ありえへん∞世界 2024年11月19日 成田&村上のニッポンの未来を考えまSHOW
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#EnglishMovie #cdrama #drama #engsub #chinesedramaengsub #movieshortfull
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00:00This is a 2 and a half hour special of Shōwa no Jōshiki and Reiwa no Hijōshiki!
00:05I wonder if Osamu's father will be able to keep up with Reiwa no Jōshiki!
00:09Ah, it's difficult.
00:11It's the father's generation.
00:13Hey, everyone!
00:14The names of the talents seem to have a lot of Reiwa feel to them.
00:18Like Miricham-chan and Rina Pippi-chan.
00:21They seem to have a philosophical name like that.
00:27That's right.
00:31Miricham-san, the strongest model of the Reiwa generation.
00:35She seems to be annoyed by some of the Shōwa generation.
00:41I think she still has a lot of prejudice against gals.
00:45Really? What kind of prejudice?
00:47The other day, I was on LINE with an old man I knew.
00:51When he was using honorifics, he said,
00:53He said,
00:57I was like, what the hell is wrong with this guy?
01:00It's about time I changed my mind.
01:04But why do you exchange LINE with an old man?
01:06Like drinking parties.
01:08Do you drink with an old man?
01:09About 40 people.
01:11Is there an old man who is over 40?
01:13Me?
01:14I'm over 40, I'm an old man.
01:16My parents are over 48.
01:18When I get close to my parents, I get the impression that I'm an old man.
01:23I have a question about this.
01:25If you ask a girl in her 20s who her boyfriend is,
01:28some people say, I'm a 40-year-old man.
01:31It's totally fine.
01:32Don't say, I'm a 40-year-old man.
01:35You're in your 20s.
01:37You're dating a 40-year-old man.
01:40You should show some respect.
01:42You should say, I'm a little older than you.
01:45You should say, I'm in my 20s.
01:47Even if you say, I'm in my 40s,
01:48the way you live and the way you spend your money are different.
01:52I think of someone.
01:55Also, tonight,
01:57the common sense of Showa,
01:58and the non-common sense of Heiwa.
02:01The parents' generation values things,
02:04so they don't throw things away right away.
02:06They put small things in.
02:08Like beads.
02:09I didn't have much money.
02:12They don't sell cases like this.
02:15It's very useful.
02:17This case is very useful.
02:19In the past, people used to put things in here.
02:24It's small.
02:25They put small things in.
02:27I feel like I'm putting in a tooth that came out when I was a kid.
02:30The case that the Showa generation reused to put small things in.
02:37It's really rare.
02:38I used to do it sometimes.
02:40When I was in elementary school,
02:42I got money from somewhere and put it in.
02:45I put it in my pocket.
02:47It's rare.
02:48I was taught that as a kid.
02:51Sometimes, when I went fishing,
02:53I got lucky.
02:55I was so excited.
02:56When I was in elementary school.
02:58It's rare.
02:59I collect them.
03:01What is the rare effect that the Showa generation collected?
03:08I used to do this when I was in my class.
03:12I used to do this.
03:13I used to do this when I was a kid.
03:15I was a little stupid.
03:18I was a little stupid.
03:20I was a little stupid.
03:22In addition,
03:23among the Showa boys,
03:25there is a strange movement called a prank.
03:29I used to do this.
03:31I used to do this.
03:33Isn't it embarrassing?
03:37It's amazing.
03:43Let's think about the future of Narita and Murakami in Japan.
03:52It's important to think about whether or not each other's voices match.
03:58I can't delay it.
03:59I can't delay it.
04:00I'm very happy.
04:02Narita Yusuke, a graduate student of Tokyo University,
04:07is wearing glasses that are asymmetrical and asymmetrical.
04:14Super 8 Murakami Shingo, who is interested in economics,
04:19will discuss various problems facing Japan and try to improve the future of Japan.
04:27What is the theme of this time?
04:30Blockchain?
04:31NFT?
04:32How will the world change in the age of Web 3.0?
04:39The government's focus on the realization of a digital society
04:44includes environmental maintenance for the promotion of Web 3.0,
04:51and the movement to Web 3.0 is accelerating.
04:56Web 1.0 was introduced in the first half of the 2000s from the 1990s.
05:03With the introduction of the Internet,
05:06various information became easier to obtain and e-mails were developed.
05:11It is now easy to contact people around the world.
05:17Web 2.0 was introduced in the second half of the 2000s to the middle of the 2010s.
05:25Not only did people receive information,
05:28but people also sent information via SNS.
05:33This led to the emergence of YouTube stars,
05:38and foreign people suddenly lined up at pubs in the back alleys.
05:46The Internet became a place for large-scale communication and information distribution.
05:53And now, in the age of Web 3.0,
05:57attention is drawn to technology such as NFTs and blockchains.
06:04I would like to invite Mr. Taihei Shi, who is an expert in this field.
06:11Startup company that develops business using blockchain and NFT technology.
06:18Mr. Taihei Shi is the CEO of Startup Company.
06:25He is active in Tokyo University as a research fellow,
06:30teaching lectures and teaching students.
06:36Mr. Murakami is also interested in various projects and events.
06:42Maru-chan and I are taking care of each other.
06:45Is this the first time I've met you?
06:47Yes, it's the first time I've met you.
06:48I'm indirectly taking care of you.
06:50I consulted with you about the technology of NFTs and blockchains,
06:54and you helped me launch the blockchain and NFT initiative.
07:00In fact, the two teams of Murakami and Maruyama,
07:04RAFURAFU,
07:06obtained a map at the theater and scanned all the two-dimensional codes in three spots within the organization.
07:15As a digital gift filled with NFTs and blockchains,
07:21a limited number of video contents were downloaded.
07:27And it was C3 that created the mechanism.
07:33What is a blockchain and NFT in the first place?
07:39First, let's ask about the blockchain.
07:44When was the blockchain created?
07:47I don't know in the first place.
07:48The blockchain itself was created at the same time as the invention of Bitcoin.
07:55Is that so?
07:56It is a technology that was created to implement the invention of virtual currency called Bitcoin.
08:01It was created in 2009.
08:04The world's first cryptographic asset, Bitcoin.
08:09It is also called a virtual currency.
08:13It was born in 2009 as a currency that does not depend on regulators such as banks and governments.
08:21However...
08:23It is difficult to exchange information on the Internet.
08:27If someone changes it, it will not function properly as money.
08:33So, in order to realize Bitcoin,
08:36we made it so that it could not be changed using computer networks around the world.
08:43Anyone can see the history of transparent transactions,
08:46and anyone can participate in the network.
08:50So, even if Bitcoin is not managed by banks and governments,
08:55blockchain is a technology that is established as a currency.
09:01The mechanism is that many participants keep the same data,
09:08leave a consistent record of transactions,
09:12and anyone can check the history of transactions.
09:18In order to improve past transactions,
09:21it is necessary to improve the data of all participants.
09:25Because it is almost impossible,
09:28security is maintained and Bitcoin is distributed.
09:35Blockchain is a technology that can be used for all kinds of things,
09:40such as the Internet.
09:43Blockchain?
09:45That's right.
09:46What?
09:47What?
09:48I'm going to scream.
09:50I'm going to scream.
09:53Narita-kun.
09:55For example, if you ask me what the Internet is,
09:58I don't know.
10:00If you ask me what a smartphone is or a computer is,
10:03I don't know.
10:04No one knows what's going on and what's going on inside.
10:09But everyone uses a computer or a net that they don't know at all.
10:13Blockchain and NFT are likely to be the same.
10:19That's great.
10:21That's great.
10:22That's great.
10:23That's great.
10:24That's great.
10:25And another technology that is said to be the future of Web3, NFT.
10:32NFT is a digital certificate that proves that digital assets such as digital art and music are real.
10:43If it is a work that exists in reality, such as real jewels and paintings,
10:51there is a certificate that shows the real thing.
10:55By having it, you can buy and sell your assets.
11:02However, digital works such as music, videos, and art on the Internet are infinitely copied,
11:10and many people can own them, so they are not bought and sold without any value.
11:18However, when it comes to images and videos,
11:22the data that proves that it is real is encoded in something like a digital stamp.
11:28By recording it on the blockchain,
11:33many people around the world can share information such as the trading history of the work and the current owner.
11:44In addition, it is impossible to decrypt everything, such as the history of pictures and videos seen by people around the world.
11:52You can prove that you own a digital asset.
11:58Twitter, the founder of GenX, created using this NFT technology.
12:05Jack Dorsey's world's first tweet image.
12:10The image itself can be copied,
12:14but the NFT proves that the data in this image is the only real thing,
12:21and it costs about 3.6 billion yen.
12:26In addition, NBA top player Lebron James' dunk video costs about 13.5 million yen.
12:36In addition, the digital work created by American artist Beaver
12:42costs about 7.5 billion yen.
12:46By proving that NFT is the only real thing,
12:50the value of digital assets has begun to emerge.
12:55And at StartBurn Co., Ltd., which Mr. C represents,
13:00they provide various services using blockchain and NFT technology.
13:07Originally, I am a modern artist,
13:12but I became famous after the death of Gokko.
13:18Artists have been around for many years,
13:23and their value has been questioned many times.
13:26Not only can they prove their value on the spot,
13:29but they also have to prove their value in the future.
13:33For example, a 100-year-old artist's masterpiece often appears on the market.
13:39I have issued a certificate that this person made the work properly.
13:44I still issue certificates to galleries and art museums.
13:47By registering it on the blockchain,
13:52I was able to keep the certificate for a long time.
13:57That's great.
13:59That's why music is like that.
14:01Yes.
14:02In our case, we have a bond with things.
14:05There are things in the real world,
14:07and there is a certificate on the blockchain.
14:09We started by putting a chip on it and binding it.
14:13Did you have things at first?
14:15Yes.
14:16I still do it.
14:18Mr. C is not only in charge of digital art,
14:22but also puts an IC chip on the painting of the actual artwork.
14:29In addition, he is developing a service that shows that the artwork is real,
14:34such as bonding it with the technology of NFT and blockchain.
14:40I had an image that I was in charge of digital art for a while.
14:47That's right.
14:48I started from there,
14:50but three or four years ago,
14:52there was a global buzz about binding digital art NFT on the blockchain and exchanging it.
14:59It was just in the middle of COVID-19.
15:01It reached us a lot.
15:03That's right.
15:04I didn't have a physical image.
15:06But what we do is basically the same.
15:08We issue a certificate on the blockchain,
15:11and in our case, we have a bond with things,
15:13such as IC chips.
15:15The NFT of digital art is basically just binding digital photos and videos on the blockchain.
15:23Basically, it's the same as the technology,
15:27but by binding something,
15:29you can prove who registered it and who owns it.
15:34It's easy to understand.
15:35That's good.
15:36It's easy to understand.
15:37It protects me.
15:38It protects me physically.
15:39I thought it was about the Internet.
15:42It protects me physically.
15:44I think I know what you're talking about.
15:46Yes, yes.
15:47As the technology of NFT and blockchain expands,
15:52what kind of changes will occur in the world?
15:58I think it'll be useful.
16:02May I ask a question?
16:03Yes, go ahead.
16:04There have been a lot of stories about artists and musicians, right?
16:08That's right.
16:09Blockchain is mainly a virtual currency,
16:12so it's related to investors.
16:14But I don't think 95% of people know what it's related to.
16:21I'm wondering how NFT and blockchain will change the lives of many people.
16:28I'm wondering if it's already having an impact.
16:33It may not be as influential as it is now,
16:36but basically, it's a system in which a certificate is issued and managed.
16:46I think that if most internet transactions use blockchain,
16:49it will be safer and more transparent.
16:55That's the prediction of the future of the industry.
16:58In a very familiar example,
17:00if you buy something and ask if it's real,
17:05you can see if the bag of a certain brand is real.
17:10In fact, high-end brands are also managed by blockchain.
17:14They're already doing it.
17:15That's right.
17:16It's already started.
17:17I see.
17:18So, when you try to put the bag of a high-end brand in a range,
17:22it's proven that it's real, and the transaction is properly and safely done.
17:28One of the things about Web3 is that one day,
17:32it may be the time when it all comes together.
17:35When it's all unified,
17:37it's really easy to tell whether it's fake or real when you shop on the Internet.
17:47It's the same with our goods.
17:49That's right.
17:50It's a strange story.
17:51Whether it's fake or real.
17:53It's proven that you can't tell whether it's fake or real when you shop on the Internet.
17:58For me, I think the point is whether it's more efficient to promote social self-management.
18:07What do you think about that?
18:08Yes.
18:09From a user's point of view,
18:11it's pretty advanced to the point where you can use it when you want to use it today.
18:17It's a project we're doing with Mr. Murakami.
18:20In the past, we wanted to buy NFTs,
18:23but after about a day or a day and a half,
18:26the environment was prepared for the first time,
18:29and it was necessary to go through a fairly difficult process.
18:34We've just issued an account,
18:37and it took us about 25 seconds to get an NFT.
18:40That's fast.
18:41It's gotten shorter in the past two years,
18:45but I think it's going to be about the same as using a regular Internet service.
18:51So in the future, when you vote on the Internet,
18:54it's going to be recorded who voted for what.
18:59Hey, it's going to be in the election.
19:01We can't dissolve it.
19:02Mr. Narita.
19:03So digital voting using blockchain has been discussed for a long time.
19:07It's connected.
19:08For example, you can vote, send money, trade,
19:14or prove what's right and what's fake.
19:18Until now, when we tried to do this,
19:20there were countries and big companies,
19:22and it was the first time I felt like I could trust them.
19:25But even if there are no countries or big companies,
19:27you can do it on a network that everyone shares.
19:30Is that what you're talking about?
19:32That's exactly right.
19:33But does that mean you can create a country with blockchain?
19:37Yes, I think so.
19:39However, it is said that a country needs something that can protect order.
19:47Shin-chan, you're not working together,
19:52but where do you feel the potential?
19:55There's a lot.
19:57Just a part of it?
19:59But we're doing content together.
20:01We're doing content together.
20:04I don't think the audience would have known what NFT was.
20:08I've never done it either, but I've studied it a lot.
20:11I listened to today's story for about 30 times the time,
20:16and I thought, oh, that's what it is.
20:18But if we do that,
20:20we get support from our fans.
20:24That's how we keep the content.
20:28We don't have a YouTube channel in our group.
20:32If you buy a DVD or Blu-ray,
20:35you can keep it, but if you lose it or break it,
20:39you can't buy it because there's a limited number of copies.
20:42You can buy it at a different non-regular rate.
20:46It's not the right price.
20:48That's how you can get it.
20:51But we're going to stick to the content we've made.
20:57If we can keep the content,
21:00we'll be able to keep it for a long time.
21:05I think that's one way to make the fans happy.
21:12It's the ultimate gift.
21:14It'll stay with you for the rest of your life.
21:16In the same way,
21:18we can keep the records we've been supporting for a long time.
21:22We know who supported us when we didn't sell well.
21:28We want to apologize to them.
21:31I'm sorry.
21:32I'm sorry.
21:33I'm sorry.
21:34I'm sorry.
21:35If it's a digital video with a certificate using NFT,
21:41it proves that it's an official video.
21:46It also records the history of purchase.
21:50You can also visualize when you became a fan.
21:56If you use this data to give a gift to your early fans,
22:03you can think of a way to interact with new fans.
22:09It can be used on TV, right?
22:11Of course.
22:12I've always wanted to try it on TV.
22:17What do you think you can do?
22:19In the old days,
22:21there was a quiz show to give a product as a gift.
22:25If you read the QR code on the QR code,
22:31you can get a special logo.
22:35For example,
22:37you can say,
22:38I'm always watching your show.
22:39You can say,
22:41But if you say,
22:42I'm really watching your show.
22:43You can interact like that.
22:46For example,
22:47you can say,
22:48I'm a fan of your show.
22:49I see.
22:50It's a special thing.
22:51I don't know if it's profitable.
22:54You can treat it like a novelty.
22:56In the past,
22:57you had to mail it,
22:59or you had to tell your address.
23:02Of course,
23:03the digital data itself is valuable,
23:06and the proof of purchase remains.
23:08But you can also add coupons and tickets.
23:12You can add that, too.
23:13You can do that on TV, too.
23:15If Narita-kun agrees,
23:16you can say,
23:17I'd like to wait for this image of yours.
23:20Like Mio-san.
23:22What do you think, Narita-san?
23:24What do you think you can do?
23:25By doing the project I mentioned earlier,
23:27viewers and TV programs
23:29and talent
23:30can be directly connected.
23:31That's a big deal.
23:33In the old days,
23:34the big limit of mass media
23:37was that you didn't know
23:39who was watching.
23:40That was the problem.
23:42In other words,
23:43there are tens of millions of people
23:45watching TV programs,
23:46but there's no way to contact
23:48those tens of millions of people.
23:50That's true.
23:51It's the same with publishers.
23:52They sell books,
23:53pay thousands of yen,
23:54and buy books,
23:55but there's no way to contact them.
23:57There's still a gap.
23:59If you try to do that,
24:01it's too expensive,
24:02and you have to hear
24:03the other person's privacy.
24:04That was a big problem.
24:06If you can overcome that,
24:08the big limit of TV and publishing
24:10can be reduced a little.
24:13The TV can record
24:15the number of viewers,
24:17but the QR code is only valid
24:19in real-time.
24:21So you can watch it in real-time.
24:24That's a good idea.
24:26Shall we do it?
24:27Yes!
24:28Let's do our best!