Saved by Keely Adler
Modular and Portable Multiplayer Miniverses
along with political skills, the production of alternatives must involve dimensions of ritual, devotional commitments, and structures of belief.
Nathan Schneider • Governable Spaces: Democratic Design for Online Life
Safe, the most popular “multisig” wallet that DAOs use to manage their digital assets, expects communities to set a certain threshold among their members to approve a transaction. But Safe also supports a project called Zodiac, “an expansion pack for DAOs” that enables communities to create and adopt diverse governance modules. Another widely used
... See moreNathan Schneider • Governable Spaces: Democratic Design for Online Life
More people, increasingly dissatisfied by these corporate offerings, are compelled into creating their own virtual worlds. The future of the internet, as some have theorized, might consist of micro-communities, enclosed worlds with fewer but more engaged members. Through video games like Minecraft and collaborative worldbuilding projects, which are... See more
Dirt • Dirt: Worldbuilding, Pt. 1
Collective ownership unlocks what was previously behind closed doors; the second stage of emergence: communities of practice.
“When local efforts connect as networks, then commit to work as a community of practice, a new system emerges at a greater level of scale.” — The Berkana Institute
“By making (ownership) a multiplayer game, it becomes a t... See more
Keely Adler • Multiplayer Futures
Over the years, plenty of responsible experimenters – think of the more pragmatic elements among the back-to-the-landers, kibbutzim, Tolstoyan farmers and so on – have managed to demonstrate that new societies can form successfully at modest scales. The best among them also managed to establish a productive and beneficial relationship with the worl... See more