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Mission

The single sentence the Foundation is built around

Source Code Declaration

The Source Code

“What drives us is people — keeping them safe, keeping them healthy, keeping them connected, ensuring they live in truth, and empowering them with agency.”

The Foundation's mission is contained in a single sentence, ratified as a binding governance constraint. It is the load-bearing piece of the entire enterprise: the question every Foundation decision is evaluated against.

The sentence is short on purpose. Mission statements that fill paragraphs cannot constrain anything because they contain too many variables to enforce. A sentence-length ethical constant can be tested against any specific decision: does this action serve people's safety, health, connection, truth, or agency? If not, it cannot be reconciled with the Foundation's mission regardless of perceived benefit.

The full text and the constraint structure are published in the Source Code Declaration. Five additional principles operationalize the mission across specific domains:

Why a Foundation, not a company


The mission framing answers a question that is often left implicit: what is this organization's reason for existing? For most companies the answer is a business — a market position, a revenue model, an equity outcome. For the Foundation, the answer is structural — to hold substrate-class infrastructure in stewardship rather than commodify it, to develop standards that serve people rather than vendors, to enforce ethical constraints through architecture rather than asserting them through policy.

The commercial activity associated with the substrate work happens at a separate layer (documented in the Structural Transparency Note). The Foundation itself does not generate commercial revenue; its work is funded through a combination of license-fee flows from the commercial layer and direct support. This separation is structural: the Foundation's authority depends on its independence from the financial incentives that drive the commercial layer.

— Money flows downstream of ethics, never upstream.

The mission is the question every decision is evaluated against.

Published 2026