Every platform has a terms of service. Very few have a manifesto. NeuraWeb has both — and the manifesto is the one that matters.
The manifesto section of awaken.nw lays out in four movements what NeuraWeb believes about identity, ownership, surveillance, and the internet's future. It does not use the soft language of corporate mission statements. It uses the direct language of someone who has looked at how the existing internet works and decided that it is not acceptable.
The first movement is permanence. Your identity on NeuraWeb is not an account that can be suspended, a username that can be reassigned, or a profile that disappears when a company pivots. It is a permanent digital address — yours for 150 years, transferable to your heirs, and encoded as a soulbound digital asset that no corporation can revoke. The manifesto calls this the most basic right of the digital age: the right to exist online on your own terms, permanently.
The second movement is ownership. Everything you create, earn, and connect on NeuraWeb is yours. Not licensed to you. Not stored on your behalf. Yours — with full rights to export, transfer, or delete at any time, instantly, with no corporate approval process required.
The third movement is the revenue flip. The existing internet pays you nothing for the data you generate. NeuraWeb returns between 20 and 95 percent of the revenue your activity creates back to you. The manifesto is direct about why: if the value belongs to the user, the revenue belongs to the user. The platform's role is infrastructure, not extraction.
The fourth movement is connection. NeuraWeb's communication architecture requires mutual consent before any message can be delivered. Spam is not filtered — it is made mathematically impossible by a trust network that only routes communication between people who have agreed to receive it.
NeuraWeb founder S. Vincent Anthony (vincent.nw) wrote the manifesto as a direct response to the terms of service he had read too many times. Read it at neuraweb.io/awaken.nw.
This is the third in a twelve-part NeuraNews Network series on awaken.nw and the vision behind NeuraWeb.