Owning Your Answers About What Happened
Saving what you say happened in context can go a long way to preserving your ownership of your words. Words can reward, help alert, define, create and mislead, and the firsthand account of what happened is our word contribution to vetting the truth and collective insight. As we move further into the era of machines handling and dictating responses, the easier it becomes to undervalue the firsthand answers. If we reduce or obstruct the affected person’s answers to what happened, simultaneously we’re diminishing their free speech. Intellectual Property, (IP) is a legal term that refers to creations of the mind but doesn’t include legal protections for a personal experience or recommendation, but it does cover the form or way in which the experiences and suggestions are expressed. The mate3 network method is a legally protectable process that can provide legal defense for your stated firsthand answers to our mate3 network questions. The mate3 process handles the answers in such a way that the method itself transforms the 3 answers into granulates that can be given a productive response. When the first parties use mate3 networking they are in essence becoming a protected class of witnesses to their personal experience. Under U.S. law each citizen has a right to authorize their witness account of events in a statement. And a witness statement can be protected by law as part of free speech. Unless you sign away your right to tell your firsthand accounts of what happened, you can own, rent or loan your answers. Mate3 is a provisional process that serves to connect 1st party answers to productive responses.
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