The confidentiality acknowledgement confirms that the participant understands how information shared in GRA-related spaces must be handled.
Depending on the pathway, participants may encounter non-public profiles, participant lists, project concepts, finance-readiness notes, insurance-readiness notes, risk records, controlled-room materials, sponsor discussions, public authority learning inputs, technical references, national pathway records, Nexus Universe preparation materials, or early-stage institutional information.
The acknowledgement may require participants to protect information, avoid unauthorized sharing, avoid screenshots or recordings without permission, avoid forwarding documents, avoid using materials for commercial solicitation, avoid public claims based on controlled information, and respect access limits.
Confidentiality does not mean every GRA conversation is secret. It means participants must follow the information classification, access, and use rules that apply to each space.
A participant should not use confidential or controlled information for investment solicitation, underwriting, procurement advantage, media claims, sponsor leverage, employer marketing, public authority pressure, or competitive intelligence.
Confidentiality is part of trust infrastructure.