The Sapphirepunk Manifesto offers a name for a new era in cryptography. It is an exploration of how we got here, what we’re leaving behind, and what a post-cypherpunk future might feel like. The manifesto is a refraction of everything we have learned in crypto, in culture, and beyond.The Sapphirepunk Manifesto offers a name for a new era in cryptography. It is an exploration of how we got here, what we’re leaving behind, and what a post-cypherpunk future might feel like. The manifesto is a refraction of everything we have learned in crypto, in culture, and beyond.

What Comes After the Bunker? Enter Sapphirepunk

7 min read

Encryption Without Ethics Is Just a Harder Shell

\ There was a time when cryptography meant resistance. A time when publishing PGP was an act of civil disobedience (Levy, 2001), when anonymity was armor, and when “cypherpunk” conjured images of shadowy figures tunneling through the digital underground. They had a creed: privacy is necessary for an open society (Hughes, 1993). They coded, not talked. Their tools were elegant, their politics fierce, their dream clear: liberation through mathematics.

\ But we are no longer there.

\ Like post-punk after the raw howl of punk rock, we are now living in a post-cypherpunk era—not in the sense that its values are gone, but in the sense that its boundaries have exploded. What came after the bunker? Not surrender—but surrealism. Not purity—but complexity.

\ We offer a name for this shift: Sapphirepunk.

\ Alongside an incredible group of thinkers, we’ve authored and released:

>The Sapphirepunk Manifesto

A signal. A refraction of everything we’ve lived and learned in crypto, in culture, and beyond.

\ What follows is a companion essay, a brief exploration of how we got here, what we’re leaving behind, and what a post-cypherpunk future might feel like when cut like a gem.

\ [These reflections are entirely my own and do not speak on behalf of the other contributors to the Manifesto]


I. From Punk to Post-Punk/From Cypherpunk to Post-Cypherpunk

Punk was rebellion stripped to its bones: three chords, a sneer, a Molotov. It collapsed under its own intensity, burned bright and fast. What came next was post-punk: angular, anxious, experimental. Bands like Joy Division, Wire, and Gang of Four took the ruins of punk and rebuilt them into cathedrals of sound: jagged, intellectual, haunted (Reynolds, 2005).

\ Cypherpunk, similarly, began as a rebellion: against surveillance, centralization, and censorship. It built tools to disappear, to resist the state, to exit. But now, we see its children (DAOs, DIDs, zk-coordination, decentralized science, quadratic voting, cryptobiometrics, retroactive funding) not as weapons, but as instruments in a symphony of governance, play, art, and new forms of collective life (Buterin et al., 2019).

Where the cypherpunks whispered “Cypherpunks write code” (May, 1994), the post-cypherpunks ask: what else can be composed from these primitives? They treat blockchains not just as infrastructure, but as a medium, like the synthesizer was to post-punk. And just like the post-punks were suspicious of utopias (Eshun, 1998), the post-cypherpunks are suspicious of maximalism. There is no silver bullet, no pure ledger, no one chain to rule them all. There are just fragments, partialities, and interlinking protocols —> a dissonant harmony.


II. The Bunker and the Garden

If the cypherpunk ethos built a bunker, the post-cypherpunk mood tends toward the garden.

\ A garden encrypted, yes, but open to experimentation, to hybridization, to weird growth. Donna Haraway’s notion of cyborg subjectivity is instructive here: a hybrid of machine and organism, coded and emotional, anonymous and relational (Haraway, 1985). Post-cypherpunks, too, are hybrid beings, not only protectors of privacy but also composers of networks, protocols, and rituals of interaction.

\ The bunker was necessary. It taught us that privacy isn’t a luxury, but a foundation. That freedom depends on opacity (Brunton & Nissenbaum, 2015). But now, cryptography isn’t just a shield, it’s a brush. ZKPs can protect, but also coordinate, verify, and compose. Where the early cypherpunks saw escape, we now see the possibility of cryptographic expression, not just self-defense, but world-building.


III. The Sapphirepunk Ethos

This is where Sapphirepunk enters.

\ Born from this tension — between defense and design, privacy and plurality — Sapphirepunk proposes a new frame for thinking about digital autonomy, care, and cryptographic infrastructure. Where the cypherpunk imagined privacy as an individual right to disappear, Sapphirepunk sees it as the foundation of relation, trust, and commons.

\

\ It draws from feminist ethics, radical infrastructure, abolitionist tech, and design critique, but speaks in its own mood: critical, poetic.

Sapphirepunk does not abandon cryptography. It expands it. It reframes privacy not as hiding, but as refining. Protocols not as exits, but as ecologies. Code not just as control, but as craft.


IV. The Aesthetics of Post-Cypherpunk

Just as post-punk had its own sound and look (black overcoats, empty warehouses, drum machines echoing in concrete), post-cypherpunk has its own aesthetic too. It is the vibe of the encrypted rave, the generative oracle, the DAO art collective, the sci-fi governance salon. It lives in liminal Telegram chats, X threads, at privacy summits and cypherpunk congresses, in the design of dark-mode dashboards, in the poetry of ENS names (Bratton, 2016; Voshmgir, 2020).

\ It is:

• dark but playful;

• rigorous but surreal;

• political but post-ideological;

• technical but mythopoeic.

\ It is where mechanism design meets mysticism. It’s what Harney and Moten (2013) might call a fugitive planning, encrypted in code and carried in spirit.


V. The Sapphire Core

If the cypherpunk era gave us the bunker, and the post-cypherpunk imagination gave us the garden, then Sapphirepunk offers a third image: the gem, a structure.

\ Sapphire is a crystal of clarity, forged under pressure, impossible to fake. Across cultures, it has symbolized sincerity, wisdom, and protection. In medieval lore, it shielded the wearer from poison and envy. In metaphysics, it channels truth.

\ To build sapphirepunk infrastructure is to build durable transparency, refined insight, and relational clarity. It is to believe that code can carry not just power, but care. Not maximalism, but multiplicity. Not extraction, but craft.

\ The sapphire refracts. It does not blind. It sharpens. It glows.


VI. Manifesto (or Anti-Manifesto)

The world cannot be protected by cryptography alone.

\ We reimagine cryptographic tools as instruments of communion, not alienation.


Read the full text here: The Sapphirepunk Manifesto


VII. What Comes After the After?

This is not to say we’ve arrived. The post- is never the end; it is the opening. Just as post-punk eventually became new wave, no wave, goth, synthpop, so too will post-cypherpunk mutate. Maybe toward solarpunk federations and network states. Maybe toward hyper-automated science (Shilina, 2025). Maybe toward rituals of computation and new techno-theologies.

\ But it begins here: with a shift in tone. From exile to experiment. From encryption as escape, to encryption as an instrument. From radical autonomy to radical interdependence.


References

Bratton, B. H. (2016). The Stack: On software and sovereignty. MIT Press.

Brunton, F., & Nissenbaum, H. (2015). Obfuscation: A user’s guide for privacy and protest. MIT Press. https://doi.org/10.7551/mitpress/9780262029735.001.0001

Buterin, V., Hitzig, Z. & Weyl, G.. (2019). A Flexible Design for Funding Public Goods. Management Science. 65. 10.1287/mnsc.2019.3337

Eshun, K. (1998). More brilliant than the sun: Adventures in sonic fiction. Quartet Books.

Haraway, D. (1985). A manifesto for cyborgs: Science, technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s. Socialist Review, 80, 65–108.

Harney, S., & Moten, F. (2013). The Undercommons: Fugitive planning & black study. Minor Compositions.

Hughes, E. (1993). A Cypherpunk’s Manifesto. https://www.activism.net/cypherpunk/manifesto.html

Levy, S. (2001). Crypto: How the Code Rebels Beat the Government—Saving Privacy in the Digital Age. Penguin Books.

May, T. (1994). The Cyphernomicon. https://hackmd.io/@jmsjsph/TheCyphernomicon

Reynolds, S. (2005). Rip it up and start again: Postpunk 1978–1984. Faber & Faber.

Shilina, S. (2025). DeScAI: the convergence of decentralized science and artificial intelligence. Front. Blockchain, Sec. Blockchain for Science. Vol. 8. https://doi.org/10.3389/fbloc.2025.1657050

Voshmgir, S. (2020). Token economy: How the Web3 reinvents the internet. Token Kitchen.


==Originally published here.==

\

Market Opportunity
ERA Logo
ERA Price(ERA)
$0.1589
$0.1589$0.1589
+1.85%
USD
ERA (ERA) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact [email protected] for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.
Tags:

You May Also Like

Trump swears he'll donate winnings in $10 billion lawsuit against his own IRS

Trump swears he'll donate winnings in $10 billion lawsuit against his own IRS

President Donald Trump told NBC News' Tom Llamas in an interview released on Wednesday that he has no interest in actually keeping any money he wins from his lawsuit
Share
Rawstory2026/02/05 10:43
US President Donald Trump says Warsh would’ve lost Fed if he pledged rate hike

US President Donald Trump says Warsh would’ve lost Fed if he pledged rate hike

The post US President Donald Trump says Warsh would’ve lost Fed if he pledged rate hike appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. US President Donald Trump said that
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/02/05 10:23
Taiko Makes Chainlink Data Streams Its Official Oracle

Taiko Makes Chainlink Data Streams Its Official Oracle

The post Taiko Makes Chainlink Data Streams Its Official Oracle appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Key Notes Taiko has officially integrated Chainlink Data Streams for its Layer 2 network. The integration provides developers with high-speed market data to build advanced DeFi applications. The move aims to improve security and attract institutional adoption by using Chainlink’s established infrastructure. Taiko, an Ethereum-based ETH $4 514 24h volatility: 0.4% Market cap: $545.57 B Vol. 24h: $28.23 B Layer 2 rollup, has announced the integration of Chainlink LINK $23.26 24h volatility: 1.7% Market cap: $15.75 B Vol. 24h: $787.15 M Data Streams. The development comes as the underlying Ethereum network continues to see significant on-chain activity, including large sales from ETH whales. The partnership establishes Chainlink as the official oracle infrastructure for the network. It is designed to provide developers on the Taiko platform with reliable and high-speed market data, essential for building a wide range of decentralized finance (DeFi) applications, from complex derivatives platforms to more niche projects involving unique token governance models. According to the project’s official announcement on Sept. 17, the integration enables the creation of more advanced on-chain products that require high-quality, tamper-proof data to function securely. Taiko operates as a “based rollup,” which means it leverages Ethereum validators for transaction sequencing for strong decentralization. Boosting DeFi and Institutional Interest Oracles are fundamental services in the blockchain industry. They act as secure bridges that feed external, off-chain information to on-chain smart contracts. DeFi protocols, in particular, rely on oracles for accurate, real-time price feeds. Taiko leadership stated that using Chainlink’s infrastructure aligns with its goals. The team hopes the partnership will help attract institutional crypto investment and support the development of real-world applications, a goal that aligns with Chainlink’s broader mission to bring global data on-chain. Integrating real-world economic information is part of a broader industry trend. Just last week, Chainlink partnered with the Sei…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 03:34