← Values Commons

Values Commons - Conscious Consuming and the Open Values Standard

A public-interest ecosystem for choosing and organizing by values, powered by an open standard and proven by a working reference app.

Grant brief · private preview · June 25, 2026 · prepared for aligned grant reviewers


The Problem

Hundreds of daily choices, from what we buy to the apps we use to where we give, are shaped by packaging, placement, feeds, and a persuasion industry that reaches us before our own values do. The tools that promise to help people "choose well" are often funded by advertising, affiliate commissions, brand relationships, or user data. Their incentives are not always aligned with the person trying to make a better choice.

The collective version is no better. When a group wants to act on shared values, such as deciding where to bank, what services to use, or what to stop funding, the available tools usually require someone else's platform, account system, database, and off-switch.

What Exists Now

Conscious Consuming is a complete working reference implementation. It ranks real options by the user's own values, not by a universal moral verdict and never by who pays. A person can weigh climate, labor, privacy, health, affordability, accessibility, and other values, then compare actual products, services, media sources, organizations, and causes on sourced facts.

Current working state:

The larger public good is Values Commons. It is a commons for values, not one common set of values: people bring their own priorities, inspect the evidence, and fork the decision process instead of surrendering it to a platform.

The Open Values Standard is the protocol beneath Values Commons. Conscious Consuming is instance #1, not the endpoint. The same engine already powers two additional illustrative instances: a learning atlas and a messaging-choice guide. They use the same unedited core, just different data and skins.

The standard and ecosystem currently have three practical layers:

The uncapturable core runs in the browser and travels as files. The optional Community layer for discussion and community ratings is separate, opt-in, account-light, and self-hostable; the core never depends on it.

Why This Is Worth Funding

The reason this needs grant support is also the reason it can be trusted: the project refuses the normal business models for recommendation software. It will not sell attention, user data, rankings, or brand access. A grant funds the time and first-contact work needed to turn a finished principled prototype into a living public good.

What A Grant Would Fund

A focused 6-month phase to take the working reference implementation to first real use:

  1. Reach a first cohort. Bring Conscious Consuming to 20-50 values-driven users and learn whether it helps with real decisions.
  2. Validate the organizing loop. Take one or two real groups through Assembly to Slate for a genuine shared choice.
  3. Make Values Commons easier to adopt. Turn the Open Values Standard and the "create an instance" path into a clearer, repeatable on-ramp for other communities.
  4. Improve what real users touch. Deepen evidence and usability only where the first users and groups actually need it.
  5. Stay independent. Fund focused maker time so the project does not need ads, affiliates, brand sponsorship, or surveillance.

Six-month proof plan

Requested grant: $35,000. Running costs are near zero by design; the grant funds time, outreach, validation, and documentation.

What We Will Report Back

Who Is Behind It

Built by Bentley Moon-Perkins, a solo maker working on humane, values-first civic technology. The current system, including the flagship app, two additional instances, shared engine, guide/content pipeline, and organizing tools, was designed and built independently.

Why Now

The reference implementation works. The evidence layer is strong enough to show. The deployable preview is static and inexpensive to host. The largest remaining uncertainty is no longer technical; it is whether real people and real groups will use it. A modest grant moves the project from impressive artifact to tested public-interest infrastructure, without compromising the independence that makes it worth trusting.

Contact: Bentley Moon-Perkins. Add the deployed noindexed preview URL in the sending email.