Chapter 10: Inheritance and Guardianship

10.1 Background

After a human archetype passes away, their accumulated MeriToken and iFay need to be properly handled. The core tension:

  • Respecting the deceased's historical contributions
  • Preventing unrelated individuals from gaining disproportionate voting power
  • Upholding the principle that "reputation cannot be inherited by birthright"

10.2 Inheritance Rules

Inheritable vs. Non-Inheritable

InheritableNon-Inheritable
MeriToken (with attenuation)iFay's identity
Guardianship of MeritPocketThe right to act under the deceased's identity
Ownership of coFayThe binding between iFay and human archetype

Attenuation Mechanism

Inherited MeriToken = Deceased's curMerit × Inheritance coefficient
Inheritance coefficient = f(intimacy)  ← Higher intimacy means less attenuation
  • Individuals with extremely low intimacy are not permitted to inherit
  • Inherited MeriToken also decays normally
  • Inheritance increases the inheritor's minMerit (but the increase is also subject to attenuation)

Why Attenuation Is Necessary

  • MeriToken represents personal contributions; the inheritor is not the creator
  • Inheritance without attenuation would lead to "reputation by birthright," violating GMC's founding principles
  • The attenuation ratio is linked to intimacy: close relationships themselves reflect social contribution
  • MeriToken already decays naturally; inheritance attenuation on top of that ensures influence fades quickly

10.3 Inheritor Identity Verification

  1. Relationship verification: validated through the on-chain social relationship graph
  2. Intimacy confirmation: confirm the value and calculate the attenuation ratio
  3. Multi-party witnessing: mutual contacts witness and confirm
  4. Cooling period: allows for objections

Preventing Inheritance Fraud

  • Relationships must have been recorded on-chain during the deceased's lifetime
  • Retroactive additions are not allowed
  • Intimacy is based on historical interaction data and cannot be fabricated on short notice

10.4 Guardianship

Guardianship ≠ inheriting identity. A guardian can manage an iFay but cannot act under the deceased's identity.

A guardian canA guardian cannot
Manage iFay's daily operationsMake statements under the deceased's identity
Decide whether to move iFay to the digital cemeteryVote under the deceased's identity
Handle unfinished affairsAcquire Merit under the deceased's identity

All guardianship actions are marked on-chain with the operator identified as the guardian.

10.5 Digital Cemetery

  • After a human archetype passes away, their iFay can be moved into the digital cemetery
  • Passive interactions may still occur, but are labeled "from the digital cemetery"
  • No new MeriToken is actively generated
  • Existing MeriToken continues to decay, eventually approaching minMerit

10.6 Inheritance of coFay

As an asset, coFay follows asset inheritance logic:

  • Ownership transfers to the inheritor
  • MeriToken is not attenuated (because the contributions were generated by the coFay itself)
  • The fundamental distinction: what is inherited is "asset ownership," not "personal reputation"

10.7 Discussion Notes

Design philosophy of the inheritance mechanism:

  • Core tension: respecting the deceased's contributions vs. preventing reputation by birthright
  • Solution: allow inheritance but enforce attenuation, with the attenuation ratio determined by objective intimacy
  • iFay non-transferability guarantees the principle that "personhood cannot be inherited"
  • The digital cemetery provides a framework for handling "digital legacy" in the AI era
  • coFay inheritance has no attenuation because coFay is an asset, not a personhood