
6:42 AM, Los Angeles. Wednesday. Amira, an environmental data analyst in Los Angeles, has a new notification in her queue:
“Need a ranked list of street segments in Atwater Village for urban reforestation tree planting efforts. $500. Click here for more detail on datasets and ecology context. Bounty paid per Civic Protocol 7.1.”
She taps accept. Instantly her workspace fills with live data streams from sensors, tree inventories, and GIS runoff models. An AI assistant cross-references neighborhood heat maps and groundwater recharge zones, identifying priority streets for bioswales and native tree planting. Two hours later, she posts her results: a living map, not a report. Her work triggers an automatic bounty payment, public verification, and a note of thanks from a landscape architect across town preparing a grant proposal.
Across the city, in Watts, a civic coder named Darius checks his queue:
“Need a microservice to translate construction permits into computable compliance checks for stormwater capture requirements.”
He reuses Amira’s code from a repository tagged CivicStack 7-G-LA. In another age, both would have waited half a year for a purchase order to be approved by someone who no longer remembers why the form existed. Now the machine hums quietly, and the human parts do what they do best: thinking, improvising, caring.
This is not science fiction. It is what happens when the operating system of cities evolves, when the plumbing behind civic life is rebuilt from brittle PDFs and silos into living protocols. In the old world, talent flowed through bottlenecks: procurement portals, consulting monopolies, the slow churn of who you know. The consultant-industrial complex still grinds its gears, but its logic, to hoard insight and bill by the hour, belongs to a bygone century.
In the new world, data flows like water, governed by quality, privacy, and transparency codes. Work itself becomes fluid, matched to need through open civic protocols. No longer a vendor list, but a living agora. No RFPs padded with buzzwords, but tasklets, precision invitations to intelligence.
Each small task feeds a larger process. Verified results become inputs to new analyses, as Stephen Waldman once imagined: a reusable, distributed, ever-expanding web of science. It is not a dashboard, it is a living archive of how we learn to govern ourselves.
Behind the scenes, AI serves not as overlord but as matchmaker. It brokers trust between the municipal and the planetary, pairing city needs with citizen skill. It translates legalese into executable logic, finds common data schemas, ensures that when a city inspector updates a field log, a researcher in Nairobi can run a new climate model by nightfall.
It makes governance porous. It invites participation from those exiled from the institutions that once claimed monopoly on public insight: the gig-workers of reason, the coders, the local fixers, the quiet scientists on Substack.
In truth, the technology for this already exists. The Dune crypto ecosystem has demonstrated how data can be opened, queried, and rewarded through bounty-style incentives and transparent marketplaces. There is nothing stopping us from applying similar mechanics on top of the open data ecosystem. What remains is not the code, but the courage and coordination to weave it into civic life.
When our program first proposed a new operating system for cities, it sounded utopian. Yet the metaphor has matured. The internet’s TCP/IP stack once turned disconnected networks into a global web. The Civic Protocol Stack now does the same for urban life: decentralized standards that allow information, trust, and payment to move securely among people and machines. With it, the feedback loop between research and action shortens from decades to days. A city can see itself, think with itself, and act upon itself.
This marketplace will not replace public service. It will deepen it. It will turn governance from a fortress into a commons. It will turn bureaucracy into jazz. Every dataset becomes a score. Every citizen with a skill an instrument. Together they improvise the song of adaptation in a century of storms. And if you listen closely, beneath the hum of networks and the rush of data, you can still hear it, the sound of civilization remembering what it means to learn in public.
Further Reading
The Evil Morty Protocol — The original post imagined a living marketplace where public problems meet open talent through shared civic protocols, freeing insight from the Citadel of bureaucracy.
Nurturing an internet of oaks - "The goal...: a decentralized oak relay for the tangled civic fabric of Southern California. A root system with memory. The first roots of the Internet of Trees."
How this post was written
This piece emerged from notes on a walk and reflections on the Dune ecosystem’s bounty mechanics. It was refined through dialogue with earlier writing on the New City O/S. The writing protocol itself is part of the experiment in making possible futures visible.
Share Dialog
No comments yet