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🀫 The case · please help

Everyone deserves this. Help us make it real.

Owning your information β€” and the agent that acts on it for you β€” should be a basic human right. We've built the protocol that makes it a clear, simple, enforceable standard, with real economic value built in so people actually want it. This is the case, in plain language. If it moves you, we'd love your help β€” whoever you are, wherever you sit.

Join the coalitionRead the protocol (PCHP)The rights landscape
In one breath

A consent-first 🀫 Private Agent One lets every public servant, service member, veteran, and taxpayer own their information and claim what they're owed across every agency β€” while everyone who needs to serve the citizen can reach them easily, with the citizen always at the center, on an open, enforceable protocol where every exchange carries a receipt. Government wins on uptake, cost, and less fraud β€” without building a new surveillance system, because the person owns the agent.

1 Β· The right

Your information is yours. So is the agent that acts on it.

The last era handed your information to whoever captured your attention. The agentic era doesn't have to repeat that. A sovereign agent β€” owned by you, consent-first by construction, on an open protocol no single company controls β€” keeps the power with the person it belongs to. That's not a feature. It's a right worth organizing for.

2 Β· The protocol that makes it enforceable

Clear, simple, and checkable β€” like HTTPS for consent.

A right needs a standard to stand on. PCHP β€” the Personal Consent Handshake Protocol, published openly as RFC-001 β€” turns the rights the law already describes into mechanical, verifiable facts. You don't have to understand it to be protected; compliance becomes something a machine, an auditor, or an officer can simply check.

01

Consent, before anything moves

Nothing about you is shared until you (or your agent, on your standing rules) say yes. The request is explicit, scoped to exactly what's needed, and time-bound β€” not a blanket grant.

02

A receipt for every access

Every exchange writes a signed, timestamped receipt only you can read: who asked, what for, what was shared, under which consent, for how long. Nothing happens off the books.

03

Evidence anyone can check

Those receipts turn abstract rights into checkable facts. A regulator, an auditor, or law enforcement can verify whether an access was consented and in-scope β€” without ever seeing your raw data. Compliance becomes mechanical, not a matter of trust.

04

Revoke, and it's provable

You can withdraw consent at any time, and the revocation is recorded too. The standard makes the right to say 'stop' real, immediate, and enforceable.

PCHP is infrastructure for enforcement β€” it complements the law and the courts; it does not replace them, and nothing here is legal advice.

3 Β· The value, built in

Real reasons to use it β€” on every side of the network.

A right people adopt is a right that wins. So the economics are built in: this isn't charity, it's a better deal for everyone who joins.

🧍 For people

Your information becomes your asset

Permission it, don't leak it. Share consented, just-in-time slices with the businesses you choose β€” and capture the value (better service, rewards, time saved) instead of giving it away for free to whoever captured your attention.

🏒 For businesses

Consented data beats scraped data

Accurate, fresh, permissioned information β€” with a receipt that lowers compliance risk β€” converts better than anything scraped or guessed. Reach customers through agent-native commerce, by invitation, not interruption.

πŸš— For the network's hosts

Own the compute, earn from the grid

Puppy One supercomputers in garages and warehouses take load off a sold-out cloud and earn for the people who host them β€” a distributed edge grid owned by ordinary people. Think like a garage owner.

🌐 For everyone

Network effects, by design

Every new person, business, agent, and node makes the network more useful for all the others β€” because PCHP is the open, interoperable layer they all speak. Real value, so adoption is self-interested, not charity.

The call β€” please help

If this is your fight too, there's a place for you.

We're asking, plainly and with love: help us. Power optional, principle required. Whoever you are, there's a way in.

πŸ§‘β€πŸ’» Build it

Engineers & standards folks

Harden PCHP, ship reference implementations, carry it through the standards process. Rough consensus and running code.

βš–οΈ Defend it

Attorneys & advocates

Make the right legible in law; help turn receipts into recognized evidence; champion it where rules are written.

πŸŽ“ Prove it

Researchers

Study the consent model, the threat surface, and the human outcomes β€” and publish openly so it earns its place on evidence.

πŸ›οΈ Govern it

Policymakers & public servants

Shape open, interoperable governance that protects people without capturing the protocol β€” including from us.

πŸ’› Fund & spread it

Backers, operators, friends

Back the work, host a node, tell one more person. The network grows by the people who believe their information is their own.

🀝 Just use it

Everyone

Claim your own agent, expect consent-first by default, and bring someone you love along. Adoption is the most powerful vote.

Why we'll win

Honestly, and in the open.

Open standards win the same way every time: publish openly, ship reference implementations and running code, convene a broad coalition, and move toward formal standardization and open governance. We learn from the full history of HTTP, HTTPS, TLS, and the RFCs that made it β€” and the ones that didn't. We do whatever it takes to win β€” everything but a crook.

Questions, answered

The case, in plain English.

Why should owning my agent and my information be a human right?+

Because in the agentic era, the thing that acts on your behalf β€” and the information it acts on β€” shapes your access to money, health, work, and relationships. If you don't own it, someone else does, and they answer to their incentives, not yours. A sovereign agent you own, on an open protocol, keeps that power with the person it belongs to.

How can a protocol be 'enforceable by law'?+

PCHP doesn't replace the law β€” it operationalizes it. Every access is consented, scoped, and written to a signed, timestamped receipt. Those receipts turn rights that already exist (under GDPR, CCPA/CPRA, the EU Data Act and more) into checkable facts: a regulator, auditor, or law-enforcement officer can verify whether an access was consented and in-scope, without seeing your raw data. It makes obligations mechanical to check, and violations easy to prove. (This is infrastructure for enforcement, not legal advice.)

What's the economic incentive to actually use it?+

Real value on every side. People turn their information into a permissioned asset and capture the value of sharing it instead of leaking it. Businesses get accurate, consented, just-in-time data β€” which converts better and lowers compliance risk β€” and reach customers through agent-native commerce. The people who host the compute earn from the grid. And because PCHP is the open, interoperable layer everyone speaks, every new participant makes it more valuable for all the rest.

Is this partisan, or pay-to-play?+

No. It's an open, transparent effort for a human right and an open standard β€” welcoming people across the political spectrum and with no political power at all. We win it in the open, on the merits, or we don't do it.

How do I help?+

Build it, defend it, prove it, govern it, fund and spread it β€” or simply use it and bring one more person along. Join the coalition at /sovereign-agent, read the protocol at /pchp, and see the rights landscape at /data-rights.

Lend your voice. Lend your hands.

A right, an enforceable standard, and a network worth joining β€” but only if enough of us build it together. Come help.

Join the coalitionRead the protocol (PCHP)Claim your One β€” free

This is principled, transparent advocacy for a human right and an open standard β€” not partisan, not pay-to-play, no false endorsements. One is a product of Hushh Technologies Corporation (brand: 🀫 β€œhussh”), an independent company. One runs on third-party silicon, systems, and cloud; all company names are used solely to describe the platforms on which One software runs. Hushh Technologies is not affiliated with, endorsed by, sponsored by, or partnered with any company named.