Parallel Society concluded its 2026 Lisbon edition with two days of discussions, performances, and collaboration centred on counter-culture, music, and civic technology. Bringing together international and local participants in Marvila on 6–7 March, the gathering explored new approaches to community, creativity, and digital-era civic life.

The event was built on the work of Logos, a social and technological movement aiming to revive civil society and empower communities through decentralised technology and blockchain. Participants engaged with real-world prototypes for self-governance and digital autonomy, exploring alternatives to traditional state systems while fostering new cultural and civic practices.
Parallel Society is collectively and organically curated as a not-for-profit initiative by an emergent coalition of international and local allied groups. Partners for the 2026 edition included Logos, Internet Archive, Tor Project, MoneroKon, Unruly Capital, Venice AI, Gnosis (Circles), DarkFi, Institute of Cryptoanarchy, Above Phone, Kleros, Funding the Commons, Haven, New Economy Institute, Protocol Labs, and Common Sense, previously known as EthDAM.
Day 1, 6th March, was dedicated to collaborative research, experimentation, and knowledge exchange through the event’s [un]conference format. Participants engaged in workshops, discussion circles, protocol labs, hackspaces, co-design sprints, and hands-on sessions spanning decentralisation, privacy, open source culture, community autonomy, and tooling stewardship. Speakers included Brewster Kahle (Internet Archive), Dr Agata Ferreira (Institute of Free Technology), Amir Taaki (DarkFi), Dave Stann (True Count Tech), Fatemeh Fannizadeh, Francesco Moiraghi (Unruly Capital), Guy-Louis Grau (Keycard), Harry Halpin (Nym Technologies), Igor Sirotin (Logos), Jarrad Hope (Logos), Pavel Zoneff (Tor), Rose O’Leary (DarkFi), Siaka Stevens (Sherbro Alliance Partners), and Vít Jedlička (The Free Republic of Liberland).
A highlight of Day 1 was the launch of Logos Testnet v0.1, offering participants a live environment to experiment with privacy-first digital coordination and governance tools. The activation allowed builders, communities, and policymakers to test resilient alternatives to legacy systems in real time.
The ethos of the first day was on full display when Tor’s Pavel Zoneff introduced a crowdfunding campaign dedicated to supporting internet freedom infrastructure. The campaign is led by Tor and Funding the Commons and backed by a coalition of privacy, cryptocurrency, and open-source partners, including Logos. The campaign benefits organisations and tools supporting secure journalism, private communications, anti-censorship technologies, and privacy-preserving infrastructure used by millions of people worldwide:
Day 2, 7th March, transformed Parallel Society into a vibrant cultural celebration. The programme showcased international and local talent across club, live experimental, and performance-focused music. Artists included DJ Stingray 313, Los Bitchos, Gayance, Kokeshi, Violet, Kaitlyn and Pearlmitted, SoundPreta, Apparat, Gilles Peterson with MC Rob Galliano, Clark, Moses Boyd, Calibre, Kode9, Maria Amor and Shcuro, Chima Isaaro, Nelson Makossa, and Collective Unconscious. Three standout projects from an open-call programme also performed, Albin, Abajour Nonok, and ϙue, equii and Olena Bublyk. Cultural coalition partners Fábrica Moderna, Rare Effect, Manja, Radio Quantica, and COOP supported the programme. Relive sets from Los Bitchos, Kode9, Apparat, Moses Boyd, Calibre and Gilles Peterson w/ MC Rob Galliano below:
Louisa Haining, Curation Director, comments:
“Across the two days, the experiment became something bigger than we expected. People from different corners of the world, different perspectives, different strains of sound. Performers from across genres alongside local pioneers relentlessly pushing the Lisbon underground forward. Barely any phones on the dance floor. Just open-minded people, curious, present, celebrating”
With more than 60 per cent of the lineup sourced from Lisbon-based talent, Parallel Society reinforced its commitment to nurturing local creativity while connecting it with global innovators.
The event also featured an on-site exhibition curated by Logos, presenting the work of João Cardoso (Cardoz), Ana Tortos, Batu, João Magalhães, Tomás João (Nature The Artist), and Collective Unconscious. The exhibition explored networks as social and sculptural forms, highlighting emergent governance, anonymity, and participatory processes through video, animation, installation, and sound.

Parallel Society 2026 concluded with a strong sense of community, experimentation, and the ongoing pursuit of alternatives for technology, culture and civic life. The event demonstrated the potential of decentralised networks, creative collaboration, and collective governance as tangible practices, creating a lasting impact on participants and audiences alike.