Creating a Quasi-Legal Framework to Navigate a Global Digital-First Ecosystem
When you set out to create a global digital-first corporate empire, the one issue you cannot ignore is bad actors operating on bad vectors. Code of conduct will be a major dynamic in the metaverse and other alternative reality ecosystems as we move forward in the 21st century.
We have to be forward-thinking and be on top of this subject as part of our growth and engagement strategy as a digital-first global company. When it comes to most ecosystems, they let anything goes as long as you don’t defend their backyard cultural norms. For example, an Israeli-based digital ecosystem is not going to allow non-Jewish folks to talk anyway about Jews and Israel and a Thai-central digital ecosystem is not going to let you talk anyway or insult the royal subjects. But if you insult other people and other cultures on their platforms, they will allow it to go on and have to be forced to impose a code of conduct. This is not ethical or good conduct of a digital ecosystem.
The other problem is bad actors who violate the trust are moving with a sense of impunity. Think about trolls on Twitter saying anything they want to other users in an insulting and downgrading way with that clown Jack Dorsey walking around not caring about women on Twitter being threatened and harassed for having an opinion. A lot of people post outright lies about other and Twitter does nothing about it. All short-statured garbage Jack Dorsey did was encourage Twitter to be a toxic place where everybody can hide behind identities and post toxic stuff and Twitter would protect those bad actors from being identified or called out. One thing I saw was Africans and Caribbeans pretending they are Black Americans or trying to lecture Black Americans and Twitter allowed it to go on.
Then on the platform, there are scams, hustles, and gaslighting by bad actors. The relationship expert sits in their car in the parking lot running their mouth before they have to head back to the warehouse job. Charlatans are allowed to sell hype and hate to influence these simpletons engaged in seeking confirmation bias with impunity. Jilted and bitter Black women raging at Black men on a social media platform - we Black men have to read/watch that nonsense while waking up next to our Asian chick who picks up a pillow and swings at us and we grab her tickling her in the bed and she giggling and we brothas appreciate the fact our Asian chick is feminine, fit, and friendly.
Then in the metaverse trials – female avatars are harassed by male avatars standing next to them all the time during the session. Mark Zuckerberg then say the metaverse stuff is his fault and he apologize then turn around and fire his own employees but Zuckerberg still clings on to his job while Twitter, Alphabet, and Microsoft founders had moved on and hired highly-qualified Indian nationals to run the show, delivering excellent results for big tech companies.
I’m not trying to be funny here and this is not a funny subject - you need to think about how serious a lack of code of conduct enforcement on a digital platform can easily perverse a society digitally and physically. If Instagram does nothing about teenagers gangbanging, taunting the opposition, and flashing money on their Instagram platform, then when those kids show up at the mall, they shooting and innocent bystanders also get shot in the crossfire. If you didn’t read between the lines, we got individuals with egos at big tech facilitating these conducts and then they act with a sense of control and impunity, taking down the NY Post coverage of Hunter Biden because they felt like it.
When you create a global community, you have two choices. You can create a toxic environment where people attack each other and viewership is increased through controversy, perversion, racism, attacks, and trolling. The goal of increasing viewership is based on seeking advertisements and advertisers are getting smarter and not promoting their brands on toxic social media platforms and ecosystems. This is what Reddit did and Serena Williams married and had a baby with one of the scumbags who created the Reddit platform and the toxic atmosphere there.
Or you can do it like Shanghai, Tokyo, Dubai, and London – they seriously monitor activities and behaviors within their community. They measure reputation through social credit systems based on activities. They don’t play with fools who want to try the community and law down the code and punishment. Bad actors get shamed, get shut out, and made an example out of.
That’s why you don’t see passport bros talking about the cities I named above because they know those cities not going to put up with any nonsense, including being broke and fronting – go to Dubai talking about you don’t have enough money to fly home and watch that person get arrested and jailed for being broke. I saw a Black American woman in Dubai who didn’t have enough money at a restaurant and she was about to get in serious trouble, they were surrounding her – yeah, I rescued that sista on the spot in Dubai and I don’t mention these acts because I’m grown and handle global things like that but only bringing it up because you cannot be broke in Dubai. Why do you think there are abandoned expensive cars at the Dubai airport all the time – flossing folks gone broke had to get the heck out of Dubai.
China has a social credit system with punishments and rewards. Want to act like a clown? Then your transportation rights to subways, trains, and planes are cut off and you can walk or hitch a ride as the clown you chose to be in China. You keep your head on a swivel, then you get access to credit facilities, perks, and special events. So when you visit places like China and Dubai, people tend to act right. Not only do they act right but they realize positive behavior goes a long way. But the society as a whole – everybody keeping to themselves and can enjoy their life but they know there is a bigger system in place to deal with fools. Now that is a polite society.
We cannot run an American-based global digital ecosystem and try to use the court system against someone in Indonesia posting lies and trolling. We have to apply a code of conduct with both rewards and punishment. Things like Ethereum where they try to say “code is law” do not pan out as bad actors exploit the code to their advantage and argue that their attack vector code is the law based on the “code is law” premise. You just got to have a good team with a good moral compass to focus on creating a polite society.
Artificial intelligence can tell when someone is typing up some BS in real-time and stop the posting from happening. We will implement this technology, warning the person that there are social credit consequences before they press that “Post” button using AI technology. YouTube has technology that can detect cuss words and unlicensed music to demonetized video bloggers and we have the same access to the technology for our platform as well. We can also detect hostile language and use physical recognition where if we see a man harassing a woman or teenagers gangbanging with guns in the photo, we can take action immediately through AI-assist technology.
I had this discussion before and some people want to say “I don’t want to be on your platform if you implement this” and my response is I don’t want you on our platform just like Dubai and Doha don’t want you either visiting their country if you think you can carry yourself any way you feel like. I rather create NPCs in our digital ecosystem to interact with others than entertain a clown and that is exactly how the digital ecosystem is trending. NPC means non-playable characters where we have actual chatbots with artificial faces and realistic human attributes enter and impose our code of conduct. So Ana the bot will be a fine Swedish-Ukrainian woman generated by AI talking to you about posting some silly nonsense and she lays down the law on our code of conduct before taking away your ability to post further comments with our ecosystem.
Toshikiso has a social credit system library in the API and if folks read Dream and Hustle articles where I posted all 400+ API endpoints, they would have seen the social credit-related APIs. For the business model, we are using blockchain agreements where business partners digitally sign agreements and if a partner violates that agreement, we can enforce a code of conduct on behalf of the other partners – this is useful for global operations where courts will not recognize taking action against a non-citizen that you was working within another country.
In summary, I hope you are understanding why a code of conduct on digital platforms is essential to make sure you have a proper ecosystem where opportunities can be pursued with respect and peace as the underlying tone. That is why so many people love Dubai and when Doha gets up to speed, we will see the same thing out of Qatar as well. So in summary, people will not be on our platform acting like fools like they doing on Twitter and TikTok right now – we don’t want them or need them on our platform.
What we will be doing is creating a new global-based digital-enforceable code of conduct where you can now feel comfortable with expressing yourself in safe, acceptable spaces. Now you go promoting your BS beliefs in a religious space, then you are a problem and will be dealt with and not tolerated. You can now enter agreements with others around the world in a trustless system knowing there is recourse to global bad actors when the courts won’t bother with your case because of international boundaries. This component of creating a global platform empire has to be considered or we will end up just like Twitter, a toxic platform that struggles with revenue because Twitter allowed bad actors to go unchecked.