Technical Notes on Federated Land Administration
Architecture, standards, and implementation reports from the Landblock project. Each post answers a specific question that governments, auditors, and architects ask.
How Landblock Is Governed — and Why No Single Person Is in Charge
A protocol that serves governments across multiple countries cannot be controlled by any one person or company. Here is how the Landblock DAO works, what it decides, and how voting power is distributed so the network serves all registries — not just a few.
Read →Landblock Tokenomics: Why Two Tokens, How They Work, and Where the Value Goes
Landblock runs on two tokens: LDBK for protocol access and LGT for governance. They are deliberately separate — and that separation is the point. Here is the full breakdown of why, how distribution works, and what the economics support.
Read →Week in Review: Phase 7 Underway, Polygon Confirmed, and the Top 12 Chain List
Phase 7 multi-chain infrastructure is live on testnet. ADR-0026 formally confirms Polygon as the primary chain. And the DAO-governed supported chain list — the Top 12 framework — is now operational on-chain. Here is what happened and what comes next.
Read →Why Landblock Is Multi-Chain — and Why That Matters
A land registry in Peru operates under different legal constraints than one in Ghana. Telling all of them to use the same blockchain was always going to be a dealbreaker. Here is how we solved that — and why it makes Landblock fundamentally more resilient.
Read →Why Land Rights Are the World's Most Underrated Problem — And How We're Fixing It
1.5 billion people live on land they cannot prove they own. That single fact sits at the root of extreme poverty, forced displacement, and generational inequality on every continent. Landblock exists to fix it — not by replacing governments, but by connecting them.
Read →What Comes After a Complete Registry: Adoption, Governance, and Trust
Phase 6 is technically complete. Phase 7 is about what happens next — adoption, transparency, and the governance structures that make a registry trusted. This post explains the distinction and why it matters.
Read →What a Real Jurisdiction Would Change — and What It Wouldn't
Governments ask whether they can adapt the registry to their legal system and administrative structure. This post answers that question precisely, separating what is fixed from what is configurable — with effort estimates.
Read →What Makes a Federation Proof Verifiable (and Why It Matters for Land Registries)
A federation proof is not a data export and not a trust agreement. It is a cryptographically signed assertion about registry state. This post explains what is inside one and why that structure matters.
Read →Demonstrating Federated Land Administration with a Fictional Jurisdiction
Before pilots, governments need to know whether the system works end-to-end. This post introduces the Novaterra simulation — a complete technical demonstration using a synthetic jurisdiction — and explains why this approach reduces political risk while increasing technical confidence.
Read →Phase 6 Complete: A Federated, Sovereign-Grade Land Registry Template
The Landblock Registry Template is now complete through Phase 6. This post documents what was built, what the seven-layer architecture enables, and what this means for governments evaluating sovereign land administration infrastructure.
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