The reality graph is the sum of all memories — a living, decentralized record of what’s actually happening in the world, captured by real people in real time. No filters. No algorithm deciding what gets in or what gets suppressed. Just evidence, geotemporally anchored to a specific place and moment.
Every memory added makes the picture more complete. A protest in New York. A street market in Lagos. A war zone in Gaza. A fashion show in Paris. Frontline footage from Iran. Intimate moments. Atrocities. Beauty. Chaos. All of it sitting in the same graph, valued not by an editorial team or a recommendation engine, but by the collective attention of the people who witnessed it.
Over time, the reality graph becomes something genuinely new: a verified, community-curated dataset of human experience across time and space. A ground truth layer for news outlets trying to verify what happened. A training dataset for AI models that need to understand the world as it actually is, not as it was staged to appear. A historical record that no single entity controls or can manipulate.
That’s the vision. Not a better social feed. A new layer of reality.