Presentato alla Free Cities Foundation Conference, Praga 2025
Di Prince Liam di Sealand
La libertà non viene concessa, va reclamata
La settimana scorsa mio padre, Prince Michael, ed io siamo andati a Praga per tenere un discorso alla Free Cities Foundation Conference, un incontro di persone che costruiscono il futuro delle società libere.
Il nostro intervento, “Make Sealand Great Again: Story of the World’s Smallest Country,”, ha raccontato come la determinazione di una famiglia per l’indipendenza sia diventata una storia di 60 anni di autodeterminazione e cosa ci riserva il futuro.
“Molto prima che le persone potessero votare con i piedi, la mia famiglia ha fatto esattamente questo.”
Cosa Abbiamo Coperto
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La lotta per le onde libere: come mio nonno, Prince Roy, durante il periodo da 'Radio Pirate', abbia portato alla fondazione di Sealand
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Dichiarazione del 1967: Fondazione del Principato di Sealand con la propria bandiera, passaporti, costituzione e stemma
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Le battaglie per la sovranità: dalle invasioni armate alla sentenza del tribunale britannico del 1968 che confermava l’assenza di giurisdizione sulla Sealand, fino al colpo di stato del 1978 che consolidò l’indipendenza di Sealand
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Sealand 2.0: un primo sguardo alla fase successiva: costruzione di una nazione digitale, E-Cittadinanza e governance basata su blockchain per una nuova generazione di costruttori di libertà
Guarda il Discorso
🎥 Make Sealand Great Again: Story of the World’s Smallest Country
Ancora Curioso? Leggi di più:
Sealand è un Paese Reale? Il Caso Legale Ti Sconvolgerà
Unisciti al Nostro Movimento come E-Cittadino

14 pensieri su “Rendi Sealand di nuovo grande: La storia del Paese più piccolo del mondo ”
Duke Olivier Clonaris
Greetings
At present, the two initiatives appear to operate on parallel tracks. The “E-Citizenship” program is explicitly presented as the path toward future digital governance and a voting system, while the noble titles (Lord, Baron, Count, Duke, etc.) are positioned as a way to join an “aristocratic class,” gain a sense of pride, and potentially access exclusive events.
My idea is to give the nobility an active role explores the fusion of these two systems. Below is an analysis of how this concept could be structured, drawing on decentralized governance principles.
1. Nobility as a Tiered Governance Model
The most straightforward idea is to use Sealand’s noble hierarchy as a framework for multi-level governance within the Sealand DAO. DAO structures with different membership or privilege tiers are a common practice for managing access and influence.
In this model:
E-Citizen: Forms the basic governance layer, with fundamental voting rights on general community proposals.
Lord/Lady (Level 1): Purchasing this title could grant slightly higher weighted voting rights or the ability to comment on specific governance proposals.
Baron/Baroness (Level 2): This tier could unlock new privileges, such as the right to officially submit governance proposals to the DAO.
Count/Countess (Level 3): May become eligible to lead specific “working groups” or “digital ministries” (e.g., a Ministry of Digital Innovation or a Community Treasury).
Duke/Duchess (Level 4): As the highest rank, Dukes and Duchesses could form a “Governing Council” holding authority to vote on high-level strategic decisions, such as major treasury allocations.
2. Token-Gated Access Based on Title
This tiered governance structure would likely be implemented through token-gating (access control by token). When an individual purchases a noble title, they could receive a unique non-fungible token (NFT) representing their rank.
This NFT would serve as a “key” — the DAO’s governance platform would read the user’s digital wallet and automatically grant privileges according to the “noble token” they hold.
In this way, the title evolves from a symbolic PDF certificate into a functional digital asset with real utility and status within Sealand’s governance ecosystem.
Other ideas :
Sealand could develop and sell access to an interactive “Sovereign Museum,” a digital heritage experience. Users (potentially as a premium benefit for “e-citizens” or nobles) could:
Take part in a virtual reality reenactment or simulation of the “Battle of 1978.”
Explore a digital reconstruction of the HavenCo archives and the controversies surrounding the “data haven.”
Participate in design challenges to propose virtual “construction projects” for the platform’s digital twin.
This approach transforms a passive history into an interactive, monetized experience. It strengthens community engagement while creating a new revenue stream that leverages Sealand’s greatest asset: its story.
And the last one :
Instead of simply selling memberships, Sealand could become a niche digital service provider for its community, emphasizing privacy and freedom:
Sealand’s “Digital Navigator” – Inspired by community-supported models, Sealand could offer a niche “digital concierge” service. This premium service would help entrepreneurs (using its GaaS platform) navigate the complexities of creating DAOs, handling international taxation (similar to the support offered to Estonian e-residents), and managing cross-border operations.
Sovereign Identity Platform – Evolve the “e-citizenship card” into a true self-sovereign identity (SSI) manager based on blockchain technology. This would allow users to control their own data, using Sealand as a trusted identity vault.
Premium Security Services – Go beyond a simple VPN by offering complete security suites (encrypted storage, secure messaging) under the “Sealand” brand, synonymous with privacy and independence.
With my highest regards,
Duke Olivier
Duke Gregory Pasden
I have an idea you may want to consider for generating additional revenue streams.
Have you considered charging a membership fee for an official Sealand embassy.
This way Sealand citizens could have an official Sealand embassy in their Home, Workspace, and the like.
Obviously, an embassy would require a higher responsibility. A higher responsibility may require a higher fee.
Let me know your thoughts.
Cheers!
Duke Gregory
Duke Gregory Pasden
I have an idea you may want to consider for generating additional revenue streams.
Have you considered charging a membership fee for an official Sealand embassy.
This way Sealand citizens could have an official Sealand embassy in their Home, Workspace, and the like.
Obviously, an embassy would require a higher responsibility. A higher responsibility may require a higher fee.
Let me know your thoughts.
Cheers!
Duke Gregory
Sir Michael Green
Proud to be a sir from sealand
Count Kevin Schnell
I think that if Sealand is looking for more legitimacy, then they need to issue passports to it citizens like all countries do. This would also raise a lot of money for future expansion plans for Seland. Also having Sealand designate Ambassadors with established Consulates would definitely help promote Seland around the world. Both of these ideas seem like logical next steps and help keep Sealand relevant while promoting Seland 2.0.