:30:19And the same thing is happening now with Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies.
00:30:23They're going from something which is not money, into money.
00:30:26And because the supply is limited, the price necessarily has to rise immensely.
00:30:31I have put the fate of my family in a fraction of a Bitcoin.
00:30:48All I could do was hope it would get them out, and in safety.
00:30:54I don't know.
00:31:00I can think of how much more do it okay?
00:31:02I need to pull out what you like.
00:31:04I ain't gonna crash.
00:31:06Bye.
00:31:07Bye.
00:31:08Bye.
00:31:09Bye.
00:31:10Bye.
00:31:10Bye.
00:31:11Bye.
00:31:12Bye.
00:31:12Bye.
00:31:13Bye.
00:31:13Bye.
00:31:14Bye.
00:31:15Bye.
00:31:15Bye.
00:31:15Bye.
00:31:16Bye.
00:31:16Bye.
00:31:17Bye.
00:31:18Bye.
00:31:19Bye.
00:31:19Bye.
00:31:20Bye.
00:31:20Bye.
00:31:21Bye.
00:31:22Bye.
00:31:22Bye.
00:31:23Bye.
00:31:23Danke.
00:31:24Danke.
00:31:25Danke.
00:31:26You're welcome.
00:31:27The days in the refugee center seemed endless.
00:31:45I isolated myself with my thoughts.
00:31:59Expecting anyone?
00:32:00No.
00:32:05Hello?
00:32:08What was it?
00:32:10I don't know.
00:32:12Someone left this.
00:32:13What's your name, honey?
00:32:16Oh, my God!
00:32:25Are you okay?
00:32:26I heard you scream.
00:32:28I'm fine.
00:32:29Just a bad dream.
00:32:33I know it's not easy to leave it all behind.
00:32:37We're going to have a gathering now in the common room.
00:32:40You might want to...
00:32:41some other time, maybe.
00:32:43come and die, please.
00:32:44I'm sorry.
00:32:45I'm sorry.
00:32:46I have to die.
00:32:47I'll be there.
00:32:48I'm sorry.
00:33:01I can't get off the ground.
00:33:02I'm sorry.
00:33:03I'm sorry.
00:33:04I'm sorry.
00:33:05Sie sind alle tot.
00:33:12Wenn sie uns mit den Fotos fangen werden, sind wir nächstes.
00:33:18Listen.
00:33:19This place ist nicht sicher.
00:33:22Wir müssen es um die Hölle zu entfernen.
00:33:27Ich bin schade.
00:33:31Wir müssen die Planung.
00:33:32Once you and me and our families are safe, we meet where we are breathing.
00:33:36Release the documents.
00:33:38The world needs to know, Nasrin.
00:33:43Nasrin, we are going to be fine.
00:33:45Come here.
00:33:48Trust me.
00:34:02Do not look.
00:34:04No matter where you are, he is against me, you see her.
00:34:10Collecting the plans, as we are against you.
00:34:13If люб입ers come in & befall in your home, your missing two players can leave.
00:34:18Unlike, were you Everywhere Dad as a human orكانan place?
00:34:22Having never been employees.
00:34:24Do not let us know.
00:34:27Ich bin ein Kind.
00:34:29Ich bin ein Kind.
00:34:31Ich bin ein Kind.
00:34:33Geh, Geh.
00:34:35Wer sind Sie?
00:34:57Das war's.
00:35:27Musik
00:35:57Musik
00:36:27Musik
00:36:32Musik
00:36:36Musik
00:36:38Musik
00:36:39Musik
00:36:39Musik
00:36:40Hmm
00:36:40You must have made quite an impression
00:36:44It usually takes months to get a new resident number
00:36:48I don't know what
00:36:50Well, listen carefully
00:36:53That number comes with a set of rules that you must follow
00:36:56So, for the next six months, one, do not leave the state, two, do not break the law, and
00:37:03I mean it all, even a subway fine will get you in trouble.
00:37:08Listen.
00:37:11Lasin, I'm telling you this because your number is set up with a smart contract, a set of
00:37:18automated rules, and if you break them, well, then you don't have any possibilities to
00:37:25to repeal. You'll be dealing with a machine, okay?
00:37:32Okay, so a smart contract is a piece of code that executes and transacts when certain conditions are met.
00:37:44So, if you look at a contract made by a lawyer, you'll recognize very quickly that all of it could
00:37:51be code instead of being a Word document, because everything is in the event of this,
00:37:57we will do this, and if this happens, then that while, and so everything is really
00:38:03programming loops with events, and that can be recreated in any programming language.
00:38:09So, what needs to happen is that lawyers need to brush up on their programming skills rapidly,
00:38:15because from now on, all the contracts they make will be made in code.
00:38:19Well, the bottom line is we don't know whether the smart contract is going to turn out to be
00:38:23important or not, right? But the world works right now largely on paper or close simulations of paper.
00:38:31Like a PDF file that's emailed to somebody is a close simulation of paper.
00:38:35It's a slightly more convenient way of doing paper, but it doesn't really do anything paper can't do.
00:38:40So, to all intents and purposes, we just have manual processes with electronic communications.
00:38:46And that's consuming 10, 20, 30% of the people in any organization.
00:38:52Because those manual processes are what you think of as craft production, we have craft production of
00:38:57deals. It's like, you know, chipping away with a pair of, you know, that mallet. And craft production
00:39:03of deals makes the deals unreliable. One in 20 goes wrong. So, if you have a process which has five or
00:39:09six deals interconnected, that process will have an error rate of about 30%. So, to get rid of that
00:39:15problem, we then create organizations in the middle which buffer the uncertainty of these deals.
00:39:20And these are things like prime contractors. So, the world is made of huge buffering organizations
00:39:26that take the unreliability of the ordinary world and sort of pad it to try and produce something which
00:39:32is reliable and efficient.
00:39:48May I come in for a minute? Yes, I was just packing my bag. It didn't take me too long.
00:39:53It's a perk of being on a run, I guess.
00:39:59So, the social service got you a flat? Yes.
00:40:05You know, I got something for you.
00:40:11My son is into online gaming and these things quickly get outdated. But it's very good for surfing.
00:40:18And thank you. I, um... Ah, no need for that. Good luck.
00:40:27Nasreen, you know what? You have to go out there and make yourself trustworthy.
00:40:34No one will ever trust a refugee.
00:40:39Go out there and prove yourself. Okay?
00:40:48It was like getting my life back.
00:41:09It didn't take them too long to track me down.
00:41:18And that's my life.
00:41:26Oh, yeah.
00:41:27I'm sorry.
00:41:28Oh, that's your destiny.
00:41:29I can't remember perfectly.
00:41:30I'm not gonna try it.
00:41:30I don't know.
00:41:31I'm not sorry.
00:41:31I'm not AfD.
00:41:32I'm talking about this.
00:41:32I'm sorry.
00:41:33I'm not kidding.
00:41:33I'm sorry.
00:41:34I'm sorry.
00:41:34I can't remember.
00:41:36I'm sorry.
00:41:36I'm sorry.
00:41:37I'm sorry.
00:41:41You're not kidding.
00:41:42I'm sorry.
00:41:42I'm sorry.
00:41:44I'm sorry.
00:41:45I'm sorry.
00:41:45I'm sorry.
00:41:46I'm sorry.
00:41:47I'm sorry.
00:41:47Wir sind in eine Rache. Wir sind. Es ist eine Industrie-Rache.
00:41:57Und jeder Lande ist da, um das zu kapitalisieren und Geld zu machen.
00:42:00Und das ist wie die Welt funktioniert, und das ist gut.
00:42:02Aber dann müssen wir uns auf die Vor-Fronten sein.
00:42:05Und wir müssen diejenigen, die Verantwortung nehmen.
00:42:08Right now, das PR ist, dass es all decentralisation und Privacy und Encryption und Wunder ist.
00:42:15Es könnte auch die perfekte Maschinerie für alles in der Welt zu verändern.
00:42:21Und zu verändern, in eine Art Art und Weise, und zu haben die Roboter die Veränderungen.
00:42:26Du magst eine solche, die du magst.
00:42:33Warum Sie Angst haben, dass wir diese Technologie implementieren?
00:42:39Vielleicht haben Sie einen Punkt.
00:42:41So, was wir tun tun?
00:42:43Wir fallen zu schnell an dieser Geschichte, dass wir die Technologie nicht kontrollieren können.
00:42:50Und dass wir sie nicht kontrollieren müssen.
00:42:52Dass wir sie einfach freiwillig machen müssen.
00:42:54Dass sie einfach ihre Kurs machen müssen.
00:42:56Und dann müssen wir versuchen, die negativen Konsequenzen nachher.
00:43:01Wenn Sie nicht interessieren, die Technologien entstehen,
00:43:07und Sie versuchen nicht zu verstehen, was kommt.
00:43:10Sie sind in Zukunft irrelevant.
00:43:12Sie sind in Zukunft irrelevant.
00:43:14Ja.
00:43:15Holl insufficient.
00:43:16Erstmal?
00:43:21Wenn Sie in Zukunft kommen, dann kommen.
00:43:22Die urge einsteigen
00:43:29auf dem F
00:43:33Tja, tja, tja, tja, tja, tja.
00:44:03Tja, tja, tja, tja.
00:44:33Tja, tja.
00:45:03Tja, tja, tja, tja.
00:45:33Tja, tja, tja, tja, tja.
00:46:02Tja, tja, tja, tja, tja, tja, tja.
00:46:04Hi.
00:46:05Do you guys need a programmer?
00:46:07Absolutely.
00:46:08How is it?
00:46:09Oh, what's the idea?
00:46:11That's what we're trying to find out.
00:46:13Yeah, we're brainstorming.
00:46:14We're trying to find out what we could do to make a huge impact.
00:46:18And we're just trying to find some sort of narrow group of people
00:46:22and find a problem that we can solve in 24 hours.
00:46:27Not an easy task.
00:46:29So if you can program something for us right now, that'd be great.
00:46:32I do have this.
00:46:37Before, people would say,
00:46:38well, what do you want to do with blockchain?
00:46:40And everyone says, well, we want to change the world.
00:46:42And it's like, well, you and everyone else, buddy, right?
00:46:45But it is actually us and everyone else, right?
00:46:49It's you, it's me.
00:46:50It's the crew.
00:46:51Everyone is going to connect.
00:46:53And education is key.
00:46:57And if we empower people,
00:47:00we have more control over what happens in our society,
00:47:03be it for better or for worse.
00:47:06You know?
00:47:07We don't believe in fairy tales.
00:47:09Not everything is going to be smooth.
00:47:11But with blockchain,
00:47:13it will help us develop future technology in a way that can
00:47:17be moderated to some degree by all of us.
00:47:21I totally lost myself in the writing.
00:47:27Gone was the escape,
00:47:29the photographs,
00:47:30even Reza faded.
00:47:33But then it all came back
00:47:36and hit me
00:47:38like a bullet.
00:47:40Like a bullet.
00:48:10That was found
00:48:11too long
00:48:12So it failed.
00:48:13That's so true.
00:48:14What did you do?
00:48:15Is this only a guy the guy?
00:48:16Is this gonna help me?
00:48:17Or is it supposed to be something那個?
00:48:19I will be webbing & talking to people.
00:48:20Instead of having to imagine a 고민
00:48:22right,
00:48:23that's where I'm gonna.
00:48:24It's probably not coming up later.
00:48:25When the doesn't do something,
00:48:27somebody's coming back.
00:48:28Maybe now he sends up
00:48:28there.
00:48:29Who knows?
00:48:30And he's going to get the best anymore.
00:48:32In your town.
00:48:33Bis zum nächsten Mal.
00:49:03Bis zum nächsten Mal.
00:49:33Jasreen! Jasreen! Jasreen! Jasreen!
00:49:41Jasreen!
00:49:43Es hier!
00:49:44Hallo! Jasreen!
00:49:46What are you doing here?
00:49:47It's freezing cold!
00:49:50Come on, come on.
00:49:52Come on.
00:49:54Come on, come on.
00:49:56Come on, come on, come on!
00:50:00So, the thing about trust is, it's very easy for people to focus on trust, but again, trust is kind of a ghost, right?
00:50:14Trust is really just another way of saying nothing went wrong.
00:50:17I think that trust produces a very fuzzy sense of relations between people, and relations between people are not what you want technology for, right?
00:50:27Trust feels nice because we have a kind of human instinct towards trust, but in a seven and a half billion person world, with lots and lots and lots of trouble all around that world, trust is actually probably not going to extend into the places that we want to extend trade, right?
00:50:43What you really want is reliability.
00:50:45How do you engineer reliability into the transactions that you have with people in faraway places where there is no basis for trust, right?
00:50:54Trustless.
00:50:57Listen, Yves, I want to thank you for everything you've done, for trusting me.
00:51:20No need for that.
00:51:20I don't need any technology to tell me who's a good person or not.
00:51:24I've always trusted my instincts.
00:51:29You're so old school.
00:51:37The release.
00:51:39I totally forgot.
00:51:41It's...
00:51:42It's today.
00:51:46You held on to that as it was a matter of life or death.
00:51:50I need your help.
00:51:50Can you drive me?
00:51:54Sure.
00:52:20I'm trying to do.
00:52:23I'm trying to do.
00:52:24I'm trying to do.
00:52:25I'm trying to do.
00:52:26I'm trying to do.
00:52:27I'm trying to do.
00:52:28I'm trying to do.
00:52:29I'm trying to do.
00:52:30I'm trying to do.
00:52:31I'm trying to do.
00:52:32I'm trying to do.
00:52:33I'm trying to do.
00:52:34I'm trying to do.
00:52:36I'm trying to do.
00:52:37I'm trying to do.
00:52:38I'm trying to do.
00:52:39I'm trying to do.
00:52:40I'm trying to do.
00:52:41I'm trying to do.
00:52:42I'm trying to do.
00:52:43I'm trying to do.
00:52:44I'm trying to do.
00:52:45Untertitelung des ZDF für funk, 2017
00:53:15Untertitelung des ZDF für funk, 2017
00:53:45Untertitelung des ZDF für funk, 2017
00:53:47Um, but do you get a better society just because you put the nerds in charge?
00:53:53I guess we're going to find out because nobody else seems to be able to compete with us effectively.
00:53:57What happens next?
00:53:58Are you sure this is the right place?
00:54:15I think so.
00:54:23No matter what you're up to, please be careful.
00:54:27Sometimes I feel like a motherless child
00:54:37Sometimes I feel like a motherless child
00:54:43Sometimes I feel like a motherless child
00:54:49A long way from home
00:54:54We need to be more clear about the strong presence of technology
00:55:04In shaping or co-shaping our societies
00:55:07Technology is both good and bad
00:55:09And it's always involved in a number of goods and bads
00:55:12But it's never really neutral
00:55:14The technology itself could be indifferent to whether you use it in a certain way or that way, of course
00:55:21But we know since Francis Bacon in the 16th century
00:55:27He said, power and knowledge are one
00:55:35Sometimes I feel like a motherless child
00:55:41A long way from home
00:55:57I think so
00:56:03I think so
00:56:07But it's very weird
00:56:09I almost think so
00:56:10Before we
00:56:27Ich weiß nicht.
00:56:57Yes, we will always need to take the first step.
00:57:02Take a chance on that something or someone unknown.
00:57:06Let go.
00:57:08And allow your trust in people to pull you over the gap.
00:57:27This is what you deserve.
00:57:57Take a chance.
00:58:17Untertitelung. BR 2018
00:58:47Last card.
00:58:52Last card.
00:58:56The controversy known as the blockchain leaks. It seems far from now.
00:59:13Last card.
00:59:16Last card.
00:59:18Holy shit!
00:59:19Nasrin.
00:59:20You did it.
00:59:23Nasrin.
00:59:25You did it.
00:59:27She did it.
00:59:30You did it.
00:59:31You did it.
00:59:32Yes.
00:59:33She did it.
00:59:34Look.
00:59:35Oh.
00:59:36Oh.
00:59:37Oh.
00:59:38Oh.
00:59:39Oh.
00:59:40Oh.
00:59:41Oh.
00:59:42The latest developments suggest that global consultancy giant Johnson and Peirce have facilitated arms
00:59:49contracts between European governments and the regime. The question everybody asks now is,
00:59:54how could this happen? A press conference has been issued for 8pm tonight. Until then, all
01:00:00we can say for sure is, this is getting ugly.
01:00:07Oh, thank you very much.
01:00:08That's full.
01:00:09Alright, please.
01:00:11Thank you very much.
01:00:12Thank you.
01:00:13Thank you.
01:00:14Thank you.
01:00:15Untertitelung des ZDF, 2020
01:00:45Untertitelung des ZDF, 2020
01:01:15Untertitelung des ZDF, 2020
01:01:45Untertitelung des ZDF, 2020