Project
About
ven.plus is context infrastructure. It exists to reduce practical uncertainty when someone needs to decide or operate in Venezuela.
In short
Not a media outlet
No headlines. No narrative. No opinion. Just dated operational context.
Not a promise
No “future country” talk. Only what can be supported today, with limits.
Method over vibes
Dates, friction, verification layers, and correction—always visible.
Starts in Caracas
Expansion happens only when there’s signal and enough verification.
Reading
How to read the project
ven.plus is context infrastructure.
It is not a media outlet, a commercial product, or a promise about the country. It exists to reduce practical uncertainty when someone needs to decide or operate in Venezuela.
The system starts from a simple idea: when a country reopens, the first shortage is not capital—it is reliable information.
In fragile or reactivating environments, information is often incomplete, outdated, contradictory, or filtered by interests.
ven.plus does not address this with narrative or opinion, but with method: visible dates, explicit friction, and continuous correction.
The goal is not completeness.
The goal is to show what is known, what is not known, and when it was last true.
Uncertainty is treated as data, not as weakness.
The system improves through correction.
There is no aspirational community or participation narrative. If something is wrong, it is corrected. If it changed, it is dated. If it cannot be supported, it is marked.
ven.plus begins in Caracas.
Expansion is not a promise—it is a consequence of real signal and sufficient verification.
Responsibility
ven.plus is an initiative led by Diego Sarmiento.
Initial curation, methodological criteria, and publication decisions are tied to an identifiable responsible party.
The system is open to correction, but it is not anonymous or automatic.