I have been thinking a lot about digital sovereignty lately and how quickly the internet is turning into a weird blend of surreal slop and centralized control. It feels like we are losing the ability to tell what is real because of how easy it is for trillionaire tech companies to flood our feeds with whatever they want.
Specifically I am curious about what I call “kirkification” which is the way these tools make it trivial to warp a person’s digital identity into a caricature. It starts with a joke or a face swap but it ends with people losing control over how they are perceived online.
If we want to protect ourselves and our local communities from being manipulated by these black box models how do we actually do it?
I want to know if anyone here has tried moving away from the cloud toward sovereign compute. Is hosting our own communication and media solutions actually a viable way to starve these massive models of our data? Can a small town actually manage its own digital utility instead of just being a data farm for big tech?
Also how do we even explain this to normal people who are not extremely online? How can we help neighbors or the elderly recognize when they are being nudged by an algorithm or seeing a digital caricature?
It seems like we should be aiming for a world of a million millionaires rather than just a room full of trillionaires but the technical hurdles like isp throttling and protocol issues make that bridge hard to build.
Has anyone here successfully implemented local first solutions that reduced their reliance on big tech ai? I am looking for ways to foster cognitive immunity and keep our data grounded in meatspace.


Sorry - I think I misunderstood part of your question (what stage have you actually gotten to). See what I mean about needing sentiment analysis LOL
Did you mean about the MoA?
The TL;DR - I have it working - right now - on my rig. It’s strictly manual. I need to detangle it and generalise it, strip out personal stuff and then ship it as v1 (and avoid the oh so tempting scope creep). It needs to be as simple as possible for someone else to retool.
So, it’s built and functional right now…but the detangling, writing up specs and docs, uploading everything to Codeberg and mirroring etc will take time. I’m back to work this week and my fun time will be curtailed…though I want nothing more than to hyperfocus on this LOL.
One of the issues with ASD is most of us over-engineer everything for the worst case adversarial outcomes, as a method of reducing meltdowns/shutdowns. Right now, I am specifically using my LLM like someone who hates it and wants to break it…to make sure it does what I say it does.
If you’d like, I can drop my RFC (request for comments, in engineering talk) for you to look at / verify with another LLM / ask someone about. This thing is real, not hype and not vibe coding. I built this because my ASD brain needs it and because I was driven by spite / too miserly to pay out the ass for decent rig. Ironically, those constraints probably led to something interesting (I hope) that can help others (I hope). Like everything else, it’s not perfect but it does what it says on the tin 9/10…which is about all you can hope for.