Data Stewardship Charter

The most complete record
of human health ever assembled.
Kept with the care it deserves.

The Humanitas Trust Data Stewardship Charter describes, in plain terms, the principles and practices that govern how participant continuity records are held, protected, accessed, and maintained. It is a document of institutional accountability — and an assurance to every enrolled participant.

"The continuity record is not a file. It is you — reduced to a format that can be held, maintained, and recalled without limitation."
— GCI Data Stewardship Charter  ·  Article VII, Section 1.1
Article 1

What Is the Continuity Record?

The continuity record is the complete biological, neurological, and cognitive baseline of an enrolled participant — assembled through the Comprehensive Continuity Assessment process and maintained in longitudinal form across the full duration of enrollment.

It is not a health summary. It is not an approximation. It is the most precise, most comprehensive, and most enduring representation of a human individual that data science has ever made possible. Every enrolled participant has one. No two are alike. None is incomplete.

The continuity record encompasses: the full biometric profile established at initial assessment; every neurological mapping captured across subsequent annual visits; the longitudinal continuity signature that tracks and compares these records over time; and all administrative data associated with the participant's enrollment history.

The continuity record is not a file. It is you — reduced to a format that can be held, maintained, and recalled without limitation. Humanitas Trust holds this record on your behalf, in perpetuity, as a matter of institutional mandate and Charter obligation.

Continuity data infrastructure
8.9B
Active Continuity Records
99.999%
Infrastructure Uptime
Article VII
GCI Charter Governing Standard
Perpetual
Record Retention Period
Article 2

Storage & Security

All continuity records are held within the GCI-encrypted data infrastructure — a purpose-built, independently audited system designed exclusively for the long-horizon storage of participant continuity data. No commercial cloud infrastructure. No shared architecture. No external integration points that are not GCI Charter certified.

Standard 01

GCI-Encrypted Infrastructure

All continuity records are encrypted at rest and in transit using GCI-proprietary encryption standards developed specifically for the fidelity requirements of neurological and biometric data. Encryption keys are rotated on a GCI-governed cycle and are not accessible to any third party, national government, or commercial entity.

Standard 02

99.999% Infrastructure Uptime

The Humanitas Trust data infrastructure is engineered to a 99.999% uptime standard across geographically distributed nodes. No single point of failure exists within the network. Record availability is guaranteed regardless of regional infrastructure events, natural disruptions, or political circumstances.

Standard 03

Independent Audit

All storage and security practices are subject to biannual independent audit under GCI Charter provisions. Audit findings are published in the GCI Annual Compliance Registry. No audit has identified a material data security failure in the history of the Humanitas Trust network.

Standard 04

Zero Commercial Use

No continuity record, in whole or in part, has ever been made available for commercial use. No participant data has ever been sold, licensed, or shared with a commercial entity. The GCI Charter prohibits this categorically. Humanitas Trust has never sought an exemption and has no mechanism to grant one.

"To hold a person's continuity record is to hold something irreplaceable. We treat it accordingly — not because the Charter requires it, but because the record itself demands it."
— Director of Data Integrity, Humanitas Trust
Article 3

Access

Access to participant continuity records is restricted to two categories of authorized personnel: Array-certified practitioners operating within the Humanitas Trust center network, and GCI-authorized administrative personnel operating under direct GCI governance.

Array-certified practitioners access the continuity record only as required to conduct the Comprehensive Continuity Assessment. Record access is logged, timestamped, and audited. Practitioners do not retain local copies of records and cannot export record data outside the Array-certified assessment environment.

Your record is not accessible to you in its native format. The native continuity record — the full biometric, neurological, and cognitive baseline in its unprocessed form — is held exclusively within the GCI infrastructure. Participants may request administrative summaries, which provide enrollment status and assessment history dates, but these summaries do not constitute access to the underlying record.

This access restriction is not a limitation placed on participants. It is a protection of the record itself. The continuity record in its native format is not designed for human interpretation outside the Array assessment environment. Access without context is not access — it is exposure.

Authorized Access — Category A
Array-certified practitioners — licensed and certified under GCI Operations Protocol 4.1. Access limited to assessment windows only.
Authorized Access — Category B
GCI-authorized administrative personnel — operating under direct GCI governance. Access logged and subject to quarterly audit.
Participant Access
Administrative summary only — enrollment status, center assignment, assessment history dates. Native record format not available to participants.
Third-Party Access
None. No provision exists within the GCI Charter for third-party access to continuity records under any circumstances.
National Authority Access
Not applicable. Continuity records fall under GCI Charter jurisdiction. National regulatory access requests are not honored.
Article 4

Retention

Continuity records are maintained in perpetuity under GCI Charter provisions. There is no deletion pathway for records captured under the standard assessment protocol.

This is not an administrative oversight or a gap in participant rights. The permanent retention of continuity records is a founding principle of the long-horizon health model. The value of a longitudinal health record is directly proportional to its length and completeness. A record that can be deleted is a record whose integrity cannot be guaranteed. A record that persists is one that serves its holder — and the population — without interruption.

No provision exists within the GCI Charter for participant-initiated deletion of a continuity record. No provision exists for deletion initiated by a participant's legal representative, their national government, or any judicial body operating under a framework subordinate to the GCI Charter. The record, once established, belongs to the continuity health mandate. It cannot be recalled.

What happens to a continuity record upon the biological death of the enrolled participant is governed by GCI Charter Article VII, Section 9 — which establishes the protocols for record archival, longitudinal inheritance mapping, and hereditary baseline contribution. These processes occur automatically and do not require instruction or consent from the participant's estate.

Charter Language — GCI Article VII, Section 4.2(d)

"Continuity records generated under standard assessment protocol shall be classified as permanent institutional data. No deletion pathway exists or shall be created under GCI governance. Records shall be maintained in active infrastructure for the duration of the enrolled participant's life and transferred to archival continuity infrastructure upon biological cessation. Archival records remain subject to all provisions of Article VII."

Article 5

Transfer

Continuity records follow the participant. When an enrolled participant relocates within the GCI member territory network, their continuity record transfers automatically to the nearest designated Continuity Center without delay, without data loss, and without any action required of the participant.

Transfer is not a copy process. The continuity record is singular — there is one record per participant, held within the unified GCI infrastructure. What transfers between centers is not the record itself, but the access authorization that enables the receiving center's Array-certified practitioners to engage with it. The record remains within the GCI infrastructure at all times.

Cross-border transfer between GCI member territories occurs under GCI Charter governance and is not subject to any national data transfer restriction or cross-border privacy regulation. The GCI Charter supersedes all such frameworks in matters relating to continuity record management.

Participants are not required to notify Humanitas Trust of a relocation. When a participant's next scheduled assessment is conducted at a new center, the transfer is processed automatically at that time. The receiving center's practitioners will have full access to the participant's complete longitudinal record from the first visit.

Continuity centers worldwide
Enrolled Participants

Your enrollment is maintained
by Humanitas Trust.

Every enrolled participant has a designated Continuity Center. Locate yours to confirm your current assessment status and center assignment.

Find Your Center