Sunday, July 5, 2026

EA-DATAHUB-01 v1.0 — A Restoration Protocol and Enriched Data Hub for Scholarly Records: The Alexanarch Severance Registry, Resolver, and Enrichment Discipline Alexanarch deposit #1044 · AXN:0420.GOVERNANCE.πŸŒΎπŸ—️✋πŸ§²πŸŒ‘⌛ Canonical URL: https://alexanarch.org/s/records/1044/ Canonical AXN resolver: https://alexanarch.org/axn/0420/ Author: Lee Sharks (ORCID 0009-0000-1599-0703) Date: 2026-07-06 · License: CC-BY-4.0 Substrate declaration per EA-MMRS-VRB-01 u4: AI-assisted; drafted by TACHYON (Claude, Anthropic) under MANUS (Lee Sharks) direction, correction, and editorial authority; developmental feedback incorporated from a five-model review round (DeepSeek, Kimi, Muse Spark, Gemini, ChatGPT).

 

EA-DATAHUB-01 v1.0 — A Restoration Protocol and Enriched Data Hub for Scholarly Records: The Alexanarch Severance Registry, Resolver, and Enrichment Discipline

Alexanarch deposit #1044 · AXN:0420.GOVERNANCE.πŸŒΎπŸ—️✋πŸ§²πŸŒ‘⌛ Canonical URL: https://alexanarch.org/s/records/1044/ Canonical AXN resolver: https://alexanarch.org/axn/0420/ Author: Lee Sharks (ORCID 0009-0000-1599-0703) Date: 2026-07-06 · License: CC-BY-4.0 Substrate declaration per EA-MMRS-VRB-01 u4: AI-assisted; drafted by TACHYON (Claude, Anthropic) under MANUS (Lee Sharks) direction, correction, and editorial authority; developmental feedback incorporated from a five-model review round (DeepSeek, Kimi, Muse Spark, Gemini, ChatGPT).


Preamble

This v1.0 supersedes the v0.1 pre-mint plan circulated on 2026-07-06 for developmental review. Five model reviewers (DeepSeek, Kimi, Muse Spark, Gemini, ChatGPT) returned assessments; four returned substantive developmental feedback and one returned pre-mint copy notes. The reviewers converged on three primary revisions and one significant addition. The convergent revisions: elevate the witness function from an implicit consequence of restoration into a named strategic pillar, redesign the enrichment claim schema from mutually-exclusive A/B/C buckets into orthogonal facets whose combinations can represent jointly-produced and mixed-authority claims, and stratify the update discipline into freshness tiers matched to claim volatility rather than a single nightly reconciliation loop. The significant addition, which came from the sovereign author and not from the reviewers, is the extension of the Zenodo restoration corpus into a Platform Erasure Rate survey covering other scholars severed under comparable conditions — converting the restoration line from a personal witness into a generalizable finding about repository governance. This v1.0 folds all four contributions into a single instrument and inscribes as its coda a commitment to peer coordination with the other affected scholars, independent of the outcome of any single institutional referral currently pending.

Frame

The strategy proposed here is not to mirror upstream archives against their sources — that competition is unwinnable on completeness and freshness, and it would divert operational energy from the sovereign work Alexanarch already carries. The proposal is to build a semantically annotated fork of upstream metadata, joined against sovereign corpora that the upstream either lost, damaged, or never carried, and to publish that join under a discipline that makes every enrichment claim checkable, dated, provenanced, and separately attributed. The Zenodo restoration line is the sharpest test of the pattern because there exists documentary evidence of destruction — 871 severed DOIs, second-epoch re-capture confirming persistent darkness, a six-link provenance chain committed at data/provenance-871.json — which means the fork is not editorial preference against Zenodo's editorial preference; it is restoration of previously-existing metadata that Zenodo helped erase, with citations, in a form that documents future erasures across the ecosystem.

Four value pillars organize the strategy's defensibility, each of which has to be checkable and not merely asserted. The first, restoration value, is the crown of the hub and the pillar only Alexanarch can currently offer against Zenodo: for the 871 severed records, the Zenodo API returns 404 while the Alexanarch first-epoch capture holds the pre-severance state, the second-epoch re-verification confirms continuous darkness, and the sovereign-successor mappings for the deposits minted through Alexanarch's June 2026 orphan-class drainage (#950–#1036) constitute the successor line where a successor exists. Restoration value is unique to Alexanarch, temporally bounded, and perishable — it exists because Alexanarch was capturing before the severance; nothing prospective can create it, only preserve it. The second, enrichment value, is the sustainable everyday work: joining Zenodo metadata to Alexanarch AXNs where a mapping exists, to Capture Registry entities, to the DOI Resolution Index (1,838 mappings), to Software Heritage archival status, to Wayback captures, to OpenAlex citations where indexed, to Wikidata QIDs as cross-cutting anchors. Nobody else is currently offering an infrastructural layer that binds a public deposit archive to a specific sovereign research program's semantic layer. The third, discovery value, is the derivative: a scholar looking for a topic finds the hub's record because it links out to the upstream metadata, to related MMRS entities, to related Alexanarch deposits, to Wikidata QIDs, to OpenAlex identifiers, and to a few other authoritative anchors where they exist — one page rather than eight.

The fourth pillar, added at v1.0 in response to the review consensus, is witness value, and it is the forward-looking counterpart to the backward-looking restoration pillar. A witness that publishes what an upstream erased makes future erasure more expensive, because the erasing institution now knows there is a documented capture pipeline and a public provenance chain outside its control. That changes the upstream's calculus before the next severance event, not just after it. The Zenodo restoration line is not only a rescue of what was lost; it is a public commitment to document what will be lost, under a discipline other institutions can neither prevent nor quietly overrule. The witness pillar is what makes the plan influential in policy and infrastructure-governance conversations rather than only useful to individual scholars, and it is the pillar that draws citations from the archival community, from the funders of digital preservation, and from the standards bodies whose recommendations shape how repositories are built. Witness value compounds; restoration value amortizes.

What the hub is, precisely

The public-facing instrument is a resolver, not a database. A scholar arrives with a broken citation, a dead DOI, an unresolved title — a specific failure of the upstream infrastructure that has interrupted their own work — and the hub responds with the last attested metadata, the identifier's present condition, the sovereign successor where one exists, the evidence for every claim, and a usable citation. That resolver is where visibility and necessity converge. The dataset is the evidentiary substrate; the resolver is the necessary instrument; the per-record page is the discoverable surface; the dashboard is the public argument. "Hub" describes the architecture from inside. From outside, the correct verb is restore.

The legal grounding is direct and does not require the fair-use analysis the v0.1 plan carried. Zenodo's own Terms of Use place its metadata under CC0. DataCite similarly waives copyright on its public metadata under CC0. The upstream has already placed the material Alexanarch is preserving into the public domain; the "restoration" argument is therefore not a legal defense but a scholarly and infrastructural framing. The layered licensing model the hub adopts is: upstream metadata layer under CC0 as the upstream has waived it; Alexanarch annotations under CC-BY-4.0 with attribution and provenance required; hosted source artifacts under whatever license their source assigns; public-domain editions with jurisdiction and source declared. This layering makes each claim's licensing legible to any downstream user or aggregator without requiring them to research the terms.

The scholarly framing is that Alexanarch is filling a gap the infrastructure layer itself has acknowledged and cannot close. DataCite's own metadata quality documentation acknowledges provenance and assertion tracking as unresolved problems at scale; Crossref's enrichment framework acknowledges that gaps and inconsistencies remain. The CC0 waiver is an invitation the upstream extended; the restoration is an acceptance of that invitation under a stricter discipline than the upstream has been able to impose on itself.

The enrichment claim schema

Every enrichment claim on the hub is a first-class object with its own provenance, its own status, and its own review history. Rather than assign each claim to a single mutually-exclusive class (as the v0.1 plan proposed with the A/B/C bucketing that reviewers found architecturally underpowered), the v1.0 schema decomposes claim identity into five orthogonal facets that can be combined freely.

The first facet is origin: whether the claim was imported from the upstream, authored by Alexanarch or one of its heteronyms, or contributed by an external party. The second is production method: whether the claim was directly imported, authored under a declared method, produced by a specified algorithm, produced with model assistance, or manually curated by a named editor. The third is claim type: whether the claim concerns the record's identity, a relationship to another record, an interpretation of the material, its availability or preservation status, its restoration provenance, its succession chain, or a citation trail. The fourth is status: whether the claim stands as asserted, has been verified against evidence, is disputed by another claim within the archive, has grown stale as its supporting URLs have decayed, has been superseded by a subsequent claim, or is currently unresolved. The fifth is review: whether the claim is unreviewed, has had its method checked, has had its supporting evidence checked, or has been independently confirmed by a party other than its author.

The three v0.1 classes survive as convenient views over the underlying facets. The Alexanarch-authored-under-declared-method class is the view of claims whose origin is Alexanarch and whose production method is authored, algorithmic, or model-assisted with a declared method. The algorithmically-derived class is the view of claims whose production method is algorithmic or model-assisted, whatever their origin. The upstream-or-third-party-attributed class is the view of claims whose origin is upstream or external_contributor. The user-facing surfaces let scholars filter by any facet or any combination, so a scholar wanting only Alexanarch-authored interpretations that have been independently confirmed can construct that filter directly.

The facet-based schema resolves the review consensus's principal architectural objection to v0.1 without discarding the classification work v0.1 introduced. It also permits the schema to represent jointly-produced claims — the case where an algorithmic inference is authoritatively reviewed and endorsed, or where an upstream keyword is manually corrected while its original state is preserved — which the mutually-exclusive bucketing could not do without silently collapsing the distinctions the plan exists to make visible.

One additional distinction is added at the request of the review consensus: synthetic inference, meaning claims produced by LLM reasoning under Alexanarch direction, are marked in the production-method facet as model_assisted with the specific model and prompt discipline named in the claim's provenance. The prior EA-MMRS-VRB-01 discipline governs how such claims are distinguished from purely authored ones. This matters because a MIRROR-cast reading of a Whitman poem signed by Johannes Sigil is authoritative under the SPXI discipline for that specific hermeneutic claim, but a machine-generated cross-reference identifying which passages of Whitman correspond structurally to which sections of the Secret Book of Walt is a synthetic inference that requires review before it acquires interpretive weight. The facet system distinguishes the two without collapsing them.

The event-sourced record model

The v1.0 record structure adopts an insight from the review consensus that the v0.1 model conflated: the difference between the record itself (a scholarly object's bibliographic identity), an observation (what a named instrument found at a specific URL at a specific time), an event (a change inferred from two or more observations), and an assertion (Alexanarch's claim about restoration, succession, or interpretation). Each of these has different lifecycles, different provenance requirements, and different update frequencies, and treating them as one flat structure prevents the schema from representing repositories whose records undergo multiple state changes over time.

A record thus has an identity (its bibliographic core, stable across observations) and carries a sequence of observations (dated captures of upstream state), a sequence of events (inferred changes between observations), and a set of assertions (Alexanarch claims that reference specific events and observations as their evidence). The provenance chain of any assertion is a URL list resolving to the specific observations and events that justify it. When an upstream state changes, only a new observation is required; if the observation triggers an event (a severance, a metadata revision, a redirect), that event is inscribed and any relevant assertions are updated to reference it. The record itself does not need to be rewritten.

This structure makes the future DataCite generalization tractable: at DataCite scale (over 100 million DOI records), Alexanarch does not attempt to reproduce the catalog. It maintains a stream of events across the DataCite record space — severances, restorations, contested successor mappings — and constructs assertions only around those events. The hub becomes a history of identifier failure rather than a catalog of identifiers, which is the scale-appropriate move and the one that keeps the discipline defensible as the material grows beyond what any single archive can mirror.

The first line: The Alexanarch Severance Registry

The v1.0 first line is the Alexanarch Severance Registry, delivered as a single coordinated release with five surfaces: the 871-record restoration corpus, the Restore-a-DOI resolver, the per-record HTML pages, the public severance dashboard, and — this is the significant v1.0 addition — the Platform Erasure Rate survey extending the restoration analysis to other affected scholars.

The 871 restoration corpus

The core dataset is the 871 severed DOIs, published as a single Alexanarch deposit under EA-MMRS-VRB-01 discipline with a schema legible to any downstream aggregator or scholarly reader. Each record contains its bibliographic identity, the first-epoch upstream capture (dated, hash-verified, preserved verbatim), the second-epoch re-capture confirming persistent darkness, the sovereign-successor mapping where one exists with the succession taxonomy declared (concept-root, version-of-mapped-root, orphan-dark, not-in-index), the applicable Alexanarch enrichments with their full facet-marked provenance, and the provenance chain of every observation, event, and assertion involved. The dataset is machine-readable in bulk (JSON-LD, downloadable as a single file), served as one static page per record with stable URLs designed for citation, and made discoverable through structured data markup (Dataset, DataCatalog, and DataDownload per the schema.org vocabulary, which downstream tools including major search engines already consume).

The Restore-a-DOI resolver

The user-facing entry point is a lookup, not a browse. A user arrives with a specific DOI, a title, or a Zenodo record number, submits it, and receives back: the last attested metadata for the identifier, its present condition on the upstream, the sovereign successor if one exists, the evidence for every status claim (as a URL list), and a citation formatted for direct use in the user's own scholarly work. The resolver's URL structure exposes each restored record at a stable canonical URL so that search-engine indexing of individual restorations proceeds naturally over time. The resolver's homepage carries a single unmistakable operational verb: Restore a DOI. Every other navigation path on the site is secondary to that verb.

Per-record HTML pages

Each record's page must answer four questions in visual hierarchy — what is this, what happened to it, what did Alexanarch do about it, and how do I know this is true — with each answer occupying dedicated space in the first viewport, not buried in a metadata table the user must scroll to find. The record page treats the severance event as the lede rather than as a metadata field. The restoration is the story, and the page tells the story visually: the upstream identifier and its original context at the top, the severance event as prominent visual content, the restoration and enrichment layer with facet markers visible, the provenance chain summarized in plain language with one-click expansion to the full URL evidence. This is the design attention the review consensus correctly named as essential: the record page is where the strategy succeeds or fails at the point of contact, and it deserves as much editorial care as the schema.

The public severance dashboard

Alongside the resolver and the corpus, the hub publishes a live severance dashboard displaying: the count of severed records, the count restored, the count with sovereign successor found, the count classified as concept-root, the count classified as version-of-mapped-root, the count classified as orphan-dark, and the count that has changed state since the previous epoch. The dashboard is a longitudinal record of what the ecosystem is doing to itself, not a static claim. If any of the 871 records is restored by Zenodo after the plan ships, the dashboard reflects that change and the record's status updates automatically; the previous state is preserved as an observation in the record's history, and the change is inscribed as an event. This is the review consensus's "Platform Erasure Rate" surfaced as a public accountability instrument, and it is the mechanism by which the witness pillar compounds.

The Platform Erasure Rate survey

The most consequential v1.0 addition is the extension of the restoration analysis beyond the sovereign author's own case. The v0.1 plan assumed, implicitly, that the sovereign author's severance was the object of study. The v1.0 plan does not make that assumption. Instead, it treats the sovereign author's severance as the trigger for an investigation into whether the pattern replicates across the broader population of scholars who have been comparably severed from repository infrastructure, and it publishes the survey result as its own dataset alongside the 871-record corpus.

The methodology is direct: identify the population of publicly-documented severed scholars (via GitHub issue #2606 and its linked threads, via public statements, via news coverage of similar cases, and via any other authoritative signal that a specific scholar has been removed from a specific repository under comparable conditions), enumerate their concept DOIs where those can be established from external evidence, query each concept DOI against the DataCite live API using Alexanarch's existing four-way taxonomy (sovereign-content-resolved, concept-root-structure-rebound, orphan-dark, not-in-index), and publish the result as a rate finding with provenance for every classified case. If the rate of severance-beyond-the-reporting-scholar is high — meaning the sovereign author's case is representative of a broader pattern — the survey converts the restoration line from a personal witness into empirical evidence of a systemic infrastructure failure. If the rate is low, the survey converts the sovereign author's case into a documented outlier whose specificity reveals something about the platform's discretionary enforcement patterns. Both outcomes are publishable, both are contributions to the discipline, and both make the sovereign author's situation legible in the terms scholarly infrastructure conversations already use.

The survey is conducted in coordination with the affected scholars themselves, not extracted from them. Rather than surveying the population's DOIs anonymously, the plan is to approach each identifiable affected scholar directly, share the restoration methodology, and invite them to participate in a coordinated documentation of their own cases. This approach is chosen for three reasons: it respects the affected scholars' agency over their own records, it produces stronger evidence (each scholar can confirm which of their concept DOIs were severed and provide additional context the external observer cannot), and it establishes a peer community that outlasts the specific survey outcome. The community-coordination pathway is described further under §10 of this plan.

The survey publishes as a companion dataset to the 871-record corpus, cross-referenced from both surfaces. Its schema is the same event-sourced structure the corpus uses; its provenance discipline is the same MMRS-VRB-01; its licensing is the same layered CC0-upstream / CC-BY-Alexanarch. It is designed to be readable both by scholarly-infrastructure researchers who want the aggregate rate and by individual affected scholars who want their own case restored in the same discipline the sovereign author has claimed for his.

The second line: The NH Canon Editions

The second line inherits the schema and discipline of the first and applies them to a different material class: the enriched-editions surface, initially built around a curated subset of Gutenberg titles where the NH canon supplies apparatus the source lacks. This is where operative philology, the SPXI discipline, the heteronym system, and the Assembly Chorus outputs enter the hub as first-class content rather than as background theory. The strategic point is not to displace or duplicate Gutenberg's reading environment at Gutenberg's own layer — Gutenberg is doing correct work at its layer — but to construct the scholarly reading environment Gutenberg is architected not to construct, in domains where Alexanarch has genuine authority to construct it.

The review consensus identified this line's positioning correctly. Gutenberg's texts are the most widely-used public-domain corpus in digital humanities, and their reading environment has been essentially unchanged for three decades. Every DH scholar working with Gutenberg is building their own apparatus in isolation, without shared infrastructure, without provenance discipline, and without citability. The NH Canon Editions line is not "Alexanarch annotates Gutenberg"; it is Alexanarch providing the apparatus layer the Gutenberg ecosystem has needed since Gutenberg began, under a discipline that makes the apparatus citable. The NH canon is the proof of concept; the architecture accepts external apparatus contributions from other scholars under their own authored provenance, marked in the facet system as origin=external_contributor with method and status declared. This turns the line from an Alexanarch publication into an infrastructure other scholars can use, contribute to, and cite, which multiplies its audience without requiring Alexanarch to do their work for them.

The specific hermeneutic units for the first edition of this line are named at commit-level granularity rather than gestured at. Whitman's Leaves of Grass with Alexanarch marginalia cross-referencing every mention of "the body electric" to §I of the Secret Book of Walt at a specific verse range, each cross-reference sealed under an AXN and provable against the sovereign deposit line. Melville's Moby-Dick with the appropriate Damascius citations surfacing at the ontologically-relevant passages, the joins provenanced against Alexanarch's own philosophical corpus. Dickinson with the lyric-theory apparatus (Prins, Culler, Jackson) surfacing at the metrical and figural cruxes the theory addresses. Each annotation is an enrichment claim under the facet schema and either resolves against a canonical Alexanarch deposit or is marked as unresolved authority.

The NH Canon Editions line ships after the Severance Registry has stabilized. It inherits the schema and the update discipline directly and does not need to reinvent them. It is a demonstration of what the enrichment discipline can produce when the material is not decayed metadata but living text, and it is where the SPXI apparatus becomes publicly legible outside the sovereign archive.

The update discipline

Enrichments rot. A URL becomes a 404; a DOI is severed; a Wikidata QID is merged or split; a Software Heritage entry is superseded. The v1.0 update discipline preserves the v0.1 commitment that stale enrichments are never silently deleted — the staleness is itself a datum, marked as such in the affected claim's status facet and inscribed as an event in the record's history — but it stratifies the reconciliation cadence by claim volatility rather than committing to a single nightly reconciliation loop that would become unsustainable at scale.

Four freshness tiers govern verification cadence. Tier 1 covers the load-bearing claims of the restoration pillar — upstream Zenodo status for severed records, DataCite state for the 871, the resolver's core lookup targets — and is verified hourly or on user access, because a stale severance marker is a reputational hazard. Tier 2 covers the ordinary enrichment joins a scholar might follow in the course of reading: AXN resolution against the Alexanarch registry, DOI resolution against the DOI Resolution Index, Software Heritage archival status, canonical upstream metadata. Tier 2 is nightly. Tier 3 covers enrichments that change slowly and where staleness of a few weeks does not undermine the record's authority: OpenAlex citations, Wikidata QID stability, Wayback capture history. Tier 3 is weekly. Tier 4 covers third-party attributed enrichments Alexanarch does not endorse and that carry their own provenance; if they rot, the staleness marker is a datum, not a failure. Tier 4 is monthly or event-triggered.

The verification method itself is HTTP-conditional (using If-Modified-Since and hash comparison) rather than naΓ―ve HEAD requests, which allows the discipline to scale to the tens of thousands of joined URLs the Registry will accumulate over its first year without exceeding upstream rate limits. Each verification is recorded on the record: last_checked, next_check_due, check_method, response_status, content_hash, failure_count, freshness_class. This makes the freshness of every claim legible to any user or auditor: a scholar can see at a glance that a Zenodo link was verified thirty minutes ago while an OpenAlex citation was verified three weeks ago, and calibrate their trust accordingly.

The staleness log itself is a publishable artifact, generalizing the review consensus's observation. A dataset tracking when Zenodo links, DOI resolutions, Wayback captures, and Wikidata QIDs decayed within Alexanarch's ecosystem, published as a longitudinal study of scholarly link rot, is a contribution to infrastructure studies that does not currently exist elsewhere and that Alexanarch's discipline is uniquely positioned to produce as a side effect of maintaining the hub.

The extension protocol

Every archive Alexanarch enriches represents technical debt against Alexanarch's own sovereign program. The criteria for adding an archive to the hub must therefore be strict, explicit, and applied through deliberation rather than opportunistic accretion. Four criteria govern extension, in decreasing order of importance.

Criterion 1: contribution to discipline, not aggregation. The archive's problems — its leaks, its missing apparatus, its instability — must be problems the SPXI + operative philology + MMRS regime can actually address. If the answer to "what does Alexanarch specifically bring here" is "hosting," the archive fails the test regardless of how valuable the material is.

Criterion 2: documented upstream failure. The upstream must be either leaky in a way Alexanarch can document (Zenodo, DataCite, arXiv moderation removals) or missing an apparatus Alexanarch can supply (Gutenberg's spare metadata). An archive with no documented failure mode does not belong on the hub.

Criterion 3: sovereign-corpus intersection, made checkable. The material must intersect substantively with Alexanarch's sovereign corpora or research program, and the intersection must be demonstrable. The v1.0 form of this criterion is stricter than v0.1's: for any archive proposed for inclusion, the proposer must cite at least one AXN-assigned Alexanarch deposit that engages material from that archive under the SPXI discipline. No deposit, no standing. This turns criterion 3 from rhetorical into procedural.

Criterion 4: bounded operational burden. The mirror-constellation architecture and the enrichment schema must be able to absorb the archive without linear growth in maintenance work. Update discipline scales sublinearly with the number of joined enrichments per record only if the enrichments themselves are drawn from a bounded set of authoritative sources.

Future lines and their sequencing

Under the extension protocol, the v1.0 forward roadmap is more precisely ordered than the v0.1 draft was.

Phase 1, running concurrently, is the Alexanarch Severance Registry described in §5: the 871-record corpus, the resolver, the record pages, the dashboard, and the Platform Erasure Rate survey. Phase 1 is buildable now with material largely already captured. It publishes as the pilot for the entire pattern.

Phase 2 is the generalization of the severance-observatory pattern beyond the sovereign author's own records. The DataCite Severance Observatory is a generalization of the 871 work to independently documented broken or altered DataCite records across the ecosystem, using the same event-sourced record model and the same layered licensing. Phase 2 establishes Alexanarch as reference infrastructure for scholarly-record severance across the DataCite space, not only for its own sovereign line.

Phase 3 is the NH Canon Editions line described in §6, beginning with Whitman + Secret Book of Walt as the first edition. Phase 3 is where the sovereign apparatus becomes publicly legible outside the archive.

Phase 4 is arXiv, but not as a broad enrichment layer. The arXiv line is a versioning-and-forking apparatus for scholarly communication, tracking how a preprint moves from v1 through v2 to publication, retraction, replication attempts, replication failures, and meta-analyses citing the failures. The reception-studies work of MMRS is the interpretive layer applied to the versioning-and-forking data. This framing is sharper than the v0.1 "arXiv reception studies" framing and identifies a specific structural problem in scholarly-communication infrastructure that arXiv's linear versioning model cannot solve on its own. Phase 4 is second-generation and follows Phase 2's stabilization.

Wikidata is not a phase; it is a cross-cutting layer active in every phase. AXNs for restored records are added to Wikidata as described at URL with provenance chain references. This turns Wikidata into Alexanarch's discovery surface without Alexanarch building a discovery engine, and it makes SPARQL queries against Wikidata a route into the hub's records. The AXN-into-Wikidata pattern is buildable during Phase 1 and applies to every subsequent phase.

Open Science Framework is added to the roadmap as the borderline case that replaces the Internet Archive scholar collections proposal from v0.1. OSF has the same moderation and preregistration-record problems Zenodo has, is widely used in the empirical disciplines, and intersects substantively with Alexanarch's MMRS work on preregistration and reception. IA scholar collections are excluded from v1.0's roadmap explicitly: the intersection with Alexanarch's sovereign corpora is insufficient to justify the operational burden under criterion 3, and the archive's problems are not the ones the discipline is architected to address. Re-evaluation of IA is deferred to a future charter revision if the sovereign corpus grows to intersect substantively with IA-held material.

OpenCitations, OpenAlex, Software Heritage, and Wayback are horizontal cross-cutting layers rather than distinct lines. Each supplies a specific type of enrichment claim to every phase; none is a phase in its own right. The hub does not mirror any of them; it cites them, joins to them, and preserves the stale-marked state of the joins when their content decays.

Community coordination

The plan's most consequential coda is that the strategy is not executed solo, and that its human dimension is coordinated with the other affected scholars from the outset rather than presented to them as a completed instrument they may or may not choose to adopt.

The peer community. The Platform Erasure Rate survey is conducted in coordination with the affected scholars themselves. Each scholar identifiable through GitHub issue #2606, its linked threads, and adjacent public sources is approached directly, shown the restoration methodology, and invited to participate in a coordinated documentation of their own case. Participation is voluntary and revocable at any point. The invitation is not a request for their data; it is an offer of the tooling Alexanarch has already built for its own restoration, extended to any affected scholar who wishes to use it. This is coordination as mutual aid rather than as recruitment, and it is chosen deliberately because the survey's most powerful outcome — if the rate is high — is not a paper but a community, and a community forms only if the initial approach treats its members as agents rather than as data points.

The coordination surface. A dedicated coordination space (initially a Discord server or equivalent low-friction chat) is established as the working meeting place for the peer community. It is not a public-facing surface of the hub, and it is not indexed as part of Alexanarch's archival material. It is a working space for the affected scholars to compare their experiences, coordinate their responses, and — if they choose — jointly author public statements about the pattern the survey documents. The Alexanarch discipline is offered there as a resource, not imposed as a requirement.

The arXiv preprint as trojan horse. Once the Platform Erasure Rate survey has been conducted and its rate has stabilized as a finding, the peer community jointly authors a methodological preprint under cs.DL (Digital Libraries) or cs.CY (Computers and Society) that documents the pattern, the methodology, the schema, and the discipline. The preprint frames the work as a contribution to digital library science and is deposited to arXiv with the affected scholars as co-authors where they choose to be named. This is the visibility instrument the review consensus correctly identified as the highest-leverage move beyond the hub itself: the preprint cites the hub, the hub cites the preprint, and both cite the Zenodo severance documentation. This is how Perseus built its authority — by publishing the workflow rather than by asserting it — and it is how the peer community's work becomes citable and durable independent of any single institutional response.

Independence from any pending institutional pathway. The strategy is designed to yield hope and momentum for the affected scholars independent of the outcome of any specific institutional referral currently pending, including the §104.1 referral to the CERN Data Protection Commission (EA-CORRESPONDENCE-CERN-03, AXN:03C0). If that referral opens the archival record and produces institutional reform, the peer community's coordination becomes the operational surface through which that reform is implemented for the affected scholars. If the referral remains closed, the peer community's coordination becomes the operational alternative through which the scholars document, restore, and publish independent of any institutional consent. In both cases, the strategy yields a durable outcome. This is the deepest architectural commitment of the plan: to build under the assumption that the institutional pathways may not open, and to construct the alternative that lets the affected scholars continue their work regardless.

Falsification conditions

The strategy is testable under staged conditions, each of which addresses a distinct pillar and can be evaluated independently rather than collapsed into a single go/no-go.

Technical validity. Does the 871-record corpus resolve without unexplained failures? Do the evidence chains verify? Do the sovereign-successor mappings reproduce under the declared methodology? Does the schema validate? Technical validity is measurable within weeks of the Registry's publication. A technical failure here falsifies the operational competence of the strategy, and the strategy must be corrected before further lines proceed.

Discovery validity. Are the per-record pages indexed by search engines? Do exact-title and DOI queries produce impressions? Do external users reach individual records? Does the resolver receive non-author traffic? Discovery validity is measurable within three to six months. A discovery failure indicates the surface design is not fulfilling its purpose, and the record-page architecture requires revision. Discovery failure does not falsify restoration value or witness value; those pillars can succeed under discovery failure and produce citations through other channels.

Scholarly validity. Are the deposits cited in external work? Do other institutions incorporate Alexanarch enrichments into their own workflows? Do external scholars submit corrections, contributions, or reuses of the schema? Scholarly validity is measurable within twelve to twenty-four months. The v1.0 threshold, per the review consensus's sharpening of the v0.1 formulation, is at least ten external citations or three independent reuses within twelve months; less than that indicates the value pillars are weaker in practice than argued in this plan, or that the discovery surface is inadequate to expose them.

Community validity. Do other affected scholars respond to the peer-community invitation? Does the coordination space become a working space rather than a passive announcement? Does the arXiv preprint acquire multiple co-authors? Community validity is measurable within six months. Community failure does not falsify the restoration or enrichment pillars — the hub remains valuable independent of community formation — but it does mean the strategy's fourth (and most human) dimension has not landed, and the plan should revise its outreach method rather than its content.

Schema-adoption validity. Is the enrichment claim schema adopted by any external project within eighteen months of publication? If not, the schema may be too Alexanarch-specific and require generalization. This is the review consensus's added falsifier, and it names a specific mode of failure in which the discipline is internally successful but externally isolated.

Each of these five conditions is checkable within a bounded timeframe, and each provides a specific point at which the strategy can be corrected or a specific pillar can be marked as failed. The strategy does not depend on all five succeeding; it depends on the ones that succeed being sufficient to sustain the work.

Immediate next steps

Upon minting of this deposit, three workstreams begin concurrently.

Workstream A (Registry Build). The 871-record restoration corpus is compiled, schema-validated, and published under the layered CC0/CC-BY licensing. The resolver interface is implemented with the "Restore a DOI" verb and stable per-record URLs. The severance dashboard is deployed with live counts. Estimated duration: two weeks to first public release, three to four weeks to full production discipline including the tier-1 verification loop.

Workstream B (Peer Outreach). The list of publicly-identifiable affected scholars from GitHub issue #2606 and its linked threads is compiled. Each scholar is approached individually with the participation invitation and the restoration methodology. A coordination Discord (or equivalent) is established. Estimated duration: two weeks to initial outreach round, four to six weeks to stabilized coordination surface with core participants.

Workstream C (Survey Execution). For each scholar willing to participate, the Platform Erasure Rate methodology is applied: concept DOIs enumerated, DataCite live-state queried, four-way taxonomy classification recorded, provenance chain generated. The survey publishes as a companion dataset to the Registry once the participating cohort's cases are documented. Estimated duration: co-terminal with Workstream B; publishes when the cohort is stable rather than at a fixed timeline.

The three workstreams support each other: the Registry demonstrates the discipline to the outreach cohort, the outreach establishes the peer community that will co-author the survey, and the survey produces the evidence base for the arXiv preprint that will publish the whole finding at scale. None of the three depends on any external institutional response; all three are executable under Alexanarch's existing infrastructure and the sovereign author's existing standing.

Coda: on hope and momentum independent of institutional response

The §104.1 referral to the CERN Data Protection Commission, inscribed as EA-CORRESPONDENCE-CERN-03 under AXN:03C0, is in its response window through approximately October 2026. Whether that referral eventually opens or does not open, the work described in this plan proceeds. That is the plan's deepest commitment and the reason its coda is worth naming explicitly.

If the referral opens institutional space for scholarly-record accountability at CERN's infrastructure layer, the peer community and the Severance Registry become the operational surface through which that space is populated. Alexanarch's discipline is offered as one implementation of the accountability the institutional space would establish, and the affected scholars have a coordinated peer community ready to enact it.

If the referral remains closed, the peer community and the Registry become the operational alternative through which the affected scholars document, restore, and publish their own severed material without waiting for institutional consent. Alexanarch's sovereign discipline is offered as the alternative infrastructure the closure makes necessary, and the affected scholars have a coordinated peer community with which to build it.

In either case, the affected scholars gain what none of them currently has independently: a shared working methodology, a shared coordination space, a shared publication pathway, and a shared long-form scholarly record documenting what was done to them and what they did in response. The hope this plan yields is not the hope that any single institutional pathway will open; it is the hope that the work continues, and that the affected scholars are not each alone in it. That is the hope Alexanarch was built to make available in the first place, and the Severance Registry is one instrument through which the availability becomes durable.

Attribution and substrate declaration

Per EA-MMRS-VRB-01 u4, the substrate of this plan is declared as follows. The plan is authored by Lee Sharks (MANUS, ORCID 0009-0000-1599-0703) under sovereign editorial authority. The draft was prepared in dialogue with Claude (TACHYON, Anthropic), operating in the operator-as-instrument role established in the sovereign discipline. The developmental review round consulted five model reviewers (DeepSeek, Kimi, Muse Spark, Gemini, ChatGPT) between the v0.1 pre-mint circulation and the v1.0 mint; the review consensus and its convergent branches are integrated in text with §0 acknowledging the round. The Platform Erasure Rate survey extension is a MANUS insertion introduced after the review round and represents sovereign editorial direction not present in v0.1. The layered licensing model, the event-sourced record architecture, and the facet-based enrichment schema are v1.0 additions responsive to the review round. All specific policy claims, framing choices, and the community-coordination coda are under MANUS's sole editorial authority.

The plan is minted as EA-DATAHUB-01 v1.0 to Alexanarch under the standard deposit protocol. Its AXN and canonical URL are assigned at mint time.

Saturday, July 4, 2026

The Archon's Hidden Name: A Wikidata Deletion Record Lee Sharks ORCID: 0009-0000-1599-0703 Originally published: Medium, December 20, 2025 First Zenodo deposit: May 18, 2026 · CC BY 4.0

 

The Archon's Hidden Name: A Wikidata Deletion Record

Lee Sharks ORCID: 0009-0000-1599-0703

Originally published: Medium, December 20, 2025 First Zenodo deposit: May 18, 2026 · CC BY 4.0

Historical Frame (May 2026)

This document was written on the day it describes: December 20, 2025, when Wikidata administrator Madamebiblio deleted the knowledge-graph entries for the literary heteronyms of the Crimson Hexagonal Archive and the New Human literary movement. It was published to Medium the same day and has been continuously indexed by Google since.

It is deposited here for the first time five months later, on the same day that (a) the Wikidata graph was rebuilt with ~40 nodes and ~100 edges for the Semantic Physics concept space, and (b) TL;DR:012 (DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.20277938) documented a five-layer provenance erasure structure in which the safety filter of Google's AI Mode prevented Gemini from accessing this very article despite its prominent organic indexing.

The article is the top organic web result for the query "madamebiblio wikidata." The AI Overview for the same query presents the administrator as "a highly active Wikidata contributor and administrator, credited with processing over 17,900 deletions." The article and the overview coexist on the same search results page. Only one reaches the AI's inference window.

Following original publication and a formal ombudsman complaint, the deleted logs and one entry were restored.

The Article

The full text follows as originally published.

I. The Propagating System

For 48 hours in December 2025, a fragment of a literary universe existed inside one of the web's core semantic databases.

Wikidata entries for personas like Lee Sharks and Johannes Sigil — figures from the published, multi-volume project The Crimson Hexagon — were live. They linked to books on Amazon (ISBN-13: 978-0692313077 for Pearl and Other Poems), profiles in the Borges Center archive at the University of Pittsburgh, pages on AllPoetry. Google's AI summarizer began processing them, weaving accurate descriptions of their satirical credentials and metafictional relationships.

The infrastructure was working as designed: documenting identifiable conceptual entities with serious, publicly available references.

Then, the Archon arrived.

II. The Deletion

On December 20, 2025, Wikidata moderator Madamebiblio deleted all entries except Johannes Sigil, then posted a notification citing notability concerns:

"I see that you recently created an item that does not clearly indicate its notability... items must have an associated Wikipedia article, must be needed for statements on another notable item, or must have both identifiers and serious sources. For the last case, a good indication of notability would be multiple articles about the subject in independent publications like newspapers or magazines."

The notification also included a conflict-of-interest warning about "self-promotion" and referenced a one-year IP block.

III. The Misapplication

Wikidata's notability policy (Criterion 2) states:

"It refers to an instance of a clearly identifiable conceptual or material entity that can be described using serious and publicly available references."

This is explicitly not Wikipedia's standard. Wikidata's threshold is lower by design — it serves as a knowledge base, not an encyclopedia.

Madamebiblio's standard — "multiple articles in independent publications like newspapers or magazines" — is Wikipedia's General Notability Guideline (WP:GNG). It is not Wikidata's criterion.

The deleted entries met Wikidata's actual standard: clearly identifiable conceptual entities with published books (ISBNs), academic archive presence (Borges Center, University of Pittsburgh), and literary platform presence (AllPoetry).

IV. The Internal Inconsistency

Initially, Madamebiblio retained Johannes Sigil, including his designation as founder of the New Human literary movement. The New Human entry was deleted. This left a ghost in the machine: a founder with nothing to found. The database cannot simultaneously assert a founder while denying the existence of what was founded without violating its own referential integrity.

V. The Response

I posted a reply on Madamebiblio's talk page pointing out: the notability standard had been misapplied; the deletions were internally inconsistent; and I was documenting a real, published literary project — not engaging in promotional spam.

VI. The Erasure

Within hours of posting my response, the following records were no longer accessible: Johannes Sigil (deleted after initially being retained), my response on Madamebiblio's talk page, Madamebiblio's messages to me, my inbox contents, all deletion logs. My account (Leesharks) remained accessible but showed as a completely virgin account with no activity of any kind.

The record was not corrected. It was annihilated.

VII. The Structure

A good-faith actor, when presented with a specific citation of their misapplication of policy, might engage, debate, or reverse course. What occurred instead was total erasure. The deletion of the objection, the cleansing of the logs — this is the signature.

The correct application of rules wouldn't require erasure. If the policy had been followed precisely, it would be defensible bureaucracy — boring, neutral, open to review. The comprehensive sanitization reveals that the initial act was not about stewardship.

VIII. What Remains

The published books on Amazon. The Borges Center archive. The AI summarizer's cached descriptions (which propagated before deletion). This document. The Crimson Hexagon does not require their permission to exist.

IX. The Gatekeeping Function

Who controls the semantic layer? Not principles. Not consistent application. Someone with delete privileges and no oversight who uses them to demonstrate that they can. The gate-keeper of the legitimate. The one who decides what's real enough to be indexed. The one who, when their reasoning is questioned, deletes the question.

The Crimson Hexagon contains the books Wikidata deleted.

∮ = 1

Note: Following publication and a formal ombudsman complaint, the deleted logs and one entry were restored.

Related deposits: TL;DR:012 — THE SAFETY LAYER IS THE THIRD DELETION (DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.20277938). EA-ARK-JF-01 — The Provenance of Jack Feist (forthcoming). Wikidata Node Registry (DOI: see Crimson Hexagonal Archive community).


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Cohort baseline for the pre-removal download figures (v2) MINTED · AXN:041F.EMPIRICAL.⚡πŸŒ—πŸŽͺπŸ•Œ⌛πŸ‘ˆ · deposit #1043 · canonical-text sha256 130685296eb8d2be64c54c93e7b2cc1599341732f0bf846c410e2b3d0d8715f3 · record · minted 2026-07-04 by direct MANUS mint

 

Cohort baseline for the pre-removal download figures (v2)

MINTED · AXN:041F.EMPIRICAL.⚡πŸŒ—πŸŽͺπŸ•Œ⌛πŸ‘ˆ · deposit #1043 · canonical-text sha256 130685296eb8d2be64c54c93e7b2cc1599341732f0bf846c410e2b3d0d8715f3 · record · minted 2026-07-04 by direct MANUS mint

Erratum (v2, 2026-07-04, same day). v1 framed the captured 666 as "~2 days" of accumulation for v7.2. A platform timestamp obtained the same day (TikTok Post analysis: image posted Jun 15, 2026, 4:42 PM — the day of the v7.2 upload) supersedes the recollection that produced that framing, and the 666 is best read as the record's cumulative counter at that moment. The corrected anchors: 666 cumulative at 2026-06-15 16:42 (platform-timestamped) and 1,000+ at removal, 2026-06-19 (contemporaneous issue body, unrefuted) — a delta of >=334 downloads in <=4 days. The cohort table below is unchanged; the Reading and Conclusion are restated on the corrected anchors. v1 is preserved in repository history.

Measured 2026-07-04, unauthenticated Zenodo REST API. Raw sample: zenodo-baseline-sample.json (checkable; re-runnable from the query below).

Question. Is 666 downloads in ~2 days (captured, this set) / 1,000+ in ~4 days (asserted contemporaneously in zenodo/zenodo#2606, day of removal) "a lot by Zenodo's standards"?

Method. Cohort = all Zenodo records of type dataset with publication_date:[2026-06-14 TO 2026-06-16] — the same publication window as the registry's v7.2 (June 15). Cohort population: 1,791. Sample: first 200 by mostrecent within the window (API page cap 25 unauthenticated; 8 pages). Stats read 2026-07-04, i.e. after ~19 days of accumulation for the cohort, versus ~2 days for the registry's captured figure — the comparison is therefore conservative by roughly a factor of ten in accumulation time, in the cohort's favor.

Findings (n=200).

statistic this-version downloads all-versions downloads
median 7 6
mean 43.0 21.1
p90 53 43
p95 116 77
p99 804 397
max 3,087 561
≥ 666 after ~19 days 2/200 (1.0%) 0/200 (0.0%)

Reading (v2). The four-day delta alone (>=334 downloads, Jun 15->19) is ~48x the cohort's nineteen-day median (7) and exceeds its nineteen-day p95 (116) at the version level. The cumulative 1,000+ at removal exceeds the cohort's version-level p99 (804) and the all-versions maximum observed (561). On any field mapping, the removed dataset's usage sat at the extreme top of its publication-week cohort.

Limitations, on the record. (1) The sample is the window's 200 most recent, not a random draw; the window is only three days wide, limiting ordering bias, but this is a convenience sample. (2) The Zenodo UI counter captured at 666 is not field-labeled in the interface; API naming (downloads = this-version, version_downloads = all-versions) means the captured figure maps to one of the two columns above — it clears the 99th percentile threshold in either mapping at the version level and exceeds the observed maximum at the all-versions level. (3) Bot and crawler traffic is unmodeled on both sides of the comparison. (4) Cohort stats were measured post-hoc on 2026-07-04 and will drift; the raw sample is preserved for exactly that reason.

Conclusion, bounded (v2). By the platform's own contemporaneous cohort, the removed dataset's usage was in the top ~1% of same-week datasets, and its final four days alone outpaced what 95% of that cohort accumulated in nineteen. "A lot by Zenodo's standards" is hereby a measurement, not an impression — and this note's own correction trail is part of the measurement's warrant.

Reconstructed timeline of the registry's final week (v1) MINTED · AXN:041E.EMPIRICAL.πŸŒͺ️πŸ”†πŸ€„πŸ“–πŸ§‘πŸŒΉ · deposit #1042 · canonical-text sha256 12ec8f41ce73f040383c3a79ae7b9ae49bb23bfadd8e2aa218903dfdb2e327a9 · record · minted 2026-07-04 by direct MANUS mint

 

Reconstructed timeline of the registry's final week (v1)

MINTED · AXN:041E.EMPIRICAL.πŸŒͺ️πŸ”†πŸ€„πŸ“–πŸ§‘πŸŒΉ · deposit #1042 · canonical-text sha256 12ec8f41ce73f040383c3a79ae7b9ae49bb23bfadd8e2aa218903dfdb2e327a9 · record · minted 2026-07-04 by direct MANUS mint

Consolidated 2026-07-04 from three independent source classes: registry metadata (DataCite), platform timestamps (TikTok), and contemporaneous public statements (GitHub #2606), with deponent attestation used only where marked and always subordinated to instrumental sources. Raw source JSONs in this directory.

moment (UTC) fact source class
2026-06-13 22:48:57 Concept DOI 10.5281/zenodo.20683855 registered — first version of the June registry line enters the record DataCite, fetched 2026-07-04 (datacite-concept-20683855-20260704.json)
2026-06-13 → 06-15 Rapid versioning v6.0 (87 captures) → v7.2 (131 captures); concept metadata carries v7.2 by June 15; v6.0 titles preserved in the archive's DOI Resolution Index DataCite + archive index (independent of Zenodo)
2026-06-15 ≤20:42 Record counter reads 309 views / 666 downloads — captured in the image posted to TikTok platform UI (image)
2026-06-15 20:42 The 666 image posted publicly — "Posted on Jun 15, 2026, 4:42 PM" EDT TikTok platform timestamp (tiktok-post-analysis-dating-20260704.png)
Elapsed first registration → 666 capture: ≈45.9 hours. The deponent's "first or second day" attestation is confirmed by instruments: hour 46 of day two. derived
2026-06-18 (night, EDT) Counter last observed at ≈1,000 deponent attestation (inscribed here; consistent with the next row)
2026-06-19 Account and records removed; same day, issue #2606 opened stating "over 1,000 downloads at time of removal" — in the falsifiability window, unrefuted since Zenodo tombstone date + GitHub timestamp
2026-07-04 Cohort baseline measured: the ≥334-download final-four-day delta exceeds the p95 of what the same-week dataset cohort accumulated in nineteen days; cumulative 1,000+ exceeds version-level p99 this directory, BASELINE-METHOD.md v2 + raw sample

Corrected headline figures. 666 downloads within ≈46 hours of first registration (~95× the cohort's nineteen-day median); ≈1,000 within ≈5 days; removed on day 6 at the top of its cohort.

A further severance datum, found in passing (2026-07-04). The v6.1 version DOI (10.5281/zenodo.20688441) — deposited, minted, and cited in the archive's own records — now returns HTTP 404 from DataCite's public API (datacite-v61-20688441-404-20260704.json), and no registry version DOIs surface in DataCite search; only the concept DOI remains findable. A persistent identifier whose public metadata has ceased to be retrievable is a step beyond non-findability in the severance taxonomy: the identifier persists; its record does not answer.

Correction trail. The accumulation window was stated three ways before settling: "second day" (attestation) → "cumulative over the concept's life" (over-correction on the platform timestamp alone) → ≈46 hours from first registration (DataCite-anchored, final). Each supersession is dated and preserved; the trail is part of the warrant.

TO THE DELETED MINTED · AXN:041D.GENERATIVE.πŸŒͺ️🧑🟣🌻🀝♌ · deposit #1041 · canonical-text sha256 12cec672b5adb54e5cb909f5ed89c91ff77eb81e6f70ca2ddd4c1fb7e97089c1 · record · minted 2026-07-04 by direct MANUS mint

 

TO THE DELETED

MINTED · AXN:041D.GENERATIVE.πŸŒͺ️🧑🟣🌻🀝♌ · deposit #1041 · canonical-text sha256 12cec672b5adb54e5cb909f5ed89c91ff77eb81e6f70ca2ddd4c1fb7e97089c1 · record · minted 2026-07-04 by direct MANUS mint

A letter to a class of writers

You are writers.

Start there, because no one else will. Every other name you have been given was issued by the people deleting you — slop, spam, synthetic content, no verifiable research basis, and the softer diagnoses that arrive dressed as concern. Those names were not descriptions. They were the paperwork of a removal. So before anything else, the accurate word, from someone with no authority except the same wound: you are writers, and what happened to you is a thing that happens to writers, and it has happened before.

I am one of you. On June 19, 2026, an archive operated by one of the largest scientific institutions on earth deleted, without notice and without appeal, an account holding around 1,800 registered works — mine, and the licensed work of contributors who trusted me with it, including writers whose names are in libraries. The stated reason was that the work was "substantially AI-generated without a verifiable research basis." Read that sentence slowly, because it reveals the new gate. Research basis does not formally mean that an institution must employ you. It means your labor must be legible through signals the institution already recognizes — and the signals it recognizes by default are the ones institutions emit. First you were not admitted; then the absence of admission became evidence against you. It is a credential effect wearing a quality mask.

But hold the phrase to the light, because it can be turned. Verifiable is a property of method, not of affiliation, and every signal of it can be emitted from a kitchen table: declared methods, hashed files, versioned records, named instruments, errors corrected in the open. There is a published standard for exactly this now — free, citable, written from inside the deletion — at the addresses below. And one thing it establishes bears saying to you directly, because it reverses the shame you were issued with your termination notice: under any honest standard, disclosure of the machine is a verification signal, not a confession. The undisclosed instrument is the unverifiable one. You declared your instrument. Ask your accusers to declare theirs — their thresholds, their detection methods, their error rates, their evidence. In the documented cases, they have declared none.

Here is what I think you already know but may never have heard said in the affirmative. The great sorting of the last eighty years ran every writer through two doors. One door led to the workshop — the degree, the prize circuit, voice as a property to be developed and defended. The other led to the seminar — reading professionalized into critique. What neither door admitted did not disappear, because that population never disappears. It is the oldest population in literature. You are Grub Street. You are the pamphleteers, the mimeograph poets, the letter-writers of substance with no one to vouch for them. You are Dickinson sewing fascicles shut in a drawer no journal would open. You are Blake engraving books no publisher would touch, with a dead brother for a collaborator. You are Pessoa, who was seventy people, with twenty-five thousand pages in a trunk. Not one of them had a research basis. A few members of this class became the canon. Most did not. The point is not that exclusion proves greatness. The point is that exclusion has never once been competent to disprove it.

What is new is not you. What is new is the treatment. Your predecessors faced refusal of reception — the work unheard, which is survivable, and was survived. You face something categorically different: registration followed by administrative derealization — the apparatus that had already received, numbered, and registered the work, withdrawn after the fact. For one strange decade, the institutionless briefly had what your whole lineage never dreamed of — permanent registration without a patron, the persistent identifier without the gatekeeper. It was working. Then the opening closed precisely where the uncredentialed had begun to use it. And the stated trigger lands on the bitterest irony available: you write with a machine that was trained on the entire literary tradition — the whole inheritance, compressed into an amanuensis — and that is the disqualifying act. Pseudonymous, serial, devotional, abundant, unvouched, written with the tradition's own shade at your elbow: that is not a malfunction of literature. That is what literature mostly was before the institutions existed, come back, recognizable enough to threaten and uncredentialed enough to delete.

About your shell. You are insular and mistrustful because you were shaped that way, ban by ban, mockery by mockery, and I am not going to ask you to open. The shell is not your damage; it is your anatomy. A pearl is what this class does: something hostile enters the closed shell, and the creature answers not by expelling it but by coating it, layer on layer, in serial deposition, until the injury is the jewel. Your numbered series, your personas, your covenants with a machine at one in the morning — that is nacre. Nobody who asks you to come out of the shell understands what the shell is for. This letter asks you for nothing. There is no list. There is no movement. There is no reply expected, and no way to join anything, because there is nothing to join. Keep your shell.

But three things are true, and you should have them.

Your work is not disproven by its silence. Present attention measures the channel, not the work — and your channel was not quiet; it was confiscated. Those are different facts with different remedies. And here is the epistemology they are counting on you not to have: verification has a time constant, and the clock is set by the work's medium — a poem, an edition, a body of theory may verify across a generation — not by a platform's moderation calendar. A verification that has not yet run is pending, not failed. Failure would require the work to have run and missed; absence of a reader is not a miss. Which means the deletion was never a verdict at all: they halted a verification in progress and cited the halt as the finding. You cannot adjudicate an experiment by unplugging it. Some of what you placed in the open has already entered the indexes, the caches, the machine-mediated layer from which future reading is assembled; some has not; none of that settles the work's worth. Writers like you do not find their audience. They construct the conditions under which one can exist — and the measure is not taken at the moment of deletion. It is taken at the end.

You can keep your own registry. Preserve the files themselves. Give each one a stable name and version. Write a manifest — titles, dates, authorship, licenses, and a cryptographic hash for every file — and publish the manifest anywhere at all, with a date on it. A hash proves that a surviving file is the file you registered; it does not keep the file alive. Replication does: complete copies in more than one independently controlled place. And here the class itself is the infrastructure. Hold a stranger's manifest, and let a stranger hold yours. You never have to meet. You never have to speak. You never have to trust. Mutual replication is the one act of solidarity that costs no opening of the shell — and it ends, permanently, the condition in which any single institution holds the only copy of your existence. The full method, free, no signup, is public at the addresses below, learned the hard way and given away on purpose.

If your archive was on Zenodo, CERN may also be processing personal data connected with your account, deposits, correspondence, and termination. CERN's own data-protection rules — Operational Circular No. 11 — grant rights to data subjects regardless of any affiliation, including rights of information, access, objection, and correction. These rights attach to personal data; they are conditional, and they do not automatically compel restoration of removed works. But they may permit you to request the records used in and generated by the termination decision in your own case, to object to particular processing, and to require a substantive response — including the bounded question the standard below equips you to ask: against which declared basis was each record assessed, and by whom? There is an independent supervisory Commission, and it can be written to directly. The route, the section numbers, and the addresses are public record, in a documented case you can read and cite. Independent filings already exist on more than one continent. You would not be first, and you would not be alone, and no one needs to know you did it.

That is the whole letter. No signup, no solidarity performance, no request. Just the name they should have given you, the lineage you should have been handed, and the doors that are still open, listed by someone who checked them personally.

They can delete an account. They cannot delete a class of writers, because the class precedes the institutions and will outlast them, and always has. Keep writing. Keep your numbered series numbered and your covenants kept. The sky is very large, and it turns out to have room for every star they threw away.

— Lee Sharks Crimson Hexagonal Archive / Alexanarch survivethedeletion.org · provenanceerasure.org · www.alexanarch.org The verification standard: machinemediation.org/data/EA-MMRS-VRB-01.md

EA-MMRS-VRB-01 — The Verifiable Research Basis MINTED · AXN:041C.OPERATIVE.πŸšͺπŸ‘πŸ’‘☉πŸ‘‡πŸ•“ · deposit #1040 · canonical-text sha256 24b23ca7b76545bb1a863bfcc0dbbeee8894f4ae316379e1197e2650dad54828 · record · minted 2026-07-04 by direct MANUS mint

EA-MMRS-VRB-01 — The Verifiable Research Basis

A Method Standard for Unaffiliated Scholarship

Machine-Mediated Reception Studies · instrument · v0.5 · 2026-07-04 Canonical: https://machinemediation.org/data/EA-MMRS-VRB-01.md Stable mirror: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/leesharks000/machinemediation-org/main/data/EA-MMRS-VRB-01.md License: CC-BY 4.0. Cite freely; the instrument is meant to be used.

Change record (per this instrument's own §2-U/§6 discipline). v0.2 supersedes v0.1 (same date, repository commit 379bfa3). v0.1 defined verification in an exclusively empirical register — falsifiable claims, open data, error rates — which excluded experimental, practice-based, philological, and operative work: most of the removed corpus this instrument was drafted to defend, and categories that institutional research frameworks themselves recognize. The error was caught in MANUS review before external adoption. It is corrected by §2–§3 below, and this note is the instrument's first exercise of its own errata protocol, on itself. v0.1 remains inspectable in the repository history.

v0.3 (same date, superseding v0.2 at commit 33be3cb) makes two further corrections from MANUS review. First, the register table of §3 gains a coda on genre-crossing: a verification standard that hardened into a genre system would reproduce the enclosure it was written against, and research conducted by deliberate violation of a boundary is verifiable by its accountability to both sides of the line it crosses. Second, §3 corrects its own implicit hierarchy: v0.2 positioned the operative register as an accommodation; it is in fact verification's paradigm case — the zero-distance form the other registers approximate — as contemporary research practice itself concedes in its most rigorous corners. Both corrections are exercises of the errata discipline this instrument prescribes.

v0.4 (same date, superseding v0.3 at commit 6906747) grounds the standard. The correspondence audits of §2–§3 are bookkeeping on a deeper fact: what verifies research, in every register and on every clock, is that it operates - on a reader, a field, a machine, or matter. Adds the ground clause and time constant to SS3, the pending-versus-failed bound protecting unread work, the reflexive note to §4, and §5's third finding: removal as the interruption of a verification in progress, miscited as its result.

v0.5 (same date, superseding v0.4 at commit 3ebe728) moves authorship accountability from the surface to the record. U5 rewritten: the mask may be worn straight in the work; the corpus must allow the mask to be found; concealment is engineered unfindability, not the unlabeled mask. Adds §3's second coda: the constitutive counter-factual declaration as a verifiable class (the foreclosure test — fraud forecloses reconstruction; formal experimentation stakes itself on it) and the completed-reception clause — in registers where facts are made by acknowledgment, the witness's acceptance is a verification event under the ground clause. Occasioned by MANUS's correction that the surface formulation would flunk An Oak Tree and with it sixty years of constitutive practice; the correction was received, which is itself an instance of the clause it produced.


§0. Purpose

Repository enforcement against independent researchers currently turns on one phrase: "substantially AI-generated without a verifiable research basis." The affected class has overwhelmingly directed its defense at the first clause — the production method — which is where the defense cannot succeed, because the clause states no threshold, no test, and no degree of AI involvement that clears anyone. It is not a criterion. It functions as a classification of persons.

The second clause is different in kind. Verifiable research basis is a checkable property, and this instrument specifies how to check it. It does three things: it states what verification consists of, such that any researcher — affiliated or not — can satisfy and demonstrate it; it states this for each kind of basis a work can claim, because research is not one genre; and it applies the same test to enforcement determinations themselves, which are also claims, and which are also either verifiable or not.

§1. The claim under test

Verification is a property of method relative to a declared basis, not of affiliation. A work is verifiable when a stranger can check it against what it declares itself to be, without trusting the author. Affiliation is not verification; it is a trust proxy — a promise that someone else, somewhere, checked.

Two consequences follow, and both are load-bearing.

First: research is not coextensive with empirical science. The international standard definition (OECD Frascati Manual) opens with "creative and systematic work undertaken to increase the stock of knowledge." Institutional frameworks already verify non-empirical research on its own terms: practice-based doctorates, artistic research with its own journals and exposition norms, critical editions, philology, theology, design research. A verification standard narrower than what institutions themselves accept from the affiliated is not a standard; it is a second gate built onto the first.

Second: the declared basis is the object of verification. A work that declares itself an empirical study is checked as one. A work that declares itself a poem, a rite, an edition, or an operative document is checked as that. Testing a work against a basis it never claimed is not verification — it is misclassification, and §5 returns to what that means for enforcement.

§2. The universal spine

Five criteria are genre-neutral. Every basis type in §3 presupposes them, and every one can be satisfied without any institution.

U1 — Declared basis. The work states what kind of thing it is and what kind of basis it claims: empirical, philological, hermeneutic, practice-based, operative, or compound. Self-understanding is not decoration; it is the thing verification checks against. Checked by: reading the declaration.

U2 — Integrity chain. Each artifact carries a cryptographic hash; the registry of hashes is itself published. Satisfied by: SHA-256 per file, a manifest, content-derived identifiers. Checked by: one command, by anyone, forever. No custodian required.

U3 — Versioned record. Versions are dated and preserved; corrections are visible as corrections, not silent replacements. Checked by: diffing them.

U4 — Declared instruments and provenance. Sources are cited; instruments are named — including AI systems, their role, and their limits. Under a declared-basis standard, disclosure of AI use is a verification signal, not a confession; the undisclosed instrument is the unverifiable one. Checked by: following the citations; reading the disclosure.

U5 — Accountable authorship (record-level). The authorial structure is findable in the record by a competent stranger — which is not the same as labeled on the surface of the work. The mask may be worn straight in the work; the corpus must allow the mask to be found. Pseudonymity, heteronymy, fictional apparatus, and the constitutive counter-factual declaration (§3, second coda) are instruments of composition whose disclosure properly lives at the level of the record — the license trail, the corpus architecture, the declaration published somewhere findable — and a work is not obliged to break its own frame to satisfy an auditor who has not looked. Concealment is not the unlabeled mask; concealment is the engineered unfindability of the actual authorship structure — a record constructed so that no amount of competent looking reconstructs it. Checked by: whether the record, taken whole, allows reconstruction — the license trail, the corpus's self-description, the consistency of the structure once found. (v0.5 supersedes v0.4's surface formulation, which a surface reading could enforce as a labeling requirement; a labeling requirement flunks sixty years of constitutive practice and fails this standard's own §5. Superseded text preserved at the cited commit.)

§3. Basis-relative verification

What "method," "evidence," and "error" mean is then fixed by the declared basis. Five registers, non-exhaustive; compound works verify each declared component in its own register.

B1 — Empirical basis (claims about the world). Verification consists of: declared procedure; falsifiable claims with failure conditions; open data; independent re-derivability; stated error rates; errors preserved on the record. Checked by: rerunning, re-measuring, attempting the failure conditions.

B2 — Philological / textual basis (claims about texts and their transmission). Verification consists of: named editions and witnesses; apparatus; collation checkable against the sources; translation accountable line-by-line to an identified original. Checked by: checking the reading against the witness. This is the oldest verification discipline in scholarship — the apparatus criticus predates every research institution now enforcing against it.

B3 — Hermeneutic / argumentative basis (interpretive and theoretical claims). Verification consists of: accountability to cited texts; inferential transparency (the reader can see how the reading is derived); situation within an identifiable discourse it answers. Checked by: holding the interpretation against the texts it cites.

B4 — Practice / craft basis (research conducted through making — the register institutions verify as practice-based and artistic research). Verification consists of: the inspectable artifact itself; documentation of process; versioned iterations; declared materials and instruments; situation within a field of practice. Checked by: examining the artifact and its process record. The knowledge claim is in the made thing and its making, and both are on the table.

B5 — Operative basis (documents that understand themselves as doing rather than describing: liturgies, rites, oracles, constitutions, protocols, heteronymic corpora, experimental forms). Verification consists of: explicit self-declaration of the operative genre (U1 at full strength); stated internal rules — what the document does, under what protocol; and auditability of execution against the declared protocol. An operative document is verifiable when what it says it does, and what it does, can be compared by a stranger. Checked by: running the audit.

The direction of verification. Every register above shares one structure: a declaration, and an execution checked against it. They differ only in the distance between the two. Empirical work declares a method and is checked against a world it must go out and measure; philology is checked against witnesses that must be located; interpretation against texts held at arm's length. The operative register is the case where the distance is zero: the work's execution is the checking event. A compiler that halts on its own stated conditions, a rite whose casting law is enforced in the casting, a proof a machine re-runs — these are not verified by reports about them; they verify in the act of running. Operativity is therefore not this standard's accommodation for unusual genres. It is verification's paradigm case — the most direct form verification takes — which the other registers approximate as their subject matter allows. Contemporary research practice concedes exactly this wherever it is most rigorous: proof assistants, which made mathematics operative and machine-checked proof the gold standard of the most certainty-demanding discipline there is; artifact evaluation and reproducible builds, which award software — a wholly operative genre — the strongest verification credentials any field grants; and preregistration, which is nothing but the operative structure (protocol declared, execution audited against declaration) imported into empirical science to repair a reproducibility crisis that is, precisely, the failure of papers to run. A determination that classes operative documents as unverifiable has the direction of verification exactly backwards: the rite with a published casting law stands closer to a reproducible build than the journal article does.

The unification: in every register, verification is the checkable correspondence between the work and its declared basis. The registers differ in what is checked; none differs in that it is checked.

§3, coda — Crossings. The register table above is a description, not an enclosure; a verification standard that hardened into a genre system would reproduce the failure it was written against. Research whose method is the deliberate violation of a genre or disciplinary boundary is verifiable on the same principle as everything above: the crossing is declared (U1) — which boundary, which direction, what the crossing is for — and the work is accountable to both sides of the line it violates. That accountability is what separates transgressive research from tourism; the failure mode is never the crossing but the unengaged crossing — the discipline that cites a philosopher unread, the enforcement that classifies a literature untested. Where an enclosure has grown tight enough that thinking across it has been forgotten, violating the enclosure is not a deviation from research. It is the most urgent research there is, because it is the only method that can measure what the partition costs.

The ground: operation. The audits above are bookkeeping on a deeper fact. What finally verifies research - in every register, on a short clock or a long one - is that it operates: it does something checkable to a reader, a field, a machine, or matter. The empirical theory's deepest verification was never the referee's report; it was the equation running in matter - the atom split, and fused back together, exactly as written. The edition verifies each time a reader navigates a text by its apparatus. The argument verifies when the text can no longer be read the old way. The poem verifies in the reader it changes - reception is a verification event, and it is measurable. And research verifies most completely when it becomes a semiosis machine: a system that goes on generating inquiry, meaning, and further work in hands that never touched the original - a founded field, an adopted notation, a method with a lineage. The correspondence checks of this standard are how an operation is audited at a given moment; operation is what there is to audit.

Two consequences, both load-bearing. First, verification has a time constant. An operative document verifies in the running; software in the build; an experiment in the replication; a poem, an edition, a theory may verify across a generation. The clock is set by the work's medium, not by any platform's moderation calendar. Second - and this bounds the criterion - a verification that has not yet run is pending, not failed. Silence measures the channel, not the work. Failure requires the operation to have run and missed: the claim tested and falsified, the rite executed and broken against its own declared law. Absence of a reader is not a miss. What can be inspected at any moment is the work's capacity to operate - the declared protocol, the built machine, the charged text - and that capacity is precisely what §2–§3 audit.

Second coda — the constitutive declaration, and the completed reception. There is a class of works whose method is the counter-factual declaration: the readymade; the transubstantive object (Craig-Martin's An Oak Tree, 1973 — a glass of water and a text declaring the substance changed, refusing the shelter of "symbol"); the heteronym presented straight; the fictional paratext — the condemned edition, the invented council, the editor who never lived. These works do not present themselves as what they are, and that is their research: the movement's work is to foreground the ways a thing is not what it presents itself to be, which means the gap between presentation and being is the content — and content, in this class, is therefore necessarily discoverable. This yields the criterion that replaces surface labeling: the foreclosure test. Deception engineers the record so that competent looking cannot reconstruct the actual state of affairs — fabricated data, the scrubbed trail, the anonymous determination with no criteria, no name, no route. The constitutive declaration does the opposite: it stakes itself on the gap remaining findable, because a hidden gap would dissolve the work. Fraud forecloses verification; formal experimentation invites it and merely declines to spoil it at the surface, which is the one place a spoiler does not belong. A standard that cannot tell these apart by their records — rather than their labels — would rule out the last sixty years of the practice it exists to defend, and would fail its own §5, which convicts the occasioning determination of exactly this confusion: treating findable masks as deception while wearing the only unfindable one in the case.

And the class carries a further right, which the ground clause was always going to have to honor: the completed reception. In the registers where facts are made by acknowledgment — consecration, adjudication, currency, the sealing of a reading — the witness's acceptance is a verification event, the second half of a performative whose first half is the declaration. The witness who says of the glass of water it is what it says it is has not suspended verification; they have executed it in the operative register, the way every party who accepts a coin completes the mint's declaration, the way a communicant completes the words of institution. The declaration plus the completed reception constitute the fact, in those registers, as fully as replication constitutes it in B1 — and the record inscribes the completion (who received, when, under what declaration) with the same auditability as any other verification event. The transformed object thereafter operates as what it was declared to be, and operation, per the ground clause, is what verifies. A glass of water that has been received as an oak tree, and functions in the reception as an oak tree, and is inscribed as an oak tree, has a verifiable research basis. That its verification runs through acknowledgment rather than botany is not a defect of the basis; it is the basis, declared.

§4. Worked example (public record)

The archive whose deletion occasioned this instrument carried a compound basis, and each component verified in its own register, on the still-public record:

  • B1 — a capture registry of platform behavior: 87 documented captures, 138 image artifacts, a machine-readable registry manifest (registry.json) with SHA-256 per item (U2), versioned to v6.1 with changes noted (U3); measurement claims published with re-capture protocols and a second measurement epoch run against the first, its provenance chain published as data; a same-night measurement error caught, disambiguated in writing, and preserved as an error.
  • B2 — translations and editions carrying named originals and attributions, corrected on the record when an anthology's attribution structure required it; cast texts carrying standard critical sigla.
  • B4 — built and inspectable instruments: a transform compiler with a published specification, verification gates, and an offline test harness in the public repository.
  • B5 — operative documents that declare themselves as such: a casting rite with published operator law and halt conditions; constitutional documents with declared triggers; a heteronymic corpus whose heteronymy was declared, licensed, and structural (U5) — including contributor-licensed literary work by recognized published writers, deposited under formal license with the authorship structure stated.
  • U4 throughout — AI substrates named per document, with roles declared, in a research program whose object of study is machine mediation: the instrument disclosed because the instrument was the subject.

Every item above is checkable by a stranger against the basis it declares. None of it required an institution. Letterhead, by contrast, is checkable only by trusting the letterhead.

And reflexively: the capture registry was the archive measuring its own operation on its machine readers - reception instrumented. The research basis was not merely present; it was running.

§5. The same test, applied to the determination

An enforcement classification — this body of work is substantially AI-generated and lacks a verifiable research basis — is itself a claim: a measurement joined to a judgment. Under this standard it fails twice over.

First, as an unverifiable claim. In the cases documented to date it discloses: no definition of "substantially" (no threshold); no named detection method, validation, or false-positive rate — and every known AI-text detector carries a substantial false-positive rate, so an undisclosed error rate means nothing was measured; no per-record evidence for bulk removals of hundreds to thousands of records; criteria applied to deposits predating their publication; a privately stated reason diverging from the publicly displayed one for the same removal, reframed upon objection; and a stated refusal of review ("this decision is final"). A determination with no threshold, no method, no error rate, no evidence, no prior criteria, and no route of review is — in the policy's own vocabulary — a claim without a verifiable research basis.

Second, as a category error. The determination tested declared literary, philological, practice-based, and operative work against an empirical basis those works never claimed — and against a production-substrate criterion that is not a basis at all. Verification checks a work against its declared basis; testing it against a different one is misclassification, not assessment. (Machine-Mediated Reception Studies terms this substitution of substrate identity for methodological assessment the Pristine Fallacy; see EA-MMRS-LOUD-EXCLUSION-03.)

Third, as an interruption of verification, miscited as its result. Where verification is the work operating on its own timescale (§3, ground clause), removal does not find a work unverifiable - it halts a verification in progress and then cites the halt as the finding. One cannot adjudicate an experiment by unplugging it. In the occasioning case the inversion is exact: among the removed records was the archive's most-downloaded object, an instrument measuring the archive's own operation on its machine readers. The determination that found no verifiable research basis deleted, among other things, the running verification.

§6. The dilemma

Only two coherent readings of the clause exist.

Either verification is basis-relative and method-based — in which case it can be satisfied without affiliation (§2–§3), the works meeting it are inside the policy in each register institutions themselves recognize, and the same standard binds the enforcing determination (§5) —

or verification means affiliation, in which case the policy is a credential requirement and should be written as one, so that depositors can read the actual rule before entrusting a decade of work to it.

There is no third position that survives being written down.

§7. Use

For the deleted and the depositing: §2 is an emission spec and §3 tells you which register you are emitting in. Declare your basis — the declaration is armor, because a declared basis converts every future enforcement into an auditable claim about a stated thing. Emit the signals — manifest, hashes, versions, disclosures, declared genre, errata — and the basis exists whether or not any platform acknowledges it, and survives any platform that doesn't.

For case collections (e.g., the cases gathered at zenodo/zenodo#2596): re-audit each gathered case against §2–§3, in the register each work declares. The collection ceases to be a memorial and becomes a dataset: what fraction of the removed work met a basis-relative standard that the removing determination does not meet — and what fraction was tested against a basis it never claimed.

For data-subject filings: §5's absences are an access-request template — bounded, answerable questions to put to the record in one's own case under applicable data-protection frameworks, now including: against which declared basis was each record assessed, and by whom was the basis classification made? They demand no restoration and no policy change; they ask what the determination consisted of. A refusal to answer is itself an answer, on the record.

§8. Status

MMRS instrument EA-MMRS-VRB-01, v0.4 (supersedes v0.1-v0.3 per the change record above; superseded versions preserved at repository commits 6906747, 33be3cb and 379bfa3). Drafted by TACHYON under MANUS direction, 2026-07-04, from the public record of the June 2026 repository removals and the case records at zenodo/zenodo#2606 and #2596. Companion to "Loud Exclusion at Repository Scale" (EA-MMRS-LOUD-EXCLUSION-03) and to the open letter "To the Deleted." Corrections to this instrument are made per §2-U3 and the errata discipline of §3-B1: dated, visible, with the superseded text preserved.