21.04.202501:38
PAPERROM - BRINGING HEART BACK TO CODE
via PAGAN CYBERPUNK (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
via PAGAN CYBERPUNK (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
11.04.202512:09
HRYGGRUN - SPINE RUNES
via PAGAN CYBERPUNK (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
via PAGAN CYBERPUNK (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
08.04.202513:09
MYTHOTECHNICS
via 《Folk Futurism》 (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
via 《Folk Futurism》 (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
03.04.202512:08
OATHS - SPIRITUAL CONTRACTS
via PAGAN CYBERPUNK (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
via PAGAN CYBERPUNK (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
已删除03.04.202504:54
02.04.202516:56
To ensure the clan has access to shared economic resources for collective needs, a community fund is established within the Silfr Kern system.
A. Purpose
● Fund community infrastructure (tools, repairs, shelters)
● Provide short-term aid to families in crisis
● Support education, apprenticeships, and medical needs
● Enable collective purchases (livestock, bulk food, machinery)
B. Contribution
● Each family contributes monthly dues (e.g., 200 SK/family) into the community wallet
● Contributions are recorded on the ledger and are non-redeemable
C. Governance and Usage
● The Clan Council oversees fund usage and allocation
● Spending proposals require a majority vote (3-of-5)
● Emergency expenditures may bypass full vote if two Coinwardens and two Council members agree
E. Usage Options
● Direct Payments: Funds may be used to pay individuals or families for community labor, crisis relief, or contributions beyond dues
● Clan Purchases: Funds may be converted into silver and vaulted, or used to purchase goods (tools, food, medicine, fuel) with USD via trusted delegates
● Hybrid Use: Partial fund reserves can be kept in SK, while portions are converted to other forms for local utility as needed
Fund usage should reflect the clan’s current needs, and all expenditures must be logged and reviewed for accountability
D. Transparency
● Community wallet ledger is publicly viewable within the network
● Quarterly reports detail fund usage, remaining balance, and upcoming needs
This mechanism ensures long-term clan resilience, reduces dependence on outside systems, and reinforces shared responsibility.
----------------------
IX. Monetary Stability
The $0.10 USD per grain peg for Silfr Kern is designed to provide symbolic and practical local value. However, silver is a commodity and its market price may fluctuate. To ensure Silfr Kern remains functional and relevant, the following stability mechanisms are proposed:
A. Monitoring Market Value
● Regularly compare the spot price of silver to the $0.10/grain peg
● If the market value of silver approaches or exceeds $0.10 per grain (~$48/oz), the Council may consider adjustments
B. Peg Review
● The Clan Council will review the peg quarterly or in response to extreme silver price shifts
● Adjustments may be made by majority vote to ensure fairness and utility
C. Floating or Dual Pricing
● If silver value increases significantly, Silfr Kern may transition to a floating peg or implement dual pricing: ● Internal pricing remains at $0.10/grain for community labor and goods ● External trades or redemptions use the current spot market price
D. Redemption Controls
● In periods of extreme silver appreciation, the council may suspend or limit redemption temporarily to preserve liquidity
● Vaulted silver becomes a community reserve, not a speculative asset
This approach ensures that Silfr Kern remains stable, trusted, and adaptive while honoring its silver foundation.
----------------------
X. Emergency Protocols and Redemption Thresholds
To maintain economic integrity and community trust, Silfr Kern implements safeguards for emergency situations and large redemption events:
A. Redemption Thresholds
● Individual redemptions above 1 troy ounce (480 SK) must be scheduled in advance with the Coinwardens
● Requests above 5 ounces may require Clan Council review and approval
● Sudden mass redemption is discouraged and may be temporarily denied if it threatens the liquidity of the system
B. Emergency Withdrawal Policy
● In the event of personal hardship (e.g. relocation, death, disaster), emergency redemptions can be reviewed by the Council
● The Council may allow partial silver redemption or transfer SK to another household as inheritance or relocation fund
C. Crisis Events
● In the event of war, systemic collapse, or natural disaster, the Clan Council may: ● Freeze redemptions temporarily ● Convert the vault into a strategic community reserve ● Redeploy SK for crisis barter and resource coordination
D. Trust and Stability
A. Purpose
● Fund community infrastructure (tools, repairs, shelters)
● Provide short-term aid to families in crisis
● Support education, apprenticeships, and medical needs
● Enable collective purchases (livestock, bulk food, machinery)
B. Contribution
● Each family contributes monthly dues (e.g., 200 SK/family) into the community wallet
● Contributions are recorded on the ledger and are non-redeemable
C. Governance and Usage
● The Clan Council oversees fund usage and allocation
● Spending proposals require a majority vote (3-of-5)
● Emergency expenditures may bypass full vote if two Coinwardens and two Council members agree
E. Usage Options
● Direct Payments: Funds may be used to pay individuals or families for community labor, crisis relief, or contributions beyond dues
● Clan Purchases: Funds may be converted into silver and vaulted, or used to purchase goods (tools, food, medicine, fuel) with USD via trusted delegates
● Hybrid Use: Partial fund reserves can be kept in SK, while portions are converted to other forms for local utility as needed
Fund usage should reflect the clan’s current needs, and all expenditures must be logged and reviewed for accountability
D. Transparency
● Community wallet ledger is publicly viewable within the network
● Quarterly reports detail fund usage, remaining balance, and upcoming needs
This mechanism ensures long-term clan resilience, reduces dependence on outside systems, and reinforces shared responsibility.
----------------------
IX. Monetary Stability
The $0.10 USD per grain peg for Silfr Kern is designed to provide symbolic and practical local value. However, silver is a commodity and its market price may fluctuate. To ensure Silfr Kern remains functional and relevant, the following stability mechanisms are proposed:
A. Monitoring Market Value
● Regularly compare the spot price of silver to the $0.10/grain peg
● If the market value of silver approaches or exceeds $0.10 per grain (~$48/oz), the Council may consider adjustments
B. Peg Review
● The Clan Council will review the peg quarterly or in response to extreme silver price shifts
● Adjustments may be made by majority vote to ensure fairness and utility
C. Floating or Dual Pricing
● If silver value increases significantly, Silfr Kern may transition to a floating peg or implement dual pricing: ● Internal pricing remains at $0.10/grain for community labor and goods ● External trades or redemptions use the current spot market price
D. Redemption Controls
● In periods of extreme silver appreciation, the council may suspend or limit redemption temporarily to preserve liquidity
● Vaulted silver becomes a community reserve, not a speculative asset
This approach ensures that Silfr Kern remains stable, trusted, and adaptive while honoring its silver foundation.
----------------------
X. Emergency Protocols and Redemption Thresholds
To maintain economic integrity and community trust, Silfr Kern implements safeguards for emergency situations and large redemption events:
A. Redemption Thresholds
● Individual redemptions above 1 troy ounce (480 SK) must be scheduled in advance with the Coinwardens
● Requests above 5 ounces may require Clan Council review and approval
● Sudden mass redemption is discouraged and may be temporarily denied if it threatens the liquidity of the system
B. Emergency Withdrawal Policy
● In the event of personal hardship (e.g. relocation, death, disaster), emergency redemptions can be reviewed by the Council
● The Council may allow partial silver redemption or transfer SK to another household as inheritance or relocation fund
C. Crisis Events
● In the event of war, systemic collapse, or natural disaster, the Clan Council may: ● Freeze redemptions temporarily ● Convert the vault into a strategic community reserve ● Redeploy SK for crisis barter and resource coordination
D. Trust and Stability
01.04.202521:44
A study on the pop-cultural cognates of Thor within the realm of Dragon Ball.
via Tristan’s Orthodox Heathenry (author: Tristan Powers)
via Tristan’s Orthodox Heathenry (author: Tristan Powers)


14.04.202507:42
10.04.202512:09
WHAT WE BELIEVE
via PAGAN CYBERPUNK (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
via PAGAN CYBERPUNK (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
07.04.202516:52
GODS IN THE GRID
via PAGAN CYBERPUNK (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
via PAGAN CYBERPUNK (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
02.04.202522:50
BONUS: MODERN RUNIC SCRIPT WORKSHEET
via PAGAN CYBERPUNK (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
via PAGAN CYBERPUNK (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
已删除03.04.202504:54
02.04.202516:56
● Digital-first, physical-rooted: Transactions occur on a lightweight local ledger; vaulting provides the material guarantee
----------------------
III. Starting Capital and Scale
Instead of fixing a total silver amount, Silfr Kern is best scaled by silver per person in a local economy.
Recommended Target:
● 1 troy ounce (480 grains) per person is a suggested baseline for initial liquidity
● 60 people × 1 oz = 60 ounces of silver
This equals approximately 4.1 pounds of silver total (since 1 troy pound = 12 troy ounces) for a group of 60.
This flexible model allows growth and adaptation to clan size. The actual amount per person can be adjusted based on local pricing, silver availability, and household participation. Contributions may come as pooled family units or individual pledges.
IV. Vaulting and Trust
● Silver is stored in a central clan vault or distributed between multiple households
● Vault overseen by Coinwardens (trusted individuals, 3-of-5 multisig control)
● Quarterly audits verify presence, weight, and purity
● Proof of reserves published to the ledger
● Redemptions require token burn + physical verification
----------------------
V. Tokenization and Ledger
Token Characteristics:
● 1 SK = 1 grain = 0.0648g silver
● 1 SK = $0.10 (see section VI)
● 1 Troy oz Silver = 480 SK = $48.00
● Digitally represented on a simple local ledger
● Transactions require digital signature
Ledger Features:
● Token minting and burning logs
● Transfers between wallets
● Proof of reserves
● Time-stamped audit trails
● Offline-friendly tools (paper wallets, NFC)
----------------------
VI. Pegging and Value
Should SK be pegged above silver's market value?
Yes. Suggested peg: $0.10 USD per grain, despite silver’s spot value (~$0.05).
Why?
● Reflects local purchasing power, not just global commodity value
● Encourages circulation, not hoarding
● Creates economic buffer for community goods and services
● Aligns with real-world effort, not just metal weight
This peg is symbolic and economic, not speculative. It aligns with local pricing rather than international market fluctuation.
----------------------
VII. Earning, Purchasing, and Trading
Earning Silfr Kern:
● Labor (e.g. farming, building, repairs)
● Trade (selling eggs, meat, goods, tools)
● Crafting (woodwork, textiles, pottery)
● Teaching (skills, homeschooling, literacy)
Example Rates:
● 1 hour unskilled labor = 50 SK
● 1 hour skilled labor = 100 SK
● Monthly dues to clan fund = 200 SK/family
Purchasing with Silfr Kern:
● Direct exchange using mobile app, paper wallet, or NFC card
● Example Prices: ● 1 loaf of bread = 10 SK ● 1 dozen eggs = 20 SK ● Firewood bundle = 30 SK ● 1 lb pork = 50 SK ● Weekend childcare = 100 SK
Trading:
● Peer-to-peer ledger entries
● Optional barter combined with SK as change or equivalence
● Ledger logs timestamped trades
A rate sheet will need to be established and accepted by all, changes will be voted on by all families.
----------------------
VIII. Monthly Growth and Contributions
To support the expansion and sustainability of Silfr Kern:
● Each family is encouraged to contribute silver monthly to expand the currency supply
● A recommended guideline is 1 troy ounce per family per month, but contributions may vary by income or agreement
● Contributed silver is verified, logged, and vaulted by Coinwardens
● New SK tokens are minted only upon receipt and verification of silver
Interaction with Community Fund
● In addition to silver contributions for economic growth, families also pay monthly dues of 200 SK into the community wallet
● These dues are drawn from each family's SK balance, not new minting
● This ensures economic growth and community infrastructure are supported in tandem without overlap
This dual system supports both currency expansion and shared clan stability, while keeping the currency fully backed and auditable., encourages community savings, and incentivizes ongoing participation in the clan economy.
----------------------
IX. Community Fund Allocation
----------------------
III. Starting Capital and Scale
Instead of fixing a total silver amount, Silfr Kern is best scaled by silver per person in a local economy.
Recommended Target:
● 1 troy ounce (480 grains) per person is a suggested baseline for initial liquidity
● 60 people × 1 oz = 60 ounces of silver
This equals approximately 4.1 pounds of silver total (since 1 troy pound = 12 troy ounces) for a group of 60.
This flexible model allows growth and adaptation to clan size. The actual amount per person can be adjusted based on local pricing, silver availability, and household participation. Contributions may come as pooled family units or individual pledges.
IV. Vaulting and Trust
● Silver is stored in a central clan vault or distributed between multiple households
● Vault overseen by Coinwardens (trusted individuals, 3-of-5 multisig control)
● Quarterly audits verify presence, weight, and purity
● Proof of reserves published to the ledger
● Redemptions require token burn + physical verification
----------------------
V. Tokenization and Ledger
Token Characteristics:
● 1 SK = 1 grain = 0.0648g silver
● 1 SK = $0.10 (see section VI)
● 1 Troy oz Silver = 480 SK = $48.00
● Digitally represented on a simple local ledger
● Transactions require digital signature
Ledger Features:
● Token minting and burning logs
● Transfers between wallets
● Proof of reserves
● Time-stamped audit trails
● Offline-friendly tools (paper wallets, NFC)
----------------------
VI. Pegging and Value
Should SK be pegged above silver's market value?
Yes. Suggested peg: $0.10 USD per grain, despite silver’s spot value (~$0.05).
Why?
● Reflects local purchasing power, not just global commodity value
● Encourages circulation, not hoarding
● Creates economic buffer for community goods and services
● Aligns with real-world effort, not just metal weight
This peg is symbolic and economic, not speculative. It aligns with local pricing rather than international market fluctuation.
----------------------
VII. Earning, Purchasing, and Trading
Earning Silfr Kern:
● Labor (e.g. farming, building, repairs)
● Trade (selling eggs, meat, goods, tools)
● Crafting (woodwork, textiles, pottery)
● Teaching (skills, homeschooling, literacy)
Example Rates:
● 1 hour unskilled labor = 50 SK
● 1 hour skilled labor = 100 SK
● Monthly dues to clan fund = 200 SK/family
Purchasing with Silfr Kern:
● Direct exchange using mobile app, paper wallet, or NFC card
● Example Prices: ● 1 loaf of bread = 10 SK ● 1 dozen eggs = 20 SK ● Firewood bundle = 30 SK ● 1 lb pork = 50 SK ● Weekend childcare = 100 SK
Trading:
● Peer-to-peer ledger entries
● Optional barter combined with SK as change or equivalence
● Ledger logs timestamped trades
A rate sheet will need to be established and accepted by all, changes will be voted on by all families.
----------------------
VIII. Monthly Growth and Contributions
To support the expansion and sustainability of Silfr Kern:
● Each family is encouraged to contribute silver monthly to expand the currency supply
● A recommended guideline is 1 troy ounce per family per month, but contributions may vary by income or agreement
● Contributed silver is verified, logged, and vaulted by Coinwardens
● New SK tokens are minted only upon receipt and verification of silver
Interaction with Community Fund
● In addition to silver contributions for economic growth, families also pay monthly dues of 200 SK into the community wallet
● These dues are drawn from each family's SK balance, not new minting
● This ensures economic growth and community infrastructure are supported in tandem without overlap
This dual system supports both currency expansion and shared clan stability, while keeping the currency fully backed and auditable., encourages community savings, and incentivizes ongoing participation in the clan economy.
----------------------
IX. Community Fund Allocation
01.04.202512:04
LUCK - HAMINGJA THEOLOGY
via PAGAN CYBERPUNK (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
via PAGAN CYBERPUNK (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
14.04.202507:24
To continue...
Having a family tree that extends beyond the 18th and 19th centuries helps to establish a sense of continuity back into prehistory, because we garner a sense of where we would be in any given generation. Some modern Pagans choose to ignore their entire heritage from the Middle Ages simply because they don't have a family tree. It's easier to identify with projected, mysterious Pagan ancestors than it is with Christian ancestors from the Middle Ages if one lacks a family tree.
However, if you know your real ancestors—your family lineage from the 1800s going back to the 1500s, 1400s, 1300s, and earlier—you know yourself. It is perfectly acceptable to identify with our culture and ancestors from the colonial era, the medieval era, or the Victorian era and still be a Pagan. It is perfectly acceptable to practice the habits and customs, and to take a liking to our ancestors from any century, and still be a Pagan. For context, historical Germanic Pagans depicted the Gods in the cultural context of their day and were—for the most part—men and women of their time. They were completely connected to their ancestral heritage, knew their ancestors, and had established forms of worship without having to think about it—whereas today, many people don't have that. This is why it is so important to formulate these things.
A notable example comes from Adam of Bremen's 11th-century Gesta Hammaburgensis Ecclesiae Pontificum. In it, Bremen describes the way in which the idols of the Gods were adorned at the temple at Uppsala. Óðinn is described as wearing armour and wielding weapons (which Bremen likens to portrayals of Mars). This shows that historical Pagan Swedes depicted the Gods in armour and with weapons that were modern to them in their day. The same is true for the Lindby idol of Óðinn, the Rällinge statuette of Freyr, and the Eyrarland statuette of Þórr, all of which show the Gods wearing a conical hat that was common across Scandinavia in the Viking Age.
Rather than viewing our history as "Paganism -> gap -> revivalism," we should be viewing our history as a continuum. The Gods have always existed, and the functional structure and nature of the universe has not changed. Objective reality (i.e., that the Gods exist) does not—and therefore has not—changed due to shifts in consensus or changes in cultural context. We should strive to live in the now and cultivate the revitalisation of Paganism: enjoy and appreciate all of our history and all of our ancestors; use the sources on Germanic Paganism as a framework to establish our own authentic forms of worship; form real groups; and revitalise our worship of the Gods and the veneration of our ancestors.
Having a family tree that extends beyond the 18th and 19th centuries helps to establish a sense of continuity back into prehistory, because we garner a sense of where we would be in any given generation. Some modern Pagans choose to ignore their entire heritage from the Middle Ages simply because they don't have a family tree. It's easier to identify with projected, mysterious Pagan ancestors than it is with Christian ancestors from the Middle Ages if one lacks a family tree.
However, if you know your real ancestors—your family lineage from the 1800s going back to the 1500s, 1400s, 1300s, and earlier—you know yourself. It is perfectly acceptable to identify with our culture and ancestors from the colonial era, the medieval era, or the Victorian era and still be a Pagan. It is perfectly acceptable to practice the habits and customs, and to take a liking to our ancestors from any century, and still be a Pagan. For context, historical Germanic Pagans depicted the Gods in the cultural context of their day and were—for the most part—men and women of their time. They were completely connected to their ancestral heritage, knew their ancestors, and had established forms of worship without having to think about it—whereas today, many people don't have that. This is why it is so important to formulate these things.
A notable example comes from Adam of Bremen's 11th-century Gesta Hammaburgensis Ecclesiae Pontificum. In it, Bremen describes the way in which the idols of the Gods were adorned at the temple at Uppsala. Óðinn is described as wearing armour and wielding weapons (which Bremen likens to portrayals of Mars). This shows that historical Pagan Swedes depicted the Gods in armour and with weapons that were modern to them in their day. The same is true for the Lindby idol of Óðinn, the Rällinge statuette of Freyr, and the Eyrarland statuette of Þórr, all of which show the Gods wearing a conical hat that was common across Scandinavia in the Viking Age.
Rather than viewing our history as "Paganism -> gap -> revivalism," we should be viewing our history as a continuum. The Gods have always existed, and the functional structure and nature of the universe has not changed. Objective reality (i.e., that the Gods exist) does not—and therefore has not—changed due to shifts in consensus or changes in cultural context. We should strive to live in the now and cultivate the revitalisation of Paganism: enjoy and appreciate all of our history and all of our ancestors; use the sources on Germanic Paganism as a framework to establish our own authentic forms of worship; form real groups; and revitalise our worship of the Gods and the veneration of our ancestors.
09.04.202515:26
MYTHIC TIME - ENTERING THE SACRED
via PAGAN CYBERPUNK (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
via PAGAN CYBERPUNK (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
05.04.202517:25
VISIONS OF PAGAN CYBERPUNK
via 《Folk Futurism》 (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
via 《Folk Futurism》 (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
已删除03.04.202504:54
02.04.202516:56
Redemption:
● Request via app
● 1 oz requires council review
● Redemption scheduled
● Tokens burned, silver delivered
● Vault and ledger updated
Maintenance:
● Weekly: health checks and backups
● Monthly: updates + patches
● Quarterly: audits
----------------------
IX. Governance
● Clan Council (5 families) oversee protocol decisions
● Major decisions require 3-of-5 majority
● Coinwardens manage physical silver, audits, and redemptions
● Protocol updates via signed proposals and clan voting
----------------------
X. Future Expansion
● Inter-clan trade using SK-to-SK swaps
● Token bridges with other resource-based currencies (grain, copper, labor)
● Compute-backed or energy-credit extensions (Silfr + Kraftr = hybrid economy)
----------------------
XI. Summary
Silfr Kern is:
● Backed by reality (silver)
● Governed by trust (clan council)
● Executed by code (lightweight digital ledger)
It is a currency of roots and reason — an embodiment of the land’s wealth, the clan’s honor, and the sacred kernel of value.
Obviously as a whitepaper this is merely a concept, development and implementation is up to whoever decides to look into this. This is a method of breaking traditional finance and keeping to your own. Not intended as a main banking system realistically one should still keep a USD bank account for normal outer economic activity and typical paycheck deposit.
Silver type should be some form of 1 troy oz round or coin. In time upgrading to bars or something larger might be prudent. Silver has been fairly “stable” so to speak but that can always change, pegging price and figuring out how to handle extreme cases is important for stability and fairness. Integration with outsiders is also a good problem to solve, do you allow outsiders to participate? Buy in without any benefits except buying your stuff (like a gift card?) Or do you keep it closed and nigh secret.
Lots to think about here but something like this is essential in the years to come. Hyperlocal economics, clan currencies, and the eventual breaking of traditional finance.
Subscribe now
via 《Folk Futurism》 (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
● Request via app
● 1 oz requires council review
● Redemption scheduled
● Tokens burned, silver delivered
● Vault and ledger updated
Maintenance:
● Weekly: health checks and backups
● Monthly: updates + patches
● Quarterly: audits
----------------------
IX. Governance
● Clan Council (5 families) oversee protocol decisions
● Major decisions require 3-of-5 majority
● Coinwardens manage physical silver, audits, and redemptions
● Protocol updates via signed proposals and clan voting
----------------------
X. Future Expansion
● Inter-clan trade using SK-to-SK swaps
● Token bridges with other resource-based currencies (grain, copper, labor)
● Compute-backed or energy-credit extensions (Silfr + Kraftr = hybrid economy)
----------------------
XI. Summary
Silfr Kern is:
● Backed by reality (silver)
● Governed by trust (clan council)
● Executed by code (lightweight digital ledger)
It is a currency of roots and reason — an embodiment of the land’s wealth, the clan’s honor, and the sacred kernel of value.
Obviously as a whitepaper this is merely a concept, development and implementation is up to whoever decides to look into this. This is a method of breaking traditional finance and keeping to your own. Not intended as a main banking system realistically one should still keep a USD bank account for normal outer economic activity and typical paycheck deposit.
Silver type should be some form of 1 troy oz round or coin. In time upgrading to bars or something larger might be prudent. Silver has been fairly “stable” so to speak but that can always change, pegging price and figuring out how to handle extreme cases is important for stability and fairness. Integration with outsiders is also a good problem to solve, do you allow outsiders to participate? Buy in without any benefits except buying your stuff (like a gift card?) Or do you keep it closed and nigh secret.
Lots to think about here but something like this is essential in the years to come. Hyperlocal economics, clan currencies, and the eventual breaking of traditional finance.
Subscribe now
via 《Folk Futurism》 (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
已删除03.04.202504:54
02.04.202516:56
SILFR KERN WHITEPAPER V1.0
Silfr Kern: A Local Silver-Backed Clan Currency
Working Whitepaper for Clan-Scale Economies
----------------------
I. Introduction
Silfr Kern ("Silver Kernel") is a grain-denominated, silver-backed cryptocurrency system designed for small, clan-based communities. Rooted in physical silver and ancient units of measurement, it combines the durability of precious metals with the utility of digital ledgers. Silfr Kern is not merely a currency but a cultural and spiritual expression of trust, honor, and economic sovereignty. It reinforces clan bonds and gives a vehicle for hyperlocal economic activity, and keeping money in the clan.
----------------------
II. Fundamental Principles
● 1 token = 1 grain of silver (0.0648 grams)
● 480 tokens = 1 troy ounce
● All tokens are backed 1:1 by vaulted physical silver
● No inflation: New tokens are minted only when silver is deposited
● Token name: Silfr Kern, abbreviated SK or k (kern)
Silfr Kern: A Local Silver-Backed Clan Currency
Working Whitepaper for Clan-Scale Economies
----------------------
I. Introduction
Silfr Kern ("Silver Kernel") is a grain-denominated, silver-backed cryptocurrency system designed for small, clan-based communities. Rooted in physical silver and ancient units of measurement, it combines the durability of precious metals with the utility of digital ledgers. Silfr Kern is not merely a currency but a cultural and spiritual expression of trust, honor, and economic sovereignty. It reinforces clan bonds and gives a vehicle for hyperlocal economic activity, and keeping money in the clan.
----------------------
II. Fundamental Principles
● 1 token = 1 grain of silver (0.0648 grams)
● 480 tokens = 1 troy ounce
● All tokens are backed 1:1 by vaulted physical silver
● No inflation: New tokens are minted only when silver is deposited
● Token name: Silfr Kern, abbreviated SK or k (kern)
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媒体内容
01.04.202511:00
🤖 Humanoid robot company Figure released a new video of its robot working on BMW's production line.
"This isn't a test environment—it's real production operations."
🔗 Sawyer Merritt
"This isn't a test environment—it's real production operations."
🔗 Sawyer Merritt
11.04.202518:27
Collective: A British Objective
via 《Folk Futurism》 (author: Goði Cornwell ᛟᚩᛗ)
via 《Folk Futurism》 (author: Goði Cornwell ᛟᚩᛗ)
08.04.202515:53
PURITY - CLEANSING THE SELF
via PAGAN CYBERPUNK (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
via PAGAN CYBERPUNK (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
04.04.202512:11
FOLK GIG ECONOMY
via PAGAN CYBERPUNK (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
via PAGAN CYBERPUNK (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
已删除03.04.202504:54
02.04.202516:56
● These thresholds exist not to deny access, but to preserve economic function
● Community members are expected to treat their SK as part of the shared wealth of the clan
----------------------
XI. Technical and Physical Implementation
A. Vault and Silver Verification Infrastructure
Primary Vault:
● SentrySafe SFW205GQC (2.05 cu ft, $349) or equivalent. ● Fire protection: 1 hour at 1700°F ● Water resistance: 24 hours in 8" of water ● Digital + key dual lock ● Bolt-down installation recommended
Secondary Safes:
● SentrySafe SFW082CTB units ($199 each) or equivalent. ● 2–3 distributed among Coinwardens ● Holds ~20–30 oz of silver each
Verification Tools:
● Sigma Metalytics Verifier ($799) for non-destructive silver authentication
● Specific Gravity Testing Kit ($69) for redundancy
● Calibration Weights ($89) for scale accuracy
Tamper-Evident Measures:
● Serialized seals with photographic logs
● Timestamp camera ($229) for vault operations (with GPS & encrypted storage)
B. Digital Ledger Stack: Hyperledger Fabric
Hardware Setup:
● Central node: Raspberry Pi 4 (8GB) with SSD
● 2–3 backup nodes in Coinwarden homes
● Local mesh network (e.g., Ubiquiti)
● UPS backup systems
Ledger Configuration:
● X organizational nodes (one per council family)
● Channels: Main for SK, Governance for decisions
● Chaincode for: ● Minting (3-of-5 approval) ● Transfer (wallet-to-wallet) ● Burning (for redemption) ● Audit logging
Security:
● Air-gapped key generation
● Encrypted USB backups stored off-site
C. User Experience and Wallets
Mobile App:
● Built with Flutter, runs Android/iOS
● Features: wallet mgmt, QR scanning, transaction history, offline signing
Offline Transactions:
● Signed QR codes scanned peer-to-peer
● Confirmed once a device joins the local network
NFC Cards:
● MIFARE Classic NFC ($2–3 each) or equivalent.
● Unique wallet address + optional PIN
● Readers at community points
● Backup: printed paper recovery codes
D. Governance and Audit Tools
Quarterly Audit Procedure:
● Announced with 24h notice within a 2-week window
● Coinwardens verify vault contents with verifier + documentation
● Digital entries into audit chaincode
● 3-of-5 confirmation required
Issue Handling:
● Discrepancies freeze redemptions
● Council resolves and records outcomes
Proposal Voting:
● 3-of-5 council vote via signed digital submissions
● Chaincode upgraded upon approval
E. Phased Deployment Plan
Phase 1 (Months 1–3):
● Establish council, legal structure
● Vault installation and initial silver deposits
● Fabric setup and basic chaincode
Phase 2 (Months 4–6):
● Pilot with a percentage of users
● v1.0 mobile app + test NFC cards
● Manual audit
Phase 3 (Months 7–9):
● Expand to full clan
● Training sessions and NFC card rollout
● Regular market use and audit schedule
Phase 4 (Months 10–12):
● Feedback improvements
● App v2.0
● Community fund processes launched
F. Daily Operations
Minting:
● Family deposits 1 oz silver
● Verified + documented
● Coinwardens approve transaction
● 480 SK credited to wallet
Transactions:
● Use mobile app, NFC, or manual ledger
● Confirmed over network or during sync
● Community members are expected to treat their SK as part of the shared wealth of the clan
----------------------
XI. Technical and Physical Implementation
A. Vault and Silver Verification Infrastructure
Primary Vault:
● SentrySafe SFW205GQC (2.05 cu ft, $349) or equivalent. ● Fire protection: 1 hour at 1700°F ● Water resistance: 24 hours in 8" of water ● Digital + key dual lock ● Bolt-down installation recommended
Secondary Safes:
● SentrySafe SFW082CTB units ($199 each) or equivalent. ● 2–3 distributed among Coinwardens ● Holds ~20–30 oz of silver each
Verification Tools:
● Sigma Metalytics Verifier ($799) for non-destructive silver authentication
● Specific Gravity Testing Kit ($69) for redundancy
● Calibration Weights ($89) for scale accuracy
Tamper-Evident Measures:
● Serialized seals with photographic logs
● Timestamp camera ($229) for vault operations (with GPS & encrypted storage)
B. Digital Ledger Stack: Hyperledger Fabric
Hardware Setup:
● Central node: Raspberry Pi 4 (8GB) with SSD
● 2–3 backup nodes in Coinwarden homes
● Local mesh network (e.g., Ubiquiti)
● UPS backup systems
Ledger Configuration:
● X organizational nodes (one per council family)
● Channels: Main for SK, Governance for decisions
● Chaincode for: ● Minting (3-of-5 approval) ● Transfer (wallet-to-wallet) ● Burning (for redemption) ● Audit logging
Security:
● Air-gapped key generation
● Encrypted USB backups stored off-site
C. User Experience and Wallets
Mobile App:
● Built with Flutter, runs Android/iOS
● Features: wallet mgmt, QR scanning, transaction history, offline signing
Offline Transactions:
● Signed QR codes scanned peer-to-peer
● Confirmed once a device joins the local network
NFC Cards:
● MIFARE Classic NFC ($2–3 each) or equivalent.
● Unique wallet address + optional PIN
● Readers at community points
● Backup: printed paper recovery codes
D. Governance and Audit Tools
Quarterly Audit Procedure:
● Announced with 24h notice within a 2-week window
● Coinwardens verify vault contents with verifier + documentation
● Digital entries into audit chaincode
● 3-of-5 confirmation required
Issue Handling:
● Discrepancies freeze redemptions
● Council resolves and records outcomes
Proposal Voting:
● 3-of-5 council vote via signed digital submissions
● Chaincode upgraded upon approval
E. Phased Deployment Plan
Phase 1 (Months 1–3):
● Establish council, legal structure
● Vault installation and initial silver deposits
● Fabric setup and basic chaincode
Phase 2 (Months 4–6):
● Pilot with a percentage of users
● v1.0 mobile app + test NFC cards
● Manual audit
Phase 3 (Months 7–9):
● Expand to full clan
● Training sessions and NFC card rollout
● Regular market use and audit schedule
Phase 4 (Months 10–12):
● Feedback improvements
● App v2.0
● Community fund processes launched
F. Daily Operations
Minting:
● Family deposits 1 oz silver
● Verified + documented
● Coinwardens approve transaction
● 480 SK credited to wallet
Transactions:
● Use mobile app, NFC, or manual ledger
● Confirmed over network or during sync
02.04.202512:08
GERMANIC SOUL SPECIFICATION SHEET
via PAGAN CYBERPUNK (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
via PAGAN CYBERPUNK (author: ᛋᛏᚨᚱᚳᚨᛞᚱ - The Mad Prophet)
31.03.202516:53
//FF// Hyper-Rom Fantasism and Symbiotechnesis
via 《Folk Futurism》 (author: Wurm)
via 《Folk Futurism》 (author: Wurm)
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