The social area of our system is a true social network of politics, business, and infinite potential.
https://www.directdemocracys.org/social
However, there are some important differences between us and traditional social networks.
The first is that public areas are reserved for our public areas management teams, and that posting posts, links, photographs, videos, audio, or anything else without requesting and obtaining permission to do so is prohibited.
Even on your personal public profile, you're prohibited from posting, as in public areas. You're only allowed to customize your profile to a limited extent. The reason is simple: organization, order, competence, discipline, and safety.
It is also forbidden to disturb other users, groups, and create useless posts.
The potential of our social area is practically identical, but in many cases superior, to that offered by similar applications or websites.
Each of our users, regardless of their type, is automatically added to a private group, invisible to anyone both inside and outside our system. They will have the option, based on very detailed implementation rules, to directly create one or more personal private groups, invisible to non-members (depending on their user type), for very important activities.
Furthermore, each of our users, regardless of their type, follows at least one private page, invisible to anyone both inside and outside our system, and will have the option, based on very detailed implementation rules, to directly create one or more private personal pages invisible to non-members (depending on their user type), for very important activities.
In addition to personal profiles, groups, and pages, there are events, videos, audio, an economic and financial space, and countless components, modules, and areas, all of which are potential: visible or invisible, public, private, or secret, which essentially allow for infinite activities, while leaving all public areas clean.
Over time, at the right time, some features will be unlocked, based on very detailed implementation rules, such as friend requests, and many other similar things.
Reading the previous section, many people will find DirectDemocracyS excessively harsh, even dictatorial, but as always, our motivations will pleasantly surprise you, and will make you exclaim: whoever decided all this was absolutely right.
To better understand, let's give you just one example, although we could offer many more. It's a question: of all the things that "appear" on any social network, what percentage are important, useful to you and others, or actually interest you? Don't know? Well, try counting 100 of them in a row, assigning each a value based on the criteria of importance, usefulness, and interest. You'll be unpleasantly surprised at the time you'll waste needlessly counting every post that isn't important to you, isn't useful, and doesn't interest you. Now think about how many important, useful, and interesting things you could do for yourself and others in your spare time on traditional social networks. Here's one of the many reasons: at DirectDemocracyS, we don't like wasting precious time, nor do we like wasting it for others. And think about all the advertising you endure with their free profiles? It's logical that those who provide you with such a service should earn "something," but it would also be nice if they paid taxes on their income, exactly where they earn it, and at the same rates paid by small, medium, and large businesses in their respective countries or geographical areas. So, is the solution to pay, even large sums, to avoid seeing commercials? This is a decision we leave to your discretion and your means. Furthermore, even if you don't see the ads, the situation regarding what you see, based on criteria of importance, usefulness, and interest, doesn't change much. You'll just have smoother browsing, but the wasted time remains.
However, traditional social networks remain useful, such as being correctly and completely informed. We bet we've made you smile. Have you seen what's out there? The only accurate information is that provided by serious professionals, not politically aligned, who inform accurately, disseminating only the fully documented truth from reliable sources, without trying, and succeeding perfectly, to manipulate you, and in some cases, completely brainwash you. Okay, let's say there's a bit of everything on traditional social networks; you just need to know how to choose, select the sources you want to hear their "truth." You have the opportunity and the ability to choose between good and bad, right and wrong, reliable and unreliable, and true and false. Or not? No problem, you'll find plenty of "gurus," know-it-alls, who will teach you to think what they want, say what they want, buy what they want, and even vote for who they want. But if all this isn't enough to keep you "free, democratic, independent, and neutral," technology is here to help, and infinite Artificial Intelligences will soon replace the many "gurus" and influencers, doing better, faster, and more comprehensively what we've all been suffering since the beginning of human existence. The very few crafty, often evil, individuals will continue to exploit the good, even if they are intelligent and deserving. But beware: not all "gurus and influencers," and not all Artificial Intelligences, do despicable things and take away what little humanity you have left, and even in this case, we at DirectDemocracyS hope you always know how to choose well. Ultimately, the entire world today is the result of all the choices, of all people, for better, but especially for worse. In our system we only try, with a lot of hard and long work, to do things differently and better, to change and improve everything that has been done wrong.
At this point, many people will ask: if I don't have friends, how can I do anything? Simple, with very detailed rules, in DirectDemocracyS you can truly do anything, as long as it's useful for yourself and others. First, in secret, invisible groups, everyone interacts with tens, hundreds, sometimes thousands, and soon millions, and hopefully billions, of other people, who respect shared rules (decided by everyone together), with common goals (always decided together).
We'll be publishing an informative article about how our groups work, revealing to those directly involved how we make everything possible. While it may seem complicated, it's actually detailed, and once you've studied it carefully, and more importantly, understood it, everything will seem simpler.
If we didn't take care of every detail, even the most insignificant, we would be just another beautiful project. Instead, we are and will always remain innovative and alternative, continuing to evolve and improve forever.
We are all and will always be connected, a bit like traditional social networks, only a little more fair, just, loyal, sincere, and meritocratic, obviously with adequate protection.
Currently, some "brilliant minds" are annoyed by the many adjectives we use, derogatory to everyone else and laudatory to ourselves. As we wrote some time ago in a very long informative article: for us, words are important, and every word, in every sentence we write, is carefully chosen, studied, evaluated, discussed, and carefully chosen, because it must always express, directly, clearly, and unequivocally, everything we want to say. For all of us, every concept is crucial.
The difference between DirectDemocracyS and everything else you've seen and know is a consistency no one else will ever have, because it comes from the desire to get as close as possible to perfection, another word that once bothered superficial people, who judged a book by its cover, and without knowing us, judged us presumptuous, but we have been and will always be realistic, and proud of our long, hard work.
Not all of our websites, or our subdomains, have a social area, as we've explained in this informative article.
Before concluding, let's explain how direct messages between users work. Essentially, only certain types of higher-level users (super administrators, administrators, and a few other authorized users) can send direct messages to literally anyone within our community. The reason is simple: we want to give everyone the peace of mind of avoiding unnecessary distractions and wasting too much time. Of course, anyone who receives a direct message—which is encrypted, protected, and invisible to anyone else, except for valid reasons, from a few trusted individuals, special security groups—can always respond, if desired, to anyone who contacts them. If you're wondering, how do I communicate with the people I work with? Directly in the various groups, through mutual comments, discussions, announcements, votes, polls, proposals, videos, audio, events, and countless other features. For direct communication, but also for calls, video calls, meetings, conferences, private or public, live or continuous, we have our own components and applications, including a live chat at the bottom of many of our websites , and some subdomains of our platforms are used continuously and dedicated to communication, not only between users, but also between infinite groups, always within our ever-expanding universe.
We hope we've clearly explained some of our rules, methodologies, instructions, and, above all, the underlying rationale. In various articles dedicated to our users, and some publicly available, we'll explore the full potential of this social space, where the magic of DirectDemocracyS is created, thanks to the long, hard work of everyone who joins us!
a. To accept full responsibility for the comment that you submit.
b. To use this function only for lawful purposes.
c. Not to post defamatory, abusive, offensive, racist, sexist, threatening, vulgar, obscene, hateful or otherwise inappropriate comments, or to post comments which will constitute a criminal offense or give rise to civil liability.
d. Not to post or make available any material which is protected by copyright, trade mark or other proprietary right without the express permission of the owner of the copyright, trade mark or any other proprietary right.
e. To evaluate for yourself the accuracy of any opinion, advice or other content.