Installations

Who said protocols are intangible?

Installations are spatial ways to feel The Internet of Value before it becomes a diagram, a website, a tool, or a protocol specification.

The old invitation was simple: come feel the protocols. The current installation program keeps that invitation and grounds it in the four canonical protocol routes.

Canonical Intent

Make the invisible input physically understandable.

Most people encounter value only after it has been converted into a grade, salary, metric, price, score, or reputation signal.

The Internet of Value installations start earlier: with the hour lived by a person, the state carried through that hour, the contribution made inside it, and the community context that can validate it.

The installation format lets visitors walk through those relationships with their body, attention, and choices instead of reading protocol language cold.

Visitor Arc

From lived hour to shared language.

01

Enter through a day

Visitors begin with ordinary lived time: recovery, care, learning, work, coordination, and rest.

02

See what existing systems miss

The installation makes visible the gap between output metrics and the human input beneath them.

03

Move through protocol routes

A single hour can become a private state update, a contribution record, or a community-validated output depending on proof, consent, and context.

04

Leave with language

The goal is not spectacle. The goal is for people to carry clearer words for time, wellbeing, contribution, and value.

Protocol Moments

The stack becomes a sequence people can walk through.

~ValueCaptureProtocol

Bounded time, activity, proof, and context become visible before value is reduced to price.

~WellbecomingProtocol

Human state enters the scene as a living condition, not an afterthought behind performance.

~SAOcommons

Community validation shows how learning, earning, and organization-building can be attested.

~WellbeingIdentity

The person updates as a living state shaped by validated flows from the other protocols.

Format

A public lab, not a product demo.

Installation work can include rooms, guided walks, projection, printed maps, protocol cards, sensor-free reflection prompts, facilitated conversations, and community pilot artifacts.

The important boundary is consent: installations should help people understand the logic of value capture and wellbeing identity without extracting private life as raw material.

Future installation documentation should connect each public experience back to the live protocol stack rather than inventing separate terminology for the same concepts.