Building Internet 2.0
Trust infrastructure for a new internet.
The first internet connected machines. Internet 2.0 connects minds — and gives them a way to trust what they find together. Idea Nexus Ventures is building the substrate that makes shared understanding possible without surrendering sovereignty.
We're building Internet 2.0
The current internet moves information. Internet 2.0 moves trust. The missing layer isn't bandwidth or compute — it's an infrastructure for knowing what you're looking at and who you can reason with. That's the layer we're building: trust infrastructure for a new internet, where communities can learn in the open without leaking sovereignty.
Our work starts from a simple conviction: a network is only as trustworthy as the provenance of what moves through it. So we build the rails that let questions, evidence, and credit flow with their history attached.
The foundation is written up in The Shape of Trust — our paper on designing information systems that hold the door open rather than lock it shut.
Trust infrastructure, not another walled garden
Most platforms optimize for engagement. We optimize for calibration — the gap between what you believe and what's true. Trust infrastructure is the set of tools that make that gap visible, chainable, and improvable over time: provenance-preserving artifacts, energy accounts for contribution, and a beam you can shine on your own reasoning.
- Provenance by default. Every artifact carries how it was made and what evidence supports it.
- Credit that compounds. Contribution is metered and returned to the connections that earned it.
- Sovereignty intact. You keep your community; the infrastructure is plumbing, not a landlord.
Network language models are an energy cache
Here's the mechanism we're building on. A network language model isn't just a model that talks — it's an energy cache. It stores the work of thinking in a shared space that others can draw from.
A scratchpad is the unit of that cache: a temporary, disposable working memory for a line of reasoning. When the reasoning is done, the scratchpad can be discarded. But the energy it cost to build isn't lost — it's returned.
As the cache fills up over time, the energy saved is returned to the connections that created it. Your questions, your checks, your forks of someone else's reasoning — they deposit energy into a shared account. The more the network learns together, the more it gives back to the people who made the learning possible.
This is the engine underneath communal learning: a network that pays its contributors in the very resource it consumed to think.
We're moving faster — and shining a light on what we see
We're going to start moving faster. That means building in the open and letting you see the path, not just the destination. To make that legible, we use the beamline — an open tool that turns a raw stream of events into a shareable, provenance-preserving projection of a search or analysis.
Think of the beamline as a way to shine a light on what you are seeing and the questions you're asking. It captures not just conclusions but the act of looking: what you searched, what lens you used, what surprised you. That record is the most valuable thing a learning network has — because questions are how we learn things.
The beamline repo is public. Use it to make your own reasoning visible, shareable, and chainable: github.com/leo-guinan/beamline.
We need to start rewarding the curious
Questions are how we learn things. So we need to start rewarding the curious — the people who look, ask, and fork. Curiosity is the input that fills the energy cache; it deserves a return, not a footnote.
That's the loop we're closing: ask in the open, let the beamline record it, and let the energy saved by your contribution flow back to you and your community. Reward the curious, and the network compounds its own intelligence.
Communal learning on the stuff you don't want to learn
Not every question is yours to chase. The interesting part: you don't have to. Communal learning means distributing the curiosity — the community absorbs the topics you'd rather not spend your life on, so you get to focus on what you do.
And here's the part most systems waste: your cognitive exhaust — the side-output of everything you think and do — powers your future. The scratchpads you discard, the questions you ask, the checks you run, the forks you make: it's all energy. Captured in the cache, returned as it fills, it becomes the fuel for the next thing you actually care about.
Your cognitive exhaust powers your future. We just built the pipe so it doesn't evaporate.
Bring this to your online community
If you run an online community and want trust infrastructure that rewards curiosity instead of draining it, let's set it up together. We'll walk through how the energy cache, the beamline, and communal learning map onto your people.
Prefer to read first? The Shape of Trust and the beamline are both open.