OUTPUT DOCTRINE: WHAT THE CLIENT SEES

SIGNET does not present people, identities, or personal profiles. All outputs are expressed exclusively as state-based intelligence representations aligned to space, time, and authorized operational context.
What the client sees is situational intelligence, not human depiction.
Within the SIGNET architecture, all visual intelligence outputs are intentionally designed to avoid person-centric interpretation. The system does not surface names, identities, biometric attributes, or persistent individual traces. Instead, visual outputs are rendered as contextual intelligence artifacts derived from spatial relevance and lawful purpose.
SIGNET employs a controlled output vocabulary composed of non-personal intelligence units. These include environmental states, zone conditions, activity relevance indicators, motion alignment markers, and event-linked visual references. Every output is bound to a defined spatial coordinate, a temporal index, and an authorization scope, never to an individual identity.
Visual outputs therefore communicate what is occurring within a defined space, rather than who is present. Optical frames, when surfaced, appear only in direct association with a specific spatial event, investigative moment, or compliance-driven review context already established within the intelligence workflow. There is no autonomous or continuous visual following of individuals across zones, cameras, or time.
Where interpretive overlays are applied, they function solely as semantic guides. These may indicate motion relevance, zone interaction boundaries, or event correlation cues. Such overlays are synthetic, non-biological, and non-representational. They do not encode identity, intent, or personal characteristics, and they do not persist beyond the authorized operational window.
SIGNET explicitly avoids longitudinal personal correlation. It does not construct behavioral histories linked to individuals, nor does it enable retrospective tracing of persons across unrelated events. Each visual output exists only within its defined purpose, authorized timeframe, and governed review scope.
The client interface reinforces this doctrine through both language and presentation. Output labels reference constructs such as zone condition, activity alignment, event confirmation, or contextual review. Terminology associated with personal operational review, individual scoring, profiling, or identity attribution is intentionally excluded from system semantics and operator workflows.
SIGNET outputs do not represent individuals, do not assign identity, and cannot be used to track persons across time or locations outside the scope of an explicitly authorized event context.
When operating in conjunction with INPSN, SIGNET outputs remain strictly subordinate to spatial intelligence. Optical references appear only to contextualize or corroborate spatial events identified through frequency-based perception, ensuring that visual intelligence enhances understanding without redefining the system’s intelligence focus.
Through this output doctrine, SIGNET ensures that visual intelligence remains bounded, interpretable, and auditable. The client does not “see people”; the client sees situations, states, and events, expressed visually only where necessary, lawful, and governed.
“What is occurring here?”
, not,
“Who is this?”
This section describes system doctrine and governance boundaries. Technical parameters and implementation details are disclosed only under contractual NDA.