GreenPill is about crypto-economic systems that create positive externalities for their neighbors & for the world. We explore the intersection of programmable money, game theory, & mechanism design. We search for powerful new ways to fund, design, develo
The GreenPill podcast is a highly recommended show for anyone interested in exploring the world of Web3 and DAOs. Hosted by Owocki, the podcast features insightful discussions with thought leaders and experts in the field, offering deep insights into regenerative economics and the future of society. The guests are brilliant and the interviews are strong, making this podcast an essential listen for those looking to understand how blockchain technology can contribute to solving important global problems.
One of the best aspects of The GreenPill is Owocki's ability to attract top talent to the show. His genuine thought leadership shines through as he engages with his guests, drawing out their expertise and capturing quality content for his audience. The discussions are filled with deep thought and exploration of ideas, providing listeners with valuable insights into how our world can become better through blockchain technology.
However, there are some aspects that could be improved upon in The GreenPill podcast. While the discussions are highly informative and thought-provoking, they might be too niche for general audiences unfamiliar with Web3 or DAOs. This specialization might limit the appeal of the podcast to a specific audience, potentially excluding those who are new to or curious about these topics.
In conclusion, The GreenPill podcast offers a wealth of knowledge and thought-provoking discussions for those passionate about Web3 and DAOs. With its well-informed host, impressive roster of guests, and exploration of regenerative economics and future society, it fills an important niche in this space. While it may not be suitable for beginners or those seeking more general content, it remains a valuable resource for anyone interested in understanding how blockchain technology can shape a better future.

In this episode, Michael explores one of the most overlooked risks in crypto today: Are stablecoins actually safe? As billions flow into stablecoins, most users don't realize the hidden layers of risk from custodians and intermediaries to complex yield strategies happening behind the scenes. This conversation breaks down the difference between centralized vs decentralized stablecoins, and why that distinction matters more than ever. From early Ethereum days to building in DeFi, Michael shares how crypto unlocks true financial sovereignty giving individuals the ability to opt out of fragile systems. Topics covered: • What inspired Michael to build in Ethereum • Peer-to-peer finance & financial sovereignty • What "resilience" and "anti-fragility" really mean • Stablecoins explained (simple breakdown) • Centralized vs decentralized stablecoins • Hidden risks in yield farming ("trust me bro" zone) • Why your stablecoin is "traveling" behind the scenes • Counterparty risk vs code-based trust • Silicon Valley Bank & real-world failures • Why optionality is the key to financial freedom • Liquity, BOLD & decentralized stablecoin design • The future of money, regulation & crypto systems The core idea: Not all dollars are equal. Not all stablecoins are safe. If you don't understand where your money is going, you're taking risks you didn't sign up for. Greenpill isn't just about building new systems. It's about building systems you can actually trust. greenpill.network vdao.org https://x.com/JoinVDAO https://x.com/greenpillnet https://x.com/svobodamichael https://x.com/LiquityProtocol Timestamps 00:00 – Introduction 00:11 – Michael's "why" & discovering Ethereum 01:36 – Peer-to-peer finance & removing intermediaries 02:29 – Journey into crypto & early DAO era 03:31 – Early crypto vs traditional finance mindset 04:22 – Ethereum community & early DeFi innovation 05:28 – Resilience, sovereignty & optionality 08:27 – Why financial independence matters 10:16 – Introduction to stablecoins 10:58 – What is a stablecoin (simple explanation) 12:00 – Centralized vs decentralized stablecoins 13:25 – The "trust me bro" risk zone 14:09 – On-chain vs off-chain backing explained 15:04 – Why decentralization matters in stablecoins 16:28 – Stablecoins for payments vs savings 17:04 – Risk comparison: CeFi vs DeFi 19:17 – Sovereignty, control & censorship resistance 21:05 – Why most stablecoins don't give real claims 21:29 – Human systems vs code-based systems 21:56 – Risks in centralized finance (SVB example) 23:05 – Optionality & monetary systems 25:25 – Regulatory risks & future scenarios 26:58 – Why decentralized stablecoins matter 27:47 – Pegging to the dollar explained 30:39 – Scalability limits of crypto-backed stablecoins 31:24 – Stablecoins as "last resort" money 32:12 – Risk & resilience in DeFi systems 33:14 – How to earn yield on stablecoins 35:39 – The "journey" your stablecoin takes 37:46 – Why chasing yield increases risk 38:32 – Terra Luna & unsustainable yields 39:48 – Where yield actually comes from 40:20 – Risk vs reward in DeFi 42:45 – Regulation vs code-based trust 43:11 – Understanding hidden dependencies 44:19 – Rehypothecation & hidden risks 47:34 – Who should use decentralized stablecoins 49:00 – Network states & financial systems 50:23 – Why stablecoin adoption is hard 52:38 – The idea of an "Ethereum-native dollar" 53:48 – Future of stablecoins & regulation 56:43 – Risks of over-regulation 59:08 – Why decentralized systems need support 01:00:03 – Stablecoins & Ethereum security 01:00:58 – Why this matters for Ethereum's future 01:01:46 – Aligning with crypto values 01:03:40 – The need for stronger community voice 01:05:24 – Final thoughts & closing

In this episode, Griff Green dives into one of the most urgent challenges in crypto today: Can Ethereum actually become safe enough for everyone? From billion-dollar hacks to AI-driven exploits, security has become the defining bottleneck for the future of decentralized systems. Griff shares lessons from over a decade in crypto from the original DAO hack to leading new efforts like the DAO Security Fund, a $170M initiative designed to fund and coordinate Ethereum security at scale. This conversation explores: • The DAO Security Fund & how it works • Turning Ethereum security into a public good • The recent wave of hacks across DeFi & Web2 • The Arbitrum Security Council decision & North Korea exploit • Why incentives for white hats are broken • AI as both the biggest threat and biggest defense • Coordination vs fragmentation in Ethereum security • Why crypto still isn't safe for normal users • Lessons from the original DAO hack • Quadratic funding & new experiments in capital allocation • The future of public goods funding in Ethereum The core idea: Security isn't just a feature. It's the foundation of everything. If Ethereum can become truly safe, it won't just compete with traditional finance it could replace it. Greenpill isn't just about funding public goods. It's about building systems people can actually trust. greenpill.network @owocki @greenpillnet https://x.com/griffgreen https://x.com/Giveth Some of the materials we mention in the episode: - https://x.com/thedaofund - https://qf.giveth.io/qf/apply - https://qf.giveth.io/qf Timestamps 00:00 – Intro: Greenpill & Griff Green 01:19 – What is the DAO Security Fund? 03:16 – $170M fund & Ethereum security as a public good 04:25 – The current wave of hacks (Web3 + Web2) 05:07 – AI arms race: white hats vs black hats 07:14 – Short-term risk vs long-term security 08:10 – Lindy, AI & system resilience 09:06 – Arbitrum hack situation explained 10:26 – KelpDAO exploit & systemic DeFi risk 12:50 – Why hackers didn't move funds immediately 13:54 – Emergency governance & Arbitrum response 15:35 – Flashbacks to the original DAO hack 18:17 – The hardest part: returning funds to users 20:40 – Multi-DAO coordination problem 22:21 – Why this situation is more complex than before 23:43 – DAO Security Fund: goals & vision 26:08 – Security as a scalable public good 27:48 – Coordination vs individual defense 28:22 – Why "security" works better than "public goods" 29:10 – Why crypto still isn't safe for normal users 30:14 – Open source vs public goods framing 31:06 – Giveth QF round & how to apply 33:33 – Expert-weighted quadratic funding experiment 36:18 – Tunable QF & improvements over past models 38:01 – Is quadratic funding still relevant? 39:06 – 10-year vision: Ethereum as global infrastructure 41:36 – Why hacks keep happening 43:17 – Misaligned incentives for white hats 44:57 – Future of public goods funding 45:21 – How the Arbitrum situation plays out 47:22 – Decentralization vs security council debate 49:11 – Social media manipulation & misinformation 50:53 – Are L2s still decentralized? 51:20 – Final call to action (QF round) 52:44 – Closing thoughts

In this episode, Raphael explores a fundamental question shaping our future: How do we build systems that can actually withstand uncertainty? As the world becomes more complex, interconnected, and fragile, it's no longer enough to optimize for efficiency. We need systems that are resilient, adaptive, and aligned with human values. This conversation dives into the deeper layers of coordination beyond technology into incentives, culture, and long-term thinking. Topics covered: • Why modern systems struggle under stress • The trade-off between efficiency and resilience • Coordination challenges in decentralized systems • Cultural vs technical solutions • Designing systems that evolve over time • Incentives, behavior, and unintended consequences • Local vs global resilience • The role of communities in system design • How narratives shape the systems we build This isn't just a conversation about infrastructure. It's about rethinking the foundations of how we organize society. The core idea: Resilient systems don't emerge by accident. They are designed intentionally, iteratively, and collectively. Greenpill isn't just about better tools. It's about building systems that can last. greenpill.network vdao.org https://x.com/JoinVDAO https://x.com/greenpillnet Timestamps 00:00 – Introduction & framing the problem 01:30 – Why resilience matters now 04:00 – The limits of current systems 07:00 – Efficiency vs resilience trade-off 10:00 – Coordination challenges 13:30 – Decentralization & its realities 17:00 – Incentives shape behavior 20:30 – Cultural vs technical solutions 24:00 – Designing adaptive systems 28:00 – Local vs global resilience 32:00 – Community as infrastructure 36:00 – Failure modes & unintended consequences 40:00 – Long-term thinking vs short-term optimization 44:00 – Narratives & system design 48:00 – What needs to change 52:00 – Final reflections 55:00 – Closing

In this expansive episode of the VDAO Series, Gregory shares a sweeping journey across ecology, permaculture, economics, crypto, and community building all anchored in a bold thesis: Humans can become a planetary keystone species. Drawing on decades of work in regenerative design, supply chains, eco-villages, and Web3 infrastructure, Gregory explores how broken relationships between humans and the biosphere sit at the root of today's "meta-crisis" and how regeneration offers a practical path forward. From Alaska fisheries to intentional communities, from the Eight Forms of Capital to founding Regen Network, this conversation connects local land stewardship with global coordination technologies. Topics covered: • Keystone species thinking & planetary stewardship • Resilience vs antifragility in ecosystems and society • Origins in permaculture & eco-village movements • Environmentalism beyond doom narratives • Regeneration as a "third way" beyond political polarization • Degrowth vs regrowth debates • Traditional skills, technology & appropriate scale • The Eight Forms of Capital framework • Financial permaculture & local economics • Regen Network and ecological credit markets • Carbon, biodiversity & ecosystem service valuation • Blockchain as infrastructure for living capital accounting • Limits of supply-chain sustainability efforts • Personal resilience through land-based living • Rural-urban reconnection (Kuni model) • Community as the core of antifragility • Network nations & place-based coordination • Regeneration as the root solution to the meta-crisis The core message: The future isn't choosing between nature and technology. It's learning how to regenerate both together. greenpill.network vdao.org https://x.com/JoinVDAO https://x.com/greenpillnet https://x.com/gregory_landua https://www.registry.regen.network/team/gregory-landua Timestamps 00:00 — Introduction & Gregory's "why" 00:44 — Humans as a planetary keystone species 03:08 — What regeneration looks like in practice 04:52 — Relationship between humanity and nature 05:37 — Resilience vs antifragility explained 07:21 — Applying resilience in everyday life 08:37 — Early roots: Alaska, fisheries & environmental science 10:55 — Frustration with doom-focused environmentalism 12:20 — Discovering permaculture & eco-villages 15:43 — From apprentice to educator & consultant 17:53 — Financial permaculture & early Bitcoin era 20:15 — Founding TerraGenesis & large-scale projects 22:08 — Optimism vs activist pessimism 24:42 — Regeneration as a "third way" 29:25 — Pre-political nature of land stewardship 31:39 — Degrowth, primitivism & collapse narratives 33:19 — Practical preparedness vs ideology 35:39 — Regrowth as a design challenge 37:38 — Critiques of techno-civilization 38:58 — Learning from diverse communities 40:56 — Back-to-the-land movements today 43:20 — Pluralism & shared human needs 45:46 — Global shifts & regenerative acceleration 47:35 — The Eight Forms of Capital framework 49:09 — Origins in financial permaculture workshops 53:36 — Regenerative Enterprise & practical tools 55:53 — Capital beyond money 57:29 — Applying the framework personally & locally 59:18 — Early path toward Regen Network 01:01:42 — Building cacao farms & regenerative supply chains 01:04:00 — Consulting with mission-driven brands 01:05:58 — Why good intentions fail in markets 01:08:06 — Need for ecological accounting systems 01:10:24 — Carbon markets & ecosystem services 01:12:49 — Regen Network's on-chain ledger approach 01:14:25 — Moving upstream for systemic change 01:16:41 — Limits of education & consulting alone 01:18:20 — Aligning markets with regeneration 01:19:35 — Creating value systems around ecological health 01:21:52 — Crypto, fintech & systemic shifts 01:25:08 — Technology vs culture in adoption 01:26:52 — Personal resilience practices 01:27:02 — Living on land & community building 01:29:27 — Local enterprise: maple sugaring operation 01:31:41 — Kuni model: reconnecting urban & rural 01:33:36 — Relationships as true resilience 01:34:30 — Invitation to collaborate & co-create 01:36:58 — Network nations & shared infrastructure 01:39:24 — Grounding digital visions in physical places 01:41:48 — Regeneration as the solution to the meta-crisis 01:42:55 — Closing reflections


In this episode of the VDAO Series, Adrian shares a deeply personal and practical journey into building local resilience in an age of uncertainty. Drawing inspiration from natural ecosystems, Adrian explains how communities, families, and individuals can become more resilient by learning from nature's ability to survive disturbance and regenerate. From urban permaculture and food systems to water independence, composting, biodiversity, and interdependence over convenience, this conversation explores what it actually means to prepare for disruption not through fear, but through stewardship. Topics covered: • What resilience really means (and what it doesn't) • Learning from ecosystems and disturbance cycles • Building resilient families and communities • Urban homesteading & food production in cities • Calgary Harvest: community fruit-gleaning network • Rainwater harvesting & water security • Soil health, composting & regenerative gardening • Low-tech skills vs high-tech convenience • Dependency vs interdependence • Biodiversity as a resilience indicator • Challenges of inspiring change in modern lifestyles • Urban vs rural resilience • Preserving traditional skills in a globalized world • Creating local food networks & mutual aid • Practical advice for getting started The core message: Resilience isn't about withdrawing from society. It's about rebuilding local capacity, relationships, and ecosystems so communities can thrive through disruption.

New @greenpillnet pod out today!

New @greenpillnet pod out today!

New @greenpillnet pod out today!

New @greenpillnet pod out today!

New @greenpillnet pod out today!

New @greenpillnet pod out today!

In this episode of the Network Nations mini-series, Primavera De Filippi speak with Santiago Siri, founder of Democracy Earth, DemocracyOS, and Proof of Humanity, to explore a central question of the digital age: Can we escape politics with protocols or do protocols simply create new political arenas? Santiago shares his journey from building Argentina's internet political party Partido de la Red, to creating open-source democratic infrastructure, to running one of the most ambitious on-chain identity and governance experiments in Web3. They discuss identity as the core bottleneck of digital democracy, governance failures inside protocols, DAOs as political systems, AI as both promise and threat, and what Network Nations must learn from a decade of real-world experimentation. A deep, honest conversation about legitimacy, power, and why politics never disappears it just moves layers.

New @greenpillnet pod out today!

New @greenpillnet pod out today!

New @greenpillnet pod out today!

New @greenpillnet pod out today!

New @greenpillnet pod out today!

New @greenpillnet pod out today!

New @greenpillnet pod out today!

New @greenpillnet pod out today!

New @greenpillnet pod out today!

In this episode of the Green Pill Podcast, Kevin Owocki and co-host Devansh Mehta sit down with Vitalik Buterin for their annual deep dive into the future of public goods funding in the Ethereum ecosystem. They explore where funding will come from in 2026, how the landscape has shifted from "vibes-based" funding to verifiable, dependency-driven mechanisms, and why this is the best moment to reform PGF using new tools like programmable cryptography, AI-assisted evaluation, and deep funding models. Vitalik also shares how he thinks about dependencies, credible neutrality, open-source licensing, pluralism, accountability, and what builders should prioritize in the coming year. A must-listen for anyone designing mechanisms, funding public goods, or building the next era of Ethereum governance.

New @greenpillnet pod out today!

New @greenpillnet pod out today!

New @greenpillnet pod out today!

New @greenpillnet pod out today!

New pod and a *NEW BOOK* out today! Kevin sits down with Daniel Ospina and Daniel Stringer from RnDAO to introduce their new book:The Network Firm: How Capital Allocation Changes in the Age of Blockchain and AI. They explore how the traditional theory of the firm is being transformed by lower coordination costs, AI-driven cognition, and blockchain-powered trust enabling a new era of open, fluid, network-native organizations. Together they break down how legacy bureaucratic structures dissolve when work becomes legible, global, and composable and why the next century of coordination will be shaped by networks, not firms.

New @greenpillnet pod out today!

New @greenpillnet pod out today!

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New @greenpillnet / Network Nations pod out today!

New @greenpillnet pod out today! Kevin talks with Akseli Virtanen, co-founder of the Economic Space Agency (ECSA), along with co-authors Dick Bryan and Jorge Lopez, about their groundbreaking book Protocols for Post-Capitalist Expression. They explore how capital is itself a protocol, how post-capitalism can emerge through new economic grammars, and why distributed finance and programmable accounting could redefine value beyond markets and the state. If you've ever wondered how economics, coordination, and code might come together to create new forms of collective value, this episode is for you.

New @greenpillnet season out now!

New @greenpillnet pod out today!

New @greenpillnet pod out today!

New @greenpillnet pod! Kevin chats with Joe Edelman, founder of the Meaning Alignment Institute, about his Full Stack Alignment paper. They dive into why current AI alignment methods fall short, explore richer “thick” models of value, lessons from social media, and four bold moonshots for AI and institutions that support human flourishing. Links: https://meaningalignment.substack.com/p/introducing-full-stack-alignment https://meaninglabs.notion.site/The-Full-Stack-Alignment-Project-List-21cc5bada1d08016a496ca729476d970 @edelwax @meaningaligned @greenpillnet @owocki Timestamps: 00:00 – Introduction to Green Pill's new season and Joe Edelman 01:59 – Joe's background and the Meaning Alignment Institute 03:43 – Why alignment matters for AI and institutions 05:46 – Lessons from social media and the attention economy 09:06 – Critique of shallow AI alignment approaches (RLHF, values-as-text) 13:20 – Thick models of value: going deeper than abstract ideals 15:11 – Full stack alignment across models, metrics, and institutions 17:00 – Reconciling values with capitalist incentive structures 19:17 – Avoiding dystopian economies and building value-driven markets 21:32 – Four moonshots: super negotiators, public resource regulators, market intermediaries, value stewardship agents 27:32 – Intermediaries vs. value stewardship agents explained 29:09 – How builders and academics can get involved in full stack alignment projects 31:10 – Why cross-institutional collaboration is critical 32:46 – Joe's vision of the world in 10 years with full stack alignment 34:51 – Food system analogy: from “sugar” to nourishing AI 36:40 – Long-term vs. short-term incentives in markets 38:25 – Hopeful outlook: building integrity into AI and institutions 39:04 – Closing remarks and links to Joe's work

https://www.builtonethereum.network/ https://x.com/petheth Timestamps- 00:00 - Introduction to the GreenPill.Network Podcast 01:03 - Launching the Documentary: Built on Ethereum 02:22 - Exploring the Use Cases of Ethereum 05:39 - Real-World Impact of Crypto in Developing Countries 06:59 - Inspiring the Disillusioned: A Call to Action 10:27 - The Balance of Cynicism and Hope in Crypto 12:05 - Future Projects and the Meta Media Production Company 14:25 - About Argentina on Chain initiative 16:26 - Closing remark

JournoDAO on Green Pill: A powerful convo on building community in collapsing systems — from integrity vacuums and decentralized tech to leadership in the digital age. They unpack network states, parallel societies, and the fine line between human values and AI-driven futures.

Show your support- https://x.com/tkstanczak https://x.com/ethereumfndn https://ethereum.foundation/ Mint an Allo Patron NFT at https://www.allo.capital/patron and join the Allominati. https://www.allo.capital/ Timestamps- 00:00 Introduction to Allo Capital and Ethereum Foundation 02:14 Tomas's Background and Current Role 03:43 Opportunities in the Ethereum Ecosystem 08:26 Ethereum Foundation's Directives and Vision 13:33 The App Layer and Ecosystem Development 15:11 Closing note

If you want to vote on the proposals in the Gardens Allo Capital Builders fun, you can mint an Allo Patron NFT at https://www.allo.capital/patron - You'll join the Allominati and can vote on your proposals of choice. The Allo.Capital Builders Fund https://app.gardens.fund/gardens/10/0x1eba7a6a72c894026cd654ac5cdcf83a46445b08/0xd3345828914b740fddd1b8ae4f4d2ce03d1e0960/123 https://x.com/gardens_fund https://www.allo.capital/ Timestamps - 00:00 Introduction to Alo Capital and Its Vision 02:15 Exploring the Gardens Allo Builders Fund 06:39 Showcasing Innovative Projects in the Alo Ecosystem 13:07 Citizen Salary Proposal: A New Approach to Income

Timestamps - 00:00 Introduction to Allo Capital 02:25 The Allominati Meeting Overview 04:48 Capital Allocation Mechanisms 08:08 Data Updates and Key Performance Indicators 10:54 Coherence and Community Building 12:21 Spotlighting Gitcoin and Future Opportunities 14:40 ProtoDAO Coordination Experiments

Description Ethan Buchman and Mia Winteher-Timaki join the Ethereal Forest crew to explore what Governance is good for, how it evolves, and how communities can harness it to draw power down to the local. With another cameo appearance by Will Szal. Timestamps: 00:00 Introduction to Ethereum Localism 03:48 Redesigning Governance Systems 11:37 Understanding DAOs and Their Flexibility 23:01 Worker Cooperatives vs. DAOs 30:05 Governance in Cycles and Broader Implications 30:54 Reimagining Coordination: DAOs and Co-ops 32:19 Governance Decisions: The Complexity of Structure 34:02 Protopia: Embracing Positive Change 35:25 Urban Planning and Spatial Justice 49:01 Decentralization and Community Empowerment 01:03:34 The Future of Governance: Intentionality and Culture 01:05:16 closing note & outro Ethan Buchman Cycles.money https://x.com/buchmanster https://x.com/informalinc Informal.systems Mia Winther-Tamaki https://warpcast.com/miawintam https://x.com/miawintam https://miawinthertamaki.com/ Will Szal https://x.com/willszal https://regen.foundation/author/willszal/ https://origins.coop/ https://terra-genesis.com/ https://www.r3-0.org/ Learn more about Ethereum Localism Ethereumlocalism.xyz This series is hosted by Ethereal Forest - https://x.com/EthForestDAO Macks - https://x.com/MacksWolf Josh - https://x.com/spexpdx6 Alex - https://x.com/haughtvalue

Timestamps - 00:00 Introduction to Allo Capital and Gitcoin 3.0 03:03 The Evolution of Gitcoin: From 1.0 to 3.0 05:47 Community Engagement and the Future of Gitcoin Grants 09:02 Gitcoin 3.0: A New Vision for Funding Public Goods 11:55 The Role of Governance in Gitcoin's Future 15:07 Funding Ethereum's Biggest Problems

Timestamps - 00:00 Introduction to Alo Capital and Capital Allocation 03:15 Exploring Gitcoin Grants and Multi-Mechanism Funding 06:07 The Concept of Retrofunding in Gitcoin 08:51 Metrics-Based Voting and Project Selection 11:57 Challenges and Learnings from GG23 14:51 Community Engagement and Project Discoverability