A live public demand ledger for CTMP infrastructure deployment.
The Wall is a live public demand ledger. It records how many people in each country have signed to indicate demand for CTMP infrastructure deployment. There are no accounts, no logins, and no personal data collected. Each country has a threshold based on its population. When enough people in a country sign, that country's eligibility for deployment is established under the published rules. The countries that reach their threshold first are prioritized first.
The count is the mechanism. There is no approval committee, no investor selection, and no government negotiation for deployment order. The numbers are public, and they speak for themselves.
Every country in the world is listed on The Wall. Each has a signature count and a threshold — the number of signatures needed for that country to reach deployment eligibility. The threshold is derived from the country's population using a published formula, not set by hand.
When a visitor arrives, their country is detected automatically. They can change the selection if needed. Pressing the Sign button submits a single anonymous signature. A background verification challenge confirms the visitor is a real person. If accepted, the country's count increases by one and the result appears publicly on the Country Race — a live ranking of all countries by progress toward threshold.
One accepted signature is recorded per badge. A badge is an anonymous token generated on the visitor's device. It is not an account. There is no email, no name, and no personal information attached.
Signing adds one to your country's public count. It moves your country closer to its deployment threshold. It appears immediately on the Country Race. It does not collect your name, email, or any personal information. It does not create an account or require a login. It does not obligate you to anything. Signing is a signal, not a contract.
Signing does not guarantee deployment. It does not create a binding agreement. It does not grant governance rights, voting power, or authority over the project. It does not expose your identity.
Every country's threshold is calculated from population using a single published rule. Countries with larger populations need more signatures. Countries with smaller populations need fewer. The formula is public and deterministic — the same population produces the same threshold for everyone, under the same methodology version.
There is a minimum population floor for Module 1 eligibility. Countries below that floor still appear on The Wall, are still counted, and may become eligible for future deployment modules. They are not excluded — they are sequenced.
When a country reaches its threshold, that country's eligibility for deployment is established under the published rules. The countries closest to threshold are prioritized first. That is the only priority rule.
A petition asks someone in power to do something. The Wall does not ask. It measures.
The distinction matters. A petition can be ignored. A threshold, once met under published rules, is designed to create a procedural consequence — recorded, timestamped, and publicly visible. Whether and how deployment follows is a governance question, but the count itself is not a request that can be quietly shelved.
The Wall operates under a charter that prohibits identity capture. There are no accounts, no unnecessary personal information requests, no hidden profiling, and no silent conversion of anti-abuse signals into identity records.
The anti-abuse system uses Cloudflare Turnstile — a third-party challenge that verifies visitors are human without collecting personal data. The badge token stays on the visitor's device. The backend records anonymous country-level counts, not individual identities.
The system is designed so that the operator cannot identify individual signers. This is a structural property of the architecture, not a policy promise. However, third-party infrastructure providers (such as Cloudflare) operate their own network layers, which are outside the operator's control and not fully inspectable. The charter requires that this limitation be disclosed as a known gap.
In some countries, the digital environment carries a level of surveillance or retaliation risk that the system will not ignore. Where participation cannot be offered with a credible baseline of digital safety, direct participation is disabled. This is a protection measure, not a judgment on the people of those countries. The Wall was built to protect human agency, not to expose it.
The Wall measures demand for deployment of the People's CTMP — an integrated infrastructure platform for low-cost power, water, and industrial capacity. To understand what the CTMP is and why it exists, see What Is the People's CTMP?.
The Wall is governed by a public charter with six hard constraints and a constitutional order of precedence. The charter prohibits identity capture, monetization surfaces, and non-auditable outputs. For a summary, see Charter Overview. For the full charter, see Charter.
The Wall maintains a public audit system covering methodology, findings, corrections, exceptions, and known gaps. The audit is identical for every visitor and contains no user data. See Audit and Methodology.