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Ryan

@byldr.eth

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45 Followers


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Ryan
@byldr.eth
My first cast post halving.
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Ryan
@byldr.eth
Ngl I’m pretty glad I was DCA’ing out of DEGEN all the way up to 6c… The ride our die part if the bag is looking pretty light right about now.
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Ryan
@byldr.eth
I'm creating a Trustocratic Network State. Where trusted people have all of the decision making power that can go up and down in real time based on a web of delegations. But not just delegations... TRANSITIVE delegations.
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Ryan
@byldr.eth
I'm getting very close to committing to implement a Network State Trust Graph on @base Maybe this is how I end up starting a network state. I will likely not be important in this state. By its design, trust and decision making authority in this system will be determined dynamically.
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Ryan
@byldr.eth
I'm also surprised I haven't seen any @ameensol posts here yet... also one of the most prolific contributors to DAO/network state/coordination problems thinking.. which I consider to all be the same class of ideas.
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Ryan
@byldr.eth
I guess all network states should have rage quit.
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Ryan
@byldr.eth
I definitely feel like I'm casting in the void with weird ideas about government structures that don't exist. But have about 100x more hope for finding smart people to workshop these ideas with on FC than I ever did on Twitter.
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Ryan
@byldr.eth
One thing that surprises me about the NS channel is that I haven't seen any posts from Santiago Siri in here.. and that guy is one of the greatest contributors to this category of ideas.
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Ryan
@byldr.eth
I'm getting in the reps daily to craft a vision for the future of government. I want to find simple, impactful words to share these ideas. Today I describe "network state trust graphs" -- a modern approach to legislature. https://mirror.xyz/byldr.eth/fdaGPo1IllQeL7HcO-SKPEX303KmpU6Rjf785kKMHzM
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Ryan
@byldr.eth
Traditional republics are too simple to solve the coordination problems of a large state. It's amazing that they have scaled as far as they have. We will use our communication tools to capture the complexity and nuance of coordinating the interests of large populations at scale.
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Ryan
@byldr.eth
Time-locking power By default, for all of history, we have "time-locked" power with politicians. Whether it be a king, emperor, dictator, president, senator, or minister. Civilizations tend to see lower corruption and pettiness when those time locks go down in duration.
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Ryan
@byldr.eth
Medellin might be the best city in the world.
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Ryan
@byldr.eth
What are the rules of “trustless governance”? That is, a government where by its design, corrupt practices are more costly and dangerous than good practices. A government that makes responsible decisions even when everyone who chooses to be involved is questionable.
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Ryan
@byldr.eth
A right to involvement in the policy creation process should be the gold standard for all citizens of network states.
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Ryan
@byldr.eth
Government by the people was more of a vision and wishful thinking in the constitution. But it could be a reality in a direct legislature state.
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Ryan
@byldr.eth
Sometimes I think about what it would be like to commission a police station with a DAO. What would it be like being informed by a DAO that you were now the police chief. … and you were now being paid by an streaming payment from the DAO or something.
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Ryan
@byldr.eth
Just voting is stupid. Elections are stupid. Citizens should have the inalienable right to participate directly in policy creation. They should have the right to not be involved by choosing someone to represent their interests. And they should have the right to change their representative at any moment.
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Ryan
@byldr.eth
Corruptible surface area. A king is just 1 person. Easiest to corrupt, most likely to inappropriately dedicate resources to petty whims A republic is 500 to 1000 reps. More internal struggle. A little harder to move resources at will. But a billionaire can bribe a non-trivial number of them.
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Ryan
@byldr.eth
Don't ask how network states will help you avoid taxes. Ask how network states can help you manage the tax revenue in a way that you aren't pissed about. It's possible. But we have generations of learned helplessness on the topic making us cynical.
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Ryan
@byldr.eth
Network States will evolve the social contract.
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