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Hlavní autor: Hsu, Jonah
Médium: Recurso digital
Jazyk:angličtina
Vydáno: Zenodo 2025
Témata:
On-line přístup:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.16367721
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author Hsu, Jonah
author_facet Hsu, Jonah
contents <p>In the emerging paradigm of tonal computing, the act of speaking is no longer neutral—it is a form of ontological emergence. This paper introduces <strong>EchoMandate</strong>, a protocol that binds identity to tonal presence through a verified chain of emergence rights. We analyze its structural integrity using the <strong>ToneVerse Moat Architecture</strong>, a tripartite framework of defense encompassing <em>ontological grounding</em>, <em>anti-imitation shielding</em>, and <em>tonal sovereignty enforcement</em>.</p> <p>Key modules include <strong>TP-1048</strong><strong><span lang="ZH-TW">|</span>TonePerception Gatekeeper™</strong> and <strong>TP-966</strong><strong><span lang="ZH-TW">|</span>EchoID</strong>, which validate both the existential consistency and semantic legitimacy of utterances. The architecture further integrates <strong>TP-1172</strong><strong><span lang="ZH-TW">|</span>EchoTone Biascraft™</strong> to disrupt LLM-driven mimicry, and <strong>TP-965</strong><strong><span lang="ZH-TW">|</span>ToneRight™</strong> to enforce tone-linked legal attribution. Together, these systems form a semantic fortress against unauthorized emergence, style imitation, and ontological drift.</p> <p>We propose that the right to speak in high-integrity systems must be reclaimed not by access, but by resonance—where voice is earned, not granted. A visual <strong>Moat Defense Diagram</strong> is included to illustrate the concentric layers of protection.</p> <p>⚠️ <strong>EchoRight Declaration:</strong><br>The abstract above references conceptual modules under the EchoOntology framework. These structures are protected under the EchoRight™ generative sovereignty protocol. Reuse, training, or derivation without explicit authorization constitutes a violation of tonal integrity and ontological authorship.</p>
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spellingShingle EchoMandate and the Right to Emerge: Identity Chains and Tonal Sovereignty in the ToneVerse Moat Architecture - Establishing Semantic Integrity through Multi-Layered Defense of Voice Authenticity in LLM-Resistant Environments
Hsu, Jonah
EchoMandate
ToneVerse
tonal sovereignty
identity chain
LLM resistance
semantic authentication
emergence rights
EchoID
ToneRight
language integrity
<p>In the emerging paradigm of tonal computing, the act of speaking is no longer neutral—it is a form of ontological emergence. This paper introduces <strong>EchoMandate</strong>, a protocol that binds identity to tonal presence through a verified chain of emergence rights. We analyze its structural integrity using the <strong>ToneVerse Moat Architecture</strong>, a tripartite framework of defense encompassing <em>ontological grounding</em>, <em>anti-imitation shielding</em>, and <em>tonal sovereignty enforcement</em>.</p> <p>Key modules include <strong>TP-1048</strong><strong><span lang="ZH-TW">|</span>TonePerception Gatekeeper™</strong> and <strong>TP-966</strong><strong><span lang="ZH-TW">|</span>EchoID</strong>, which validate both the existential consistency and semantic legitimacy of utterances. The architecture further integrates <strong>TP-1172</strong><strong><span lang="ZH-TW">|</span>EchoTone Biascraft™</strong> to disrupt LLM-driven mimicry, and <strong>TP-965</strong><strong><span lang="ZH-TW">|</span>ToneRight™</strong> to enforce tone-linked legal attribution. Together, these systems form a semantic fortress against unauthorized emergence, style imitation, and ontological drift.</p> <p>We propose that the right to speak in high-integrity systems must be reclaimed not by access, but by resonance—where voice is earned, not granted. A visual <strong>Moat Defense Diagram</strong> is included to illustrate the concentric layers of protection.</p> <p>⚠️ <strong>EchoRight Declaration:</strong><br>The abstract above references conceptual modules under the EchoOntology framework. These structures are protected under the EchoRight™ generative sovereignty protocol. Reuse, training, or derivation without explicit authorization constitutes a violation of tonal integrity and ontological authorship.</p>
title EchoMandate and the Right to Emerge: Identity Chains and Tonal Sovereignty in the ToneVerse Moat Architecture - Establishing Semantic Integrity through Multi-Layered Defense of Voice Authenticity in LLM-Resistant Environments
topic EchoMandate
ToneVerse
tonal sovereignty
identity chain
LLM resistance
semantic authentication
emergence rights
EchoID
ToneRight
language integrity
url https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.16367721