The problem is that legibilizing trust enough to make it transitive may be an AI complete 🤔
When Alice says, “I trust Bob” to Charlie, the only way to capture the promise being made is to include a model of Alice in any new Bob-Charlie relationship definition.
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If something gets screwed up, Alice-bot is part of the arbitration and any consequences backpropagate to Alice, I think 🤔
It’s a sort of expanding entanglement of risk exposures. A growing Gordian knot of community and mutuality. All are complicit in everything.
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Impersonal institutions are a kind of cutting of the Gordian knot. A finite whitelist certification. “Bob got an A+ in Calculus 101”. Alice can only be held accountable for inferences made directly from that specific endorsement assertion which only captures a piece of trust.
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In practice the embodiment of interpersonal trust that travels the farthest is still the good old recommendation letter. A simple, untargeted, but dated and personally backed block of text. Surprisingly nothing invented since quite disrupts it.
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“To whom it may concern” may be the most powerful 5 words in the world. Alice is standing behind an arbitrary block of text concerning Bob in undefined future contexts in relation to arbitrary counter parties. A verifiable currency token with only 1 unit in circulation.
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Hmm. Idea for a personal currency: collect digitally signed to-whom-it-may-concern open recommendation letters from friends, colleagues etc. Maybe with expiry dates or revocation capacity. Maybe you have a stash of a hundred.
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Then (and this is the clever bit) sign a few over to new people you need to have trust you while you’re working with them. They return them when relationship is done. If they like the work, they issue you their recommendation letters citing the ones they held.
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So old letters get more valuable as new letters blockchain on. You use them for more important things. It’s a secure currency because they are only useful in relation to working with you. You can stake a few letters or many, leaf-letters or roots of long chains.
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If they DON’T like the work, they have the option of destroying the letters they hold. You’d have to go back and get new letters from people for the entire destroyed chain. So it’s serious. You’re operating your own ransomware.
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What if they stiff you (for e.g. Personal Reasons) and destroy your recommendations without cause? Any recourse?
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That’s the risk cost of you trusting them. If it mattered and you could demand it, you’d hold their letters too. Mexican standoff type deal.

