Three networks the Association supports.
The projects below sit in the field the Association studies, and each is a public-interest network the Association supports through its non-profit research programme — not a commercial relationship. Each is a network rather than a product, in regulated tokenization, environmental data, and cultural provenance, and each is governed in a way we find worth documenting. Our relationship to each project is described on its own page.
Boli Platform
Tokenization tech infrastructure for regulated real-world, environmental, and public-sector assets.
The neutral software layer that lets law firms, fund admins, transfer agents, developers, project originators, registries, and governments tokenize once and make their programs addressable across every venue, rail, custodian, registry, government system, and agent.
Customer-operated. Boli is unregulated software; every license sits with the customer or their licensed partner.
Multi-VM contracts (EVM · SVM · Canton), compliance-programmable, agent-native, with AI runtime for workflows, fraud, MRV, NAV, and regulatory monitoring.
Naturecode
A global platform for environmental data — owned by communities, governed through The Steward, and activated by autonomous systems.
Naturecode is a community-owned substrate for environmental data. It binds MRV evidence, ecological observations, and ecosystem-service claims to durable public records that communities control, steward entities supervise, and autonomous systems activate.
Community ownership of primary data; The Steward as supervisory entity with a public, amendable mandate.
Autonomous MRV pipelines, verification agents, and signed attestations anchored to on-chain identity.
Cultural Layers
A decentralized cultural network. Every work is a layer. Every layer can branch.
Cultural Layers is a protocol for cultural production in which every work is a layer and every layer can branch — into commentary, restoration, reinterpretation, analysis, or adaptation. Attribution is permanent. AI is accountable. Governance belongs to the community.
Community governance by contributors. Protocol-level rules change by public proposal and ratification.
Branchable layers, permanent attribution, and AI accountability through declared model identity and mandate.
Supported, not operated.
The Association does not operate, own, or hold any economic interest in these networks. It supports them because each sits at the intersection of the research we carry out — tokenization standards, verification and AI accountability, and governance for institutional legibility of new primitives.
Support means non-commercial advisory engagement, research dialogue, and convening — the same kind of public-interest support a non-profit research institute extends to any project worth documenting in its field. The Association takes no fees, holds no equity, and earns no commission from any of the projects below. Full governance detail is on the governance page.