In Āut's envisioned world, human capital is transformed into a quantifiable unit: Real-World Asset (RWA). Participation Score and Global Reputation are the leading concepts of this single system that frame individual worth in hard metrics rather than subjective qualities. Such a system would be able to quantify a person's many contributions, capabilities, and even moral merit.
What would it mean if the value in humanity, long insulated from the market, became something like creditworthiness - defined, tracked, and traded like any other asset? Would we be cogs in the machine of dehumanization, or would this system lead us to perhaps a rediscovery of human interdependence, a throwback to the early origins of the community?
My essay considers two possible futures enabled by measuring human capital over systemized humanity that constitutes a dystopian nightmare and a bucolic return to community-based values.
And now, imagine every interaction, each decision, and all actions being reduced to a point on a digital ledger. The Participation Score becomes another critical vital statistic, like blood pressure or oxygen level - but this rating dictates access to resources, freedom, and social mobility.
Here, the ideal citizen is no longer just a productive worker but also a well-behaved node on the network. Fail to keep a good score, and your life becomes miserable. High scorers get premium housing, access to the latest medical advancements, and can travel wherever they want; low scorers are forced into low-skilled jobs, have no access to healthcare, and will be marginalized from the mainstream. The Global Reputation score further refines this division into hypersegregated digital classes.
Ironically, the dystopian mechanism of ranking and commodification of human beings would be oddly democratic because of their fairness. The metrics would be out in the open; they would be transparent and algorithmically generated - so who could complain? Aren't these scores just a numerical reflection, after all, of one's actual participation and value to society?
But within that lies the darkness. Human value defined by a quantified measure denies characteristics that cannot be measured: empathy, vulnerability, even creativity, and things that cannot be standardized. In a world consumed with measurable contribution, where would the room be for quiet contemplation, unprofitable kindness, or rebellion? The people no doubt would toe the line of the system's logic by turning life into some sort of performative exercise. Individuality would dissolve in everyone's pursuit of the highest Participation Score at the cost of authentic expression.
This might ultimately create a world devoid of all emotional substance, where even interpersonal interactions would be driven by "reputational algorithms." Friendships, marriages, and even family communications become mercantile relationships - a bundle of ledgers pitted against a person's score's potential gain or loss. Trust, which had once been allowed to grow organically, is outsourced to technology: only those who emerge as trustworthy from such calculations can gain entry into the sanctum sanctorum of society.
This is a dystopia based not on overt oppression but on subtle control. People think they are playing the game by their own will, yet they do not realize how the game has already possessed them. This would be the last stage of a systematized society: a free-for-all society in which everyone can succeed - but only according to the terms set forth by the system.
But what if this same system could revitalize very ancient human values: reliance on community, mutual aid, and interdependence? Human beings weren't valued before the industrialized economies arose for their individual wealth or status but for their contributions within a tight-knit group. The community was the currency.
In a bucolic return to these values, Āut's system could be reframed to celebrate human interconnection rather than competition. The Participation Score would track not just productivity but also how much one contributes to the well-being of others. Think of it as a kind of communal barometer, one that raises the stock of those who give the most—through care, teaching, mentoring, or simply being a good neighbor. In the Global Reputation system, technology could make this a speech tradition of another kind, one in which personal reputation earned over time via lived relationships means more than any abstract qualification.
A world in which technology amplifies this human warmth through reinforcement of reasons to trust and cooperate. Trust becomes less transactional; instead, it's validated through the organic accumulation of positive interactions across many dimensions. In such a future, there would be a network where the measure of human capital is depth, not height.
Here, instead of striving for the highest score, people may cultivate durable, mutual relations. Families and communities would flourish, governed by an integral measure of well-being, not by material success only. Social relations became the new currency. It is among ancient humans that societies were built up, earned trust, and kept through action rather than assigned by the algorithm.
Systematization would reposition the value of human capital as a catalyst for community revival. No longer would it be solely a personal asset to be hoarded and displayed, but rather a communal resource that weaves people into the social fabric. By systematically rewarding collaboration, the Participation Score could spur people to care for each other and turn personal success into community well-being.
The systemization of human capital cuts both ways:
Āut's system of human capital as RWA is something that, in some way, computes what tech will do: to either conjoin more or break loose bonds between us. It begs the following questions about values: are we better off measured, ranked, and optimized? Or, do we come into our own when free from over-systemization and left to our relationships and communities as we did millennia ago?