Bio
Tibet Sprague is a communitarian technologist, working for a world where all beings can thrive. As a core steward of the Terran Collective and Hylo his mission is to amplify cooperation among those working to heal and regenerate our communities and our planet.
Tibet is an experienced entrepreneur, technical leader and community builder. He has been coding since age 10 and starting companies since he was 22. He has built numerous software platforms from scratch, while growing and managing software teams from 2 to 18 people. Tibet spent six years helping grow the residential solar industry as one of the founding employees and VP of Engineering for One Block off the Grid. They helped drive down the cost of home solar while building some of the very first tools for remote solar system design using satellite imagery. 1BOG was acquired first by Pure Energies and then NRG Home Solar who mismanaged and ruined all that had been built.
This past experience led Tibet to the belief that the mainstream model of VC backed startups is unlikely to create the kind of radical change needed in the world right now as we face so many existential crises from climate change to political polarization and misinformation. So in 2017 Tibet co-founded the Terran Collective to experiment with different organizational models, and create a structure that would protect their work from corruption and co-optation by the forces of neo-liberal capitalism. Terran runs as a for-profit/non-profit hybrid using sociocracy as their governance model. The work of Terran weaves together community building, technology, and culture creation, to foster greater trust and collaboration, with a particular local focus on bioregional coordination in the Bay Area. Tibet is the technical lead of their primary project Hylo - the social coordination platform for a thriving planet. Other projects Tibet is involved in through Terran include the NorCal Resilience Network and Collaborative Technology Alliance.
LINKS
Towards a Literacy of Cooperation, Stanford Humanities Lab and IFTF
Elinor Ostrom, Understanding the Commons and 8 Principles for Managing the Commons
Tyson Yunkaporta, Sand Talk: How indigenous thinking will save the world