Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Our feedback on --> Cautious hope: Prospects and perils of communitarian governance in a Web3 environment

The goal of this post is to provide feedback on the Cautious hope: Prospects and perils of communitarian governance in a Web3 environment paper written by Nancy Ettlinger (Professor of Geography at The Ohio State University), in 2024. More importantly, I will nuance some statements about Sensorica and address some factually false ones. 

Before we begin, it is probably important to mention that, to my recollection, the author has never contacted any Sensorica affiliate before publishing this paper. I also don't know what sources of information Nancy used to learn about Sensorica, apart from one paper written by Pazaitis, A. (2020), provided as reference (Breaking the chains of open innovation: Post-blockchain and the case of Sensorica) and a link to a P2PFoundation wiki page on Sensorica. 
I discover the paper in 2026 and I sent my feedback to Nancy, which is the first version of this document. She got back to me the next day with her feedback to my feedback, which I integrated into this final version. 

Friday, March 20, 2026

Nondominium - A Coordination Layer for Parallel Infrastructure

Executive Summary


Critical infrastructure no longer behaves like a set of separate sectors. Energy, communications, finance, transport, manufacturing, supply chains, water, and public governance now operate as a tightly coupled system of systems. Failures in one layer increasingly propagate into the others, turning local disturbances into systemic shocks (Buldyrev et al., 2010; Helbing, 2013; CISA, 2025; DOE, 2023).

This is not a small market problem. Global supply chains alone account for over $10 trillion in annual intermediate goods trade, while infrastructure investment requirements exceed $3.3 trillion annually and rise toward $7 trillion when climate-adjusted needs are included (McKinsey, 2020; Woetzel et al., 2016; OECD, 2017). Yet recent evidence suggests that the binding constraint is often not capital itself, but coordination: the ability to govern interdependent assets, actors, and processes across fragmented institutional boundaries (World Bank, 2020).