Tag Archives: identity infrastructure

Signal Under Conditions of Flow: The Architecture of Public Cognition After the Open Web

An exploration of how modern internet systems optimise for communication, visibility, and behavioural flow while increasingly undermining the structural conditions required for cumulative public cognition. Examining flow systems, identity-mediated participation, infrastructural governance, AI-driven abstraction, and cognitive continuity, the article argues that public reasoning is becoming constrained, minority infrastructure operating inside environments optimised for throughput rather than understanding.

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The Persistence Layer: Cognitive Continuity Under Conditions of Flow Dominance

As the visible web fragments, conversations destabilise into flow, and platforms increasingly optimise for extraction, a quieter transition has been happening beneath it all. Durable, owner-controlled systems, personal sites, archives, linked notes, static documents, repositories of accumulated thought, are becoming disproportionately important precisely because they operate outside the dominant incentives of the modern internet. They do not restore the old public sphere. They function instead as continuity infrastructure: minority systems that still allow thought to persist, stabilise, and accumulate across time.

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The Age-Gated Internet Revisited: Identity, Trust and the Architecture of Control

This article responds to thirty-two questions posed in response to my earlier piece, “The Age-Gated Internet: Child Safety, Identity Infrastructure, and the Not So Quiet Re-Architecting of the Web”, where I explored how age verification and identity systems are beginning to reshape the internet. It examines the assumptions behind these developments and situates them within a broader architectural shift.

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