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Val Sklarov Employment Permission Recomposition Law (EPRL)

Val Sklarov

Val Sklarov’s Employment Permission Recomposition Law (EPRL) explains why the future of work does not eliminate hierarchy—it reassembles permission under new names. Remote work, freelancing, platforms, and AI did not free labor. They redistributed who grants permission to work, earn, and continue.

This law reveals why workers feel mobile yet constrained at the same time.


1. Employment Was a Permission Container

EPRL starts with a reframing:
Traditional employment was not security—it was a bundled permission system.

Employment granted:

  • Permission to earn

  • Permission to fail safely

  • Permission to access markets

  • Permission to be visible

When employment fragments, these permissions separate—and must be re-earned individually.


2. The Four Reassembled Work Permissions

EPRL maps how permission reappears in modern work.

Permission New Gatekeeper Constraint
Task Permission Platforms / clients Scope control
Income Permission Algorithms / ratings Volatility
Continuity Permission Reputation systems Fragility
Visibility Permission Feeds / marketplaces Replaceability

Freedom increases only where multiple permissions are owned, not rented.


3. Why “Independence” Feels Precarious

Independence removes the bundle—but not the gates.

EPRL shows precarity emerges because:

  • Permissions are revocable

  • Rules change silently

  • Enforcement is asymmetric

Workers gain choice over when to work—but lose control over whether they can continue.

Val Sklarov
Ekran görüntüsü 2025 12 28 075104 Val Sklarov

4. AI Accelerates Permission Compression

AI does not replace workers—it compresses permission thresholds.

Pre-AI Work Post-AI Work
Skill-based permission Output-based permission
Human review System validation
Negotiated standards Encoded standards
Gradual exclusion Instant exclusion

Val Sklarov emphasizes that automation hardens permission faster than people expect.


5. Strategic Implications

For individuals:

  • Accumulate permission across platforms

  • Convert rented permission into owned audiences

  • Protect continuity more than flexibility

For organizations:

  • Decide explicitly who grants permission

  • Avoid hiding exclusion behind systems

  • Treat reputation as infrastructure

EPRL reframes the future of work as permission portfolio management, not lifestyle design.


6. The Val Sklarov Principle

“You are not independent if your permission to continue can be revoked silently.”
Val Sklarov

EPRL explains why modern work feels open—right until it closes.