MIR for Humans
No tech degree required.
The internet used to forget things. Now it remembers everything — except context.
Photos get copied. Videos get altered. Quotes get detached from their source. AI makes it all faster. And when something goes wrong, the burden falls on the person who has to say: "That's not what happened."
That's backwards.
MIR (My Internet Reputation) exists to fix one simple problem: the web has no neutral way to show what actually happened — and what didn't.
So MIR does one thing, and only one thing: it records participation, not people.
No scores. No surveillance. No judgments.
Just a quiet, verifiable record that says:
- This media was asserted by its creator.
- This action occurred at this time.
- This record hasn't been altered.
Think of it like a receipt for the internet. Not a review. Not a rating. Not a punishment system. A receipt.
Why this matters, in plain English
Right now, fake content spreads faster than truth. Real people are forced to prove they didn't do something. "Seeing is believing" no longer works.
MIR flips that dynamic.
In the future, people won't ask "Is this real?" They'll ask: "Was this asserted — or is it just floating?"
If it's not asserted, people know to be careful. If it is, there's context attached.
No authority deciding truth. No platform gatekeeping speech. Just history where history is missing.
What MIR is not
- Not social credit.
- Not identity scoring.
- Not tracking behavior.
- Not telling anyone what to believe.
Silence stays silent. Participation is optional.
Why I'm building this
Because in a world of AI, deepfakes, and endless copying, truth shouldn't need a defense attorney.
People deserve a way to say: "This is mine." "This happened." "This hasn't been changed." And have the web remember it — neutrally.
That's it. That's MIR.