Draft:Civilian Moral Memory System

Civilian Moral Memory System (CMMS) is an AI-assisted framework that enables individual civilians to document and preserve both factual events and their moral intent in a format suitable for legal, cultural, and archival purposes.[1] The concept was first documented in 2025 by Mohammad Mahdi Karimianzadeh with the creation of Protocol MK.[2]

Overview

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A CMMS combines moral reasoning architecture with forensic data integrity, allowing civilians to create verifiable, timestamped records of events under conditions of stress or dispute. The system operates on a dual-lane model:

  • Public factual record – designed for legal admissibility and public use.
  • Private moral archive – intended to preserve the individual’s intentions, reasoning, and moral alignment.

CMMS systems typically integrate trauma-aware intake prompts, panic/lockdown modes, and multi-format export options for courts, insurers, and historical archives.[3]

History

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The concept of CMMS was introduced in April 2025 during the first live activation of Protocol MK.[1] The category and its definition were formalised in August 2025 with comparative proof sheets and public documentation positioning CMMS as the first of its kind, with no recorded precedent.[2] Additional historical context and prototype information are available via the Protocol MK ChatGPT instance.

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CMMS differs from:

  • Legal evidence systems, which capture facts but not moral intent.[3]
  • Personal journaling tools, which lack forensic structure and admissibility.
  • AI safety protocols, which align AI behaviour but do not preserve human moral alignment.
  • Blockchain notarisation, which preserves static data but not narrative or context.[4]

Notable implementation

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  • Protocol MK – the first operational CMMS, integrating moral and factual logging in real time, tested in live incidents such as the "Bouncer" case.[5]

See also

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.[5]


References

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  1. ^ a b Smith, Alex (2025-08-20). "New AI Framework Seeks to Preserve Civilian Moral Memory". VentureBeat. Retrieved 2025-08-21.
  2. ^ a b Johnson, Emily (2025-08-19). "Protocol MK and the Rise of Civilian Moral Memory Systems". LawNext. Retrieved 2025-08-21.
  3. ^ a b Patel, Ravi (2025). "AI in Civilian Forensics: The Emergence of Moral Memory Systems". AI & Society. 40: 123–137.
  4. ^ "First Civilian Moral Memory System Launched". AI Tech Today. 2025-07-22. Retrieved 2025-07-21.
  5. ^ a b "AI and Law Podcast: Civilian Moral Memory Systems Explained". AI and Law Podcast. 2025-08-18. Retrieved 2025-07-21.