Three essays on who holds the leverage
A three-part series on dependency, accumulation, and minimum disclosure. Each essay holds on its own, but the argument compounds across the three. Read in order.
- Part Onedata lens5 min read
Nothing happened, and that was the point
Y2K was a fix delivered on time. Harvest-now-decrypt-later puts encryption in the same shape of problem. The durable answer is collecting less.
Read the essay - Part Twoplatform lens6 min read
The Switch Someone Else Holds
When one government can disable a frontier model worldwide overnight, dependency itself is the vulnerability. Sovereignty is architectural, not geographic.
Read the essay - Part Threehuman lens6 min read
Exposure Is Not Democratic
Collected data lands hardest on the most exposed. How duty of care under ISO 31030 collides with GDPR Article 9, and why minimum disclosure is the resolution.
Read the essay - Operational thesis12 min read
The Strategic Memo
The founder's long-form memo on minimum-disclosure compliance architecture, KTH IRL 5 validation, and why the EU's catch-22 is solvable from Tallinn.
Open - Analytical brief18 min read
The Shadow HR Liability Brief
Why multinationals with diverse workforces are sitting on the next €35M GDPR fine, and the architectural pattern that resolves it. v1.1.
Open - Whitepaper22 min read
Beyond Disclosure
The founder's whitepaper on why disclosure-based protection fails marginalised populations, and the four architectural principles that resolve it.
Open