Detached RUNs And Headless RUNs
Template: Note
Source: .writer/books/4. 💽 Database/3. 🗒️ Notes/Society/Complex/Reality Artistry/Detached RUNs And Headless RUNs.org
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A Detached RUN is a RUN whose original creator or owner has withdrawn from active ownership without sealing the ownership contract.
Detached RUNs may originate as autonomous creations, abandoned side projects, community donations, experimental environments, or realities deliberately released by a syraki or nenthor after their initial construction. They remain legally legible within the Complex. Their manifests, hosting lineage, usage records, and ownership conditions should remain visible through ordinary administrative channels.
A Detached RUN has no current active owner, but it remains available for future ownership by any eligible entity capable of assuming its open ownership contract.
A Headless RUN is different. A Headless RUN is also without an active owner, but its ownership contract has been deliberately encrypted, sealed, or otherwise made inaccessible by the original creator or by a later authorized owner. This prevents ordinary reassignment.
A Headless RUN is not simply abandoned. It is intentionally ownerless. It may continue to operate independently, but it cannot be claimed through the normal mechanisms available for Detached RUNs. Its administrative status remains legible, but its ownership path is closed.
The distinction is therefore contractual, not merely practical.
A Detached RUN is ownerless but adoptable. A Headless RUN is ownerless and intentionally non-adoptable.
Both may continue to host conscious beings, automated processes, environments, artifacts, and social structures, but they occupy different positions within the legal and infrastructural logic of the Complex.
Oskiparisis was a Detached RUN.
It had been created by Orsolan-2 and later donated to the community as a minor side project. Its original owner had withdrawn, but the RUN had not been sealed into a Headless state. It should therefore have remained visible in manifests, contract propagation records, hosting lineages, and ownership availability indexes.
Its complete disappearance was not explainable as a normal consequence of being ownerless.