I would add of this to #3 (the Terms of Operation may need to be a separate document):
It is recommended users pool their money to buy hardware together and have real co-ownership in a shared server. A Terms of Operation for this joint ownership would have these constraints: A.) Product is the owner's reward. This means the purpose of the property is to receive the outputs of that production - which would be storage and computing power in this case. This allows us to avoid buying or selling the product since we own it already - as a side-effect of our co-owning the inputs. B.) Profit is the payer's investment. This means if the group allows non-owners to use the server, those latecomers will gain co-ownership in the growth of that facility when paying more than the real costs of production. C.) Promise-to-work is a type of investment. This means the people who install and maintain the equipment gain co-ownership when they commit to do that work. This allows us to avoid paying wages in the traditional sense but still compensate workers. D.) Any subgroup my secede for any purpose. This means when there is a conflict of interests, the Tyranny of the Majority is avoided by splitting the facility and allowing each subgroup to retain their co-ownership in that new, smaller group.
