aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/packages/website/ts/pages/faq/faq.tsx
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to 'packages/website/ts/pages/faq/faq.tsx')
-rw-r--r--packages/website/ts/pages/faq/faq.tsx374
1 files changed, 163 insertions, 211 deletions
diff --git a/packages/website/ts/pages/faq/faq.tsx b/packages/website/ts/pages/faq/faq.tsx
index c5afcb79f..b4b5214a2 100644
--- a/packages/website/ts/pages/faq/faq.tsx
+++ b/packages/website/ts/pages/faq/faq.tsx
@@ -1,13 +1,13 @@
import * as _ from 'lodash';
import * as React from 'react';
import * as DocumentTitle from 'react-document-title';
-import {Footer} from 'ts/components/footer';
-import {TopBar} from 'ts/components/top_bar';
-import {Question} from 'ts/pages/faq/question';
-import {FAQQuestion, FAQSection, Styles, WebsitePaths} from 'ts/types';
-import {colors} from 'ts/utils/colors';
-import {configs} from 'ts/utils/configs';
-import {constants} from 'ts/utils/constants';
+import { Footer } from 'ts/components/footer';
+import { TopBar } from 'ts/components/top_bar';
+import { Question } from 'ts/pages/faq/question';
+import { FAQQuestion, FAQSection, Styles, WebsitePaths } from 'ts/types';
+import { colors } from 'ts/utils/colors';
+import { configs } from 'ts/utils/configs';
+import { constants } from 'ts/utils/constants';
export interface FAQProps {
source: string;
@@ -30,14 +30,19 @@ const sections: FAQSection[] = [
prompt: 'What is 0x?',
answer: (
<div>
- At its core, 0x is an open and non-rent seeking protocol that facilitates trustless,
- low friction exchange of Ethereum-based assets. Developers can use 0x as a platform
- to build exchange applications on top of{' '}
- (<a href={`${configs.BASE_URL}${WebsitePaths.ZeroExJs}#introduction`} target="blank">0x.js</a>
- {' '}is a Javascript library for interacting with the 0x protocol). For end users, 0x will be
- the infrastructure of a wide variety of user-facing applications i.e.{' '}
- <a href={`${configs.BASE_URL}${WebsitePaths.Portal}`} target="blank">0x Portal</a>,
- a decentralized application that facilitates trustless trading of Ethereum-based tokens
+ At its core, 0x is an open and non-rent seeking protocol that facilitates trustless, low
+ friction exchange of Ethereum-based assets. Developers can use 0x as a platform to build
+ exchange applications on top of (<a
+ href={`${configs.BASE_URL}${WebsitePaths.ZeroExJs}#introduction`}
+ target="blank"
+ >
+ 0x.js
+ </a>{' '}
+ is a Javascript library for interacting with the 0x protocol). For end users, 0x will be the
+ infrastructure of a wide variety of user-facing applications i.e.{' '}
+ <a href={`${configs.BASE_URL}${WebsitePaths.Portal}`} target="blank">
+ 0x Portal
+ </a>, a decentralized application that facilitates trustless trading of Ethereum-based tokens
between known counterparties.
</div>
),
@@ -47,15 +52,14 @@ const sections: FAQSection[] = [
answer: (
<div>
In the two years since the Ethereum blockchain’s genesis block, numerous decentralized
- applications (dApps) have created Ethereum smart contracts for peer-to-peer exchange.
- Rapid iteration and a lack of best practices have left the blockchain scattered with
- proprietary and application-specific implementations. As a result, end users are
- exposed to numerous smart contracts of varying quality and security, with unique
- configuration processes and learning curves, all of which implement the same
- functionality. This approach imposes unnecessary costs on the network by fragmenting
- end users according to the particular dApp each user happens to be using, eliminating
- valuable network effects around liquidity. 0x is the solution to this problem by
- acting as modular, unopinionated building blocks that may be assembled and reconfigured.
+ applications (dApps) have created Ethereum smart contracts for peer-to-peer exchange. Rapid
+ iteration and a lack of best practices have left the blockchain scattered with proprietary and
+ application-specific implementations. As a result, end users are exposed to numerous smart
+ contracts of varying quality and security, with unique configuration processes and learning
+ curves, all of which implement the same functionality. This approach imposes unnecessary costs
+ on the network by fragmenting end users according to the particular dApp each user happens to be
+ using, eliminating valuable network effects around liquidity. 0x is the solution to this problem
+ by acting as modular, unopinionated building blocks that may be assembled and reconfigured.
</div>
),
},
@@ -64,20 +68,18 @@ const sections: FAQSection[] = [
answer: (
<div>
<ul>
+ <li>0x is a protocol for exchange, not a user-facing exchange application.</li>
<li>
- 0x is a protocol for exchange, not a user-facing exchange application.
- </li>
- <li>
- 0x is decentralized and trustless; there is no central party which can be
- hacked, run away with customer funds or be subjected to government regulations.
- Hacks of Mt. Gox, Shapeshift and Bitfinex have demonstrated that these types of
- systemic risks are palpable.
+ 0x is decentralized and trustless; there is no central party which can be hacked, run
+ away with customer funds or be subjected to government regulations. Hacks of Mt. Gox,
+ Shapeshift and Bitfinex have demonstrated that these types of systemic risks are
+ palpable.
</li>
<li>
- Rather than a proprietary system that exists to extract rent for its owners,
- 0x is public infrastructure that is funded by a globally distributed community
- of stakeholders. While the protocol is free to use, it enables for-profit
- user-facing exchange applications to be built on top of the protocol.
+ Rather than a proprietary system that exists to extract rent for its owners, 0x is
+ public infrastructure that is funded by a globally distributed community of
+ stakeholders. While the protocol is free to use, it enables for-profit user-facing
+ exchange applications to be built on top of the protocol.
</li>
</ul>
</div>
@@ -87,13 +89,12 @@ const sections: FAQSection[] = [
prompt: 'If 0x protocol is free to use, where do transaction fees come in?',
answer: (
<div>
- 0x protocol uses off-chain order books to massively reduce friction costs for
- market makers and ensure that the blockchain is only used for trade settlement.
- Hosting and maintaining an off-chain order book is a service; to incent “Relayers”
- to provide this service they must be able to charge transaction fees on trading
- activity. Relayers are free to set their transaction fees to any value they desire.
- We expect Relayers to be highly competitive and transaction fees to approach an
- efficient economic equilibrium over time.
+ 0x protocol uses off-chain order books to massively reduce friction costs for market makers and
+ ensure that the blockchain is only used for trade settlement. Hosting and maintaining an
+ off-chain order book is a service; to incent “Relayers” to provide this service they must be
+ able to charge transaction fees on trading activity. Relayers are free to set their transaction
+ fees to any value they desire. We expect Relayers to be highly competitive and transaction fees
+ to approach an efficient economic equilibrium over time.
</div>
),
},
@@ -102,25 +103,23 @@ const sections: FAQSection[] = [
answer: (
<div>
<div>
- Participants in a state channel pass cryptographically signed messages back and
- forth, accumulating intermediate state changes without publishing them to the
- canonical chain until the channel is closed. State channels are ideal for “bar tab”
- applications where numerous intermediate state changes may be accumulated off-chain
- before being settled by a final on-chain transaction (i.e. day trading, poker,
- turn-based games).
+ Participants in a state channel pass cryptographically signed messages back and forth,
+ accumulating intermediate state changes without publishing them to the canonical chain until
+ the channel is closed. State channels are ideal for “bar tab” applications where numerous
+ intermediate state changes may be accumulated off-chain before being settled by a final
+ on-chain transaction (i.e. day trading, poker, turn-based games).
</div>
<ul>
<li>
- While state channels drastically reduce the number of on-chain transactions
- for specific use cases, numerous on-chain transactions and a security deposit
- are required to open and safely close a state channel making them less efficient
- than 0x for executing one-time trades.
+ While state channels drastically reduce the number of on-chain transactions for specific
+ use cases, numerous on-chain transactions and a security deposit are required to open
+ and safely close a state channel making them less efficient than 0x for executing
+ one-time trades.
</li>
<li>
- State channels are isolated from the Ethereum blockchain meaning that
- they cannot interact with smart contracts. 0x is designed to be integrated
- directly into smart contracts so trades can be executed programmatically
- in a single line of Solidity code.
+ State channels are isolated from the Ethereum blockchain meaning that they cannot
+ interact with smart contracts. 0x is designed to be integrated directly into smart
+ contracts so trades can be executed programmatically in a single line of Solidity code.
</li>
</ul>
</div>
@@ -130,16 +129,20 @@ const sections: FAQSection[] = [
prompt: 'What types of digital assets are supported by 0x?',
answer: (
<div>
- 0x supports all Ethereum-based assets that adhere to the ERC20 token standard.
- There are many ERC20 tokens, worth a combined $2.2B, and more tokens are created
- each month. We believe that, by 2020, thousands of assets will be tokenized and
- moved onto the Ethereum blockchain including traditional securities such as equities,
- bonds and derivatives, fiat currencies and scarce digital goods such as video game
- items. In the future, cross-blockchain solutions such as{' '}
- <a href="https://cosmos.network/" target="_blank">Cosmos</a> and{' '}
- <a href="http://polkadot.io/" target="_blank">Polkadot</a> will allow cryptocurrencies
- to freely move between blockchains and, naturally, currencies such as Bitcoin will
- end up being represented as ERC20 tokens on the Ethereum blockchain.
+ 0x supports all Ethereum-based assets that adhere to the ERC20 token standard. There are many
+ ERC20 tokens, worth a combined $2.2B, and more tokens are created each month. We believe that,
+ by 2020, thousands of assets will be tokenized and moved onto the Ethereum blockchain including
+ traditional securities such as equities, bonds and derivatives, fiat currencies and scarce
+ digital goods such as video game items. In the future, cross-blockchain solutions such as{' '}
+ <a href="https://cosmos.network/" target="_blank">
+ Cosmos
+ </a>{' '}
+ and{' '}
+ <a href="http://polkadot.io/" target="_blank">
+ Polkadot
+ </a>{' '}
+ will allow cryptocurrencies to freely move between blockchains and, naturally, currencies such
+ as Bitcoin will end up being represented as ERC20 tokens on the Ethereum blockchain.
</div>
),
},
@@ -147,23 +150,19 @@ const sections: FAQSection[] = [
prompt: '0x is open source: what prevents someone from forking the protocol?',
answer: (
<div>
- Ethereum and Bitcoin are both open source protocols. Each protocol has been forked,
- but the resulting clone networks have seen little adoption (as measured by transaction
- count or market cap). This is because users have little to no incentive to switch
- over to a clone network if the original has initial network effects and a talented
- developer team behind it.
- An exception is in the case that a protocol includes a controversial feature such as
- a method of rent extraction or a monetary policy that favors one group of users over
- another (Zcash developer subsidy - for better or worse - resulted in Zclassic).
- Perceived inequality can provide a strong enough incentive that users will fork the
- original protocol’s codebase and spin up a new network that eliminates the controversial
- feature. In the case of 0x, there is no rent extraction and no users are given
- special permissions.
-
- 0x protocol is upgradable. Cutting-edge technical capabilities can be integrated
- into 0x via decentralized governance (see section below), eliminating incentives
- to fork off of the original protocol and sacrifice the network effects surrounding
- liquidity that result from the shared protocol and settlement layer.
+ Ethereum and Bitcoin are both open source protocols. Each protocol has been forked, but the
+ resulting clone networks have seen little adoption (as measured by transaction count or market
+ cap). This is because users have little to no incentive to switch over to a clone network if the
+ original has initial network effects and a talented developer team behind it. An exception is in
+ the case that a protocol includes a controversial feature such as a method of rent extraction or
+ a monetary policy that favors one group of users over another (Zcash developer subsidy - for
+ better or worse - resulted in Zclassic). Perceived inequality can provide a strong enough
+ incentive that users will fork the original protocol’s codebase and spin up a new network that
+ eliminates the controversial feature. In the case of 0x, there is no rent extraction and no
+ users are given special permissions. 0x protocol is upgradable. Cutting-edge technical
+ capabilities can be integrated into 0x via decentralized governance (see section below),
+ eliminating incentives to fork off of the original protocol and sacrifice the network effects
+ surrounding liquidity that result from the shared protocol and settlement layer.
</div>
),
},
@@ -180,26 +179,25 @@ const sections: FAQSection[] = [
0x protocol token (ZRX) is utilized in two ways: 1) to solve the{' '}
<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coordination_game" target="_blank">
coordination problem
- </a> and drive network effects around liquidity, creating a feedback loop
- where early adopters of the protocol benefit from wider adoption and 2) to
- be used for decentralized governance over 0x protocol's update mechanism.
- In more detail:
+ </a>{' '}
+ and drive network effects around liquidity, creating a feedback loop where early adopters of
+ the protocol benefit from wider adoption and 2) to be used for decentralized governance over
+ 0x protocol's update mechanism. In more detail:
</div>
<ul>
<li>
- ZRX tokens are used by Makers and Takers (market participants that generate
- and consume orders, respectively) to pay transaction fees to Relayers
- (entities that host and maintain public order books).
+ ZRX tokens are used by Makers and Takers (market participants that generate and consume
+ orders, respectively) to pay transaction fees to Relayers (entities that host and
+ maintain public order books).
</li>
<li>
- ZRX tokens are used for decentralized governance over 0x protocol’s update
- mechanism which allows its underlying smart contracts to be replaced and
- improved over time. An update mechanism is needed because 0x is built upon
- Ethereum’s rapidly evolving technology stack, decentralized governance is
- needed because 0x protocol’s smart contracts will have access to user funds
- and numerous dApps will need to plug into 0x smart contracts. Decentralized
- governance ensures that this update process is secure and minimizes disruption
- to the network.
+ ZRX tokens are used for decentralized governance over 0x protocol’s update mechanism
+ which allows its underlying smart contracts to be replaced and improved over time. An
+ update mechanism is needed because 0x is built upon Ethereum’s rapidly evolving
+ technology stack, decentralized governance is needed because 0x protocol’s smart
+ contracts will have access to user funds and numerous dApps will need to plug into 0x
+ smart contracts. Decentralized governance ensures that this update process is secure and
+ minimizes disruption to the network.
</li>
</ul>
</div>
@@ -209,9 +207,9 @@ const sections: FAQSection[] = [
prompt: 'Why must transaction fees be denominated in 0x token (ZRX) rather than ETH?',
answer: (
<div>
- 0x protocol’s decentralized update mechanism is analogous to proof-of-stake.
- To maximize the alignment of stakeholder and end user incentives, the staked
- asset must provide utility within the protocol.
+ 0x protocol’s decentralized update mechanism is analogous to proof-of-stake. To maximize the
+ alignment of stakeholder and end user incentives, the staked asset must provide utility within
+ the protocol.
</div>
),
},
@@ -219,10 +217,10 @@ const sections: FAQSection[] = [
prompt: 'How will decentralized governance work?',
answer: (
<div>
- Decentralized governance is an ongoing focus of research; it will involve token
- voting with ZRX. Ultimately the solution will maximize security while also maximizing
- the protocol’s ability to absorb new innovations. Until the governance structure is
- formalized and encoded within 0x DAO, a multi-sig will be used as a placeholder.
+ Decentralized governance is an ongoing focus of research; it will involve token voting with ZRX.
+ Ultimately the solution will maximize security while also maximizing the protocol’s ability to
+ absorb new innovations. Until the governance structure is formalized and encoded within 0x DAO,
+ a multi-sig will be used as a placeholder.
</div>
),
},
@@ -233,27 +231,19 @@ const sections: FAQSection[] = [
questions: [
{
prompt: 'What is the total supply of ZRX tokens?',
- answer: (
- <div>
- 1,000,000,000 ZRX. Fixed supply.
- </div>
- ),
+ answer: <div>1,000,000,000 ZRX. Fixed supply.</div>,
},
{
prompt: 'When is the Token Launch? will there be a pre-sale?',
- answer: (
- <div>
- The token launch will be on August 15th, 2017. There will not be a pre-sale.
- </div>
- ),
+ answer: <div>The token launch will be on August 15th, 2017. There will not be a pre-sale.</div>,
},
{
prompt: 'What will the token launch proceeds be used for?',
answer: (
<div>
- 100% of the proceeds raised in the token launch will be used to fund the development
- of free and open source software, tools and infrastructure that support the protocol
- and surrounding ecosystem. Check out our{' '}
+ 100% of the proceeds raised in the token launch will be used to fund the development of free and
+ open source software, tools and infrastructure that support the protocol and surrounding
+ ecosystem. Check out our{' '}
<a
href="https://docs.google.com/document/d/1_RVa-_bkU92fWRsC8eNy4vYjcTt-WC8GtqyyjbTd-oY"
target="_blank"
@@ -267,66 +257,50 @@ const sections: FAQSection[] = [
prompt: 'What will be the initial distribution of ZRX tokens?',
answer: (
<div>
- <div className="center" style={{width: '100%'}}>
- <img
- style={{width: 350}}
- src="/images/zrx_pie_chart.png"
- />
+ <div className="center" style={{ width: '100%' }}>
+ <img style={{ width: 350 }} src="/images/zrx_pie_chart.png" />
</div>
<div className="py1">
- <div className="bold pb1">
- Token Launch (50%)
- </div>
+ <div className="bold pb1">Token Launch (50%)</div>
<div>
- ZRX is inherently a governance token that plays a critical role in the
- process of upgrading 0x protocol. We are fully committed to formulating
- a functional and theoretically sound governance model and we plan to dedicate
- significant resources to R&D.
+ ZRX is inherently a governance token that plays a critical role in the process of
+ upgrading 0x protocol. We are fully committed to formulating a functional and
+ theoretically sound governance model and we plan to dedicate significant resources to
+ R&D.
</div>
</div>
<div className="py1">
- <div className="bold pb1">
- Retained by 0x (15%)
- </div>
+ <div className="bold pb1">Retained by 0x (15%)</div>
<div>
- The 0x core development team will be able to sustain itself for approximately
- five years using funds raised through the token launch. If 0x protocol
- proves to be as foundational a technology as we believe it to be, the
- retained ZRX tokens will allow the 0x core development team to sustain
- operations beyond the first 5 years.
+ The 0x core development team will be able to sustain itself for approximately five years
+ using funds raised through the token launch. If 0x protocol proves to be as foundational
+ a technology as we believe it to be, the retained ZRX tokens will allow the 0x core
+ development team to sustain operations beyond the first 5 years.
</div>
</div>
<div className="py1">
- <div className="bold pb1">
- Developer Fund (15%)
- </div>
+ <div className="bold pb1">Developer Fund (15%)</div>
<div>
- The Developer Fund will be used to make targeted capital injections
- into high potential projects and teams that are attempting to grow
- the 0x ecosystem, strategic partnerships, hackathon prizes and community
- development activities.
+ The Developer Fund will be used to make targeted capital injections into high potential
+ projects and teams that are attempting to grow the 0x ecosystem, strategic partnerships,
+ hackathon prizes and community development activities.
</div>
</div>
<div className="py1">
- <div className="bold pb1">
- Founding Team (10%)
- </div>
+ <div className="bold pb1">Founding Team (10%)</div>
<div>
- The founding team’s allocation of ZRX will vest over a traditional 4
- year vesting schedule with a one year cliff. We believe this should
- be standard practice for any team that is committed to making their
- project a long term success.
+ The founding team’s allocation of ZRX will vest over a traditional 4 year vesting
+ schedule with a one year cliff. We believe this should be standard practice for any team
+ that is committed to making their project a long term success.
</div>
</div>
<div className="py1">
- <div className="bold pb1">
- Early Backers & Advisors (10%)
- </div>
+ <div className="bold pb1">Early Backers & Advisors (10%)</div>
<div>
- Our backers and advisors have provided capital, resources and guidance
- that have allowed us to fill out our team, setup a robust legal entity
- and build a fully functional product before launching a token. As a result,
- we have a proven track record and can offer a token that holds genuine utility.
+ Our backers and advisors have provided capital, resources and guidance that have allowed
+ us to fill out our team, setup a robust legal entity and build a fully functional
+ product before launching a token. As a result, we have a proven track record and can
+ offer a token that holds genuine utility.
</div>
</div>
</div>
@@ -336,47 +310,39 @@ const sections: FAQSection[] = [
prompt: 'Can I mine ZRX tokens?',
answer: (
<div>
- No, the total supply of ZRX tokens is fixed and there is no continuous issuance
- model. Users that facilitate trading over 0x protocol by operating a Relayer
- earn transaction fees denominated in ZRX; as more trading activity is generated,
- more transaction fees are earned.
+ No, the total supply of ZRX tokens is fixed and there is no continuous issuance model. Users
+ that facilitate trading over 0x protocol by operating a Relayer earn transaction fees
+ denominated in ZRX; as more trading activity is generated, more transaction fees are earned.
</div>
),
},
{
prompt: 'Will there be a lockup period for ZRX tokens sold in the token launch?',
- answer: (
- <div>
- No, ZRX tokens sold in the token launch will immediately be liquid.
- </div>
- ),
+ answer: <div>No, ZRX tokens sold in the token launch will immediately be liquid.</div>,
},
{
prompt: 'Will there be a lockup period for tokens allocated to the founding team?',
answer: (
<div>
- Yes. ZRX tokens allocated to founders, advisors and staff members will be released
- over a 4 year vesting schedule with a 25% cliff upon completion of the initial
- token launch and 25% released each subsequent year in monthly installments. Staff
- members hired after the token launch will have a 4 year vesting schedule with a
- one year cliff.
+ Yes. ZRX tokens allocated to founders, advisors and staff members will be released over a 4 year
+ vesting schedule with a 25% cliff upon completion of the initial token launch and 25% released
+ each subsequent year in monthly installments. Staff members hired after the token launch will
+ have a 4 year vesting schedule with a one year cliff.
</div>
),
},
{
prompt: 'Which cryptocurrencies will be accepted in the token launch?',
- answer: (
- <div>ETH.</div>
- ),
+ answer: <div>ETH.</div>,
},
{
prompt: 'When will 0x be live?',
answer: (
<div>
- An alpha version of 0x has been live on our private test network since January
- 2017. Version 1.0 of 0x protocol will be deployed to the canonical Ethereum
- blockchain after a round of security audits and prior to the public token launch.
- 0x will be using the 0x protocol during our token launch.
+ An alpha version of 0x has been live on our private test network since January 2017. Version 1.0
+ of 0x protocol will be deployed to the canonical Ethereum blockchain after a round of security
+ audits and prior to the public token launch. 0x will be using the 0x protocol during our token
+ launch.
</div>
),
},
@@ -401,19 +367,17 @@ const sections: FAQSection[] = [
questions: [
{
prompt: 'Where is 0x based?',
- answer: (
- <div>
- 0x was founded in SF and is driven by a diverse group of contributors.
- </div>
- ),
+ answer: <div>0x was founded in SF and is driven by a diverse group of contributors.</div>,
},
{
prompt: 'How can I get involved?',
answer: (
<div>
- Join our <a href={constants.URL_ZEROEX_CHAT} target="_blank">Rocket.chat</a>!
- As an open source project, 0x will rely on a worldwide community of passionate
- developers to contribute proposals, ideas and code.
+ Join our{' '}
+ <a href={constants.URL_ZEROEX_CHAT} target="_blank">
+ Rocket.chat
+ </a>! As an open source project, 0x will rely on a worldwide community of passionate developers
+ to contribute proposals, ideas and code.
</div>
),
},
@@ -421,20 +385,15 @@ const sections: FAQSection[] = [
prompt: 'Why the name 0x?',
answer: (
<div>
- 0x is the prefix for hexadecimal numeric constants including Ethereum addresses.
- In a more abstract context, as the first open protocol for exchange 0x represents
- the beginning of the end for the exchange industry’s rent seeking oligopoly:
- zero exchange.
+ 0x is the prefix for hexadecimal numeric constants including Ethereum addresses. In a more
+ abstract context, as the first open protocol for exchange 0x represents the beginning of the end
+ for the exchange industry’s rent seeking oligopoly: zero exchange.
</div>
),
},
{
prompt: 'How do you pronounce 0x?',
- answer: (
- <div>
- We pronounce 0x as “zero-ex,” but you are free to pronounce it however you please.
- </div>
- ),
+ answer: <div>We pronounce 0x as “zero-ex,” but you are free to pronounce it however you please.</div>,
},
],
},
@@ -447,20 +406,13 @@ export class FAQ extends React.Component<FAQProps, FAQState> {
public render() {
return (
<div>
- <DocumentTitle title="0x FAQ"/>
- <TopBar
- blockchainIsLoaded={false}
- location={this.props.location}
- />
- <div
- id="faq"
- className="mx-auto max-width-4 pt4"
- style={{color: colors.grey800}}
- >
- <h1 className="center" style={{...styles.thin}}>0x FAQ</h1>
- <div className="sm-px2 md-px2 lg-px0 pb4">
- {this._renderSections()}
- </div>
+ <DocumentTitle title="0x FAQ" />
+ <TopBar blockchainIsLoaded={false} location={this.props.location} />
+ <div id="faq" className="mx-auto max-width-4 pt4" style={{ color: colors.grey800 }}>
+ <h1 className="center" style={{ ...styles.thin }}>
+ 0x FAQ
+ </h1>
+ <div className="sm-px2 md-px2 lg-px0 pb4">{this._renderSections()}</div>
</div>
<Footer />
</div>