The infrastructure no one has a clean record of.
Bluefield is an ongoing catalog of the physical plant the internet runs on, cross-indexed against the operators and networks that occupy it. Datacenters, cell towers, substations, power plants, rail, airports, fiber corridors, carrier hotels, IXPs, submarine landings, metro rings, and much more.
Public records for this kind of infrastructure are fragmented and often adversarial. Authority is scattered across dozens of jurisdictions; ownership hides behind shell entities that rebrand and acquire on timescales shorter than any aggregator refresh cycle; the filings that do exist routinely contradict each other. Operators know this. Planners pay for it. The open web has nothing coherent to offer.
The system runs autonomously. Ingestion, reconciliation, verification, and aging all happen continuously, without curators in the loop. Every subject is an evidence package: sources are named, claims are dated, confidence is tracked, and disagreement surfaces as disagreement rather than a silent pick-one. Corporate ancestry is resolved so an acquisition propagates across every fact it touches. Geographic context is preserved: a datacenter knows its nearest substation; a cell tower knows its corridor. Nothing is a black box and nothing is indefinitely cached.
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