decentralized networks for community care, dweb reflections, general updates

/ personal updates 

wanted to document and reflect some events from this past year, including:

  • quit my job at google this past summer

  • traveled and spent time with friends for a while 

  • explored zero-knowledge cryptography, privacy preserving identity, and secure multi-party computation 

  • biked, danced, and played in the desert dust at burning man

  • in theory, am a part of peer to peer residency – though i keep missing the sessions due to time zone differences … 

  • danced to excellent music nonstop at sustain release

  • started building analog modular synths with stem modular, helped table at the brooklyn synth expo

  • organized and live-coded visuals for a show! tender alchemy @ hex house 

  • still making music 

also attended a number of gathering where i met a lot of great people and made new friends! including: 


/ dweb camp reflections 

wanted to write a little bit on my experience at decentralized web camp! i was able to go thanks to the generous support of dweb and attended as a governance track fellow

as a fellow, i arrived a few days before camp and helped with build and setup – was really cool to see the community mesh network installed over a few days across the redwood forest! i think the early arrival also helped ease into the camp socially, as the rest of the crowd grew from a more intimate ~60 people to much bigger once dweb camp officially started. 

i felt like i benefited a lot from meeting and engaging with a lot of international attendees and was also pleasantly surprised at how large the latin american and indigenous presences were, making friends who were from and/or working with communities from berlin, argentina, brazil, india, the new zealand maori community, as well as the cohort of healing waters fellows who focused on indigenous water stewardship practices. 

the overall culture felt very casual and also pretty genuine. as opposed to more transactional, networking-type events, the camp felt like a low pressure, authentic gathering of cool, interesting, caring, and smart people who shared similar interests and wanted to meet, learn from, and build community with one another. 

the way the event was organized felt highly distributed in nature as well, with workshops and programming emergent from the attending communities. the sessions were distributed over a couple of days, covering governance models, distributed and decentralized networks, cooperative and community leadership, and included fun activities like stargazing and making music together. i also enjoyed the casual meal times where you could easily meet a new set of people to process, engage, or decompress with.

i co-facilitated a workshop on distributed networks for community care with zarinah agnew, someone whose work i really respect and admire. informed by previous experiences in community building, transformative justice, and governance methods, we held space for open discussions on different approaches to distributing community care for increased resilience and sustainability and led people through a social ecology mapping exercise for identifying and reflecting on their own care webs. 

it was exciting to see so much ongoing work in this space, both from community organizations that have been around for a while as well as from those newly emerging. my wish is to see more community collaboration, as i notice a lot of overlapping research, interests, and efforts, including between more formal institutions with more casual community groups. i’d also like to see increasing access and ease for new people to get involved. 

overall, i felt excited going into the camp and left feeling satisfied and inspired, with the biggest highlight being the friends made along the way (very cheesy). i really enjoyed my experience would definitely recommend it to anyone who’s interested in distributed technology and community networks <3 


/ what’s next?

currently, i’m back in new york and hoping to stay put for at least a little bit. i’m building hardware synths part-time and making music as i enjoy my sabbatical. i think nearing soon i’d like to take on more part-time or possibly full-time work, especially related to researching: coops and governance; cryptography; distributed systems; hardware for music :-) 

coops and governance: mood board

tldr: still deep in my coops + governance + web3 rabbit hole :-) also join our coops + governance discord!

have since joined a number of lovely web3 communities, including kernel, web3baddies, and crypto, culture, and society! had a really nice time at ethdenver and schelling point recently as well (special thanks to hudson jameson and 3box labs for making this trip possible) :-)

wanted to compile my current coops + governance + web3 mood board, a list of resources and topics that have been simmering for a while. would love to dig deeper, research, write, and collaborate with others on these topics + hoping to maybe go through a round of applying for grants to formalize some of these explorations, conduct interviews, facilitate conversations, and co-create resources. if you’re interested in any of these, please contact me, i do read my messages!

special thanks to friends and collaborators kadallah burrowes, em, and bert muthalaly for their feedback and conversations <3

also — just created a coops + governance discord server (join us!) :-) originally was a big signal chat of friends and am hoping to build a more accessible community and open it up, would love to have more ppl share ideas and resources and create conversations with!

word cloud of primary interests rn: coops, governance, solidarity economy, collective ownership, public goods and the commons, coalition building, p2p models, distributed networks, systems thinking, interdependence
+ secondary interests: privacy, zero knowledge proofs, cryptography


coops + governance mood board 

// coops


// governance 

  • polis

  • quadratic voting

  • arweave profit sharing communities tokens / voting

    • voting power = ownership * commitment (staking) time

  • dynamic participation ?!

    • interested exploring in governance models that allow for dynamic and fluid frameworks of participation, e.g. different people can have varying levels of involvement over time 

// profit sharing, local currencies, funding models

// mechanism design

  • demurrage - small charge on holding of money, in order to encourage some exchange, not inflation

// public goods, the commons 

// universal basic income (ubi) / universal basic services (ubs); debt jubilees

  • tradeoffs: legibility, proof of personhood, accessibility, quality of services  

    • universal basic income

      • pros: those who are less legible to institutions may have more autonomy for support

        • e.g. trans or poc access to hormones may not be supported by traditional healthcare systems

      • cons: those who are in debt, ubi just goes towards debt. basic needs may not be met for those who exist at a deficit or those who are working against the system

    • universal basic services

      • pros: ensures basic needs are met. e.g. healthcare, education, housing, legal services, etc. 

      • cons: less autonomy to what an individual may need. institutions may not provide adequate care for marginalized communities

  • proof of personhood, sybil resistance

  • emerging ubi systems

  • other experiments in ubi

  • debt collective: debt jubilees, debt abolition, rolling jubilee fund 

// orgs

// books 

// resources