What the FLock
In this episode of What the FLock, host Sameeha Rehman speaks with Elizabeth Lui [https://x.com/elizabethluihy], Head of Ecosystem at FLock [www.flock.io], about her path from Hong Kong and political science into software engineering, blockchain, and decentralized AI. Elizabeth traces her journey through human rights work, university research, computational social science, and a move to the UK. She explains how she met FLock founder Jiahao [linkedin.com/in/jiahao7sun/?skipRedirect=true], joined as an early engineer, and now works across research, technical product management, and ecosystem partnerships. The conversation covers FLock’s mission to decentralize and democratize AI development, its products including AI Arena and federated learning on blockchain, and a UNDP pilot in the Dominican Republic that uses AI, smart contracts, and DAO governance to support rural women’s agricultural collectives with transparent, automated insurance payouts. Timestamps 00:00 — Intro: What the FLock, guest Elizabeth Lui 00:38 — Growing up in Hong Kong 01:20 — Arts, history, literature to politics at university 01:58 — Web3 as political systems 04:20 — NGO and early research career 05:35 — Computational social science and Python 06:23 — Twitter data for social science 07:35 — Move to the UK 09:18 — Oxford, work ethic, and research ambitions 13:08 — Tech bootcamp and software engineering in London 14:21 — Path toward blockchain engineering 15:21 — Meeting Jiahao and discovering early FLock 17:42 — Joining FLock as an early team member 18:19 — First impressions of the FLock team 24:00 — Explaining FLock to non-technical listeners 26:29 — Decentralized AI experience before and at FLock 28:11 — Research, TPM, and head of ecosystem 33:45 — UNDP x Dominican Republic pilot 37:49 — Hackathons, crowdsourced data, and AI Arena for niche models 42:31 — FLock’s next 3-5 years 45:21 — Rapid fire: AI, colleagues, Turing, yoga, and privacy 48:25 — UK health data leak discussion 51:03 — If FLock were a song Key Takeaways 1. Web3 is political, not only technical. Consensus, incentives, and punishment of bad actors are governance questions. Web3 implements them in code and protocols. 2. Decentralized does not automatically mean democratic. FLock aims for both: open infrastructure and broader participation, voice, and rewards in AI. 3. Privacy is underweighted in AI. Over-collection and poor handling of data, especially sensitive data like health records, can create harm that is hard to undo. 4. Niche, high-impact problems need different infrastructure. Large AI vendors may not build models for every local need. Decentralized training and incentives, such as AI Arena, can help fill that gap. 5. Real-world pilots matter. The Dominican Republic project connects on-the-ground data collection, fine-tuned models, transparent payouts, and community governance into one end-to-end use case. Key Terms 1. Decentralized AI: AI development and training not controlled by a single central party. 2. Democratic AI: An approach where more people can participate, govern, and benefit from AI development. 3. Federated learning: Training models without centralizing sensitive raw data. 4. AI Arena: FLock’s decentralized training platform with Kaggle [https://www.kaggle.com/]-like rewards via smart contracts. 5. FL Alliance: Federated learning on blockchain, designed to be privacy-preserving across parties. 6. DAO: On-chain governance for collectives, such as loan and insurance decisions. Links FLock [https://flock.io/]
4 episoder
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