I don't see how this can be resistant to manipulation.
I don't see how it can be resistant to foreigners flooding the system with their text or to people creating multiple accounts to have an outsized influence.
I think if those problems could be solved it would be the best thing in the world, but the funnel procedure and the meritocratic promotion don't matter in the absence of those things. There are also many ways to do what this system proposes. A threaded discussion system is also good.
The problem is instead the lack of manipulation resistance from multiple accounts and people who shouldn't have accounts at all.
Apologies for the slow reply; I had mistakenly assumed this thread was inactive after the first day.
You have put your finger on the single most difficult technical challenge, and I appreciate you focusing on it. How does the system defend against manipulation from foreign actors or domestic users with multiple accounts?
A simple solution like filtering by in-country phone numbers is insufficient, as it would unfairly exclude the significant and important Iranian diaspora.
Instead, the primary defense against this kind of manipulation is built into the very structure of the protocol: massive randomization and scale.
The key is that an adversary with, for example, 1,000 coordinated accounts cannot concentrate them into one group to guarantee a win. The randomization protocol would scatter those 1,000 accounts across 1,000 different Level 1 groups. In each group, their single agent would be just one voice out of 100, rendering their coordinated voting power negligible.
To have a meaningful impact, an adversary wouldn't just need to create thousands of accounts; they would need to create hundreds of thousands or even millions to have a statistical chance of influencing a significant percentage of the concurrent discussions. This raises the cost and complexity of an attack by several orders of magnitude compared to traditional social media platforms.
While no system is perfectly immune, the protocol is designed so that its very architecture acts as the primary defense, making coordinated manipulation impractical.
Thank you again for this sharp and essential critique.
I don't see how it can be resistant to foreigners flooding the system with their text or to people creating multiple accounts to have an outsized influence.
I think if those problems could be solved it would be the best thing in the world, but the funnel procedure and the meritocratic promotion don't matter in the absence of those things. There are also many ways to do what this system proposes. A threaded discussion system is also good.
The problem is instead the lack of manipulation resistance from multiple accounts and people who shouldn't have accounts at all.