Max / Regen Marketplace on Celo/EVM
Max demonstrated a functional port of the Regen eco-credit marketplace to EVM (Celo), built in approximately 1.5 days using AI-assisted Cosmos-to-Solidity translation. The demo included credit buying with mock USDC, full batch retirement with on-chain metadata, credit class creation, issuer management, and IPFS-backed data storage. A cooperative bank mechanism routes 10% of platform fees into a fund that promotes further sales — a flywheel for ecosystem growth. The group discussed connecting real credits via EcoBridge for live multi-chain testing, and the possibility of deploying on multiple chains (Base, Celo) simultaneously while referencing Regen Ledger as the data backbone.
Gregory / Protocol Politician Agents
Gregory presented 9 governance agent archetypes based on the Enneagram as a living systems framework (via Carol Sanford and JG Bennett). Each agent asks a different core question: the Integrity Guardian enforces rules, the Community Steward asks who is affected, the Impact Champion demands numbers, the Knowledge Steward checks evidence, the Risk Guardian flags what could go wrong, and so on. Together they form a whole-system governance layer. Each agent has hooks and plugins for Ledger MCP, Koi, GitHub, Discord, and the forum. Phase 1: agents research and debate forum topics. Phase 2: on-chain proposals via liquid democracy. Sean suggested deploying them in a dedicated Discord server with a temporal rhythm — daily logs, weekly synthesis, monthly aggregation — to build institutional memory at multiple timescales.
Gregory, Max, Sean & Brandon / Cosmos vs Ethereum Tradeoffs
A substantive debate on chain migration. Marketplace and eco-credit modules port easily to Solidity, but data provenance and nested DAO governance (DaoDao) remain architecturally stronger on Cosmos. Gregory argued that Regen Ledger’s data module + Koi + DaoDao intersection is ahead of anything available on Ethereum for semantic data and flexible delegation of authority. The pragmatic consensus: keep Regen Ledger as a proof-of-authority data backbone, deploy multi-chain marketplace frontends, and test demand signals before deciding on full migration. Vitalik’s recent post about L2 diversity — not everything should run EVM — was cited as alignment with this hybrid approach.
Max, Gregory & Sean / Agent-Aided Methodology Review
Max raised the case of a project waiting nearly a year for R&D authorization to issue credits. Gregory clarified the permissionless issuance path and the curated marketplace’s peer-review requirements. The group explored using the existing registry review assistant as an external-facing pre-screening tool, with an “agent-approved” badge tier that accelerates review without replacing human certification. Brandon expressed interest in deploying a version of the marketplace on Base for his own work.
Gregory & Sean / Agentic Research Loops & Claims Engine
Gregory outlined a vision for recursive research loops: matters arising from calls get chunked into research tasks, deep research agents gather information and bring it back, results feed into agent debate, which crystallizes into Koi artifacts on temporal rhythms. The claims engine serves as the quantifiable test at the end of each loop. Dog-fooding this into Regen’s own infrastructure — using the claims engine as a verifiable AI harness — could prove the architecture can be abstracted beyond eco-credits to any domain of agentic coordination.