Foundation > Regulations

Foundation Laws

Foundation Laws

Foundation Laws are regulations and policies enacted by the Administrative Assembly and O5 Council, they are the supreme ruling documents of the Foundation. Foundation laws are enforced by the Ethics Committee. Revisions to Foundation Laws may be made by the same bodies that enacted them.

Alternate Account Regulations Act

The Alternate Account Regulations Act (AAR Act or AARA) establishes the regulations on alternate accounts within the foundation. Alternate accounts are banned unless they are crime accounts, which must remain a Class-D but can be used by Foundation Personnel to break conventional personnel regulations.

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Corruption Prevention and Security Act

The Corruption Prevention and Security Act (CPS Act or CPSA) establishes the definition of corruption, how to report corruption, how corruption is to be investigated, and how corruption is to be punished. Corruption includes (but is not limited to): wrongful terminations, bribery, coercion, and blackmail.

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Foundation Discord Authenticity Act

Summary: The Foundation Discord Authenticity Act (FDA Act or FDAA) establishes the regulations for creating an official Foundation discord server, alongside outlining the crime of falsely creating a Foundation discord. For a discord to be official, the O5 Councilor Head must be in it, the Administrator must be in it, and there must be Foundation insignia or markings, alongside other things.

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Penal Code Creation and Authorization Act

Summary: The Penal Code Creation and Authorization Act (PCCA Act or PCCAA) is responsible for establishing the Penal Code, the foundation's index of punishable crimes. The penal code is the highest crime index within the foundation and is edited by the Ethics Committee Overseer. Changes to the Penal Code must be approved by the Site Director.

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Regulations and Protocols of Suspension Act

Summary: The Regulations and Protocols of Suspension Act (RPS Act or RPSA) establishes the basis for punishing someone within the Foundation. If someone violates a portion of the Penal Code, they can face punishment. For a punishment to be official, the punishment must be approved by the Ethics Committee.

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