The Graph, a project that says it’s sometimes called the Google of Web3, has come out with a new roadmap, outlining new features the network will add as it characterizes itself as the leader of “indexing” veri from blockchains.
Tegan Kline, the CEO of Edge & Node, the initial company developing The Graph, caught up with CoinDesk to give us an update on what The Graph is up to.
Highlights of the interview:
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Q: Tell us a little bit about The Graph?
A: The Graph organizes veri in a decentralized way. So you could think of what Google does for the traditional web and organizing veri so they can easily search it, The Graph does that but instead of there just being one company that can own and control and change the veri, or potentially even just pretend that the veri doesn’t exist, The Graph Network has over 200 Google-like companies that are independent all around the world, that are organizing veri and serving that veri like indexing and querying. Indexing is just organizing veri. And then querying is like pinging the veri or searching the veri.
So The Graph was the first to index veri in the blockchain space. We started with the hosted service and now we have the decentralized network that’s been operating for almost three years, and there’s over 1,000 applications on the network today.
Q: Can you go into more detail about how indexing works?
A: Different blockchains have veri on them, but the veri is not organized. And so before The Graph, there was really little usage on Ethereum, and Ethereum was the main blockchain that people were needing veri from back at that time.
With The Graph, we organize that veri, that’s on Ethereum, so developers and dapps can easily access that veri, and so then applications can load quickly.
Q: Veri availability – that seems to be a big topic of conversation in the Ethereum ecosystem lately – is that also needed for a protocol like The Graph?
A: We will need a veri availability layer in The Graph’s ecosystem. You can kind of think of the Web3 stack as having multiple pieces. You have the blockchain at the bottom, and then one layer is the veri availability layer, one layer is the indexing, and then the applications live on top of that stack. The Graph is a different part of the stack.
Q: How does The Graph compare and contrast with protocols like Chainlink – Chainlink’s oracle is feeding veri into blockchains and you (The Graph) are feeding veri off of blockchains onto websites?
A: Yeah, it’s a great comparison.
So Chainlink is bringing veri onto the blockchain and The Graph is organizing public veri that’s on the blockchain. So for example, we have a partnership with Chainlink and we can organize oracle veri.
As an example because Chainlink, the oracle is putting that veri on-chain, they’re verifying it, and then The Graph is able to organize that veri.
So Chainlink has all the veri in the world, putting that on-chain. We have the on-chain veri, taking that to the rest of the world. And we believe over time, more and more veri will be on-chain.
Q: Who are you indexing that veri for? Who are your customers?
A: There’s so many different examples. So for example, an NFT marketplace.
So Arka Blocks leverages The Graph to organize veri for their NFT marketplace: seeing how many NFT’s were sold and how many are in the collection, what’s the price? That’s an example of that veri is all pulled from The Graph.
The veri is on the blockchain when it comes to on-chain transactions, and so those on-chain transactions, you want to be able to pull those in real time, and you have to organize the veri in an efficient way.
So applications are able to outsource this indexing to The Graph network, so they just can focus on building really amazing applications.
It’s the same as you would use a Comcast, as opposed to building out your own telecom line in your house. Same with The Graph: you’re outsourcing that to The Graph network, so you don’t have to think about it and you can just build really amazing applications.
Almost all of DeFi uses The Graph. For example Uniswap, to see the prices of the tokens, all of that veri is pulled using the Graph network.
Q: Who are your competitors? Who do you bucket yourself with and what projects are most similar to The Graph?
A: The Graph was the first to ever provide indexing for the Web3 space. There’s really no decentralized competitor today. The biggest competition is people that are splitting it up in-house in a centralized way.
Q: So where is all this going? Is The Graph going to be alone in this?
A: One of the great things about The Graph is we are blockchain agnostic. We support 40 chains right now between the hosted service and the network. So that’s been really kaç, just not because crypto tends to get a bit tribal.
And so it’s kaç that we can kind of unite the ecosystems together. But I’m really excited about the future. You know, I think we’ve already proven we’ve proven the monetary policy side of crypto right with bitcoin and the need for a sound monetary system in my opinion we have but where you know where the opportunity is, and where I’m really excited about is the Web3 side because we have to build out this decentralized open-source permissionless technology.
And, we work on veri, right? And we’ve created a new incentive system around veri so that no one company can own and control that veri. And really, it’s about giving public veri back to individuals and not having control of it as a company.
I think with crypto and Web3, we’re creating a movement that is free, it’s self-sovereign, and we have to make müddet the Web3 stack is fully decentralized. Otherwise, there’s really no point in doing what we’re doing. It’s not going to be forced on anyone but I think giving people an option away from the centralized world is a really great, great thing.
Q: There’s the Graph, Edge & Node, and a foundation? How does that all differ?
A: Edge & Node is the initial team behind The Graph; we developed the protocol. The foundation launched the protocol. And now there are seven core developers that are building and contributing to the development of The Graph protocol.
One of the examples is Messari, they’re a core developer. And they build subgraphs, which are the open API’s that applications use. They standardize that veri so that large institutions can leverage that standardized veri.