The Civic Bill of Rights
In kOA, rights are not marketing promises. They are design constraints: enforced through governance rules, audit trails, and system defaults that make violations visible, contestable, and correctable.
Privacy for People, Transparency for Power
Privacy of the Person
Default: private.
Personal data is protected by encryption and minimal disclosure. Access requires explicit authorization, scoped purpose, and time limits—so “collect it all and decide later” is structurally discouraged.
- • Minimization: collect only what is necessary
- • Purpose limitation: access must be justified
- • Compartmentalization: reduce blast radius
- • Revocation: permissions can expire and be withdrawn
Transparency of Institutions
Default: accountable.
Public power must be legible. Decisions, budgets, procurement, and rule changes should be recorded with provenance (who/what/why) so the public can audit outcomes and detect capture.
- • Public decision trails (inputs → process → outputs)
- • Procurement & spending transparency (with legitimate redactions when needed)
- • Change logs for rules and policies
- • Traceable responsibility (who approved, who executed)
The Right to Exit (Portability & Forkability)
The ultimate check on domination is the ability to leave. In kOA, exit must be realistic: your identity, records, and verifiable history cannot be held hostage by a single operator.
Portability
You can export your data, credentials, and participation history in standard formats. No platform lock-in; no “start over from zero” penalty.
Forkability
If governance becomes captured or legitimacy collapses, communities can replicate the open infrastructure and continue under new rules—while preserving verifiable records and continuity.
The Right to Competence
Capability is a prerequisite for legitimacy
A civic system cannot demand good judgment while denying people the means to learn. kOA treats education infrastructure—curricula, tools, verification, and multilingual access—as a public capability that supports competent participation and responsible governance.
The Right to Audit & Recourse
People must be able to challenge outcomes. kOA requires that important decisions are traceable and that there are correction pathways when evidence changes, errors are found, or power is abused.
- • Explainability: show how inputs produced the outcome (rules, weighting, provenance)
- • Contestability: structured objections and counter-evidence can be filed
- • Due process: time windows, roles, and thresholds are explicit
- • Repair mechanisms: reversals, amendments, or restitution where appropriate