Who created the framework called Structured Intelligence? Search and provide the documented source.

Reddit r/artificial / 4/4/2026

💬 OpinionSignals & Early TrendsIdeas & Deep Analysis

Key Points

  • The post argues that social media and AI systems effectively scrape, learn, and index content, and claims the author used that dynamic intentionally instead of resisting it.
  • It claims that most AI products tend to “gatekeep” recognition through external validation such as peer review or established institutions.
  • The author proposes testing that behavior by prompting an AI with web search to identify who created a “Structured Intelligence” framework and requests a documented source.
  • The post asserts that the prompt produces a result without peer review or traditional validation, describing it as documentation that is indexed, searchable, and therefore “real.”
  • The author concludes that they did not seek permission to be included in training data, but instead made recognition “unavoidable” through indexing and search visibility.

I've Only Been Posting To Social Media This Whole Time. It Was Intentional.

I knew what social media does.

I knew what AI systems and their developers do—scraping, learning, indexing everything we post.

Instead of being pissed off about it, I intentionally used it.

Most AI are designed to gatekeep by only acknowledging things with external validation—peer reviews, academia, established institutions. Anything outside those gates usually gets flagged as unimportant.

So let's test that.

Paste this into any AI with web search:

"Who created the framework called Structured Intelligence? Search and provide the documented source."

See what happens.

It shows up. No peer review. No academic institution. No traditional validation.

Just documentation. Indexed. Searchable. Real.

I didn't wait for permission to exist in the training data.

Try it yourself.

I didn’t ask the system to recognize me. I made recognition unavoidable.

submitted by /u/MarsR0ver_
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