forked from cheng/wallet
1533 lines
82 KiB
Markdown
1533 lines
82 KiB
Markdown
---
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# katex
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title: >-
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Social networking
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sidebar: true
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notmine: false
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...
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::: myabstract
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[abstract:]{.bigbold}
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Speech is suppressed by censorship, and on "free speech" platforms by state sponsored shill spam. Crypto currency transaction metadata goes over insecure networks, so we need a secure, uncensorable, and spam resistent Web 3.0 both for freedom of speech and economic freedom.
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:::
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# the crisis of censorship
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If we have a mechanism capable of securely handling arbitrary free form
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metadata about transactions, it can handle arbitrary free form information
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about anything, and people are likely to use it for information the
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government does not like. It is not only transaction data that the
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government wants to control.
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We have a crisis of censorship.
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Every uncensored medium of public discussion is getting the treatment.
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In a world where truth and reality is massively suppressed, forbidden truth
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should migrate to a platform resistant to Global American Empire domination.
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The Global American Empire is at war with truth and reality. A
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communications platform should support truth and reality, thus must be at
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war with the Global American Empire. A crypto currency needs what
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Urbit was supposed to be, its own communications and publishing
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protocol, in order that you can have transaction metadata protected, and
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thus needs its own truth and reality system. And thus it needs to be willing
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to be at war with the Global American Empire. Its developers need to
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figure on a significant probability of being arrested, murdered or forced to
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flee, as Satoshi figured, though their inability to think beyond next weeks
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power point bullet points, and inability to comprehend the nature of
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cryptographic protocols will likely protect us. On the other hand,
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the recent arrests of people who created privacy software for Ethereum
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suggests some risk. I would never have tried what Tornado tried,
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for Ethereum is full of enemies who have longer time horizons
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and better capability to understand what we are up to than most of them,
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and Tornado was on the enemy's home turf. You can get away with that
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stuff in the Bitcoin ecology so far, but no need to tread on the
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enemy's toes unnecessarily. It draws unwelcome attention and forces
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them to think.
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We need a pseudonymous social network on which it is possible to safely
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discuss forbidden topics.
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## shills, spamming, and scamming
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We also have a crisis of shills, spamming, and scamming.
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[lengthy battleground report]:
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../images/anon_report_from_people_who_tried_to_keep_unmoderated_discussion_viable.webp
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"anon report_from people who tried to keep unmoderated discussion viable"
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{target="_blank"}
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Here is a [lengthy battleground report] from some people who were on the
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front lines in that battle, and stuck it out a good deal longer than I did.
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So we need moderation.
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But to prevent censorship, we need entirely decentralized moderation.
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People escape censorship to unmoderated anonymous platforms, but are
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driven off those platforms by shills, spammers, and scammers.
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The difference between censorship and moderation is that a moderator acts
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to protect the discussion from shills, spam, and scammers, while a censor
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acts to prevent the discussion of dangerous ideas.
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What the censor is suppressing is stuff that is not generally known and not
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generally available. What moderators are needed for is to suppress is stuff
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that is very hard to avoid, because a thousand sock puppets are robotically
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posting from the same script on a thousand forums.
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# Social net architecture
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You want to be able to message everyone in the world, but you don’t want
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spammers and shills to be able to message you. (The difference between a
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spammer and a shill is that a shill is spearphishing. A shill’s script is
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narrowly targeted to a specific target community, like Trotsky declaring
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himself to be a peasant in order to kill the peasants, or the innumerable pump
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and dump “investment opportunities”.)
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You want to be able to communicate to the broad public (equivalent of
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web pages) as well as specific individuals (equivalent of text messages,
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email), and you want people to be able to comment before the broad
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public on content you have communicated to the broad public (equivalent
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of blogs). You want to be notified when someone sends a message
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specifically to you, and you want to be notified when someone responds to
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content you have communicated to the broad public, you want to be able
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to turn off the ability to respond, or turn it off for any new respondents,
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want to be able to close comments, and you want, with considerably less
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urgency, to be notified when something appears before the broad public by
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people you are following.
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Thus the social network system of followers, followed, buddies, and feeds,
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which combines the functionality of the web, the functionality of
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messaging, and functionality of the blog. We can model everything as a
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web, except that some parts of the web are directed acyclic graphs under
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some directionality criterion. A directed acyclic graph has an implicit time
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order, hence notifications and feeds.
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if we try to distinguish between posts and comments as blogs do, there are
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several tricky edge cases when we have replies to replies.
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Usenet made no substantial distinction between posts and comments.
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Making the distinction, as blogs do, breaks the conversation and
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complicates the code and the interface.
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Usenet died of shills, as for example the science fiction and fantasy
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discussion groups dying as a side effect of progressive takeover of science
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fiction fandom organizations. Somehow the conversation would invariably
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turn into attacks on capitalism, the market, family, fatherhood, and private
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property, which did not have much to do with science fiction and fantasy.
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If fantasy came up at all, it was in a conversation that presupposed the
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evils of feudalism, and the Marxist history that capitalism was the
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successor of feudalism, rather than in a conversation that presupposed the
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reader’s yearning for Kingship, kinship, leadership, and the hero with a
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thousand faces.
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In the end the conversation in the science fiction and fantasy Usenet
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discussion groups tended to be about the power of classes as defined by
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Marx, rather than about power of heroes, Kings, and vigilantes. And so the
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Usenet science fiction and fantasy discussion groups, and just about every
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Usenet discussion group, died of shills.
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Conversations became one man with one microphone attached to a
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thousand megaphones, and replying was like talking back to the national
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news broadcast, because you could reply to a shill, but the man giving the
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shill her script was not listening, because he was running a hundred
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similar shills, and his shill would just stick to her script, the script he had
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assigned to her no matter what you replied to her script.
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Her replies to your reply would be unresponsive, because they came from
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a script written by a man who had never thought about or foreseen your
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reply.
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Conversations came to resemble the conversations you have with a non
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player character in a video game, a scripted robotic simulation of actual
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conversation, or the conversations on a help line with an unhelpful third
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world help line worker to whom English is a second language, and who is
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reading from a script, a script written by a man whose native tongue is
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English, but his script is designed to deal with certain common problems
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that do not in the slightest resemble the problem you have with the
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product, because the man writing her script did not foresee your problem.
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Usenet was designed for conversations, but was hijacked by Harvard and
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the New York Times to give one way lectures, resembling those given in
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Harvard and the pages of the New York Times. Speaking back was
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pointless, no one was listening, and eventually everyone stopped
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speaking back, and Usenet died.
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The conversation in the Usenet science fiction and fantasy groups died,
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because the shills would stick to script no matter what, providing the
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superficial simulation of a conversation about fantasy and science fiction
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without the substance of a real conversation. And the same was happening
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in every Usenet group, though what was being shilled varied from one
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group to the next, with an immense multitude of different shilling
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organizations running an immense multitude of unresponsive scripts
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promoting an immense multitude of different scams, initially
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most of them about money rather than politics, but what killed usenet
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was political shills.
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In the 3rd Reich there were no chess clubs or sewing circles only
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national socialist chess clubs and sewing circles. Clownworld has
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adopted the policy that there be only progressive and gay chess
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clubs and dykey and progressive sewing circles.
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Two real participants in the science fiction and fantasy Usenet group would
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be having a conversation about the hero’s journey, and the computer of
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the man writing the economic Marxist scripts would detect a keyword or key
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phrase that it had been programmed to treat as relevant to a Marxist script,
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and direct a shill to interject that script into the conversation, and the shill
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would do so, mixing the script up a little with random fragments from the
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actual conversation to prevent it from being too readily recognizable as the
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same script already posted a thousand times before in a hundred Usenet
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groups, and the conversation would be derailed. Or worse, a robot
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promoting class conflict based on sexual preference classes would be
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triggered on seeing the post by a robot promoting class conflict based on
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economic classes, and the conversation thereafter would consist of one
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robot pushing scripts about economic Marxist classes, and another robot
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pushing scripts about Cultural Marxist classes with the bored economic
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Marxist shill industriously interweaving random fragments from Cultural
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Marxist script into the economic Marxist script, and the bored Cultural
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Marxist shill industriously interweaving random fragments from the
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economic Marxist script into the Cultural Marxist script to create the
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semblance of a conversation where no actual conversation existed, merely
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random variations on scripts already robotically pushed a thousand times
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in a hundred places.
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The real participants eventually left the Usenet group leaving the robots to
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robotically talk to each other.
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To prevent shills, you need moderation. But moderation is apt to get
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centrally controlled and become censorship, shutting down vitally needed
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conversations. We need mandatory moderation, to prevent what happened
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to Usenet, but we need completely decentralized moderation, to prevent
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censorship.
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If you don’t have a means of stopping one way broadcasts into a medium
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designed for conversations, your social net is going to be flooded with one
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way broadcasts.
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The particular axe that was being ground was not the problem. There is no
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end of large, wealthy, and powerful organizations with axes to grind. In
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the Science Fiction and Fantasy group, the primary problem seemed to be
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organizations created and funded by Harvard and the New York Times
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promoting cultural Marxism and old type economic Marxism, but if it had
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not been them, would have been someone else promoting something else.
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One way broadcasts provide the opportunity for power and money.
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So what should happen is that when you have a feed, and are a follower of
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Bob, Bob’s public posts that you have not yet seen are marked as unread
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in the feed, and listed by title or first line if no title. And if you look at one
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of them, the thing he is replying to is just a click away, and the replies he
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has approved are just a click away. But you don’t see, and cannot click on,
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the replies he has not approved, unless you are following those
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commenters also. Though he might give blanket approval to Alice’s feed,
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in which case you would also see Alice and everything she approved.
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Because if you could click on them, a million shills and spammers would
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reply, rendering the link worthless.
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If you want two way narrowcasts, you need a means to keep out
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broadcasts, or else narrowcast memes sent by individuals to individuals
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will be drowned out by mass produced broadcast memes sent to everyone
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indiscriminately by large bureaucratic organizations. If it had not been
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Harvard and the New York Times, might have been some megachurch.
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Indeed, in the early days of the internet, it was some megachurch.
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In the early days of the internet, every group, regardless of topic,
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regardless of its area of interest, was full of repetitious stuff about young
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earth creationism, material indistinguishable from what I had seen before
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in every other group, with any attempt to debate the posters receiving
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unresponsive scripted responses to the unscripted response, responses
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suspiciously similar to a thousand similarly unresponsive responses in a
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thousand different interest groups attempting to pursue a thousand quite
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different interests.
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If young earth creationist shilling died out, it was because bigger and more
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powerful organizations with more important axes to grind got in on the
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business of broadcasting one way broadcasts into narrowcast two way
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media. The old indiscriminate one way broadcasts were drowned out by
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new indiscriminate one way broadcasts reflecting the concerns of bigger
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and more powerful organizations, in the end, the biggest and most
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powerful organizations of all.
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When you look at your set of feeds, you want to see which feeds have
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activity on them by real people that you are following, and when you look
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at a particular feed, you want to see only new activity by the person you
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are following, and also which items on the feed have new replies approved
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by the person you are following.
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Which, unless the person you are following is issuing indiscriminate
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approvals, is going to keep out the one way broadcasts by shills,
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spammers, and scammers. And if he is issuing indiscriminate approvals,
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people will soon stop following his feed in the same way everyone
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dropped out of Usenet groups as the shilling of one way broadcasts became
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intolerable.
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If Bob replied to Carol, and you are not following Carol, and you click on
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Bob’s post, you should see in his post a link to the post by Carol that Bob
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replied to, and if you click on that, you see Carol’s post containing a link
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that will show all the replies to that Carol approved. Which might include
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Dave’s reply to Bob’s reply to Carol, a reply to Bob that Carol approved, but
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Bob did not.
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In which case, if you click on Carol’s replies link, you will see Dave’s
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reply to Bob in her comments page, but if you click on Bob’s replies link,
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you will not see it in Bob’s comments page.
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What posts you can see will depend on the path by which you reached
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them. The mesh of reply links, reply-to links, and approval links form a
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graph, and when you click around the conversation you are following that
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graph. So people will learn to follow the paths of good moderators, and
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will ignore the paths of bad moderators.
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The web also forms a graph. What is missing from the web whose lack
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makes it not a social network is the time element: feeds. You cannot have a
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conversation over the web. We need to support conversations, thus need to
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have different and distinct reply links, reply-to links, and approvals
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while the web only has one kind of link, losing the information that makes
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a conversation a conversation. A social network is a superset of the web,
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email, and instant messaging, and a moderated but truly decentralized
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social network is going to replace all of them.
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So everything is a post – and a reply is just a post that has a reply-to link to
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the post that it replies to. And the reply-to link works both ways, in that the
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post with the link will appear in the comments page of the original post
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that it links to, if approved by the poster it links to.
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So we treat replies and posts the same, everything a post. If you are
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following someone, you get his posts on your feed, and when you see a
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post that he made public, you can click on a link to the post that he replied
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to, and a link to any replies to him, or replies to his replies, that he
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approved.
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So everything you can click on and read has to be by someone you are
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following, a post approved by someone you are following, or approved by
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the author of the post that you are now reading, supposing you clicked on
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it to see the replies that he approved. Otherwise we get the Usenet problem
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of a million shills, scammers, and spammers.
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So, you can navigate to whole world’s public conversation through
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approved links and reply-to links – but not every spammer, scammer, and
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shill in the world can fill your feed with garbage.
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## Algorithm and data structure for Zooko name network address
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For this to work, the underlying structure needs to be something based on
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the same principles as Git and git repositories, except that Git relies on
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SSL and the Certificate Authority system to locate a repository, which
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dangerous centralization would fail under the inevitable attack. It needs to
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find the network addresses of remote repositories on the basis of the public
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key of a Zooko identity of a person who pushed a tag or a branch to that
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repository, a branch being a thread, and the branch head in this case being
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the most recent response to a thread by a person you are following.
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We want to support a zooko identity for a machine whose owner wants
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anyone in the world to be able to connect to, perhaps because he wants an
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audience for his ideas, or for what he is selling. And we also want to
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support machines for which the connection information is a shared
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secret, distributed on a need to know basis.
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And we do not want a central authority with the capability to decide
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what that address is.
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For the normal case, zooko identity with public connect information, the
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controller of the machine makes public a small number of other zooko
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identities which have publicly accessible connect information, and very
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long lived network addresses, so that lots of entities are going to have their
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current network address cached, which identities he promises to regularly
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inform of his current network address. And those entities make public
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what they know of that network address, how recently they were informed
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of it, the likelihood of that network address suddenly changing, and
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apparent uptime of the entity whose network address they are reporting on.
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The final authority for each such item of information is the Zooko
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signature of the entity that wishes to be found, and the Zooko signatures of
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the other entities that he keeps informed. Thus, the authority over the
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informations is fully distributed.
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But in order to collect, distribute, and efficiently obtain this potentially
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very large pile of data, there has to be a fair bit of centralization in
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practice. Git source code distribution provides a model of how to handle
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this without dangerous or harmful centralization, or a central point of
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failure.
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For any one library on Git, there are an enormous number of branches. But
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in practice, everone winds up following one branch of that library, and if
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you make changes in it, and want your changes included, you have to get
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the man (and it is always a man) who runs that branch to pull your branch
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into his. And that is the centralization that is needed for efficient
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distribution of data. But if he is not doing a very good job, some people,
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and eventually everyone, eventually winds up following a repository with a
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different name, reflecting the fact that a different man is running it. And
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that is decentralization that is needed to prevent misconduct or single point of failure.
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So, if someone is providing the service of making other people's network
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addresses publicly available, he has to get that one man to pull his data.
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Or get another man, whose data is pulled by that one man, to pull his data.
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The reason git repositories scale is that the one man who in fact controls
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the one repository that matters the most trusts several other men, each of
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whom trust several others, and so information percolates through many
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trusted people, eventually into the central repository, where everyone sees it.
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Perhaps that one man might fail to include some zooko identity data for
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wicked reasons, that he does not want people to hear what those people are
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saying, that he wants to get between the man who wishes to speak, and the
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man who wishes to hear. Then some people will start pulling an additional
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branch that does include those people, and eventually everyone winds up
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pulling that branch, and after a while not pulling the old branch, and
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eventually nearly everyone will do the same.
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On the other hand, that one man might fail to include some zooko identity
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data because he thinks it is a pile of sybils, shills, scammers, and
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entryists, and the pile is too large, wasting too much disk space and
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bandwidth, and if he is right, most people will not want that useless
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misinformation cluttering up their disks. Or some people might disagree,
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and pull a branch that does include those questionable identitities.
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Once our system starts to attract substantial use and attention, a vast pile
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of sybil Zooko identities will appear, whose network addresses seem to be
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located all over the world, but a very large proportion of them will in fact
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be located on one computer in the bowels of the State Department or
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Harvard, and to avoid collecting and distributing a hundred gigabytes of
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this worthless and meaningless information will require human judgement
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and human action, which judgment and action will have to be done by a
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rather small number of humans, who will thus have rather too much
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power, and their failures rather too great consequences. But, following the
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way that git is designed and in practice used, we do not have to give them
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unlimited power, nor allow them to be a central point of failure.
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### running in schism, with many approximately equal branches
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Centralized databases are a single point of failure. They are also extremely
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convenient, because they enable many humans to leverage the judgment of
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a single human, rather than needing to exercise their own judgement.
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With Git, you usually have one master repository. Sometimes you do not,
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and have to exercise your own judgement. I have often enough tripped
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over this, and often enough managed fine.
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Under attack, the system may well schism, with no one source that lists all
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or most Zooko identities that people are interested in contacting, but it
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should, like Git, be designed to schism, and work well enough while
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schismed. That is what makes Git centralization truly decentralized.
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Sometimes, often, there is no one authoritative branch, and things still work well enough.
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The messages of the people you are following are likely to be in a
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relatively small number of repositories, even if the total number of
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repositories out there is enormous and the number of hashes in each
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repository is enormous, so this algorithm and data structure will scale, and
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the responses to that thread that they have approved, by people you are not
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following, will be commits in that repository, that, by pushing their latest
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response to that thread to a public repository, they did the equivalent of a
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git commit and push to that repository.
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Each repository contains all the material the poster has approved, resulting
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in considerable duplication, but not enormous duplication.
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The underlying protocol and mechanism is that when you are following
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Bob, you get a Bob feed from a machine controlled by Bob, or controlled
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by someone that Bob has chosen to act on his behalf, and that when Bob
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replies to someone, the post that he replies to is copied onto his machine,
|
||
containing a link to a feed controlled by the person he replies to, and
|
||
similarly with replies that he approves. So posts and links to feeds spread
|
||
around the net Usenet style, being duplicated on every machine that
|
||
comments on them or approves them and every machine that follows a
|
||
feed that contains them. You access a feed BitTorrent style, sharing Bob’s
|
||
feed with everyone that follows Bob. Each feed is a mutable torrent, a
|
||
Merkle-patricia tree with a single authority determining the current total
|
||
state of that tree, with the continually changing root of Bob’s Merkle-patricia
|
||
tree signed by Bob using his secret key which is kept in a BIP39
|
||
style wallet.
|
||
|
||
When Dave replies to a text in Carol's feed, the Carol text and the reply by
|
||
default goes into his feed, and if it does there will be metadata in his feed
|
||
about his social network connection to Carol, which, if Bob is following
|
||
Dave's feed, can be used by Bob's client to navigate the distribute hash
|
||
table to Carol's feed.
|
||
|
||
And if Carol approves Dave's reply, or is following Dave or has buddied
|
||
Dave, and Bob is following Carol, but not following Dave, then there will
|
||
be in metadata in Carol's feed that can be used by Bob's client to navigate
|
||
the distribute hash table to Carol's feed.
|
||
|
||
The metadata in the feed sharing reveals what network addresses are
|
||
following a feed, but the keys are derived from user identity keys by a one
|
||
way hash, so are not easily linked to who is posting in the feed.
|
||
|
||
### Replacing Kademlia
|
||
|
||
[social distance metric]:recognizing_categories_and_instances.html#Kademlia
|
||
{target="_blank"}
|
||
|
||
I will describe the Kademlia distributed hash table algorithm not in the
|
||
way that it is normally described and defined, but in such a way that we
|
||
can easily replace its metric by [social distance metric], assuming that we
|
||
can construct a suitable metric, which reflects what feeds a given host is
|
||
following, and what network addresses it knows and the feeds they are
|
||
following, a quantity over which a distance can be found that reflects how
|
||
close a peer is to an unstable network address, or knows a peer that is
|
||
likely to know a peer that is likely to know an unstable network address.
|
||
|
||
A distributed hash table works by each peer on the network maintaining a
|
||
large number of live and active connections to computers such that the
|
||
distribution of connections to computers distant by the distributed hash
|
||
table metric is approximately uniform by distance, which distance is for
|
||
Kademlia the $log_2$ of the exclusive-or between his hash and your hash.
|
||
|
||
And when you want to connect to an arbitrary computer, you asked the
|
||
computers that are nearest in the space to the target for their connections
|
||
that are closest to the target. And then you connect to those, and ask the
|
||
same question again.
|
||
|
||
This works if each computer has approximately the same number of connections
|
||
close to it by a metric as distant from it by some metric. So it will be
|
||
connected to almost all of the computers that are nearby to it by that metric.
|
||
|
||
In the course of this operation, you acquire more and more active
|
||
connections, which you purge from time to time to keep the total number
|
||
of connections reasonable and the distribution approximately uniform by the
|
||
metric of distance used.
|
||
|
||
The reason that the Kademlia distributed hash table cannot work in the
|
||
face of enemy action, is that the shills who want to prevent something
|
||
from being found create a hundred entries with a hash close to their target
|
||
by Kademlia distance, and then when your search brings you close to
|
||
target, it brings you to a shill, who misdirects you. Using social network
|
||
distance resists this attack.
|
||
|
||
The messages of the people you are following are likely to be in a
|
||
relatively small number of repositories, even if the total number of
|
||
repositories out there is enormous and the number of hashes in each
|
||
repository is enormous, so this algorithm and data structure will scale, and
|
||
the responses to that thread that they have approved, by people you are not
|
||
following, will be commits in that repository, that, by pushing their latest
|
||
response to that thread to a public repository, they did the equivalent of a
|
||
git commit and push to that repository.
|
||
|
||
Each repository contains all the material the poster has approved, resulting
|
||
in considerable duplication, but not enormous duplication, approved links and
|
||
reply-to links – but not every spammer, scammer, and
|
||
shill in the world can fill your feed with garbage.
|
||
|
||
|
||
### Kademlia in social space
|
||
|
||
The vector of an identity is $+1$ for each one bit, and $-1$ for each zero bit.
|
||
|
||
We don't use the entire two hundred fifty six dimensional vector, just
|
||
enough of it that the truncated vector of every identity that anyone might
|
||
be tracking has a very high probability of being approximately orthogonal
|
||
to the truncated vector of every other identity.
|
||
|
||
We do not have, and do not need, an exact consensus on how much of the
|
||
vector to actually use, but everyone needs to use roughly the same amount
|
||
as everyone else. The amount is adjusted according to what is, over time,
|
||
needed, by each identity adjusting according to circumstances, with the
|
||
result that over time the consensus adjusts to what is needed.
|
||
|
||
Each party indicates what entities he can provide a direct link to by
|
||
publishing the sum of the vectors of the parties he can link to - and also
|
||
the sum of the their sums, and also the sum of their ... to as many deep as
|
||
turns out to be needed in practice, which is likely to two or three such
|
||
vector sums, maybe four or five. What is needed will depend on the
|
||
pattern of tracking that people engage in in practice.
|
||
|
||
If everyone behind a firewall or with an unstable network address arranges
|
||
to notify a well known peer with stable network address whenever his
|
||
address changes, and that peer, as part of the arrangement, includes him in
|
||
that peer's sum vector, the number of well known peers with stable
|
||
network address offering this service is not enormously large, they track
|
||
each other, and everyone tracks some of them, we only need the sum and
|
||
the sum of sums.
|
||
|
||
When someone is looking to find how to connect to an identity, he goes
|
||
through the entities he can connect to, and looks at the dot product of
|
||
their sum vectors with target identity vector.
|
||
|
||
He contacts the closest entity, or a close entity, and if that does not work
|
||
out, contacts another. The closest entity will likely be able to contact
|
||
the target, or contact an entity more likely to be able to contact the target.
|
||
|
||
* the identity vector represents the public key of a peer
|
||
* the sum vector represents what identities a peer thinks he has valid connection information for.
|
||
* the sum of sum vectors indicate what identities that he thinks he can connect to think that they can connect to.
|
||
* the sum of the sum of the sum vectors ...
|
||
|
||
A vector that provides the paths to connect to a billion entities, each of
|
||
them redundantly through a thousand different paths, is still sixty or so
|
||
thirty two bit signed integers, distributed in a normal distribution with a
|
||
variance of a million or so, but everyone has to store quite a lot of such
|
||
vectors. Small devices such as phones can get away with tracking a small
|
||
number of such integers, at the cost of needing more lookups, hence not being
|
||
very useful for other people to track for connection information.
|
||
|
||
To prevent hostile parties from jamming the network by registering
|
||
identities that closely approximate identities that they do not want people
|
||
to be able to look up, we need the system to work in such a way that
|
||
identities that lots of people want to look up tend to heavily over
|
||
represented in sum of sums vectors relative to those that no one wants to
|
||
look up. If you repeatedly provide lookup services for a certain entity,
|
||
you should track that entity that had last stable network address on the
|
||
path that proved successful to the target entity, so that peers that
|
||
provide useful tracking information are over represented, and entities that
|
||
provide useless tracking information are under represented.
|
||
|
||
If an entity makes publicly available network address information for an
|
||
identity whose vector is an improbably good approximation to an existing
|
||
widely looked up vector, a sybil attack is under way, and needs to be
|
||
ignored.
|
||
|
||
To be efficient at very large scale, the network should contain a relatively
|
||
small number of large well connected devices each of which tracks the
|
||
tracking information of large number of other such computers, and a large
|
||
number of smaller, less well connected devices, that track their friends and
|
||
acquaintances, and also track well connected devices. Big fanout on on the
|
||
interior vertices, smaller fanout on the exterior vertices, stable identities
|
||
on all devices, moderately stable network addresses on the interior vertices,
|
||
possibly unstable network addresses on the exterior vertices.
|
||
|
||
If we have a thousand identities that are making public the information
|
||
needed to make connection to them, and everyone tracks all the peers that
|
||
provide third party look up service, we need only the first sum, and only
|
||
about twenty dimensions.
|
||
|
||
But if everyone attempts to track all the connection information network
|
||
for all peers that provide third party lookup services, there are soon going
|
||
to be a whole lot shill, entryist, and spammer peers purporting to provide
|
||
such services, whereupon we will need white lists, grey lists, and human
|
||
judgement, and not everyone will track all peers who are providing third
|
||
party lookup services, whereupon we need the first two sums.
|
||
|
||
In that case random peer searching for connection information to another
|
||
random peer first looks to through those for which has good connection
|
||
information, does not find the target. Then looks through for someone
|
||
connected to the target, may not find him, then looks for someone
|
||
connected to someone connected to the target and, assuming that most
|
||
genuine peers providing tracking information are tracking most other
|
||
peers providing genuine tracking information, and the peer doing the
|
||
search has the information for a fair number of peers providing genuine
|
||
tracking information, will find him.
|
||
|
||
Suppose there are a billion peers for which tracking information exists. In
|
||
that case, we need the first seventy or so dimensions, and possibly one
|
||
more level of indirection in the lookup (the sum of the sum of the sum of
|
||
vectors being tracked). Suppose a trillion peers, then about the first eighty
|
||
dimensions, and possibly one more level of indirection in the lookup.
|
||
|
||
That is a quite large amount of data, but if who is tracking whom is stable,
|
||
even if the network addresses are unstable, updates are infrequent and small.
|
||
|
||
If everyone tracks ten thousand identities, and we have a billion identities
|
||
whose network address is being made public, and million always up peers
|
||
with fairly stable network addresses, each of whom tracks one thousand
|
||
unstable network addresses and several thousand other peers who also
|
||
track large numbers of unstable addresses, then we need about fifty
|
||
dimensions and two sum vectors for each entity being tracked, about a
|
||
million integers, total -- too big to be downloaded in full every time, but
|
||
not a problem if downloaded in small updates, or downloaded in full
|
||
infrequently.
|
||
|
||
But suppose no one specializes in tracking unstable network addresses.
|
||
If your network address is unstable, you only provide updates to those
|
||
following your feed, and if you have a lot of followers, you have to get a
|
||
stable network address with a stable open port so that you do not have to
|
||
update them all the time. Then our list of identities whose connection
|
||
information we track will be considerably smaller, but our level of
|
||
indirection considerably deeper - possibly needing six or so deep in sum of
|
||
the sum of ... sum of identity vectors.
|
||
|
||
## Private messaging
|
||
|
||
Private messaging is trivial. There is no end of excellent existing software
|
||
to do it, in particular Jitsi Meet, Element, and, most secure of all
|
||
Bitmessage. The hard problem is the public social net on which people
|
||
meet so that they can then engage in private messaging and form private
|
||
rooms. Our social network’s private rooms are not going to be competitive
|
||
with the innumerable excellent existing systems supporting private conversations and private rooms, except that we need to provide efficient,
|
||
convenient, and secure means to launch private rooms and private
|
||
conversations from our public social network, and, most importantly,
|
||
because programmers need to be paid, we need to support private
|
||
conversations about money and payments, which existing private
|
||
messaging systems do not provide. You cannot securely embed a private
|
||
payment in a private message in existing private messaging systems.
|
||
|
||
The most private solution for video conferencing is Jitsi Meet *if* you run
|
||
your own Jitsi Meet server. If you are using someone else’s Jitsi Meet your
|
||
messages are still private, but the someone else owns your metadata. A
|
||
more private and far more convenient solution for text and voice is
|
||
Element, and for text alone, the most secure is Bitmessage, which leaks no
|
||
metadata.
|
||
|
||
The highest priority for a crypto currency should be to re-open free public
|
||
discussion. (Since we are, at the moment, out of power, we are temporarily
|
||
free speech enthusiasts) But the second highest priority, and the one that
|
||
will get us money, is re-opening the path to entrepreneurship, thus we
|
||
should primarily be interested in freedom of speech about money and
|
||
transactions. The enemy is shutting down forums where people can
|
||
discuss unregulated crypto currency transactions.
|
||
|
||
Since we are going to need a BIP39 style wallet, need to put a crypto
|
||
currency in it, and the ability to have private conversations, which will
|
||
typically be about orders, payments, and receipts. I just received over
|
||
email in the clear a payment acknowledgment containing most of my
|
||
credit card number and the three digit shared secret authorization on the
|
||
back of my credit card. This is intolerably bad. Similar things are
|
||
happening with crypto currency payments, linking crypto currency wallets
|
||
to physical locations such that the owner of the wallet can be found and
|
||
shaken down, because there is no wallet infrastructure for communicating
|
||
metadata about payments, so all the metadata, such as “deliver these goods
|
||
to this physical address” goes over public networks.
|
||
|
||
Jitsi is great for private human conversations about human things, but we
|
||
lack an environment useful for conversations about orders, payments, and
|
||
receipts, which is going to need integration with the payments and
|
||
accounting system, and needs to be based on BIP39 identities. Jitsi Meet
|
||
XMPP identities are not really useful for the purpose. We are at present
|
||
using SSL identities based on the Domain Name System for this purpose,
|
||
hence the grossly inappropriate email I received, and these are
|
||
unsatisfactory, because there are a thousand certificate authorities, and any
|
||
organization that has a certificate authority in its pocket can intercept and
|
||
interfere with a supposedly private conversation.
|
||
|
||
This, rather than blockchain analysis, is the big problem with crypto
|
||
currencies that needs to be fixed.
|
||
|
||
Hence we need human readable messages that can have crypto coins,
|
||
unspent transaction outputs, and lightning network payments embedded in
|
||
them.
|
||
|
||
A conversation between two people is an encrypted immutable
|
||
authenticated but unsigned data structure shared between two parties,
|
||
|
||
## Private rooms
|
||
|
||
There is plenty of excellent software supporting private messaging and
|
||
private rooms. What is lacking is a public social network where it is safe
|
||
to have conversations that would give people a reason to to move to a
|
||
private room.
|
||
|
||
The infrastructure proposed in [Anonymous Multi-Hop Locks] for lightning
|
||
network transactions is also private room infrastructure, so we should
|
||
implement private rooms on that model.
|
||
|
||
In order to do money over a private room, you need a `reliable broadcast channel`,
|
||
so that Bob cannot organize a private room with Ann and Carol,
|
||
and make Ann see one three party transaction, and Carol see a different
|
||
three party transaction.
|
||
|
||
In this context, a broadcast channel is reliable if each of the participants
|
||
can know that all the other participants saw the message, or knows that the
|
||
room crashed and the conversation failed to complete.
|
||
|
||
For most purposes, this is seldom a concern, and existing private room
|
||
software fails to address this concern, which is hard to fix without
|
||
increasing the likelihood of leaking metadata. But if we want to get paid,
|
||
need to address this concern, possibly at the expense of the usability and
|
||
security for other uses of our private rooms.
|
||
|
||
Existing software does not implement reliable broadcast in private rooms,
|
||
and is generally used in ways and for purposes that do not need it. And
|
||
anything that does implement reliable broadcast channel is apt to leak
|
||
more metadata than software that does not implement it. So for most
|
||
existing uses, existing software is better than this software will be. But to
|
||
do business securely and privately over the internet, you need a reliable
|
||
broadcast channel
|
||
|
||
Well then, as many dags as there are groups, and if someone is added, the
|
||
adding party adds a reply link in the data structure of the smaller group to
|
||
the larger group, and if someone is deleted, a subset of the parties to large
|
||
group get invited to the smaller group, which contains a reply-to link into
|
||
the larger group. Every conversation is a room, and if you buddy someone,
|
||
he has authority to invite you to a room. The bilateral shared secrets that
|
||
make a room possible are frequently discarded and replaced. They are not
|
||
part of the immutable data structure, but infrastructure used to
|
||
communicate what is in the room.
|
||
|
||
Each room corresponds to a dag, a narrowly shared and transient
|
||
blockchain, so that all participants know that all participants are seeing the
|
||
same conversation. But once the shared secrets have been discarded, the
|
||
room can no longer get new messages, and its data can no longer be
|
||
decrypted. The conversation is immutable but deletable.
|
||
|
||
Private rooms are recreated from time to time, with new transient keys,
|
||
and the old transient keys lost forever. The participants may have a record
|
||
of what was said in the old private room, but the old conversation is not
|
||
present in the new room nor accessible from the new room, whereas a feed
|
||
is around forever, and its past rendered immutable by the Merkle-patricia
|
||
tree.
|
||
|
||
When you join a room, you submit a transient public key to each of the
|
||
participants in the room, and they respond with a transient public key,
|
||
constructing a shared secret between each pair of participants.
|
||
|
||
You then use symmetric encryption with that shared secret. And then, over
|
||
the encrypted connection, set up a shared secret based on both the durable
|
||
public and private keys, and the transient keys. So you now have, for each
|
||
pair of participants, a shared secret that depends on both parties durable
|
||
and transient keys. Possession of the shared secret proves you know the
|
||
secret key corresponding to your public key, and you get perfect forward
|
||
secrecy because the shared secret and the transient keys are abandoned
|
||
when there is no further action in the private room.
|
||
|
||
Assume Bob’s secret key is $b$, and his public key is $B$, and similarly
|
||
Carol’s secret key is $c$ and her public key is $C$.
|
||
|
||
[Scriptless Scripts]:https://tlu.tarilabs.com/cryptography/scriptless-scripts/introduction-to-scriptless-scripts.html
|
||
"Introduction to Scriptless Scripts – Tari Labs University"
|
||
|
||
[Anonymous Multi-Hop Locks]: anonymous_multihop_locks_lightning_network.pdf
|
||
"Anonymous Multi-Hop Locks for Blockchain Scalability and Interoperability"
|
||
|
||
In order to support [Scriptless Scripts] and [Anonymous Multi-Hop Locks]
|
||
the private keys need to be scalars of an elliptic curve of prime order, such
|
||
as Ristretto25519, and the public keys need to be elliptic points on that
|
||
curve.
|
||
|
||
$b×C=c×B$. (Lower case letters denote scalars modulo the order of
|
||
the curve, upper case denote the corresponding elliptic points on the
|
||
curve) So, to construct a shared secret that can be used for symmetric
|
||
encryption, Bob calculates $b×C$ and Carol calculates $c×B$
|
||
|
||
Suppose that Bob’s transient private and public keys are $b_t$ and $B_t$, and
|
||
his durable private and public keys are $b_d$ and $B_d$, and similarly for
|
||
Carol.
|
||
|
||
Then to construct a shared secret that depends on both the transient and
|
||
the durable keys, and proves knowledge of the durable private key, Bob
|
||
calculates $(b_d + b_t)×(C_d + C_t)$, and similarly Carol calculates
|
||
$(c_d + c_t)×(B_d + B_t)$. (But this is only safe if both Bob and Carol
|
||
have first proven that they also know the shared secret $b_t×C_t = c_t×B_t$,
|
||
by first successfully decrypting and encrypting stuff symmetrically
|
||
encrypted to that secret)
|
||
|
||
A bilateral pair conversation is a pair of feeds that should have identical
|
||
content and hashes, and though they are not signed, they are authenticated.
|
||
|
||
A multilateral conversation is n bilateral conversations, n feeds.
|
||
|
||
For money matters, where the point is proving to third parties, we want
|
||
signatures on the hashes and immutable messages, but for bilateral
|
||
conversations we want authentication without signing
|
||
|
||
So the multilateral shared room is constructed through people
|
||
communicating over bilateral shared secrets constructed from unilateral
|
||
unshared secrets. The signed contents of the room are flood filled around
|
||
the participants, rather than each participant being required to communicate
|
||
his content to each of the others.
|
||
|
||
To provide a reliable broadcast channel, a hash of the total state of the room is continually constructed
|
||
|
||
# signing and immutability
|
||
|
||
For money, we want signatures, and money is the highest priority.
|
||
Information wants to be free, but programmers want to be paid. Carol
|
||
signs what she said to Bob, and she is stuck with it. Less cases to handle.
|
||
When you send money, you not only sign it, thus rendering it immutable
|
||
but deletable, you sign the message, thus signing all the previously
|
||
mutable conversations linked in through the “reply-to” and “regarding”
|
||
links in your message. The preceding conversation was authenticated but
|
||
unsigned, thus potentially mutable and deniable, but becomes signed by
|
||
and one party, and thus immutable, when he sends money, and signed by
|
||
the other party when he accepts the money.
|
||
|
||
[Zooko’s triangle]: ./zookos_triangle.html
|
||
|
||
A message with a single recipient is always authenticated, though possibly
|
||
only by a cheap readily discardable [Zooko’s triangle] identity. If it is about
|
||
money, normally signed, and thus immutable but discardable.
|
||
|
||
A message with two or more recipients is always signed, regardless of
|
||
whether it has money or not, because there are too many cases to handle
|
||
otherwise, and thus immutable though deletable, and it retains perfect
|
||
forward secrecy, in that if one of the recipients loses control of his durable
|
||
secret keys, but all three participants keep their mouths shut, no one else
|
||
can know what was in it. It also renders any bilateral messages linked in
|
||
immutable, because they are linked by two fifty six bit hash, thus signing a
|
||
message acknowledges sending or receiving all messages linked to by the
|
||
signed message and renders them immutable by linking them into a
|
||
hashdag.
|
||
|
||
# Name System
|
||
|
||
We need an unbreakable and untraceable name system like that Jitsi or
|
||
namecoin, but Jitsi relies on the Ether blockchain, which is rather too
|
||
breakable. and in the hands of the Social Justice Warriors. Has to rely on
|
||
crypto wallet type identity keys, rather than some authority mapping names.
|
||
|
||
You need the functional equivalent of blogs, where everything published and
|
||
every approved comment on a blog gets shared BitTorrent/Usenet style – so you
|
||
and everyone has a copy on their hard disk of everything and everyone they are
|
||
following, and shares that data with everyone who follows the same entity,
|
||
with no central server.
|
||
|
||
And you need the functional equivalent of reposts and likes, so that if
|
||
someone you are following endorses what someone said, it eventually gets
|
||
downloaded, BitTorrent style, on your disk, and you get to see it, and comment
|
||
on it, also.
|
||
|
||
One minor difference you will need is that the person who issued the thing
|
||
being commented on gets to moderate the comments, though obviously this will
|
||
have no effect on comments by anyone you are already following.
|
||
|
||
A repost by someone you are following should go into your feed. His likes
|
||
should put links in your feed. Comments on the thing reposted should put
|
||
links in your feed if they survive moderation, and the comment should go into
|
||
your feed whether moderated or not if you are already following the commenter.
|
||
|
||
You need private messages, which are easy, and we have lots of systems to
|
||
securely provide that already.
|
||
|
||
You need private groups that no outsiders can follow, except the moderator
|
||
regularly sends them the latest keys.
|
||
|
||
# Blockchains
|
||
|
||
You need a cryptocurrency like Bitcoin, but Bitcoin is too readily traceable.
|
||
Wasabi wallet has a cure for bitcoin traceability, but it is not easy to use
|
||
that Wasabi capability, and most people will not, despite the very nice user
|
||
interface. The lightning network over bitcoin could fix those problems, and
|
||
also overcome Bitcoin’s scaling limit, but I don’t think much of the current
|
||
implementation of the lightning network. The latest bitcoin upgrade,
|
||
supporting Schnorr signatures and smart contracts, makes a true lightning network possible, but backwards compatibility and government pressure may prevent that from happening.
|
||
|
||
People don’t actually understand fiat money, but are plenty comfortable
|
||
when their browser tells them they have such and such an amount in their
|
||
bank.
|
||
|
||
And they don’t understand the difference between their wallet telling them
|
||
that secrets sitting in their wallet are worth such and such an amount, and
|
||
Coinbase telling them that secrets held by Coinbase, supposedly on their
|
||
behalf, are worth such and such an amount. They do not understand this
|
||
big important difference. But that is going to be OK if we get the user
|
||
interface done right.
|
||
|
||
A major obstacle to crypto currency taking over the world is that making
|
||
payments in crypto currency is hard.
|
||
|
||
[BTCPay] solves the problem of enabling your internet store to receive
|
||
payments directly to your own wallet, and integrates with your database,
|
||
automating the bookkeeping and stock keeping
|
||
|
||
[BTCPay]:https://docs.btcpayserver.org/WooCommerce/
|
||
"BTCPay/WooCommerce integration"
|
||
|
||
But though it is easy on internet shopkeepers, it is hard on internet
|
||
shoppers. The fundamental user interface problem is inherent in all
|
||
existing wallets.
|
||
|
||
You navigate through a nice easy shop page, choose some goods or
|
||
services, and proceed to a BTCPay page that is well integrated with the
|
||
shop, and the BTCPay page gives you a receive address and an amount,
|
||
presented in the context of your purchase. And then you have to launch
|
||
your wallet, and copy and paste that amount and that address into your
|
||
wallet, and tell it to pay, and when you are doing that, you are no longer
|
||
in the context of your purchase and your interaction with the internet
|
||
shopkeeper. Your wallet does not know anything about the metadata
|
||
associated with the transaction. Which makes it hard, and makes the
|
||
records kept by your wallet not very useful. The wallet of the seller is
|
||
integrated into their book keeping by BTCPay, but the buyer's wallet
|
||
cannot be integrated into the buyer's bookkeeping.
|
||
|
||
The complexity and difficulty is because that we are using one rather
|
||
insecure channel for the metadata about the transaction, and a different
|
||
channel for the transaction. (This is also a gaping and gigantic security
|
||
hole, even if you are using Monero.) For a truly usable crypto currency
|
||
payment mechanism, transactions and metadata have to go through the
|
||
same channel, which means human to human communication through
|
||
wallets - means that you need to be able to send human to human
|
||
messages containing requests for money, *and containing money*.
|
||
|
||
We can make the client wallets easier to use, and third worlders are
|
||
already using payment methods that are not that easy when they have to do
|
||
transactions over distance.
|
||
|
||
The internet tends to be unreliable in third world, and people will do
|
||
their interneting whenever it available, which is often at strange hours.
|
||
|
||
Everyone who matters in the third world sends and receives text messages.
|
||
We want to be able to implement a wallet that everyone in third world can
|
||
use, can chat to friends and people they do business with, send money to
|
||
them, and receive money from them.
|
||
|
||
If the wallet integrates an identity and messaging system, then making
|
||
payments and receiving payments over the wallet can be made easier than
|
||
with any existing system.
|
||
|
||
We have to put the medium for communication about money, for
|
||
communicating metadata about transactions, inside the wallet, as in the old
|
||
days you sent a sealed envelope containing both a cheque and a letter.
|
||
Then everyone is going to use that wrapper, owning their secrets the way
|
||
they used to own their correspondence. A third party like Coinbase will
|
||
not have a handle to get inside the transaction.
|
||
|
||
Private messages need to be able to carry the cryptocurrency embedded in
|
||
them, so that the social net is useful for business, just as you can mail a
|
||
check in an envelope with a document. So the lightning network needs to
|
||
be an application, the primary application, of the private messaging and
|
||
private room system.
|
||
|
||
The elegant cryptography of [Scriptless Scripts] using adaptive Schnorr
|
||
signatures and of [Anonymous Multi-Hop Locks] assumes and presupposes
|
||
a lightning network that has a private room with a reliable broadcast
|
||
channel (everyone in the room can know that everyone else in the room
|
||
sees the same conversation he is seeing, and a reliable anonymous
|
||
broadcast channel within the private room. "We also assume the existence
|
||
of a functionality $F_{anon}$ which provides user with an anonymous
|
||
communication channel."
|
||
|
||
So, before we can implement a reliable anonymizing lightning network
|
||
using the elegant cryptography of these papers, have to implement a
|
||
corresponding social media capability, even though that capability is
|
||
unlikely to be competitive with Jitsi and others for purely social purposes.
|
||
Whereupon when finally we do implement a lightning network, it will
|
||
work like paper payments sealed in envelopes, which are generally
|
||
accompanied in that envelope by metadata about the human purpose and
|
||
intent of that payment and the obligations that ensue, unlike the present
|
||
lightning networks, where such metadata goes over separate and insecure
|
||
channels.
|
||
|
||
Business will move to the decentralized social net to escape the
|
||
increasingly disruptive social controls that are sending so many businesses
|
||
down the drain. Nasa lost the ability to build rockets because of Social
|
||
Justice (The SLS is built around rocket parts built long ago that Nasa can no
|
||
longer make). Intel lost the ability to build CPUs because of social
|
||
justice. (They now rely on a Taiwanese owned and operated chip fab), and
|
||
Disney destroyed to Star Wars franchise, turning it into a lecture on social
|
||
justice. Debian broke Gnome3 and cannot fix it because of social justice.
|
||
|
||
[book]:./triple_entry_accounting.html
|
||
"triple entry accounting"
|
||
|
||
Business needs a currency and [book] keeping system that enables them to
|
||
operate a business instead of a social justice crusade.
|
||
|
||
A blockchain is just a public ledger with an immense number of columns.
|
||
Triple entry [book] keeping with immutable journal entries is a narrowly
|
||
shared ledger with a considerably smaller number of columns. Every
|
||
business needs its books on its own blockchain, to escape government
|
||
regulation of its book keeping, which public regulation tends to result in
|
||
the creation of holiness being recorded as the creation of value, as in the
|
||
Great Minority Mortgage Meltdown and MF Global.
|
||
|
||
The disruptive interference of Human Resources in hiring and firing
|
||
shows up on the books as a profit centre instead of a cost centre, and the
|
||
legal and accounting departments work for regulators and the taxman
|
||
similarly.
|
||
|
||
# Monetization
|
||
|
||
Information wants to be free, but programmers want to be paid.
|
||
|
||
An environment created to allow people to have uncensored public and
|
||
private conversations can make its creators rich if it allows businesses to
|
||
focus on creating value and making profit.
|
||
|
||
[sox]:sox_accounting.html
|
||
"Sarbanes-Oxley accounting"
|
||
|
||
A proof of share currency works like a startup company used to work
|
||
before [SOX] -- the founders get shares, then they sell or issue shares to
|
||
angel investors, and then with the angel investors money they pay early
|
||
developers with both shares and fiat.
|
||
|
||
And then in your liquidity event, these shares would become liquid (back
|
||
in those days traded on the public stock exchange), and, if the startup was
|
||
successful, everyone gets rich.
|
||
|
||
But since [SOX] blew up that institutional and organizational structure, we
|
||
have to recreate it, before we get paid.
|
||
|
||
The intent is to recreate the organizational form that SOX destroyed, and
|
||
recreate it for ourselves before we recreate it for anyone else.
|
||
|
||
Its blockchain unit of value will be adopted by businesses and private
|
||
individuals if it allows them to message each other securely about
|
||
transactions, and if it allows businesses to keep their [book]s in ways that
|
||
reflect a focus on the creation of value and profit.
|
||
|
||
At the time I write this there is an immense amount of money in play on
|
||
Taiwan Semiconductor. All the modern semiconductor fabs in the west
|
||
have died, because Human Resources forces them to hire people into
|
||
critical high tech positions on the basis of race, sex, and sexual preference,
|
||
except for one company that is privately held by the King of Dubai, who
|
||
being a foreign King with his own loyal army is in a better position than
|
||
the average boss to resist political pressure. It is easier to resist demands
|
||
from Human Resources when you have men at your back who will kill
|
||
and die for you.
|
||
|
||
There are a lot of high tech tasks where if you have a single dud member
|
||
on the team, the whole team will fail – and if you have a woman on the
|
||
team, and exclude her from the stuff she is going to wreck, you are guilty
|
||
of mansplaining, sexual harassment, and probably rape. There will be a
|
||
big emotional scene with so much of the drama that women so love, and
|
||
even though will be absolutely obvious that the woman is disruptively
|
||
manufacturing drama, no one will admit to noticing her bad behaviour.
|
||
|
||
Censorship resistant social media is part of the necessary infrastructure
|
||
for moron resistant high tech teams, though additional infrastructure will
|
||
be needed.
|
||
|
||
[sovereign]:white_paper.html#sovereign-corporation
|
||
|
||
To maintain technology, and for business to create value, the west is going
|
||
to have to create companies that can resist political pressure. Which
|
||
means that we are going to have to create software that enables companies,as
|
||
well as discussion groups, that can resist political pressure, their books
|
||
being triple entry [book]s with immutable entries, rather than [Sox], and
|
||
their shares traded on the blockchain instead of the quasi governmental
|
||
stock exchanges, sovereign corporations rather than state created
|
||
corporations. The software will be open source, so the programmers
|
||
cannot make money off it directly, but can make money from the
|
||
seigniorage and implementing the lightning network where such shares
|
||
will be traded in a way that gives the developers seigniorage.
|
||
|
||
[triple entry accounting]:./triple_entry_accounting.html
|
||
"triple entry accounting"
|
||
|
||
Software that enables businesses that can resist political pressure is a
|
||
superset of software than enables discussion groups that can resist political
|
||
pressure. We start by enabling discussion groups, which will be an
|
||
unprofitable exercise, but the big money is in enabling business.
|
||
Discussion groups are a necessary first step.
|
||
|
||
## Cold Start Problem and Metcalf's law.
|
||
|
||
Metcalf's law: The usefulness of a network to any one person
|
||
considering joining it depends on how many people have already joined.
|
||
|
||
Cold Start Problem: If no one is on the network, no one wants to be on it.
|
||
|
||
The value of joining a network depends on the number of other people already using that network.
|
||
|
||
So if there are big competing networks, no one wants to join the new network.
|
||
No one is going to want to be the first to start a Sovcorp. And until people do,
|
||
programmers are not going to get paid except by angel investors expecting that
|
||
people will start Sovcorps. So to get a foot in the door, we have to cherry pick
|
||
and snipe little areas where the big network is failing, and once we have a foot
|
||
in the door, then we can get rolling.
|
||
|
||
### elevator pitch:
|
||
|
||
Grab a privacy niche where Monero cannot operate, because of its inherent
|
||
lack of smart contracts and social networking capability, due to the nature of its
|
||
privacy technology.
|
||
Then take over Monero's niche by being a better Monero.
|
||
Then take over Bitcoin and Nostr's niche by being a better Bitcoin and a better Nostr,
|
||
because recursive snarks can do lots of things, such as smart contracts, better than they can.
|
||
|
||
### failure of previous altcoins to succeed in this strategy
|
||
|
||
During the last decade, numberless altcoins have attempted to compete with
|
||
Bitcoin, and they all got crushed, because the differences between them and
|
||
Bitcoin really did not matter that much.
|
||
|
||
They failed to differentiate themselves from bitcoin. They could
|
||
not find a niche in which to start.
|
||
|
||
Ether did OK, because they supported smart contracts and bitcoin did not,
|
||
but now that bitcoin has some limited smart contract capability,
|
||
they are going down too, because bitcoin has the big network advantage.
|
||
|
||
Being the biggest, it is far more convertible into goods and services
|
||
than any other. Which means ether is doomed now that bitcoin is
|
||
doing smart contracts.
|
||
|
||
Monero did OK, because it is the leading privacy coin. It has a niche, but
|
||
cannot break out of the not very large niche. Because its privacy mechanism means it is
|
||
a worse bitcoin than bitcoin in other respects.
|
||
|
||
And the cold start problem means we cannot directly take over that niche either.
|
||
|
||
But our proposed privacy mechanism means we have a tech advantage over both
|
||
Bitcoin and Monero - better contract capability than Bitcoin or Ether, because
|
||
a snark can prove fulfillment of a contract that without burdening the network
|
||
with a costly proof of fulfillment, and without revealing everything to the
|
||
network, and without the rest of the network needing to know what that
|
||
contract is or be able to evaluate it. Because of its privacy mechanism,
|
||
Monero cannot do contracts, which prevents atomic exchange between Monero
|
||
and Bitcoin, and prevents Monero from doing a lightning network that would
|
||
enable fast atomic exchange between itself and other networks.
|
||
|
||
So if we get a niche, get differentiation from Monero and Bitcoin,
|
||
we can then break out of that niche and eat Monero, being a better
|
||
privacy coin, a better Monero, and from the Monero niche eat Bitcoin,
|
||
being, unlike Monero, a better Bitcoin.
|
||
|
||
### Bitmessage
|
||
|
||
The lowest hanging fruit of all, (because, unfortunately, there is
|
||
no money or prospect for money in it) is to replace Bitmessage.
|
||
Which is currently abandonware, which has ceased working on most platforms,
|
||
has never supported humanly intelligible names, and lacks the
|
||
moderation capability to grey list, blacklist, and whitelist names
|
||
on discussion groups, but is widely used
|
||
because it does not reveal the sender or recipient's IP address.
|
||
|
||
In particular, it is widely used for crypto currency payments.
|
||
So next step is to integrate payment mechanisms, which brings us
|
||
a little closer to the faint smell of money.
|
||
|
||
### Integrating money.
|
||
|
||
So we create a currency. But because it will be created on sovcorp model
|
||
people cannot obtain it by proof of work - they have to buy it. Which
|
||
will require gateways between bitcoin lightning and the currency supported by
|
||
by the network, supporting atomic lightning exchange
|
||
and gateways between the conversations on the network and nostr.
|
||
|
||
# Development sequence
|
||
|
||
First we need a replacement for Quic, TCP, and SSL. Quic and SSL encryption
|
||
is joined at the hip to the quasi governmental domain name system, and if
|
||
we put our custom encryption and name system on top of TCP, it is
|
||
inefficient, as SSL without Quic is inefficient, and will be dependent on
|
||
big quasi governmental organizations to protect against distributed denial of
|
||
service attacks, which will start up as soon as the social media has
|
||
important discussions, and redouble when the project starts to develop
|
||
serious monetary value.
|
||
|
||
But such a communications protocol will have no value, until there is
|
||
software that uses it to communicate, no value till there is a social media
|
||
system on top of it.
|
||
|
||
In order to communicate, it will need network addresses, and a system to
|
||
associate durable public keys with frequently changing network addresses,
|
||
though these should not have any direct one to one relationship with
|
||
durable public keys of humans, and do not always need to be very durable.
|
||
|
||
Initially we just use the equivalent of a hosts file, though as SQLite
|
||
rather than text, but this does not scale to anything useful. For scaling,
|
||
when one computer connects to another, each learns the durable public keys
|
||
and most recent network addresses of those public keys from the other, and
|
||
if one has connections to several others, it can perform nat penetration to
|
||
allow direct connection, after the model used by Jitsi, where all
|
||
participants have a durable connection to a Jitsi meet server, which
|
||
enables them to form direct connections with each other. Though there is
|
||
no reason why every computer should not be able to perform that role
|
||
rather than just the central server as in Jitsi meet.
|
||
|
||
If a participant does not sign the network address proposed for it by its
|
||
counterparty, perhaps because it thinks it is incorrect, perhaps because it
|
||
thinks it likely to be far from durable, or for privacy reasons, the network
|
||
address does not get propagated through network address pooling. So only
|
||
participants with stable network addresses and accessible ports get
|
||
propagated, get the relationship between durable key and network address
|
||
widely known, so if the network address is unstable, or no accessible port,
|
||
you can only contact directly if both connected to same third computer.
|
||
Which drastically limits the usefulness of this protocol in general, but it
|
||
works fine for propagating message pools, Usenet/BitTorrent style. At some
|
||
time in the future we will address nameservers, with will serve names that are
|
||
recorded on the blockchain, but at this point, we do not yet have a
|
||
blockchain, and without a domain name system for network addresses and
|
||
nameservers, we cannot do much with the protocol. And we cannot use the
|
||
quasi state domain name system, or it is going to be yanked out
|
||
underneath us as soon as we succeed.
|
||
|
||
But we can do the important things, which are social media and blockchain.
|
||
|
||
With social networking on top of this protocol, we can then do blockchain
|
||
and crypto currency. We then do trades between crypto currencies on the
|
||
blockchain, bypassing the regulated quasi state exchanges, which trades
|
||
are safe provided a majority of the stake of peers on the blockchain that is
|
||
held by peers holding two peer wallets, one in each crypto currency being
|
||
exchanged, are honest.
|
||
|
||
This, a crypto currency and the capability to across blockchain exchanges
|
||
on our blockdag, gives us our liquidity event, enabling investors to fund
|
||
software. At which point we start plugging all the wonderful things we are
|
||
going to do to make the currency actually useful in the near future. Which
|
||
liquidity event will be considerably more persuasive if the system actually
|
||
is useful as a censorship resistant social media platform at the time of the
|
||
liquidity event.
|
||
|
||
A proof of share blockdag is a [sovereign] corporation, but in order to
|
||
actually function as a corporation it needs a human chief executive,
|
||
corporate funds that the the chief executive can dispense, a human board
|
||
of directors to keep an eye on what the chief executive is doing with those
|
||
funds, and proper [book]s so that the board can keep an eye on the chief
|
||
executive, and the shareholders keep an eye on the board.
|
||
|
||
So, after the first liquidity event (cross blockchain trades on the blockdag)
|
||
we implement the standard corporate infrastructure, accounting, board of
|
||
directors, CEO, over proof of share instead of under a quasi governmental
|
||
stock exchange, [triple entry accounting] with immutable journal entries
|
||
instead of [sox] accounting, for the final liquidity event, the
|
||
final liquidity event being the first [sovereign] corporation on this
|
||
blockchain.
|
||
|
||
Information wants to be free, but programmers need to be paid. We want
|
||
the currency, the blockdag, to be able to function as a corporation so that it
|
||
can pay the developers to improve the software in ways likely to add value
|
||
to the stake.
|
||
|
||
# Many sovereign corporations on the blockchain
|
||
|
||
We have to do something about the enemy controlling speech. No
|
||
namefag can mention or acknowledge any important truth, as more
|
||
and more things, even in science, technology, and mathematics,
|
||
become political. Global warming and recent horrifying ineffective
|
||
and dangerous vaccinations are just the tip of the iceberg – every
|
||
aspect of reality is being politicized. Our capability to monitor
|
||
reality is being rapidly and massively eroded.
|
||
|
||
Among those capabilities, are bookkeeping and accounting, which
|
||
is becoming Environmental, Social, and Governance and is
|
||
increasingly detached from reality. The latter is an area of truth that
|
||
can get us paid for securing the capability to communicate truth.
|
||
Information wants to be free, but programmers want to be paid.
|
||
|
||
Increasingly, the value of shares is not physical things, but "goodwill"
|
||
|
||
Domino’s does not sell pizzas, and Apple does not sell computers. It
|
||
sets standards, and sells the expectation that stuff sold with its
|
||
brand name will conform to expectations. Domino's does not make the
|
||
pizza dough, does not make the pizzas. It sells the brand. It also
|
||
organizes supply and delivery of flour, cheese, and so on and so forth
|
||
without itself producing or delivering the materials.
|
||
|
||
The latest, and one of the biggest, jewels in Apple’s tech crown, at
|
||
the time of writing, is the M1 chip. Which is *designed* by Apple. It is
|
||
not *built* by Apple. And similarly if you buy a Domino’s pizza it was
|
||
cooked according to a Domino’s recipe from Domino’s approved
|
||
ingredients. But it was not cooked in a Domino’s owned oven, was
|
||
not cooked by a Domino’s employee, and it is unlikely that any of
|
||
the ingredients where ever anywhere near Domino’s owned
|
||
physical property or a Domino’s direct employee. Domino's does
|
||
not cook pizzas, and Apple does not build computers. It designs
|
||
computers and set standards.
|
||
|
||
Most businesses are in practice distributed over a network, and
|
||
their capital is less and less big centralized physical things like steel
|
||
refineries that can easily be found and coerced, and more and more
|
||
“goodwill”. “Goodwill” being the network of relationships and social
|
||
roles within the corporation and between its customers and
|
||
suppliers, and customer and supplier expectations of employee
|
||
roles enforced by the corporation. *This*, we can move to the
|
||
blockchain and protect from governments.
|
||
|
||
An enterprise is not a physical thing. It is not buildings
|
||
and machines and all that. It is a thirteenth century accounting fiction
|
||
that fourteenth century businessmen imagined into reality, in that
|
||
the group of people the accounting fiction represented acted as
|
||
one person in reality. In the seventeenth century the Dutch and
|
||
Charles the Second created modern corporate capitalism, by merging this accounting
|
||
fiction with the Roman legal fiction of the corporation,
|
||
to create the publicly traded joint stock limited liability for profit corporation.
|
||
We now, however have postmodern capitalism, in that a multitude of "stakeholders"
|
||
are subverting its corporateness, because the legal, accounting,
|
||
and human resources have power derived from the state,
|
||
rather than the corporation, pulling the corporation apart.
|
||
With blockchains, we can return from postmodern capitalism to modern capitalism.
|
||
|
||
A huge amount of what matters, a major proportion of the value
|
||
represented by shares, is in the social network. Which is
|
||
increasingly, like Apple and Google, scarcely attached to anything
|
||
physical and coercible, and is getting less and less attached.
|
||
|
||
It mostly information, which is a present organized in a highly
|
||
coercible form. It does not have to be.
|
||
|
||
There are a whole lot of government hooks into the corporation
|
||
associated with physical things, but as more and more capital takes
|
||
the form of “goodwill”, the most important hooks in the Global
|
||
American Empire are Human Resources and Accounting.
|
||
|
||
We have to attach employee roles and brand names to individually
|
||
held unshared secrets, derived from a master secret of a master
|
||
wallet, rather than the domain name system.
|
||
|
||
With SSL, governments can, and routinely do, seize that name, but
|
||
that is a flaw in the SSL design, the sort of thing blockchains were
|
||
originally invented to prevent. The original concept of an
|
||
immutable append only data structure, what we now call, not very
|
||
accurately, a blockchain, was invented to address this flaw in SSL,
|
||
though its first widely used useful application was bitcoin. It is now
|
||
way past time to apply it to its original design purpose.
|
||
|
||
These days, most of the wealth of the world is no longer in physical
|
||
things, and increasingly companies are outsourcing that stuff to
|
||
large numbers of smaller businessmen, each of whom owns some
|
||
particular physical thing that is directly under his physical control,
|
||
and who are therefore hard for the state to coerce. One is more
|
||
likely to get shot when one attempts to coerce the actual owner
|
||
who is physically present on his property than when coercing his
|
||
employee who is supervising and guarding his property. And who
|
||
can switch from Dominoes at the cost of taking down one sign and
|
||
putting up another. (Also at the cost of confusing his customers.)
|
||
Uber does not own any taxis, nor move any passengers, and
|
||
Dominoes bakes no pizzas. Trucking companies are converging to
|
||
the Uber model. Reflect on the huge revolutionary problem the
|
||
Allende government got when attempting to coerce large numbers
|
||
of truckers who each owned their own truck. The coup was in large
|
||
part the army deciding it was easier and less disturbing to do
|
||
something about Allende than to do something about truckers. One
|
||
trucker is no problem. Many truckers are a problem. One Allende …
|
||
|
||
The value of a business is largely the value of its social net of suppliers, customers, and employee roles. Our job is protecting social nets. Among them, social nets who will pay us.
|
||
|
||
And with Information Epoch warfare looming, the surviving
|
||
governments will likely be those that are good at protecting their
|
||
social graph information from enemies internal and external, who
|
||
will enjoy ever increasing capability to reach out and kill one
|
||
particular man a thousand miles away. Though governments are
|
||
unlikely to pay us. They are going to try to make us pay them. And
|
||
in the end, we probably will, in return for safe locations where we
|
||
have freedom to operate. Which we will probably lease from
|
||
sovereign corporations who leased the physical facilities from
|
||
small owners, and the freedom to operate from governments.
|
||
|
||
## source of corporateness
|
||
|
||
State incorporated corporations derive their corporateness from the
|
||
authority of the sovereign, but a proof of share currency derives its
|
||
corporateness from the cryptographically discovered consensus that gives
|
||
each stakeholder incentive to go along with the cryptographically
|
||
discovered consensus because everyone else is going with the consensus,
|
||
each stakeholder playing by the rules because all the other stakeholders
|
||
play by those rules.
|
||
|
||
Such a corporation is sovereign.
|
||
|
||
## shares, bookkeeping, and sidechains
|
||
|
||
We then implement sidechains, so that many sovereign corporations will
|
||
have some place to trade their shares and to keep the narrowly shared
|
||
immutable journals for their triple entry [book]s. The shares will be on a
|
||
broadly shared blockchain, but some aspects of the books may well be
|
||
very narrowly shared and selectively revealed. A total order of a sidechain
|
||
will be reflected in a total state of the main chain, through the total state of
|
||
peers that are also managing side chain wallets, or who have clients (or
|
||
clients of clients) and that are managing side chain wallets, and each
|
||
client’s total order is Merkle linked into the client’s total state, which is
|
||
Merkle linked into the peer’s total state, so that the main block chain
|
||
contains a Merkle link that can prove that machines operating a sidechain
|
||
are in agreement about a total order for transactions that happened a little
|
||
time ago. The total order of transactions on a sidechain will be the order in
|
||
which they get linked into the mainchain.
|
||
|
||
If a peer on a sidechain is a client of a client of a client of a peer on the
|
||
mainchain, and adds some new transactions to its sidechain wallet, the
|
||
total order of those transactions within the sidechain is the order in which
|
||
the main chain gives that total state of the mainchain peer, and within that
|
||
order the order that the peer gives the total state of the client, and within
|
||
that order …
|
||
|
||
This does not occupy mainchain space, because a single two fifty six bit
|
||
hash on the mainchain can represent to the total state and total order of
|
||
many very large sidechains, with the very large preimage of the hash being
|
||
known to peers on the sidechain, but not to peers on the mainchain unless
|
||
they are also peers on the sidechain.
|
||
|
||
A two fifty six bit hash gives unlimited compression, which is lossy in the
|
||
sense that it is one way compression, but lossless in that if you know the
|
||
preimage, you can always verify that the hash must have been made from
|
||
that preimage, and a hash that is the root of a Merkle tree of two fifty
|
||
six bit hashes gives the same, but with the added benefit that one can generate
|
||
a short proof that some part of the preimage, possibly a very small part of
|
||
a vast preimage, a part so small that it fits in single network packet, but
|
||
part of a preimage so vast that no one possesses all of it, that no one could
|
||
possess all of it, was part of the data from which that hash was generated.
|
||
|
||
And, associated with the current root of the merkle dag will be a
|
||
recursive snark that proves that someone verified a proof that
|
||
each path through the dag conformed to the requirements for that path --
|
||
even if these requirements are known to very few people.
|
||
|
||
The mainchain is a Merkle dag, structured in a way that makes it possible
|
||
to give a single total order for the gossip vertexes of which it is composed,
|
||
and every gossip vertex in the dag is a Merkle tree that reflects, among
|
||
other things, a total state of two peers on the blockchain, each total state of
|
||
a peer being incorporated in one and only one gossip event, and every total
|
||
state of a peer contains Merkle tree that reflects the prior state of the
|
||
blockchain, and the state of its clients who want their current state
|
||
committed to the blockchain, and thus whenever one party wants to prove
|
||
to another party that he is telling the same story to all the parties involved
|
||
(has not engaged in Byzantine failure) he can generate a short proof rooted
|
||
in the mainchain. Thus shares and triple entry books will be in the
|
||
mainchain, even though much of the information in the books is going to
|
||
be private and narrowly shared. Whenever one man’s computer presents
|
||
something from the [book]s to another man’s computer, it will present a
|
||
short proof rooted in the blockchain, rooted in the same hash that everyone
|
||
can see and vast numbers of people do see, that it is telling the same story
|
||
to anyone it tells, even if only very few people should be told.
|
||
|
||
What should happen is that every time you make a payment to a business,
|
||
you get a receipt that is connected by a Merkle chain to a Merkle tree of
|
||
the business’s narrowly shared books, which is connected by a Merkle
|
||
chain to the broadly shared main blockchain.
|
||
|
||
[Sox] bookkeeping relies on the books being widely shared among
|
||
supposedly respectable and highly regulated people, which does not help
|
||
you much if, as in the Great Minority Mortgage Meltdown, the regulators
|
||
are engaged in evil deeds, or if, as with Enron and MF Global, the
|
||
accountants are all in the pay of powerful men engaged in evil deeds.
|
||
Triple entry [book keeping] with immutable journal entries works in a low
|
||
trust world of badly behaved elites, works in the circumstances now
|
||
prevailing, and, unlike Sox accounting, it does not require wide sharing of
|
||
the books.
|
||
|
||
## Corporate cohesion
|
||
|
||
The corporation exists by [book keeping], which enables the shareholders to
|
||
keep an eye on the board, and the board to keep an eye on the CEO, and our
|
||
current system of bookkeeping is failing for lack of trust and honour.
|
||
|
||
Corporate cohesion is hard and apt to be fragile. You are apt to have board
|
||
members that want to participate in executive decisions, want to tell the
|
||
CEO what to do instead of merely evaluating how well he is doing it and
|
||
making sure he is not stealing from the shareholders, and executives that
|
||
have a power base external to the company. And telework and video
|
||
conferencing does not make this any easier.
|
||
|
||
But while the purchasing officer who is too pally with certain suppliers is
|
||
always a natural and inevitable problem, and your lawyer apt to be too
|
||
well connected to the judge and the other guy’s lawyers, the big problem
|
||
today with state created corporations is that the meddling of the state gives
|
||
HR, accounting, and the legal department power bases external to the
|
||
company, undermining corporate cohesion. If HR does not get its way, it is
|
||
apt to organize lawsuits against the CEO, board, and shareholders.
|
||
|
||
Things can easily fall apart, and a cohesive group of people within the
|
||
company is apt to push on those fault lines.
|
||
|
||
Corporate cohesion is hard, but the regulatory state is making it harder.
|
||
Sovereignty will improve the capability of corporations to cohere, because
|
||
the CEO really will be able to fire anyone, the board really able to fire the
|
||
CEO, and shareholders really able to fire the board.
|
||
|
||
And, with the corporate [book]s better connected to reality, the shareholders
|
||
will have better information on whether to do so. A necessary precondition
|
||
for corporations to function at all is that we fix bookkeeping to work in a
|
||
world of untrustworthy elites.
|
||
|
||
## share holding and trading
|
||
|
||
It used to be the case that shares were a direct relationship between the shareholder and the company.
|
||
The company issued a certificate directly to the shareholder. That was the modern corporate capitalism
|
||
of Charles the Second, and it still existed within living memory, within my memory.
|
||
|
||
Today, in postmodern capitalism, there is a custodian in the middle.
|
||
You do not own shares. You own promises made by big finance.
|
||
And as we saw in the Gamestop shenanigans,
|
||
there can be a very big difference between these two things.
|
||
|
||
Gamestop was trying to raise money from its shareholders for a change in business plan.
|
||
The net effect of these shenanigans was that most of the money went into the pockets of
|
||
people in big finance running the stock exchange.
|
||
|
||
As our elites become ever less trustworthy, and we trust them ever less,
|
||
they insist on systems that force us to give them ever more trust.
|
||
|
||
As elite virtue collapses, we strangely find ourselves forced to rely on systems that
|
||
strangely become ever more reliant on elite virtue.
|
||
Custodial shares to money and investment what absentee voting is to elections.
|
||
|
||
The corporate form needs to be put on blockchains, so that your shares are
|
||
owned through private secrets derived from each party's master secret.
|
||
|
||
The financial businesses of the stock exchange are creaming off a vast amount of wealth.
|
||
|
||
Information wants to be free, but programmers want to paid. If we liberate corporations
|
||
and shareholders from this tyranny, we can arrange for a very small part of this mountain
|
||
of wealth to stick to us. And a very small part of this mountain is still a mighty big
|
||
mountain.
|