
SYSTEM SUMMARY
WCF-1: Wireless Communications Fix One — Public Framework Closure
(Public Summary — Full Compliance Logic Restricted)
WCF-1 establishes a regulated, ecologically compliant replacement for legacy telecommunications systems. It embeds electromagnetic communication within Truthvenarian equilibrium law, Sansana reciprocity doctrine, PHM proportional-harm calculus, and the NashMark ethical-allocation framework. All operational behaviour is governed by Sentinel oversight and Markov-gated state transitions.
The system is defined in its public form by the tuple:
$ \mathcal{W} = \langle \mathcal{S},\, E_t,\, \tau_t,\, \Delta\Omega_t,\, A_t \rangle $
where:
- $ \mathcal{S} $ — Markov state space governing permitted, constrained, restricted, critical, and locked communication modes.
- $ E_t $ — ecological state vector capturing biological proximity, exposure density, field drift, and environmental disruption indices.
- $ \tau_t $ — Sentinel-derived transmission permission function determining whether emission is permitted, shaped, reduced, or denied.
- $ \Delta\Omega_t $ — PHM harm-weight metric controlling legality of transmission events.
- $ A_t $ — NashMark fairness allocation ensuring ethical priority of communication channels.
Communication is lawful only where:
$ \Delta c_t - \Delta\Omega_t \ge 0 $
and the system remains within equilibrium:
$ \text{Eq}(\mathcal{S}) = \Sigma(\Delta c - \Delta\Omega) \ge 0. $
All deviations from equilibrium, proportionality, or ecological compliance trigger BCE/EEE enforcement pathways and state transitions as defined within the IP-restricted governance module.
The public shell of WCF-1 provides transparency of purpose, structure, and legal standing. The internal logic including threshold parameters, harm-weight tensors, Sentinel veto functions, Markov matrices, and enforcement operators remains sealed and executable only through the WCF-1 Compliance API.
WCF-1 therefore functions simultaneously as:
- an ecological safety framework,
- a telecommunications governance standard,
- a legally enforceable proportional-harm protocol,
- a regulated gateway for ethical communication networks.
This summary completes the public documentation. All deployment, compliance, licensing, and enforcement functions are executed through the restricted module.