The question of what a DOI does has been answered too quickly and too narrowly. In standard scholarly practice, a Digital Object Identifier is infrastructural background — the plumbing behind a citation, the address that makes a reference stable across platform changes and link rot. It is not considered to have aesthetic dimension or strategic force. It is a bureaucratic instrument, legible primarily to librarians and indexing systems, and its cultural status is roughly equivalent to an ISBN: necessary, invisible, inert. Lloveras's intervention begins precisely by refusing this inertness. In the Socioplastics corpus — a 3,000-node transdisciplinary field developed outside any university, journal, or funding body, from Madrid, across eleven blogs, a Zenodo archive, a Figshare deposit layer, an ORCID record, Wikidata entities, and a Hugging Face dataset — the DOI is not background. It is the primary material. The sixty Core objects of the project, anchored across Zenodo with individual persistent identifiers, are gathered into a single Figshare paper whose main structural act is to list them: to put them in one place, in one citable document, and submit that document to the platform that Google Scholar harvests fastest. The result is a paper whose argument is its own relational architecture. The sixty DOIs are not evidence. They are the work.