Humanode on Substack
Humanode has opened a Substack.
Over time, the work around Humanode has touched subjects that move slowly and carry weight. Identity on the internet. Sybil resistance. governance. privacy. the structure of digital societies. the limits of systems that measure participation through capital alone.
These topics rarely unfold well inside short formats. They tend to ask for patience, context, and room to follow an idea long enough to understand where it leads.
Substack gives us that room.
The Humanode Substack will host longer pieces built around research, leadership thinking, opinion, and careful exploration of ideas that sit close to Humanode’s work. Some articles will walk through technical subjects in detail. Others will examine broader questions about how humans coordinate online.
Some will look at existing systems and the trade-offs hidden inside them. Others will follow emerging problems that are only beginning to appear as AI agents, bots, and synthetic identities become normal features of the internet.
Writing here will move at a slower pace.
Each piece will aim to stay with a subject long enough to make sense of it. That may mean tracing the history of a concept. It may mean examining a technical structure from the inside. It may mean stepping back and asking how certain assumptions about identity, governance, or decentralization became so widely accepted in the first place.
A few examples give a sense of the direction.
One article may look closely at what Sybil resistance really means once autonomous agents and automated account creation become commonplace. Another may examine the tension between privacy and trust in online systems and why many identity frameworks struggle to preserve both at the same time. Another may explore how governance changes when participation is tied to humans rather than wallets.
These kinds of questions benefit from a place where they can be explored carefully.
Substack offers that kind of environment. Readers arrive there expecting depth. They open an article knowing it will take a little time. They read slowly enough for an argument to develop and settle.
That kind of readership fits the material.
Humanode will continue to share announcements, releases, updates, and community activity through the usual channels. The Substack will serve a different purpose. It will act as a place where ideas can be examined in full rather than summarized.
A quieter space.
A slower conversation.
If you enjoy reading deeply about the systems shaping the future of the internet, identity, governance, privacy, coordination, and proof of personhood, you may find the Humanode Substack worth following.
You can subscribe here to receive each new piece as it is published.