This app was mentioned in 2 comments, with an average of -0.50 upvotes
I read the article I find it the writer simply "synthesizes" the examples he offers to fit his narrative.
If you are going to introduce articles find some peer reviewed ones, not some article that someone just published online. I don't find the examples he offered were as statless as he present them other than simply wishful thinking.
Brehon law or early Irish law is a legal system in order to have a legal system some one or some entity is in charge. I do not find this to be much of a example of this stateless society that you prescribe.
Peacekeeper App: There is a app its called 911. There are private alert systems like Life Alert which can cost from 30$ to 50$ per month. I understand the examples were crime related but was mentioned that it this app would be used for all emergency issues criminal or not. Would this app really work? How many people would actually get involved? Would you leave work knowing some event was happening down the street? Its one thing to get involved when its only a few feet away but how far would you go if it were blocks, while at work?
Bystander effect https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bystander_effect: Would people risk life and limb if others were in trouble?
Could this app be used by criminals? You need help from emergency services, but you get robbed instead. As in this example of Grindr
There is a gang using Grindr to mug gay men
Private Arbitration: This is just another example of turning the Public Statism into Private Statism.
Open Bazaar: as I read it is more designed to replace proprietary E commerce as in Amazon and Ebay. Bitcoin seems more designed to replace Visa / MasterCard / American express. I do not see how this fits in your Statless society theme.
I'm not currently having a stroke, and it's unclear to me how this Lifealert app does what I'm talking about:
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.arctouch.lifealert.view.activity&hl=en