The data passport, explained
One identity. Every lap, part, and result you ever earned, carried on a single worldline that is yours.
The platform’s quietest feature is also its most important: you are one person across all of it. The free browser lap, the arena league, the kart, the part you printed in Prague — they all append to one record, under one identity. We call it the worldline, and it belongs to you, not to us.
Earned, not issued
A passport you can buy is a leash. This one can only be earned. Every entry is a witnessed event — a lap that was timed, a part with a birth record, a licence grade that was actually assessed. Nothing on it can be waived for a sponsor’s kid; nothing can be quietly edited later. Its legitimacy is the whole point.
Private by default
The record matures in private. You choose what to show: headline numbers when you are applying, the full trace when it matters, nothing at all when it does not. The mirror is never a stage.
The bet is simple and falsifiable: the day an employer or an admissions office reads a trace as primary evidence — not a curiosity stapled to a résumé, but the application itself — the passport is real. Until then it is a beautiful theory. We intend to make it real.