Leverage your credibility
1. Unlock access and compliance
Your DISC Score serves as a programmable access credential across decentralized and centralized platforms, and institutional systems requiring regulation standards.
A single DISC credential can unlock participation across DeFi, governance, and institutional systems without repetitive onboarding — ensuring one proof works universally.
Using Access Policies (APs), developers and organizations can define participation rules based on:
Overall or metric-specific DISC Score thresholds
Metric Health Factor requirements for specific verticals such as Finance, Governance, or Security
Required verification levels (zk-KYH, zk-KYC, or zk-KYC + AML)
Exclusions for actors with BAD Status
When a user attempts to access a gated protocol, application, or enterprise system, their TRIS ID is verified through Tythe.
Tythe responds with one of three standardized results:
Access Granted, Access Denied, or Access Conditional.
NOTE: Access results can also include a *conditional approval* status. This indicates partial eligibility — for instance, when a user’s DISC Score meets governance criteria but falls short on compliance or verification requirements.
Conditions are enforced dynamically through the protocol’s configured Access Policy.
This allows participants to enter systems that match their verified trust level without redundant identity checks.
All verifications are executed through zero-knowledge proofs, validating credentials without revealing personal data.
2. Participate with verified influence
Governance and decision-making systems integrated with Tythe can align voting power or proposal weight with verified credibility.
Through Validation Policies (VPs), influence can be computed from:
DISC Score and corresponding band (Poor → Excellent)
Metric-specific performance (for instance, Governance or Compliance credibility)
Historical validation consistency and diversity
Organizations, DAOs, and institutions can calibrate their own VP rule sets to reflect regulatory, structural, or fairness requirements.
This framework makes governance influence measurable, reproducible, and tamper-resistant—ensuring outcomes reflect earned credibility rather than temporary wealth or participation volume.
3. Collaborate within verified networks
Within Tythe’s ecosystem, verified individuals can connect through trust-anchored relationships.
When two TRIS IDs mutually connect, Tythe recognizes the relationship as a credibility-validated network link, which unlocks advanced collaboration and attribution features.
Connected participants can:
Exchange t-transfers (trust transfers) and sponsorships freely without proximity restrictions.
Share selective Trovebook access, allowing collaborative projects, audits, or research reviews.
Validate each other’s contributions through peer attestations, feeding verified data into Tythe’s validation graph.
Each connection strengthens both parties’ credibility footprint within Tythe’s network graph.
Frequent collaboration with high-DISC peers increases TCT diversity and validation weighting — improving both Metric Health and visibility across future partnerships, job networks, and governance systems.
Networking on Tythe is not social — it is structural. Every verified connection becomes a verifiable trust link within the digital economy.
FAQs
Q1: Does a low DISC Score block my participation? Only if a platform enforces Access Policy (AP) thresholds. You can still build credibility and reapply once your score has improved.
Q2: Can I carry my DISC across protocols? Yes. Tythe’s DISC data is portable through its APIs and SDKs, ensuring interoperability across integrated systems.
Q3: Do platforms set their own thresholds? Yes. Access Policies (APs) are fully configurable by organizations or developers.
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