
🔵 Simplified Introduction (For Everyone)
Before going into the full details, it is essential to understand one very simple thing:
In DirectDemocracyS there are different levels of participation , and everyone is free to choose:
- If you want to participate for free, without obligation
- If you observe before you trust
- If you actively contribute
- Whether to become an official member and co-owner
👉 No one is forced to pay.
👉 No one is forced to trust immediately.
👉 No one is forced to do anything.
This system was designed precisely to respect a fundamental principle:
Trust is built over time, not imposed.
Many people start with doubts:
- “What if I pay for nothing?”
- “What if I don’t get what I pay for?”
- “What if the system is not as it seems?”
👉 These doubts are normal, expected, and respected.
For this reason:
- There are free user types
- there are gradual paths
- There are very strict safety rules
Everything you read below is to protect:
- tea
- the others
- the entire system
🔶 Why are there seemingly restrictive rules?
Before reading the full text, it is important to clarify one thing:
Many online systems allow:
- casual friendships
- uncontrolled messages
- immediate access
👉 The result is:
- spam
- scams
- waste of time
- chaos
DirectDemocracyS does the opposite.
👉 Here:
- every contact has a meaning
- all access is controlled
- every relationship is traceable
- all responsibility is clear
This does not limit freedom.
👉 It protects her.
📖 Reading Guide
The following text is complete and detailed.
You will find:
- precise rules
- operating procedures
- technical explanations
- concrete examples
👉 If something seems complex:
that's normal, because the system is profound.
👉 But each part has a precise logic.
🔹 Initial context: trust and gradual access
There are some people who have been with DirectDemocracyS for a long time, without doing much, or who joined us recently, or some who want to join us but aren't confident paying annual fees, at least initially. Perhaps some people are afraid of paying for nothing, or of not receiving the type of user they paid for, and so they prefer a free user type, with no attendance requirements and no need to volunteer with us.
🔎 Supplementary explanation:
This is the most natural behavior possible. A serious system does not eliminate this fear — it manages it.
👉 DirectDemocracyS doesn't force trust:
it builds it through direct experience.
🔹 Friend Request Rules
Let's briefly talk about our friend request rules...
🔎 Supplementary explanation:
This section is fundamental because it defines how relationships are created in the system .
👉 It's not a traditional social network
👉 it's an organized structure
🔹 Concrete example (integration)
👉 Simplified real case:
- User A enters for free
- He doesn't trust → he doesn't pay
- Know an official member
- Communicate via forms
- After some time he decides to trust
- Become an official member
- Start building your network
👉 This is the natural expected path.
🔹 Key Explanation: Limited Friendships
Friend requests are not allowed for all types of users for various reasons...
🔎 Simply translated:
👉 You can't add anyone because:
- avoid fake people
- avoid wasting time
- avoid disturbance
👉 But you can still:
- speaking in groups
- contact whoever you want
- collaborate
👉 So:
it's not a limitation → it's a smart protection
🔹 Official invitations (critical point)
🔎 Strengthened explanation:
Many think:
“Why should I take responsibility?”
Simple answer:
👉 You are not asked to control everything
👉 You are asked NOT to ignore problems
👉 If you report → you are protected
👉 If you help → you are valued
👉 If you ignore → it becomes a responsibility
🔹 Micro-groups (heart of the system)
🔎 Simplified explanation:
A micro-group is:
- small
- controllable
- real
- verifiable
👉 31 people = a manageable number. Subsequently, additional members can be added, up to an unlimited number, creating integrated local structures, from the smallest to the largest, at the local, national, continental, and international levels.
👉 Real trust
👉 Solid growth
🔹 Practical consequences of the system
This system leads to concrete results:
✔ zero spam
✔ zero fake accounts (or almost)
✔ real
accountability ✔ controlled growth ✔
strong local organizations
Let us now return to the initial concept, examining it in greater depth in the complete operational context.
There are some people who have been with DirectDemocracyS for a long time, without doing much, or who joined us recently, or some who want to join us but aren't confident paying annual fees, at least initially. Perhaps some people are afraid of paying for nothing, or of not receiving the type of user they paid for, and so they prefer a free user type, with no attendance requirements and no need to volunteer with us.
Let's briefly discuss our friend request rules, always remembering that the latest rules apply to everyone, even if they're different from the previous ones.
For friend requests, a simple rule.
In the early stages of our system, friend requests were prohibited. People communicated with each other in groups in our social areas, and for higher user types, in community areas.
Subsequently, certain types of users—our guarantors, super administrators, and administrators—were allowed to send friend requests and communicate confidentially through our internal messaging services and live chat.
Currently, all our managers , owners , political representatives, official representatives, and official members can only add as “friends” (contacts) people who have informed them of the existence of our system, provided they have a higher user type (users with verified identity and official members, all with the blue check mark next to their username, in our social area).
For all other types of users, friend requests are temporarily not allowed, but they can continue to communicate with each other in the various groups they belong to. In short, only if one of the two users is at least an official member can they send contact requests (via the user contact form), and then the official member can friend the other user (or one of the two if both are official members).
A brief explanation.
Friend requests are not allowed for all types of users for various reasons, here are some:
- Avoid contact with unreliable users, i.e. those without a verified and guaranteed identity, who disrupt other people's work with meaningless, unhelpful, and unauthorized friend requests.
- You can communicate with virtually anyone without disturbing them via contact forms.
- You can communicate with anyone directly in the various groups, without any limitations, but not in public areas, or by disturbing users in their activities.
For those who are already our users.
If you are already an official member (in good standing with your annual fee, as collective owners of our system), you can directly add the person who introduced you to DirectDemocracyS as a "friend" (contact in DirectDemocracyS). To do so, simply log in to our free website, in our social area, and enter your username and password in our login form at this link:
https://free.directdemocracys.org/social
Find or ask for the link or QR code to the personal profile of our official member and add them as a friend. Visit their profile and click "add as friend," and they'll accept if they want. Technically, you can add them even if they're not an official member, as long as they're at least a registered user with a verified and guaranteed identity, and have the blue checkmark next to their username in the social area. However, in this case, you'll only be able to communicate directly, without many mutual benefits.
two options to add the user who introduced you to our system as a "friend" (contact). The first, simpler option is to pay an annual official member fee based on your age (which will take effect as soon as your annual registered user fee, with a verified and guaranteed identity, expires). You will then immediately obtain the official member status, while still using the previous annual fee you paid until it expires. After paying and obtaining the official member status, as a collective owner, you can add the user who introduced you to DirectDemocracyS as a "friend" (contact) by going to your personal profile. The second option is to simply log in to our free website with your username and password and contact our official member who introduced you to our system at this link:
https://free.directdemocracys.org/utility/extensions/internal-forms/contact-user
asks the user to add you as a “friend” (contact) in the social area of our free website.
For those who joined us a while ago, regardless of whether they're free or not (login users, partially verified users, or registered users without a verified or guaranteed identity), there are two important new features. The first allows you to add as a "friend" or direct contact in DirectDemocracyS only the user who introduced you to our system and gave you the instructions to join us. This is done without an official invitation, but with a simple invitation, not through the social area. To do so, simply log in with your username and password to our free website and contact our official member who introduced you to our system at this link:
https://free.directdemocracys.org/utility/extensions/internal-forms/contact-user
By asking the user to add you as a "friend" (contact) in the social area of our free website. The user who invited you must be at least an official member to add you as a "friend" (contact).
For those who haven't registered yet.
There are two ways to connect as a contact with one of our official members who introduced you to our system. The simplest is to request an official invitation, with a unique registration link, via a simple email invitation (which our official member sends to the email address of the person you're inviting), with the unique link, or the QR code to scan, for the unique registration form, which will automatically connect them as a "friend" (contact) to the official member who invited them. The second is to register with a free profile, or a lower user level, with the generic registration link, and then, depending on the user level obtained, proceed with the steps described above.
To directly reach the top user types.
Based on a virtually unanimous vote by our users, we've decided to allow a higher level of user, only upon official invitation (with guaranteed identity verification and acceptance of full responsibility by the inviter for the invitee's activities and behavior). This invitation will be sent by one of our higher level users, who will then send a unique link or QR code containing the unique link, which will automatically connect the inviter and the invitee as "friends." The primary reason for this is to keep the system safe, secure, organized, and orderly.
The official invitation for new and existing users.
New users.
All new users can request and receive a simple invitation (without being connected to the inviter and the invited person), a direct invitation (with a link or QR code for the registration form), and an official invitation with identity verification (direct or anonymous with our special security team).
Our users.
To get an official invite, simply request friendship according to the rules above, and ask our official member for an invite to upgrade to a higher user level.
Our users of all free and lower membership levels can request a higher membership level, even that of an official member, by contacting their national group, which will connect them with an official member or an official representative, who will provide all the support, information, and instructions, and, if the two users are authorized, even an official invitation to a higher membership level. In certain countries, local groups can also connect two users to have the free or lower membership level officially invited (always assuming responsibility) and upgrade them to a higher membership level.
How are all these rules about friend requests and official invitations connected and integrated with the creation of micro-groups?
They are linked by the fact that to create a micro-group, one must be at least an official member, in good standing with the annual fee, mandatory attendance, and volunteer activities. The official member, as the collective owner of our entire system, must request and obtain an official representative profile, which cannot be linked to their personal profile. The official representative profile, obtained free of charge and with extensive potential, will be partially public, therefore identifiable in some internal groups, virtually, and physically, in person, in their urban or rural area, with a username and geographic coordinates, as well as with their first name, last name, actual date of birth, and authorization codes. At the right time, they will be added to a local group of official representatives, and after a short training course with all the instructions, they will create their own micro-group, manage it, verify it, and grow it.
This procedure is very simple, fast, and safe.
Based on the above rules, virtually anyone can join us. Anyone who meets all the requirements can become our official member, thus collectively owning our entire system. As the system owner, they will have the right to have an official representative profile and represent our system in their own geographic, territorial, administrative, and electoral area by creating their own micro-group and being able to invite new users, especially new official members, to join their micro-group. Once the micro-group has at least 31 official members, they will be able to obtain the status and potential of an official organization, which will offer everyone numerous benefits and advantages.
Our official representative will be able to verify the annual fees of new users, with the exception of free users, who pay nothing but can join groups reserved for various user types, connected via human bridges from official members to future official organizations. They will be able to extend official invitations to other official members and manage, monitor, and authorize all activities and individuals in their area, their micro-group, and the next official organization. They will be able to verify and guarantee the identity of everyone in their area and organize a wide range of activities, together with all our local, national, continental, and international organizations.
This is a very important statement for anyone who, as a member or verified user, wants to officially invite someone. Why should I take full responsibility, forever, for all the activities and behavior of anyone I invite? Let's just say that for a relative, a friend, or someone I know, I might accept, but for a stranger, perhaps one randomly assigned to me by our national or local organizations, I don't think I'd be willing to take full responsibility.
Our response to this statement. In DirectDemocracyS, responsibility lies with individuals, with connected individuals, with entire groups, and with the entire system. Let us explain. If a person or group engages in reprehensible activities and behaves inappropriately, those who do so are primarily responsible, directly and continuously. However, anyone who invites someone, whether they know them well or only for a short time, is obligated to verify every activity and behavior of the person they invite, reporting any possible "anomalies" to our special security groups, allowing us to prevent any potential misconduct and any morally and ethically incorrect behavior. If the invited person engages in activities that do not comply with our rules or behaves inappropriately, and there is no way to prevent it, the inviter, together with the groups involved, will be responsible for addressing any issues. This is what accountability is all about. In short, we will never hold the host responsible if they attempt to prevent, and succeed, with the help of our groups, in preventing and resolving, any of their guests' mistakes. The host's responsibility, however, is evident if they fail to monitor, intervene, prevent, and resolve—we repeat, with the help of all our groups, and our entire system, everyone involved. Everyone must work to protect all our activities, for the common good.
Responsibility in DirectDemocracyS: Protecting the Common Good
In a system based on collective ownership and direct democracy , freedom is not an abstract concept, but a daily exercise of awareness. In DirectDemocracyS, each member is not a simple user, but a co-owner. This position entails immense rights, but requires a fundamental pillar: Shared Responsibility .
1. The Three Levels of Responsibility
To understand how our system works, we must clearly distinguish where individual duty ends and collective duty begins.
- Individual Responsibility: Each user is directly and personally responsible for their actions, comments, and activities within the system.
- Liaison Responsibility (The Inviter): Whoever officially invites a new member acts as an "ethics guarantor." This isn't a condemnation, but rather a mentoring and oversight role.
- Group and System Responsibility: Local, national and special security groups step in to support individuals, ensuring that the entire system runs smoothly.
2. The Big Doubt: "If I invite someone, will I risk my money?"
The answer is a categorical "NO".
One of the most common fears concerns the financial sphere. It's essential to clarify that:
- No member pays for the defaults of others. If someone you invite decides not to renew their annual membership fee or doesn't participate in activities, your financial standing and funds are not affected in the slightest.
- Fiscal Autonomy: Each profile is a separate financial entity. Your responsibility is solely for its own behavior and security , not for anyone else's wallet.
3. What does “Assumption of Responsibility” mean?
Officially inviting someone means certifying that that person is real and that, to the best of your knowledge, they are willing to respect our values.
Preventive monitoring
Your main task is prevention . If you notice that one of your guests is behaving aggressively, spreading misinformation, or violating the system's rules, your duty is to:
- Intervene privately to advise and correct.
- Report the anomaly to our Special Security Groups if the behavior persists.
Golden Rule: You will never be held responsible for one of your guests' mistakes, provided you did everything possible to prevent the action or reported it promptly. Blame arises only in the case of failure to supervise or complicity.
4. Concrete Examples of Critical Issue Management
|
Scenario |
Action of the Guarantor (Inviting) |
Consequence |
|
The guest makes a technical error due to inexperience. |
The inviter guides him and helps him correct the mistake with the help of support groups. |
No sanctions. The bond is strengthened and the system remains clean. |
|
The guest violates the moral or ethical rules of the system. |
The inviter immediately reports the incident to the security groups. |
The invitee is penalized or removed; the inviter is praised for protecting the system. |
|
The host is unaware of the serious violations committed by his guest, even though he is aware of them. |
No reports, the inviter allows the damage to continue. |
Both may face disciplinary action for failure to supervise. |
5. Why does this system make us the safest in the world?
While traditional social networks are full of fake profiles, bots, and scammers because no one is responsible for anyone, in DirectDemocracyS every new entry is filtered by human intelligence and conscience.
This "chain of trust" allows you to:
- Eliminate Spam and Nuisance: Only serious people enter with an official invitation.
- Creating Strong Micro-Groups: An Official Representative managing a micro-group of 31 people (or more) who know and vouch for each other creates an unbreakable local structure.
- Total Transparency: The blue tick and verified identity make every interaction real, honest, and constructive.
Conclusion
Don't be afraid to invite. It's normal to be cautious at first, but you'll soon realize that this mechanism is your greatest protection. By inviting valuable people, you're not just increasing your points or your time in the system; you're building the foundation of your future Official Organization .
At DirectDemocracyS, those who help keep the system clean and safe are the true drivers of change. Your responsibility is our freedom.
In DirectDemocracyS:
- freedom is not chaos
- trust is not blind
- responsibility is not punishment
👉 It's a system designed to work over the long term.
💡 Final message
If you're new:
- observe
- trial
- verify
- ask questions
👉 you don't have to trust right away
But you need to know one thing:
Every rule you read exists to protect you, even before the system.

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