Architectural Foundations of Decentralized Systems

Our infrastructure work focuses on building and operating systems that assume failure, hostility, and observation as default conditions. We design for resilience not by scale, but by distribution—across geography, hardware, energy sources, and trust boundaries.

Infrastructure here is not neutral.
Every architectural choice encodes assumptions about power, visibility, and control.


Focus Areas

Distributed Network Topology Minimizing choke points, resisting correlation, avoiding dependency on privileged routes Modular Hardware Design Systems built to be replaced, repaired, and recomposed rather than upgraded Geographic Distribution Jurisdictional diversity as a first-class security property Redundancy Protocols Failure-tolerant by design, not by fallback Energy Constraints Infrastructure that acknowledges material limits rather than externalizing them Status Operational, experimental, and conceptual systems Constraints Technical, operational, and economic limits acknowledged