CONCEPT
The Innovation Commons
The aggregate pool of shared user innovations — a resource available to all, owned by none, sustained by collective contribution — that requires deliberate institutional design to prevent degradation as the AI-augmented innovator population expands.
When millions of individuals innovate freely and share their innovations openly, the aggregate constitutes a commons — a pool of resources available to all, owned by none, sustained by collective contribution rather than by market incentive or governmental mandate. The innovation commons faces governance challenges structurally similar to those
Elinor Ostrom identified in natural resource commons: not depletion through use, but degradation through low-quality contributions that raise the search cost of finding useful innovations. The
AI moment simultaneously expands the commons and stresses its governance mechanisms.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Garrett Hardin's 1968 essay 'The Tragedy of the Commons' predicted that shared resources would inevitably degrade through individual self-interest. Elinor Ostrom spent her career demonstrating that commons could be sustained when specific institutional design principles were satisfied: clear boundaries, proportional rules, local monitoring, graduated sanctions, and accessible conflict resolution. The innovation commons inherits both the challenge and the framework for meeting