GRA protects Capital-Reader Rooms from false capital signals through strict role definitions, access control, conflict disclosure, safe-meeting rules, confidentiality controls, non-attribution rules where appropriate, feedback logs, diligence gap notes, public-language restrictions, correction dockets, and claims-discipline enforcement.
Key safeguards include:
capital readers are not described as investors unless that role is separately relevant and still bounded;
attendance does not imply interest;
feedback does not imply endorsement;
questions do not imply diligence;
diligence gap notes do not imply due diligence completion;
readiness routing does not imply approval;
Nexus Universe preparation does not imply investor validation;
no fundraising is allowed in the room;
no securities recommendations are allowed;
no deal terms are discussed;
no capital commitments are recorded through the room;
attribution is controlled;
marketing use is prohibited unless specifically approved;
misuse triggers correction.
The strongest protection is consistent language:
Capital-Reader Rooms produce readiness feedback, not capital signals.
That sentence should govern every docket, meeting note, feedback log, and public statement connected to Capital-Reader Rooms.