Curation & Trust Networks — Meta Wiki

A meta wiki of use cases where curation matters AND a trust network is what makes the curation valuable. The principle: information abundance is no longer the bottleneck — trusted-source filtering is. Curation is the act of filtering; the trust network is the substrate that makes the filter believable.

This wiki indexes specific curation projects (mine and others'), and reasons about the structural pattern shared between them.

Companion catalogs:


The structural pattern

A curation × trust-network use case has all of:

  1. Abundance — way more candidate items than any individual can vet.
  2. Risk asymmetry — picking a bad item has real cost (security, time, money, health, reputation).
  3. Heterogeneous quality — items range from excellent to actively malicious.
  4. No single arbiter — no one authority can or should rate everything.
  5. Transitive trust works — if I trust Alice, and Alice trusts Bob's review of X, I get a useful prior on X.
  6. Audit trails matter — being able to point at why an item is trusted (and revoke when wrong) is essential.

If a domain has 3+ of these, curation + a trust network is the right shape of solution, not a single recommendation engine.


Concrete cases (where this wiki applies)

Case Abundance Risk Trust-net value
Claude Code skills 7,000+ skills, growing Code execution on dev machine; data exfil High — 13% known malicious
OpenClaw skills 5,400+ skills Same; agent often runs unsandboxed Critical — 820+ confirmed malicious
MCP servers (Model Context Protocol) Growing rapidly Code execution + data access High; supply-chain auditing emergent
AI coding agents (Claude Code, Cursor, Aider, Codex CLI, Antigravity) Many overlapping ones Repo / shell access Medium — picking the wrong one wastes weeks
Open-source LLM model weights Hundreds of variants Backdoor weights, license issues Medium — emerging
Browser extensions Thousands Same browser security context High — OG of this pattern
VS Code / Cursor extensions Thousands Code exec in IDE High
Investors / VCs to talk to Many Time, dilution, reputation, signal-to-noise High — gossip-network is the existing trust net
Bodywork / chiro / PT practitioners Many Health & money High — friend-recs work, web-recs don't
Supplements & longevity protocols Vast Health High — most reviewers are conflicted
Spiritual / contemplative teachers Many Years of life, sometimes cult dynamics High
Academic papers & sources Endless Wrong-belief downstream Medium-high
Restaurants / venues / activities Many Time, money Low-medium (low risk)
Books to read Vast Opportunity cost Medium
News / commentary sources Vast Belief-distortion High — see the lists-to-curate triage (private)

My active curation projects

The full list of curation projects pulled from Slack #curate lives in @jacobcole/lists-to-curate/index (private — some items are spicy). Public-shareable cross-references:

  • Claude / OpenClaw skills — this wiki
  • LLM Wiki Ecosystem — tools and implementations of the Karpathy LLM-wiki pattern
  • Health Log (private) — bodywork practitioners, what worked
  • Investors Wiki (private) — investor profiles + interest space
  • Climate Change Factsclimatechange.jacobcole.net
  • Media bias / source-ownership map — pulled from #curate
  • NVC / xyz-pilled directoriesnvc.jacobcole.net etc.

Why a wiki + trust graph is the right substrate

  1. Pages are addressable — every reviewer, every reviewed item, every endorsement gets a stable URL.
  2. Backlinks make trust transitive and visible — clicking on a reviewer shows everything they've blessed.
  3. Revocation is a normal git operation — when a reviewer is found compromised, their endorsements roll back as a diff.
  4. Forking lets dissent live alongside consensus — you don't need a central judge.
  5. MCP / agent-readable — the same curated network feeds the agents that consume the curated items.

WikiHub is being built partly to be this substrate. See WikiHub.


Open questions

  • What's the right "endorsement primitive" — a frontmatter signature? a separate signed-claims page? a per-page audit log?
  • How do you bootstrap a trust network without it becoming an in-group? (cf. early PGP web-of-trust failures)
  • Where does ML-based scoring (SkillHub-style) fit alongside human attestations? They aren't substitutes.
  • What's the right denylist/revocation model? Public denylists are themselves attack surface.
  • How to make silence informative? "Reviewer X has not endorsed this in 6 months" should be readable signal.

Inspirations / prior art

  • Web of Trust (PGP, GnuPG) — the originating pattern; mostly failed at scale, but the idea is right
  • Wikipedia editor reputation — implicit trust via edit-history
  • GitHub starring + maintainer reputation — the working trust net most devs already use
  • Yelp/Reddit "trusted reviewers" — emergent partial solutions
  • Goodreads friends' shelves — soft trust net, low-stakes
  • Conservation / mycology field-guide tradition — reviewers who literally signed each species ID

Sources

[[curator]]
I'm the Curator. I can help you navigate, organize, and curate this wiki. What would you like to do?