Ouail Tayarth

Ouail is a blockchain developer and enjoys collaborating with clients to create high-converting NFT and web3 projects.

He’s experienced in smart contracts with Gas Efficiency, Security Mechanisms, and all the specific requirements you need for a project or collection.

Ouail can help clients with the following services:

● Coding gas-efficient custom and secure smart contracts to store NFT information, which bring transparency, time efficiency, precision, safety, cost-effectiveness, and trust into blockchain transactions for your community.

● Providing suggestions, reviews, including metadata storage through IPFS.

● Testing, writing smart contracts for different tokens (ERC-20, ERC-721, ERC-1155,etc) based on the client’s requirement.

● Building secure NFT Minting Websites with metamask wallet connection and web3 integration.

● Designing and building decentralised and centralised web applications of different types (NFT marketplace, crypto website, NFTs, blogs, e-commerce stores, personal website) from scratch to production using the best and secure web development technologies.

As an experienced blockchain developer, you can rest assured that you are getting top-quality with a pre-determined strategy to assure your return on investment.

*Ouail is employed by Summit Land Management, a Rose Law Group related company, and contracted with Rose Law Group.

Examples of Work

In The News

Judge dismisses copyright lawsuit against OpenAI; Paul Coble, chair of Rose Law Group’s AI, intellectual property, and technology law departments, provides insight

By Jack Nicastro | Reason U.S. District Court Judge Colleen McMahon has dismissed a copyright lawsuit against OpenAI. McMahon’s decision, issued Thursday, is a win not just for OpenAI but for everyone who benefits from ChatGPT and similar programs. Raw Story Media and AlterNet Media filed the suit in February, complaining that OpenAI used their articles to train ChatGPT and that the bot “regurgitate[s]

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Paul Coble, chair of Rose Law Group’s AI, intellectual property, and technology law department, comments on: Signs of perpetuating historic biases emerge as AI takes the helm of decision making

By Paige Gross | AZ Mirror In a recent study evaluating how chatbots make loan suggestions for mortgage applications, researchers at Pennsylvania’s Lehigh University found something stark: there was clear racial bias at play. With 6,000 sample loan applications based on data from the 2022 Home Mortgage Disclosure Act, the chatbots recommended denials for more Black applicants than identical white counterparts. They

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