On Aiki Wiki

Rome Viharo

03-Jul-2024, 16:00-17:00 (17 months ago)

Abstract: Rome Viharo introduce Aiki Wiki, a unique online conversational tool and computational system designed to gamify consensus building into resolution without relying on a voting mechanism for governance.

Aiki Wiki represents an innovative approach to forming a “narrative consensus” using a type of conversational game theory for conflict resolution, eliminating the need for voting while ensuring openness, transparency and continuous feedback.

Aiki Wiki has been developed to facilitate rational and constructive dialogue within online communities, with a stated mission to “replace nothing, improve everything”

The project is currently evolving from Version 1.0 (Parley) to Version 2.0 (Consensus Dojo), which has applied for the MetaGov interoperability grant, and seeks to evolve to Version 3.0, a global library of consensus articles to submit for Phase 1 of the NSF SBIR program.

- Will introduce 9x3 narrative logic, introduce the structure of narrative events and its unique markup language that replaces a voting algorithm - Will introduce “convergence or abandonment” as a method to filter toxicity or disinformation within a consensus process - The transparency and feedback loop process that ensures the integrity and accountability of the consensus. - The potential applications of Aiki Wiki in conflict resolution, governance and decision-making processes.

Rome Viharo, the creator of Aiki Wiki, will be available to present this seminar in June, July or August. As a dedicated advocate for decentralized governance and innovative community engagement, Rome aims to inspire further adoption and involvement in Aiki Wiki’s ongoing development.

This seminar will be an excellent opportunity for the MetaGov community to explore how Aiki Wiki can transform decentralized governance and foster meaningful community interactions by leveraging conversational game theory for narrative consensus.

game theoryhuman-computer interactionsocial and information networkslaw and economics

Audience: researchers in the topic

( chat | video )


Metagovernance Seminar

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