This paper specifies WEBBIUM (WBM) and the WEBBERPUNK Protocol (WBP), a non-custodial, identity-bound routing and settlement layer for the global internet. It advances a precise and falsifiable thesis: the internet lacks a native value layer, and this absence underlies three structural failures in global finance—fragmentation across sovereign currencies and digital assets, the coexistence of anonymity and invasive surveillance, and costly settlement latency. WEBBIUM resolves these failures by separating the unit of account from the settlement protocol, allowing nations to retain monetary sovereignty while enabling universal interoperability. The system routes value between any asset, on any ledger, across any jurisdiction through a neutral, cryptographically secured layer, achieving near-instant settlement for compatible asset pairs. Fees are denominated in user-preferred currency equivalents, with WBM functioning as invisible protocol gas. The architecture introduces five primary contributions: (1) the Sovereignty-Interoperability Resolution; (2) the Reputation-Bonded Transaction (RBT), a novel mechanism tying transaction validity to verified professional reputation; (3) the Universal Human Dividend (UHD), a protocol-native redistribution model allocating a portion of network fees to all verified participants; (4) the Zero-Knowledge Tax Oracle (ZKTO) for privacy-preserving compliance; and (5) a phased, implementation-ready roadmap. WEBBIUM is positioned not as a replacement for existing monetary systems, but as a universal routing layer analogous to TCP/IP for value transfer. By combining identity, interoperability, and cryptographic settlement, it establishes a foundation for a sovereign, inclusive, and efficient global financial internet.
Rashon Rahming (Fri,) studied this question.