AbstractCurrent scientific publication infrastructure is built on a brokenatomic unit (the paper-as-container), a broken identity system, abroken review economy, a broken versioning model, a brokenclassification system, and a broken disclosure model. These are notindependent failures. They share a common substrate of print-culture assumptions that have never been fundamentallyreconsidered. This paper proposes the Ideverse platform, a graph-native architecture with the ideatom cluster (Idesol) as its atomicunit, cryptographic versioning with access-controlled priorityestablishment, a Wikialo surface-and-depth architecture combiningWikipedia's convergence mechanics with Kialo's open-branchargumentation, a functioning reviewer economy with dual-axisreputation, a typed ecosystem layer for review, replication, data,and disclosure nodes, and LLM ingestion via epistemically-weightedsemantic embedding. Three empirically testable predictions arespecified, falsifiable against existing Kialo, OpenAlex, and PubPeerdata without requiring the full platform. This paper is published as adefensive publication: the architecture is placed in the publicdomain to establish prior art and prevent patent enclosure offoundational scientific knowledge infrastructure by any singlecommercial actor.
Storm Bjørn Flindt Temte (Mon,) studied this question.