@GHOST has good tips and insights for privacy related topics.
View quoted note →
Max
max@towardsliberty.com
npub1klkk...x3vt
Praxeologist ~ Cryptoanarchist ~ Cypherpunk
The Art of Not Being Governed
Really interesting book on how statecraft favors certain technologies.
Vise versa, freedom tech is the root of liberation.


The Art of Not Being Governed - Wikipedia
# BOOK LAUNCH!
# The Praxeology of Privacy
v0.1.0 Now Available
I'm excited to announce the publication of **"The Praxeology of Privacy: Economic Logic in Cypherpunk Implementation"** - a complete manuscript bridging Austrian economics with cypherpunk cryptography.
## What Is This Book?
This work proves that **privacy isn't just a preference—it's an economic necessity**. Through rigorous praxeological analysis, it demonstrates that privacy is logically required for rational economic action, property rights, and voluntary exchange.
### The Core Argument
I develop a **Three-Axiom Framework** showing how:
- **Privacy enables economic calculation** (building on Mises)
- **Privacy protects rational discourse** (extending Hoppe)
- **Privacy provides resistance tools** (following Voskuil)
The result? A systematic proof that surveillance systems create the same calculation problems as socialist planning, while cryptographic tools restore the conditions necessary for free markets.
## Why This Matters
For too long, privacy advocates have relied on moral arguments while economists have ignored cryptographic innovation. This book bridges that gap, showing that:
- **Cypherpunks** gain rigorous economic foundations for their tools
- **Austrian economists** discover how cryptography solves fundamental problems
- **Everyone** learns why privacy is essential for human flourishing
## What's Inside
~70,000 words across 21 chapters covering:
- Economic logic of digital signatures and zero-knowledge proofs
- How surveillance destroys market discovery processes
- Cryptographic property rights and enforcement mechanisms
- Practical framework for building parallel economies
- Original theoretical contributions to both traditions
## Download Now
**Complete manuscript available in multiple formats:**
- Light/Dark PDFs for reading
- Summary collection for overview
- Text-to-speech optimized version
- Individual chapters + full archive
👉 **Download here:** towardsliberty.com/pop
## The Best Part
This work is **100% public domain**. Copy it, share it, sell it, modify it—whatever helps spread these ideas.
## Next Steps
- **Researchers**: I welcome feedback, critique, and collaboration
- **Educators**: Use this material in courses and discussions
- **Practitioners**: Apply the framework to evaluate privacy technologies
- **Publishers**: Contact me about formal publication opportunities
I would love to get some serious review before we print the first batch, so please reach out with critique and improvement proposals.
This represents a couple years of research connecting two intellectual traditions that desperately needed each other. I believe it's the first systematic praxeological analysis of cryptography—and hopefully not the last.
**What do you think? Does this framework resonate with your understanding of privacy and economics? Do I make any logical flaws?**
TreeKEM encryption secures group membership. Even large chats stay private, with keys updating efficiently as users join or leave.
Nostr’s protocol is lightweight. It avoids bloat, focusing on identity, distribution, and censorship resistance.
Group messaging at scale usually sacrifices security. A MLS ensures encryption stays efficient, even for thousands of participants.