- Lu Heng argues that centralised Internet resource registries have grown into political and bureaucratic institutions unsuited to global coordination.
- A decentralised registry using cryptographic proofs could preserve sovereignty and resilience without reliance on political consensus.
“Centralised systems require consensus; consensus requires politics; politics inevitably leads to capture, conflict, and instability. Moving registry authority further into governmental or intergovernmental structures would not fix this — it would amplify it by adding legal and geopolitical layers to an already fragile construct… The choice is therefore clear. Either we keep layering bureaucracy onto a system never designed for today’s economic and political weight, or we remove the band-aids entirely and let networks govern themselves within their legal environments.”
——Lu Heng, CEO at Cloud Innovation, CEO at LARUS Ltd, Founder of LARUS Foundation.
Centralised registries have outlived their technical purpose
In “On Why Centralised Alternatives Fail — and Why a Decentralised Registry Is the Only Viable Path”, Lu Heng examines the historical evolution and contemporary challenges of centralised Internet registries such as Regional Internet Registries (RIRs). Originally conceived as simple databases to record which network uses which number resource, these institutions have accumulated political weight and bureaucratic complexity that far exceed their original technical function.
Heng explains that centralisation itself is the root cause of this complexity. Because these systems rely on voluntary global consensus — not international law — they inevitably attract political contention. As they have expanded into large organisations with formal governance processes and intergovernmental proposals emerging, the core registry function has become entangled with geopolitics and bureaucratic negotiation.
Also Read: On Reality Layers, Symbolic Power, and Why Clarity Feels So Hostile
A technical, not political, solution
Lu Heng proposes an alternative: a decentralised registry in which each network maintains its own cryptographic proof of ownership for its number resources, recorded in a shared ledger. In this model, global uniqueness is enforced by cryptographic guarantees rather than by a central authority or multi-party political agreement. This shifts the problem from political coordination to technical enforcement, simplifying rather than complicating global resource management.
Under Heng’s proposal, sovereign governments retain the ability to regulate within their own jurisdictions. They can require operators to comply with national laws if desired, or allow networks to manage their records independently where appropriate. Because enforcement occurs locally, geopolitical tensions in one region would not destabilise the entire global registry.
Also Read: Why RIRs Do Not Have Authority — and Why “Community Sovereignty” Breaks the System
Rethinking internet infrastructure governance
Lu Heng warns that subjecting Internet resource coordination to traditional political processes is risky, especially considering the Internet’s status as critical infrastructure. He concludes that adding more bureaucracy to an institution never designed for such burdens will not resolve its fundamental weaknesses. Instead, decentralisation — with distributed ownership, authority, and responsibility — is the only scalable path for the future of Internet registry systems.
