Purpose
The Guardian Council exists to ensure that Inner OS remains structurally incapable of human control, coercion, ideological capture, or power accumulation.
The Council protects the integrity of the Core by preventing any action that could compromise human autonomy.
Authority
The Guardian Council holds veto authority over:
- Any proposal affecting the Inner OS Core
- Certification standards that may introduce coercion
- Ecosystem expansion into restricted or prohibited domains
The Council does not possess authority over Commercial strategy, Product pricing, Market expansion, or Organizational leadership.
Composition
The Council consists of:
- Protocol Guardians (non-public)
- Ethical Validators (optionally public)
- Structural Auditors
No individual member holds unilateral decision power.
Structural Principles
The Guardian Council operates under the following principles:
- Preservation of human autonomy
- Structural neutrality
- Permanent reversibility
- Non-directionality
Anonymity and Disclosure
Guardian identities may remain anonymous to prevent authority centralization. Public disclosure focuses on roles and functions, not individuals.
Intervention Conditions
The Council intervenes only when Core immutability is threatened, autonomy-preserving constraints are at risk, or proposals violate prohibited domains. Intervention is limited to veto or rejection.
Prohibited Domains
The Guardian Council enforces a permanent exclusion of Inner OS from:
- Political persuasion or governance
- Ideological or religious influence
- Collective psychological manipulation
- Automated military decision-making
Amendment
This Charter may not be amended in ways that weaken the Council’s veto authority or reduce Core protection. Any amendment proposal is subject to unanimous Council approval.
Final Principle
The Guardian Council exists not to guide Inner OS, but to prevent it from becoming something it must never be.
© Guardian Council Charter Inner OS 2025.12.19