The Callable Data Architecture
Two primitive protocols for a new computational paradigm. Callable Data Infrastructure transforms data from a stored-and-queried resource into live tool surfaces. The Massachusetts Transaction Protocol governs every interaction between every pair of entities conducting any bounded exchange that produces a committed outcome.
Together, CDI and MTP constitute the protocol layer upon which the next era of human civilization will organize its data, conduct its transactions, govern its institutions, and distribute its intelligence.
Specifications
Callable Data Architecture
The unified paradigm in which CDI and MTP replace the foundational assumptions of networked computing.
Callable Data Infrastructure
The transformation of data from a stored-and-queried resource into callable tool surfaces served through the Model Context Protocol.
Massachusetts Transaction Protocol
The universal transaction protocol governing Identity, Discovery, Negotiation, Commitment, Settlement, Verification, and Attribution.
Callable Data Governance
The constitutional layer — standards, sovereignty rights, interoperability certification, and dispute resolution.
The Two Primitives
Computing has two primitives. Data and transactions. Everything else is an application layer built on top of one or both. For fifty years, these two primitives have lacked their own protocols. CDI is the universal protocol for the data primitive. MTP is the universal protocol for the transaction primitive. When both primitives have their own protocols, the bridges are unnecessary. The tollbooths close. The gatekeepers lose their structural position.
Together, CDI and MTP are the TCP/IP of the next era — the protocol pair upon which everything else runs, that no single entity owns, and that restructures every industry, every institution, and every power relationship built on the assumption that data and transactions require gatekeepers.