Hosted ondev.hyper.mediavia theHypermedia Protocol

Jeffersonian Newspapers & Decentralized Feeds

    Context

      In a discussion on future publishing models, 'Jj proposed piloting Seed feeds with journalism students and institutional partners, inspired by Jefferson’s vision of newspapers as tools for self-governance. A classic 1787 letter from Thomas Jefferson to Edward Carrington was cited as the philosophical foundation.

    Key Ideas

      Feeds as a civic infrastructure: A Seed “feed” isn’t just content—it’s a tool for participatory governance and distributed literacy. Jeremy suggests piloting feeds with journalism schools, co-hosted institutionally and supported by cryptographic NGOs.

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      Jeffersonian principle: Jefferson famously wrote: “Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter.”

      Decentralized authorship & cryptographic guarantees: Imagining multisig models where institutions can support early-stage publishing, then gradually hand over key control to authors as they gain confidence.

      Self-governance through journalism: Newspapers (or digital successors) must inform and activate the public. If people become inattentive to public affairs, Jefferson warns, "judges & governors shall all become wolves."

    Seed Relevance

      Seed’s hypermedia protocol revives the Jeffersonian ideal—enabling communities to own the infrastructure of public knowledge.

      With permanent links, signed authorship, and version control, Seed is uniquely suited to support this new generation of civic feeds.

      Potential pilots with journalism schools create real-world momentum and align with Seed’s mission of sustainable, community-driven publishing.