About BSP
The Biological Sovereignty Protocol (BSP) is an open cryptographic standard that gives every human permanent ownership of their biological data.
Mission
Make biological sovereignty a default right. Replace institutional custody of health data with cryptographic self-custody. Enable any device, lab, clinic, or AI system to exchange biological data through a universal, permissionless protocol.
Vision
A world where:
- Every person holds their complete biological record under a cryptographic identity (BEO) they alone control.
- Hospitals, labs, wearables, and AI systems speak a single interoperable language.
- Data storage is permanent, tamper-proof, and user-revocable — not corporate infrastructure.
- The protocol evolves through open governance (BIPs), not private roadmaps.
Origin
BSP was conceived at the Ambrósio Institute as part of the infrastructure needed for longevity medicine, precision health, and AI-driven diagnostics at civilizational scale.
The first version published proprietary schemas. The current version (v1.0) is fully open source (MIT), built on Aptos for state management and Arweave for permanent storage, with a community governance model.
Stewardship
The protocol is stewarded by the Ambrósio Institute and an open community of contributors. No single company controls the roadmap. Every change to the specification is proposed, reviewed, and ratified through BIPs.
Governance keys are held under a 2-of-3 multisig. See BIP-0001 — Governance Charter.

