The Policy Layer
Ep 68: Digital Sovereignty Beyond “Buy European”
This episode starts with a simple argument: Europe cannot buy its way into digital sovereignty. Professor Roman Beck explains why the real issue is not nationality, but control, and why blockchain and decentralized systems belong in that conversation. From governance and key custody to resilience and execution, this is a policy discussion about what blockchain infrastructure can offer when institutions are thinking seriously about sovereignty.
Ep 68: Forward-Looking Crypto Policy
What does good crypto regulation look like when the technology keeps moving and the stakes are real? Maha El Dimachki (GFTN) to talk about the gap between blockchain and crypto in policy conversations, the importance of proportionate regulation, and why useful engagement between regulators and industry depends on trust, tension, and clarity. We also get into policy coordination, experimentation, and what still is not getting enough attention. This one is for anyone interested in how serious institutions think through innovation. 🎧 Listen on Spotify & Apple Podcasts
Ep 66: Data Ownership, Privacy, and Hiring: MyStandard
Adam Zec, CEO of MyStandard, joins us to talk about fixing one of the most broken parts of the digital economy: data ownership. MyStandard is building infrastructure that lets individuals control and monetize their workforce data instead of handing it over to platforms by default. The conversation covers hiring, privacy, bias, and why useful blockchain products should lead with what they solve. Discover more in MyStandard.io 🎧 Listen on Spotify & Apple Podcasts
Ep 64: When Tokens Don’t Fit the Rules: LSTs & MiCA
Liquid staking tokens may sound like a niche corner of crypto, but they raise a much bigger question: can regulation actually keep up with decentralized systems? Juan Ignacio Ibañez of the MiCA Crypto Alliance dicusses why LSTs are so hard to classify under MiCA, and why that ambiguity creates real compliance risk for platforms and service providers. The conversation moves beyond labels to a deeper issue: what happens when existing rules are built for assets with issuers, managers, and clearer boundaries than Web3 often provides. Listen on Spotify and Apple Music. Discover more in their working paper: Crypto-asset Taxonomy for Investors and Regulators
Ep 62: Crypto Crime, Sanctions & Signals: Evidence in the Blockchain
Yes, illicit finance in crypto exists, but it's not the whole story. Ari Redbord (TRM Labs) walks us through the real numbers, how blockchain data is used as evidence, and what better enforcement could look like. From sanctions to smart compliance tools, we get into what’s working and what still needs to improve. 🔎 Discover more in TRM's 2026 Crypto Crime Report 🎧 Listen on Spotify and Apple Podcasts
Ep 59: Stablecoins Across Borders (2025 edition)
Stablecoins were the main character in policy circles this year, and for good reason. Urszula McCormack, Andrew Whitworth , and Laura Navaratnam walk us through how 2025 played out across Hong Kong, the EU, UK, and Australia. From what got finalized, what’s still fuzzy, and what signals to watch in early 2026... it's the year-end reality check for anyone dealing with digital money, law, and regulation. 🎧 Listen on Spotify and Apple Podcasts.
Ep 58: Inclusion Is Infrastructure: Diversity and Design in Web3
Crypto says it’s for everyone — but who’s actually building the future? Michelle O’Connor, founder of The Digital Future, joins us to talk about inclusion, innovation, and why the next wave of Web3 depends on who’s in the room. From breaking down crypto’s insider language to creating real access for builders across different backgrounds and regions, Michelle shares how diverse voices are shaping the next era of Web3. Together, we explore what happens when the people designing the technology finally reflect the world it’s meant to serve. 🎧 Listen on Spotify and Apple Podcasts.
Ep 56: Tokenized Economies and the Architecture of Digital Money
Keith Bear, Fellow at Cambridge Judge Business School, joins us to break down what digital money really looks like in a tokenized economy. From stablecoins to CBDCs, we explore what’s working, what’s missing, and what still needs to be reimagined.
Ep 55: Applying GDPR to the Blockchain ft. Clifford Chance
Can blockchains ever truly be privacy-compliant? Clifford Chance lawyers walk through the gray areas, from wallet addresses to pseudonymous data, and explain what regulators are starting to expect. 🎧 Listen on Spotify and Apple Podcasts.
Ep 54: What Are Digital Assets, Really? ft. Lord Chris Holmes
Lord Chris Holmes explains how tokenization could reshape identity, finance, and trust across the UK and beyond. He breaks down what digital assets really are and why they matter for everyone, not just technologists. From refugee ID to football cards, this episode connects the dots between everyday life and emerging tech. 🎧 Listen on Spotify and Apple Podcasts.
Ep 53: TLDR Global Crypto Policy in 2025 (from MiCA to Abu Dhabi and beyond).
Global crypto rules are changing fast, and 2025 is a turning point. We are joined by Elise Soucie Watts (Executive Director at Global Digital Finance), who discusses the big moves: MiCA in Europe, U.S. legislation, Asia’s innovation wave, and so much more. Check out the GDF’s report on tokenization here. 🎧 Listen on Spotify and Apple Podcasts.
Ep 52: Rethinking Cities with Blockchain ft. Former Lord Mayor of London Michael Mainelli
Michael Mainelli, former Lord Mayor of London, joins Owl Explains to unpack how blockchain can help cities govern smarter: from planning records to transit data. From congestion charges to building permits, Mainelli explains why cities need better memory systems and not just better apps. It’s local meets ledger, and a reminder that blockchain’s real power might lie in fixing what cities forget to track. 🎧 Listen on Spotify and Apple Podcasts.