In 2022, the main software in an Urbit installation was a "bare-bones" text-based message board.[7]
Functionality
The Point described Urbit OS1 as a "bare-bones messaging server" and compared it to 1990s era Usenet.[7]
Tlon, the company founded by Yarvin to build Urbit, has received seed funding from various investors since its inception, most notably Peter Thiel, whose Founders Fund, with venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz invested $1.1 million.[8] The Urbit community talks up its association with and funding from Thiel, who has also backed Urbit public events.[9][7]
The Point estimated Urbit's active user base as of September 2022 at "a few thousand."[7]
Technical details
The Urbit software stack consists of a set of programming languages ("Hoon," a high-level functional programming language, and "Nock," its low-level compiled language); a single-function operating system built on those languages ("Arvo"); a runtime implementation of that operating system ("Vere"), public key infrastructure, built on the Ethereumblockchain ("Azimuth"), for each Urbit instance to participate in a decentralized network; and the decentralized network itself, an encrypted, peer-to-peer protocol.[10][non-primary source needed]
The 128-bit Urbit identity space consists of 256 "galaxies", 65,280 "stars" (255 for each galaxy), and 4,294,901,760 "planets" (65,535 for each star) and comets under those.[9]
Yarvin called Urbit "functional programming from scratch" in 2010.[4]The Register described Urbit as having "reinvented some very Lisp-like technology."[11]Reason described Urbit as "complicated for even the most seasoned of functional programmers".[12]
Politics and controversy
In 2015, Yarvin's invitation to discuss Urbit at the Strange Loop programming conference was rescinded; the conference organizer said Yarvin's "mere inclusion and/or presence would overshadow the content of his talk."[13]
In 2016, after Yarvin was invited to the functional programming conference LambdaConf to discuss Urbit, five speakers and three sponsors withdrew their participation. Their stated reason was Yarvin's claims that white people have higher IQs than black people and his support of slavery.[14]
The source code and design sketches for the project alluded to some of Yarvin's views, including initially classifying users as "lords," "dukes," and "earls." Yarvin described this structure of Urbit in 2010 as "digital feudalism."[7][15]
In a 2019 blog post, Yarvin said Urbit "is not designed as a political structure".[16] Josh Lehman, Executive Director of the Urbit Foundation, denied in 2022 that Urbit was "digital feudalism."[9]
Andrea O'Sullivan of libertarian magazine Reason described Urbit in 2016 as having a "libertarian vision".[12]
Yarvin departed Tlon in 2019. Lehman said that the "hardest part" of his work at Tlon had been to distance Urbit from Yarvin.[9]
^Pein, Corey (2018). "Poor Winners". Live Work Work Work Die: A Journey into the Savage Heart of Silicon Valley. New York: Metropolitan Books. ISBN9781627794862.