Site Navigation

Download all pages
for Obsidian or LLMs.

A Thousand Small Mints

A story written by Pete Kaminski with ChatGPT 5.2 (January 2026), set in a near-future authoritarian state where centralized finance has become a tool of control. A field tech named Mara enters a mutual credit network — trust-routed, personally minted, synced over Nostr — and discovers that the thing the regime is trying to nationalize isn't money. It's relationships.

Full text: A Thousand Small Mints (Full Text)

In This Conversation

Pete invoked it during the Regenerative Economics and Currencies discussion:

Pete: "Do you know this story, A Thousand Small Mints?"

The Nameless One: "Yes."

Pete: "That architecture is the right way to do it. I think that was the first story I wrote with AI, where I was trying to explain a technical concept, and the technical concept and the story ended up disjoint."

Pete noted that his next story, Lark and Mara Cross the River, improved on this by keeping the story and the technical spec together.

The Architecture

Reading the story reveals how deeply it connects to the patterns discussed in the call:

Technical Background

The architecture in the story isn't fictional speculation — it draws from a real lineage of decentralized monetary design. Pete has been following this space since Ryan Fugger's early Ripple project (before it became the corporate-led XRP). A community of decentralized monetary architects continues to work in the "Classic Ripple" vein, coordinating through the rippleusers Google Group, building projects like Swaptacular, Villages.io, Rumplepay, Resilience, and Credit Commons.

The core insight these systems share with the story: every user is their own "mint" — you decide whom to trust and for how much. This is topological decentralization, where the network is a web of local trust rather than one giant global ledger. Bitcoin is trustless; this is trust-based. It's deceptively tricky at scale, which is where the routing and sync problems live.

The story's use of Nostr as a sync substrate also reflects real discussions in this community about using Nostr to provide a sync layer to Ripple-ish payment protocols. Pete's interest in Nostr's NIP process — the RFC-like collaborative standards iteration — fed directly into IFP's design.

For more detail, see Pete's Architectural and social aspects of mutual credit networks.

Why Pete Called the Architecture "Right"

When Pete said "that architecture is the right way to do it," he was pointing to the story's core technical insight: trust-based routing through personal bilateral credit lines, synced over a decentralized relay layer, with no global ledger and no central authority. This is the same architecture he's building into IFP — agents negotiating pairwise, discovering shared schemas, routing information through trust relationships.

Mentioned by: Pete Kaminski

Connection to the Manifesto

The Inter-Face Manifesto builds on the same architecture this story embodies. The manifesto's core design — each person runs their own agent, agents talk pairwise, trust is bilateral and progressive, there is no central authority — is the social-protocol version of the story's mutual credit network. The story's "web of webs, not a single ledger" is the manifesto's "decentralized by design." The story's trust-routing through chains of personal bilateral credit lines is the manifesto's progressive trust through disclosure tiers. Where the story's characters mint their own currencies, the manifesto's participants run their own agents.

Related


Pages that link to this page