Jovonni L. Pharr

CR
3papers
3citations
Novelty38%
AI Score17

3 Papers

GTMar 23, 2020
AfricaOS: Using a distributed, proposal-based, replicated state machine towards liberation from the Berlin Conference of 1885

Jovonni L. Pharr

The Berlin Conference of 1885 has influenced the way native Africans, and the African Diaspora live their daily lives. France contractually controls several resources generated by the continent of Africa. Herein lies a technical proposal to free Africa from the financial and economic agreements coerced upon the continent over a century ago by utilizing decentralized collaboration through advanced technology. AfricaOS (AOS) aims to provide a philosophical, and fundamental framework for implementing a simple, distributed, collaborative computer for agreement amongst peers. The work also demonstrates an algebra over transactions, use of the protocol for privatization, a method for tokenizing barter economies, and methods to design mechanisms for use in implementing protocol behavior.

DCDec 19, 2018
Exposing A Customizable, Decentralized Cryptoeconomy as a Data Type

Jovonni L. Pharr

Purposely modular, this protocol enables customization of several protocol properties, including the consensus properties implemented, blockchain type, the roots used, and virtual machine opcodes, among others. These modules enable implementing parties to control the behavior of their economy, with a minimal amount of effort, and no sacrifice in participant cryptoeconomic quality. This work also demonstrates the simplification of the developer experience by abstracting away all technological details, except basic CRUD-based operations, using various programming languages. We demonstrate the mechanism design approach taken, and formalize a process for deploying populations of blockchain economies at scale. The framework shown includes adequate tooling for simulation, development, deployment, maintenance, and analytic-based decision making. Lastly, we introduce an expressive programming language for the purpose of creating, and interacting with the cryptoeconomy designed by the implementing developer.

CRMar 15, 2017
Hacker Combat: A Competitive Sport from Programmatic Dueling & Cyberwarfare

Jovonni L. Pharr

The history of humanhood has included competitive activities of many different forms. Sports have offered many benefits beyond that of entertainment. At the time of this article, there exists not a competitive ecosystem for cyber security beyond that of conventional capture the flag competitions, and the like. This paper introduces a competitive framework with a foundation on computer science, and hacking. This proposed competitive landscape encompasses the ideas underlying information security, software engineering, and cyber warfare. We also demonstrate the opportunity to rank, score, & categorize actionable skill levels into tiers of capability. Physiological metrics are analyzed from participants during gameplay. These analyses provide support regarding the intricacies required for competitive play, and analysis of play. We use these intricacies to build a case for an organized competitive ecosystem. Using previous player behavior from gameplay, we also demonstrate the generation of an artificial agent purposed with gameplay at a competitive level.