Protocols should function without names or attribution: the principle that the best systems work through mechanism, not personality or brand.
Laozi opens the Tao Te Ching: 'The Tao that can be named is not the eternal Tao.' Names create division, distinction, and ego. The most robust blockchains succeed through mechanism rather than personality. Bitcoin has no figurehead—Satoshi Nakamoto disappeared precisely because the protocol's integrity depends on principle, not person. Ethereum's Vitalik Buterin remains public, yet the network increasingly operates through distributed governance. Protocols designed around leaders—whether founders, corporations, or visible teams—inherit their vulnerabilities. When a founder is indicted, the project falters. When a company controls code, trust erodes. True decentralization achieves namelessness: code that runs itself, communities that organize without hierarchy, decisions made through consensus rather than edict. This reflects the Taoist principle that naming creates duality and conflict. The most sustainable systems are those whose operations seem inevitable and impersonal, like natural law rather than human will.
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