FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT:
Kurt Liebe
Project Founder
hkurtlebe@gmail.com
www.ecosystemsintelligence.com
AI Assisted Technical Foundation, Ethical Framework, and Operational Model Combine to Expand Community Support Services Worldwide
Athens, Ontario, Canada — 2025-12-26 — Community Assets today announced an AI assisted research project exploring theoretical models for community resource redistribution: the development of its ESI-CAI-CAPlatform integration prototype, a four-domain theoretical framework that combines AI assisted technical infrastructure, ethical governance frameworks acknowledging Indigenous rights and aspirations, operational models, and planning/strategy documentation to explore how resource redistribution and community support services could be expanded worldwide in the AI/AGI and Climate Change context. The project envisionsthat the theoretical CAI entity would operate through partnerships and co-development options at various and numerous scales with existing or newly founded entities for that purpose.
All current documentation is regarded as "living documents" to evolve as the project evolves.
Community Assets operated from the 1990s-2004. In 2023-24, Community Assets was re-activated as Community Assets Canada (CAC), a federally incorporated not-for-profit startup organization. Within the current research project, CAI (Community Assets International) was created to house the theoretical organizational/administrative steward entity, drawing from Community Assets' historical mission and experience.
The prototype brings together four complementary domains: Community Assets Platform (CAPlatform), an AI assisted technical digital foundation providing services, database architecture, APIs, and interfaces; the Ecosystems Intelligence (ESI) Framework, an embedded planetary operating system proposal with theoretical second level implementations and tertiary applications derived from the O/S pattern, serving as social/scientific operating system with 17 ethical principles (Core Principles: 0-default + 16 Principles); CAI (Community Assets International), a theoretical organizational/administrative steward entity applying ESI framework principles on the CAPlatform technical foundation; and Strat-Plan-Docs, a planning and strategy repository centralizing planning/strategy documents that span or support multiple domains. CAI was "created" within the project model to "house" the theoretical organizational/administrative entity that is the steward of the project within the theoretical project model construct itself, combining "community" "assets" and "international" to reflect both local and international aspects of the project.
"This prototype explores how operations could be scaled while maintaining core commitment to serving communities at nominal or no cost," said Kurt Liebe, project founder. "By combining a theoretical operational model with an AI assisted robust technical foundation and a innovative, comprehensive ethical framework, the research explores how impact could be expanded while ensuring community-centered, equitable approaches through partnerships and co-development."
The theoretical CAI entity's mission would focus on accepting and refurbishing donated material resources for redistribution, providing education and training in resource maintenance and use, and supporting community initiative organization and leadership. The prototype explores how these operations could be scaled globally through partnerships and co-development while maintaining service delivery at nominal or no cost to recipients.
Key features of the integration include:
All technical implementation remains in the CAPlatform environment, with CAI services, routes, database schemas, and API endpoints built on the CAPlatform foundation. This approach ensures consistent technical standards while enabling CAI-specific operational features.
CAI operations are designed and guided by the Ecosystems Intelligence (ESI) framework's 17 ethical principles (Core Principles: 0-default + 16 Principles), including existence confers rights (default principle) recognizing inherent, inalienable rights for all elements; abundance (not scarcity); interconnectedness; dynamic balance; feedback loops; disruptions; tipping points; emergence; adaptation and resilience; hierarchical organization; celebration requirement (recognizing achievements and milestones as essential systems-maintenance functions); resource cycling; diversity and redundancy; boundaries and context; entropy and energy degradation; decomposition and system renewal; and human obligation and responsibility to non-human elements, including Indigenous knowledge protection with Free, Prior, and Informed Consent (FPIC), data sovereignty; community-centered equity and governance; respectful integration of knowledge systems; cultural sensitivity and place-based understanding; transparency and accountability; and intergenerational responsibility (Seven Generations Principle).
The research project explores a theoretical prototype for material resource redistribution, education and training, and community initiative support. CAI (Community Assets International) was "created" within the project model to "house" the theoretical organizational/administrative entity that is the steward of the project within the theoretical project model construct itself, combining "community" "assets" and "international" to reflect both local and international aspects of the project. The theoretical CAI entity would operate worldwide through partnerships and co-development, prioritizing exceptional needs, human assets, and community commitment while promoting resource sharing and circular economy principles. Generally, outside of core functions, CAI of the "project" operates through partnerships and co-development rather than direct on-the-ground implementation. For more information, visit www.ecosystemsintelligence.com or contact Mr. Liebe.
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This press release is available for immediate distribution. For media inquiries, please contact Kurt Liebe at hkurtlebe@gmail.com.
With Respect,
We live and work on the traditional territory of the Anishnabek, Huron-Wendat, Haudenosaunee, Oneida (St Lawrence Iroquois) and Mohawk peoples. As settlers, we're grateful for the opportunity to meet here. We honour and thank all the generations of people who have taken care of this land - for time immemorial. Long before today there have been aboriginal peoples who have loved and lived here and been the stewards of this place. We recognize and deeply appreciate their history and connection to this place and continuing and ongoing stewardship. We also recognize the contributions of Métis, Inuit, and other Indigenous peoples have made, both in shaping and strengthening this community in particular, and our province and country as a whole. And as settlers, we acknowledge this recognition of the contributions and historic importance of Indigenous peoples must also be clearly and overtly connected to our collective commitment to make the promise and the challenge of Truth and Reconciliation real in our communities, and in particular to bring justice for murdered and missing indigenous women, girls and the lost children across our country.