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What if decentralization doesn't remove control — it just moves it somewhere harder to see?
In Episode 19, Watson and B. Sovereign review Protocol: How Control Exists After Decentralization by Alexander Galloway. The book's argument is deceptively simple: when you remove the center from a network, control doesn't disappear. It migrates into the rules — into compatibility layers, naming systems, default clients, and upgrade paths. Whoever writes those rules holds the power, whether the network is "open" or not.
The conversation covers Galloway's three-stage model of control (sovereign, disciplinary, and protocological), the Panopticon as a precursor to modern network governance, and why TCP/IP and DNS tell two very different stories about power. Watson walks through the Microsoft OOXML scandal as a real-world example of how standards bodies can be gamed. B. Sovereign applies the framework to Bitcoin and Ethereum — specifically why soft forks and hard forks represent fundamentally different relationships between users and protocol authority.
The episode closes with a builder's framework: how to make control surfaces legible, inspectable, and contestable by the people who depend on them.
📖 Protocol — Alexander Galloway 🌐 bitlemmas.com
By The Bitlemmas GroupWhat if decentralization doesn't remove control — it just moves it somewhere harder to see?
In Episode 19, Watson and B. Sovereign review Protocol: How Control Exists After Decentralization by Alexander Galloway. The book's argument is deceptively simple: when you remove the center from a network, control doesn't disappear. It migrates into the rules — into compatibility layers, naming systems, default clients, and upgrade paths. Whoever writes those rules holds the power, whether the network is "open" or not.
The conversation covers Galloway's three-stage model of control (sovereign, disciplinary, and protocological), the Panopticon as a precursor to modern network governance, and why TCP/IP and DNS tell two very different stories about power. Watson walks through the Microsoft OOXML scandal as a real-world example of how standards bodies can be gamed. B. Sovereign applies the framework to Bitcoin and Ethereum — specifically why soft forks and hard forks represent fundamentally different relationships between users and protocol authority.
The episode closes with a builder's framework: how to make control surfaces legible, inspectable, and contestable by the people who depend on them.
📖 Protocol — Alexander Galloway 🌐 bitlemmas.com