Blockchain technology has always been focused on disruption, from the financial overalls promised by Bitcoin to the anti-internet oligopoly vision of Ethereum. Now, an ambitious and somewhat mysterious group is attempting perhaps the most disruptive application of distributed ledger technology to date.
Decenturion promises to be the first sovereign society governed by direct democracy via blockchain. The project was unveiled at Consensus 2018, and Decenturion’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Viktoriia Pirumova, recently spoke[1] at the Blockchain for Impact Summit at the United Nations. Following the event at the U.N., a reception was held on a yacht cruise on the Hudson River.
Decenturion has no physical location. Instead, the society aims to transcend borders by operating as a permissionless platform. The ruling principle of Decenturion is that the state should make its people more prosperous, rather than deducting from their prosperity in the form of taxes.Those who became citizens at Consensus 2018 received 100 Decenturion ERC-20 tokens (DCNT). Later adopters will receive tokens proportional to their Ethereum holdings upon registration. The total token supply is capped at 30 million.
According to The Decenturion Manifesto[2], the society will not have an administrative state as we know it today, rather the affairs of the organization will be managed by its citizens through the smart contracts underpinning the society.
Decenturion currently recognizes two different legal classifications for its members: Citizen and Startup. Citizens have the added benefit of receiving tokens from startup companies in proportion to their Decenturion token holdings.
All of the society’s activities, such as the registration of new citizens or startups, the emission of tokens, and the management of existing tokens will be handled by smart contracts.
While the project is certainly impressive in its ambitions, there is a noticeable lack of hard information