Introducing the Biological Sovereignty Protocol

The global health system is built on a fundamental structural failure: individuals do not own their own biological data.
Medical records belong to hospitals. Lab results belong to diagnostic centers. Wearable data belongs to hardware companies. You — the subject of the data — are merely a guest in these systems. You are granted access through portals and PDFs, but you do not hold the keys.
Today, we are announcing the Biological Sovereignty Protocol (BSP) to change this at the infrastructure level.
The Illusion of Privacy
For the last decade, the technology industry has attempted to solve this problem through privacy policies and regulations like HIPAA or GDPR. But a privacy policy is just a promise from an institution not to misuse data they ultimately control.
BSP proposes a different paradigm: consent is not a privacy policy. It is a mathematical instruction recorded on the blockchain.
What is BSP?
BSP is an open, decentralized standard that defines how biological data is formatted, encrypted, and exchanged.
At its core is the Biological Entity Object (BEO) — a sovereign, cryptographic identity that belongs to the human being. Once a BEO is created (e.g., andre.bsp), no one can delete it. No one can move it. And no one — not even the Ambrósio Institute — can read the data attached to it without the holder's explicit, active cryptographic signature.
When you do a blood test at a BSP-compliant laboratory, the results aren't just uploaded to their servers. They are formatted as standardized BioRecords, encrypted with your public key, and pushed permanently to your BEO on the Arweave blockchain.
The Scientific Imperative
Why build this? Because the future of longevity medicine demands it.
The most advanced artificial intelligence engines capable of analyzing biological aging — like our own Ambrósio Vitality Algorithm (AVA) — require continuous, high-fidelity, standardized data. They need genetics, monthly blood panels, and nightly wearable data, all speaking the same language.
Without a unified protocol, this data remains fragmented across dozens of silos, compounding in value for corporations but never for the individual.
By making the standard open and free to implement, BSP creates a network where sharing data is structurally beneficial for developers, and cryptographically secure for humans.
The Protocol Belongs to the World
The BSP specification is officially published today under an open-source license. The smart contracts are live on Arweave. The SDKs are available for TypeScript and Python.
Any laboratory, wearable manufacturer, or developer can begin building on the protocol today, without asking us for permission.
The protocol belongs to the world. Sovereignty belongs to the individual.

