Difference between revisions of "Science of Governance/Criteria"

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Having two/thirds(<math>2/3</math>) of participants sign off on each of the proposed resolutions/propositions.
#Operating the governing board of [[SoG]] using a trustworthy content versioning/publishing system
#Improve the content of [[SoG]] using [[Smart Contract]] specified workflows
#Having two/thirds(<math>2/3</math>) of [[active participant]]s sign off on each of the proposed resolutions/propositions.
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=The Principles of SoG=
{{:The Three Principles of the Science of Governance}}
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Latest revision as of 23:54, 19 December 2022

  1. Operating the governing board of SoG using a trustworthy content versioning/publishing system
  2. Improve the content of SoG using Smart Contract specified workflows
  3. Having two/thirds() of active participants sign off on each of the proposed resolutions/propositions.

Based on Byzantine Fault Tolerance[1], the rule of consensus is going to peg at two/thirds() majority votes.

The Principles of SoG

There are three main principles that is necessary to set up The Science of Governance through self-administered Data.

  1. Improved Cycle Time of Accountable Data Refinement: Increased frequency of verification and validation for higher data resolution in spacetime, therefore high degree of trust-worthiness.
  2. Data-driven Accountability: All information sources have explicitly defined identity, including address information for Executable Contracts, Data Collecting Devices, and Data provisioning Agencies.
  3. Web-enabled Observability:Present Data COntent using one consistent data presentation and abstraction framework, so that data content can be presented using composable and reusable software components and networked display instruments, including Web3D, and Metaverse instruments with minimum application-specific engineering costs.


References

  1. Lamport, Leslie (July 1982). "The Byzantine Generals Problem". 4 (3). local page: ACM Transactionson Programming Languages and Systems: 382–401. 

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