
AI Mechanism Designer
The job that doesn't exist yet

When The Toolbox Outgrows The Workshop
Some Thoughts on the State of Public-Good Funding Following Devconnect Buenos Aires

Intents, x402, and Enshrined Thermorealism
This essay by Pat Rawson is a speculative imaginary, not a forecast. Thermorealism is a conceptual tool used to explore how truth, energy, and protocol might one day converge. This essay asks, simply: what if our digital systems finally responded to the rigid laws of thermodynamics, to the imperative of planetary stewardship?Modern economies operate as though information is free and matter is infinite. The global payment system moves trillions daily, yet it remains largely blind to the energe...
Web3 research and advocacy initiative to unlock the value of nature 🌳



AI Mechanism Designer
The job that doesn't exist yet

When The Toolbox Outgrows The Workshop
Some Thoughts on the State of Public-Good Funding Following Devconnect Buenos Aires

Intents, x402, and Enshrined Thermorealism
This essay by Pat Rawson is a speculative imaginary, not a forecast. Thermorealism is a conceptual tool used to explore how truth, energy, and protocol might one day converge. This essay asks, simply: what if our digital systems finally responded to the rigid laws of thermodynamics, to the imperative of planetary stewardship?Modern economies operate as though information is free and matter is infinite. The global payment system moves trillions daily, yet it remains largely blind to the energe...
Web3 research and advocacy initiative to unlock the value of nature 🌳
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After 22 months of research, writing, and collaboration, we’re excited to share that the The Green Crypto Handbook manuscript is now complete. It’s a whopping 117,910 words and seven chapters, moving from the bottom to the top of the Environmental Finance Stack.
The Green Crypto Handbook offers a critical yet constructive rethinking of environmental finance, arguing that blockchain technology provides a new institutional architecture capable of democratizing access to green asset markets, strengthening ecological data integrity, and enabling a more inclusive, transparent ecological economy. The book’s rationale rests on a systematic critique of existing ecocapitalist regimes—from inefficient carbon markets and centralized certification systems to the structural inequities of debt-financed conservation—and proposes “Ecocapitalism 2.0,” a decentralized, programmable alternative grounded in the affordances of Web3 systems.

As we move into the publishing phase, we’ve decided to hide our sample chapters while we pitch to publishers. We’re incredibly proud of the work and want to give it the best possible chance to reach a wide audience through the right publishing partner. Groups and persons who would benefit from this research can reach out to us directly for a limited copy at this time.
We’re currently looking for two kinds of support:
Reviewers — If you're someone with experience in climate tech, Web3, regenerative finance, or sustainability and are interested in reading and reviewing an advance copy, we’d love to get your feedback.
Publishing connections — If you know someone in the publishing world—an editor, agent, or acquisitions contact—who might be aligned with this project, please consider connecting us. Personal introductions make a huge difference.
We’re writing this book to advance the conversation around climate-aligned blockchain infrastructure and to help bridge communities that rarely speak the same language. If that resonates with you, we’d be grateful for your support in this next step.
You can reach us via our online contact form.
Thank you for being part of this journey.
— Pat & Louise (Ecofrontiers)
Website | X | Support Our Work
After 22 months of research, writing, and collaboration, we’re excited to share that the The Green Crypto Handbook manuscript is now complete. It’s a whopping 117,910 words and seven chapters, moving from the bottom to the top of the Environmental Finance Stack.
The Green Crypto Handbook offers a critical yet constructive rethinking of environmental finance, arguing that blockchain technology provides a new institutional architecture capable of democratizing access to green asset markets, strengthening ecological data integrity, and enabling a more inclusive, transparent ecological economy. The book’s rationale rests on a systematic critique of existing ecocapitalist regimes—from inefficient carbon markets and centralized certification systems to the structural inequities of debt-financed conservation—and proposes “Ecocapitalism 2.0,” a decentralized, programmable alternative grounded in the affordances of Web3 systems.

As we move into the publishing phase, we’ve decided to hide our sample chapters while we pitch to publishers. We’re incredibly proud of the work and want to give it the best possible chance to reach a wide audience through the right publishing partner. Groups and persons who would benefit from this research can reach out to us directly for a limited copy at this time.
We’re currently looking for two kinds of support:
Reviewers — If you're someone with experience in climate tech, Web3, regenerative finance, or sustainability and are interested in reading and reviewing an advance copy, we’d love to get your feedback.
Publishing connections — If you know someone in the publishing world—an editor, agent, or acquisitions contact—who might be aligned with this project, please consider connecting us. Personal introductions make a huge difference.
We’re writing this book to advance the conversation around climate-aligned blockchain infrastructure and to help bridge communities that rarely speak the same language. If that resonates with you, we’d be grateful for your support in this next step.
You can reach us via our online contact form.
Thank you for being part of this journey.
— Pat & Louise (Ecofrontiers)
Website | X | Support Our Work
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