filedot model

Filedot Model File

This design choice is revolutionary in its conservatism. It returns to the early internet’s ethos of end-to-end principle and dumb networks. A dot file is like a physical letter: sealed, signed, and self-contained. You can store it on a USB stick, email it as an attachment, or host it on a personal web server. The network becomes merely a transport layer, not an identity layer.

First, . If losing your dot file means losing your identity, the model imposes unforgiving self-custody burdens. Proponents counter with social recovery mechanisms and hardware vaults, but usability remains a hurdle. filedot model

Second, . If a dot is immutable (changing it creates a new dot), how do you revoke an old credential—e.g., a driver’s license after you move to a new state? The answer requires a revocation registry: a public log of “still valid” hashes. That registry reintroduces a central or consensus-based component, partially undermining the model’s purity. This design choice is revolutionary in its conservatism

Today, individuals bear the risks of data breaches but capture little value from their data. Under Filedot, you could sell access to a dot (e.g., your shopping preferences) via a smart contract, without losing custody. The buyer receives a verifiable copy; you retain the master. Data becomes a tradeable asset, not a leaky byproduct. You can store it on a USB stick,

Because references are cryptographic hashes, the resulting graph is and content-addressable . This is the Filedot Model’s answer to the blockchain’s distributed ledger but without global consensus overhead. You do not need every node to agree on history; you only need each dot to carry its own provenance.

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