Autonomous Organisations

From BurnZero

An autonomous organisation (AO) is a machine which has sufficient self governing systems allowing it to run without human intervention.

Many business are working towards the fully autonomous goal by adoption of new technological advances. As of yet there are very few fully autonomous organisations as current systems although highly automated still require human maintenance. The T-Corp owns two autonomous businesses https://prepare.online and https://mushroomexam.com and is open to proposals (submit here) of new forms of highly automated, low externality businesses. Below is a list of some suggestions from our Subreddit:

Automated Business Proposals

A - Online Training ☑

This is the primary funding source of the T-Corp, it is an online learning platform called Prepare.Online, where anyone can submit a course online via https://prepare.online/join-our-experts.html and enter a 30% Transparent Company / 70% you profit share.

B - Renewable Hosting

BurnZero is hosted on a industry standard server meaning it is more than likely powered by coal. The second action to address therefore would be to minimise the externality caused by the server by using a renewable energy source. If you are interested in helping make this proposal a reality please get in contact with us.

C - Sea Water Conversion

Sea water, conversion to clean water. Using parabolic mirrors to condense light onto thermo/photovoltaic[1] cells which generate electricity to power no-filter[2] water filtration units.

D - Tool Rental

 
Figure 1. Tool Library

A communally shared, low use / duration tools rental service which provides saws and axel grinders to people in an area.

E - Data Centre Heat

Turn the heat produced by a data centre into heating for a house or even a city[3].

F - Solar

Build an phone application similar to https://www.legends.solar/ where the recycling cost of the solar panel is factored into the rebate made.

G - Green Hydrogen

Store renewable energy in the form of hydrogen opposed to electrochemical energy in batteries.[4]

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