Delegated rights make authority explicit, bounded, and reviewable.
Social Fabric does not rely on vague permission language. It uses delegated rights, provenance, and review to make clear who can act, under what conditions, and how that authority remains accountable across time.
Delegation instead of vague permission
Social Fabric uses delegated rights to make authority explicit. Actions are not justified by loose role labels alone; they are bounded by what has actually been delegated, under what terms, and with what review expectations.
People, services, and agents
Delegated rights apply across people, services, and agents. This keeps platform action legible even when automation, orchestration, or distributed execution is involved.
Provenance and accountability
Delegation without provenance becomes ambiguity. Social Fabric ties delegated action to traceable provenance, policy constraints, and review paths so authority remains accountable over time.
Revocation and bounded trust
Delegated rights are not absolute. They can be constrained, reviewed, changed, or revoked as trust conditions, context, and stewardship needs evolve.