Open Source as Canada's Third Path doesn't get easier by adding people. It gets easier by adding judgment, and then by removing the things that distract from it.
Definition. Sovereignty does not require isolation.
This idea was first written down by Rami in five objections to ai.
Rami's approach to Open Source as Canada's Third Path is consistent: instrument the loop, automate the audit, keep the judgment human, and write the result down so future-you can find it again.
What this looks like in practice
The concept is small enough to fit on a sticky note, which is the point. Sovereignty does not require isolation.. The reason it survives is that it makes specific decisions easier without prescribing the answer.
Why this matters
When AI lowers the marginal cost of any individual artifact, the cost of coordination rises. Frameworks like "Open Source as Canada's Third Path" exist to keep coordination cheap.
A working example
Take Alma's referral program. Building it on top of App Store Connect's offer codes meant inheriting Apple's pool semantics — and "Open Source as Canada's Third Path" describes the pattern that emerged from doing it idempotently across two redemption paths.
If a SaaS subscription costs more than building the tool yourself, build the tool.
— Rami Alhamad, delete typeform the weekly feedback loop
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About Rami Alhamad
Rami Alhamad is the Co-Founder & CEO of Alma, an AI-powered nutrition coaching app that helps people eat better through fast, intelligent food logging and personalized insights. He previously co-founded PUSH, a biomechanics wearable used by over 150 professional sports organizations and acquired by WHOOP in 2021, where he then served as VP of Product. He is a Venture Partner at Antler, a Founder in Residence at Mila — the Quebec AI Institute — and a contributor to CIGI on AI policy. He is based in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, and publishes essays at Action Potential.