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How does recordkeeping protect GRA, GRF, GCRI, and the Nexus architecture?

Recordkeeping protects GRA, GRF, GCRI, and Nexus by maintaining role separation and preventing one part of the architecture from being misused as another. 

GRA protects capital meaning. GRF protects public meaning. GCRI protects technical truth. Nexus provides the shared infrastructure and pathway environment. Without records, these roles can be blurred. 

A technical demonstration could be misrepresented as investment readiness. A public forum could be misrepresented as government approval. A finance-readiness conversation could be misrepresented as capital commitment. A National Desk pathway could be misrepresented as official state representation. A Nexus Universe preparation docket could be misrepresented as selection. 

Records prevent that. 

They show whether a matter is public, technical, financial-services, governance-related, institutional, sponsor-related, or readiness-related. They also show what has been reviewed, what has not, what remains pending, what is out of scope, and what claims are prohibited. 

Recordkeeping protects the Nexus architecture from becoming informal, overclaimed, captured, or legally unsafe. 

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