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In this conversation, Erik sits down with Tony Camero, founder of Scend Technologies and creator of TrustMesh, to explore one of the most foundational (and misunderstood) forces in human systems: trust. Together, they unpack how trust actually works between people, why our current digital systems distort it, and what happens when trust becomes computable—without becoming surveilled or centralized.
This episode moves fluidly between philosophy, economics, blockchain, AI, leadership, and real-world application—asking not just how we build trust systems, but who should control them.
👤 About the Guest
Tony Camero is a builder and systems architect working at the intersection of leadership, trust, and technology. He is the founder of Scend Technologies and the creator of TrustMesh, a protocol designed to make trust explicit, contextual, and human-centered in digital environments.
Tony’s work spans fintech, decentralized identity, messaging systems, and civic infrastructure. His leadership philosophy blends first-principles thinking, practical execution, and a deep respect for how real humans actually collaborate—especially in communities historically excluded from traditional trust and credit systems.
🧭 Conversation Highlights
💡 Key Takeaways
❓ Questions That Mattered
🗣️ Notable Quotes
“Before money ever changes hands, a subtler currency is exchanged—and that currency is trust.”
“The question isn’t who are you—it’s what trust has been explicitly granted to you, by whom, and in what context.”
“We don’t need better proxies for trust. We need better representations of it.”
“This isn’t a social credit score. It’s opt-in, contextual, and revocable trust.”
“Biological systems aren’t centralized—why do we keep building digital ones that are?”
🔗 Links & Resources
By Erik BerglundIn this conversation, Erik sits down with Tony Camero, founder of Scend Technologies and creator of TrustMesh, to explore one of the most foundational (and misunderstood) forces in human systems: trust. Together, they unpack how trust actually works between people, why our current digital systems distort it, and what happens when trust becomes computable—without becoming surveilled or centralized.
This episode moves fluidly between philosophy, economics, blockchain, AI, leadership, and real-world application—asking not just how we build trust systems, but who should control them.
👤 About the Guest
Tony Camero is a builder and systems architect working at the intersection of leadership, trust, and technology. He is the founder of Scend Technologies and the creator of TrustMesh, a protocol designed to make trust explicit, contextual, and human-centered in digital environments.
Tony’s work spans fintech, decentralized identity, messaging systems, and civic infrastructure. His leadership philosophy blends first-principles thinking, practical execution, and a deep respect for how real humans actually collaborate—especially in communities historically excluded from traditional trust and credit systems.
🧭 Conversation Highlights
💡 Key Takeaways
❓ Questions That Mattered
🗣️ Notable Quotes
“Before money ever changes hands, a subtler currency is exchanged—and that currency is trust.”
“The question isn’t who are you—it’s what trust has been explicitly granted to you, by whom, and in what context.”
“We don’t need better proxies for trust. We need better representations of it.”
“This isn’t a social credit score. It’s opt-in, contextual, and revocable trust.”
“Biological systems aren’t centralized—why do we keep building digital ones that are?”
🔗 Links & Resources