Why Is Network School Seeking Legal Assurances?

Network School founder Balaji Srinivasan is seeking a formal agreement with Malaysia after authorities opened an immigration probe into his tech community in Johor’s Forest City over allegations that it was hosting Israeli citizens using second passports.

Malaysia’s Home Affairs Ministry said Tuesday it was investigating the community after claims circulated that Israeli nationals were present in violation of immigration rules. Initial checks found that all 266 foreigners at the site held valid documents, but the episode has still placed Srinivasan’s project under political and regulatory pressure.

Srinivasan said Network School needs legal certainty before it continues investing in Malaysia. He suggested the arrangement could take the form of a memorandum of understanding or a change linked to special economic zone rules, giving the community a clearer basis for operating in the country.

“I’d like to have a document which says not just abstractly that tech is welcome … but rather that we’re personally welcome,” Srinivasan said in a video directed at Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim.

What Triggered The Malaysian Probe?

The investigation followed claims from activist group Malaysian Protest 4 Palestine, which accused Network School of becoming a “gathering place for Israeli entrepreneurs.” The allegations spread through social media and quickly became a political issue because Malaysia does not recognize Israel and has no diplomatic relations with the country.

Israeli passport holders are barred from entering Malaysia without written permission from the Ministry of Home Affairs. That makes the nationality question more sensitive than a routine visa issue, especially in a Muslim-majority country where public opinion around Israel is politically charged.

The probe has not produced evidence, based on initial checks, that the foreign residents lacked valid documentation. Still, the inquiry shows how quickly a private tech project can become exposed to national immigration policy, foreign relations, and domestic political pressure.

For Network School, the issue is not only whether its residents complied with entry requirements. It is whether the project can rely on stable treatment from Malaysian authorities while building a long-term community marketed to global founders, builders, and investors.

Investor Takeaway

The dispute shows that startup cities and crypto-linked communities still depend on state approval. Capital mobility gives projects leverage, but immigration law, foreign policy, and public pressure remain controlled by governments.

Why Does This Matter For Crypto-Native Communities?

Srinivasan has long promoted the idea of network states and digital-native communities that build their own institutions, economies, and membership systems. Network School is one of the most visible physical versions of that idea, launched in August 2024 in Forest City, about an hour from Singapore.

The project is marketed as a community for tech builders, creators, and founders. Its location in Malaysia gives it access to lower operating costs than Singapore while remaining close to one of Asia’s most important financial and technology hubs.

The current dispute highlights a central weakness in the network-state model. These communities can organize online, attract capital, and create internal cultures, but they still need visas, property rights, business permits, banking access, and political tolerance from the host country.

That dependence becomes more visible when residents come from multiple jurisdictions or when the community touches politically sensitive issues. A project built around global mobility may see itself as border-light, but host governments do not treat immigration, sanctions, diplomatic recognition, or national security as optional rules.

What Are The Stakes For Malaysia And Network School?

Srinivasan said he is pausing further investment in Malaysia, including a planned $122 million expansion, until Network School receives “sufficient assurance” that similar issues will not recur. He also warned that the community could move its capital elsewhere if it does not feel welcome.

“If not, then we will readily go somewhere else because I don’t want to be where we’re not welcome,” he said.

For Malaysia, the dispute creates a balancing act. The country wants to attract technology investment, founders, and international capital, especially in areas near Singapore. But any arrangement with Network School would need to fit domestic law and avoid the appearance of granting special treatment on a politically sensitive immigration issue.

For investors and operators watching the case, the message is clear. Special zones, startup hubs, and founder communities can reduce some operating frictions, but they do not remove sovereign risk. In emerging markets, political sensitivities can reshape the terms of market access even when a project brings capital, global attention, and a technology narrative.

The outcome will indicate whether Malaysia is willing to give Network School the explicit legal comfort it wants, or whether the project’s capital will move to a jurisdiction more willing to formalize its status.