The experimental sandbox created by the researcher as part of this project has an impact on current discussions of ethics and algorithmic governance and it offers a unique combination of policy and design methods. This research offers an experimental alternative to the aspirational ethical frameworks and equally popular “governance-by-design” and “value-sensitive design” initiatives. Regulatory sandboxes address the structural challenges of algorithmic governance and automation by connecting deliberation with experiments that work simultaneously with regulations and code without reducing one to another. They open a space for design and policy iterations that engage participants and probe issues of power, stakes, interests, ownership without compromising on innovation. These participatory and experimental engagements with algorithmic governance in exploratory sandbox (as Lithopy that tested near-future blockchain and satellite services scenarios) can be useful for policy makers but also industry. Furthermore, her final two 2020 workshops provided interesting data on the issues of how to regulate (with) algorithms. The researcher visualized the data from the surveys and opened them for discussion on Tableau story. Instead of reducing and transforming various democratic values and regulations to code, the exploratory sandbox insist on the oversight by a public body outside the infrastructure and supports hybrid, tactical and situated engagements with automation and infrastructure described in [Paper 12]. Rather than some universal model for regulating (with) algorithmic governance, it offers experiences with “good enough” solutions that are open for further modifications. The processes of negotiation and design reiterations do not separate nor reduce regulations from code. They support friction and “slowing down” of the technology to increase participation by underrepresented groups, but their main advantage is in the experiments that combine design and policy for particular contexts and concrete communities. This work is at the forefront of present research into RegTech, algorithmic governance and related issues of ethics. Its impact on European policy objectives of democratizing and opening science and technology and supporting engagement are fully supported (especially the RRI agenda).