Communication Rules
For Community Members, Sales Representatives, Referrers and Partners
How to Share the Project Clearly, Positively and Responsibly
Gen6 grows through people who believe in the project and are willing to talk about it. Community members, sales partners, referrers and enthusiasts play an important role in helping others understand what Gen6 is building.
This guide is here to make communication easier, clearer, and more effective. It is not meant to restrict enthusiasm. On the contrary, it is designed to help everyone speak about Gen6 with confidence, consistency and credibility.
1. Purpose
These Communication Guidelines are designed to ensure that all public and private communications regarding Gen6, validator rights, GSX, referrals, and related project matters are accurate, responsible and aligned with official Gen6 materials.
Anyone communicating about Gen6 in a sales, referral, promotional, educational or community capacity must follow these guidelines at all times.
2. Communicate With Confidence
You are encouraged to talk about:
The Gen6 vision and ecosystem
The role of validator rights
The utility of GSX
Official milestones and announcements
Product launches, partnerships, and roadmap progress
Your own excitement about the project
Authentic enthusiasm is welcome. Positive communication helps others discover the opportunity and understand the broader mission behind Gen6.
All communications must be:
Accurate
Balanced
Non-misleading
Based on official Gen6 sources
Clear about risks and uncertainties
Free from promises of profit or guaranteed outcomes
Opinions may be shared but they must never be presented as guaranteed results, investment promises or official company statements unless expressly authorized. GSX and Validators are not investment products.
3. Stay Aligned With Official Information
The best communication is simple: share what Gen6 has officially published.
Please rely on:
The signed links and resources by the Official Gen6 Identity:
Use the Gen6 Wiki
Official company announcements, issued presentations, documents, and public statements
What is official? Only the Real Seal signed communication channels! See the identity above for details.
This keeps communication consistent and ensures that the community is speaking from the same factual foundation.
4. Share the Opportunity Without Turning It Into a Promise
It is completely appropriate to speak about Gen6 as a project with ambition, utility, and growth potential. At the same time, future outcomes should not be presented as guaranteed.
Good examples
“Gen6 is building an ecosystem with long-term utility around GSX and validator participation.”
“The project has reached several important milestones and continues to develop its roadmap.”
“Many people are excited about the future of the ecosystem.”
“Validator rights are designed to play a role within the Gen6 network and its broader economic model.”
Avoid statements like
“This will definitely increase 20x.”
“Profit is guaranteed.”
“There is no risk.”
“Everyone who joins now will make money.”
A strong message is not weakened by being accurate. In fact, responsible communication builds more trust over time.
5. Personal Opinions Are Welcome — Just Present Them as Opinions
You may absolutely share your own views, expectations, and excitement.
For example:
“I personally believe Gen6 has strong long-term potential.”
“In my view, this is one of the most interesting utility-driven Web3 projects.”
“I am optimistic about the ecosystem based on the milestones already achieved.”
When expressing a personal view, make it clear that it is your opinion and not a guaranteed outcome or official investment promise.
6. Risk Language Is Mandatory when Talking about GSX and Validators
Communications must clearly acknowledge uncertainty and risk where relevant.
This applies especially when discussing:
GSX
Validator rights
TGE timing
Market access
Future listings
Potential economic benefits
Revenue models
Adoption projections
Roadmap milestones
Required communication posture
Whenever discussing future outcomes, include language such as:
“Subject to execution, regulatory conditions, and market developments.”
“No financial return is guaranteed.”
“Future timelines and project milestones may change.”
“This should not be interpreted as investment advice.”
“Participants should make independent decisions based on official documentation.”
7. How to Talk About GSX and Validator Rights
When discussing GSX or validator rights, focus on their place in the ecosystem and the official project framework.
Recommended framing
Explain the utility and role as described in official materials
Discuss the broader validator model and participation structure
Highlight official project milestones and current progress
Share links to the Gen6 Wiki or official announcements for details
Please avoid
Quoting specific future token prices
Presenting income or returns as guaranteed
Promising liquidity, resale value, or market outcomes
Making claims that go beyond official materials
The most persuasive communication is not hype — it is clarity.
8. No Investment Promises
It must always be clear that personal opinions, projections, or enthusiasm are not investment promises.
No communicator may state or imply that:
A validator purchase guarantees returns
GSX tokens will appreciate in value
A future listing will produce liquidity at a specific price
Participation ensures financial profit
Project milestones guarantee market performance
Recommended disclaimer
Where appropriate, use:
“This communication is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, tax, or investment advice. No return, liquidity event, token price, or market outcome is guaranteed.”
7. Make Risk Awareness Natural, Not Fearful
Responsible communication does not require sounding negative. It simply means presenting the project with maturity.
For example:
“As with any developing ecosystem, future outcomes depend on execution, adoption, and market conditions.”
“Anyone considering participation should review the official materials and make an informed decision.”
“The project has strong ambitions, while future results naturally depend on many factors.”
This type of language reassures people that the communicator is informed and trustworthy.
8. Communication About Timelines and Roadmaps
Timelines may only be communicated exactly as officially published.
Do not independently promise or reinterpret:
Launch dates
TGE dates
Listing dates
Token availability
Product rollout dates
Revenue activation dates
Acceptable phrasing
“According to the latest official announcement, the current target date is…”
“Please refer to the latest Gen6 communication for the most up-to-date timeline.”
“Roadmap items may be subject to operational, regulatory, or strategic adjustment.”
9. Talk About Gen6 in a Way That Builds Trust
The community benefits most when communication is:
Positive
Honest
Clear
Consistent
Grounded in official information
Trust compounds. A message that is realistic and well-supported is more powerful than one that overreaches.
10. Communication About GSX and Validators
When discussing GSX or validator rights:
Do
Explain their role only as officially defined
Refer to published project documentation
Clarify that future utility and market outcomes involve risk
Encourage readers to review official materials directly
Do not
Promise income
Promise token liquidity
Promise resale value
Promise appreciation
Suggest that validator rights are risk-free
Suggest that token allocation equals guaranteed realizable value
10. No Unauthorized Legal, Financial, or Tax Advice
Community members, referrers, and sales representatives may not provide:
Legal advice
Tax advice
Investment advice
Regulatory interpretations presented as certainty
Correct approach
Use wording such as:
“Please consult an independent advisor.”
“For legal or tax implications, obtain professional advice.”
“Please rely on the official documentation and your own independent assessment.”
11. Examples of Acceptable and Unacceptable Statements
Token price
“Future token market performance is uncertain and cannot be guaranteed.”
“GSX will multiply after TGE.”
Validator economics
“Any economic outcome depends on the project framework, implementation, and future conditions.”
“This will generate passive income.”
Project timing
“Please rely on the latest official roadmap and announcements.”
“The launch date cannot move.”
Resale opportunity
“Transferability, resale, or market demand cannot be promised.”
“You can always sell later at a profit.”
Personal views
“This is my personal view and not an official investment statement.”
“The company says this is a guaranteed opportunity.”
12. Escalation Rule
If you are unsure whether a statement is acceptable:
Do not publish it.
Check the latest official Gen6 documentation.
Ask the designated Gen6 communication or compliance contact for clarification.
When in doubt, leave it out.
13. When in Doubt, Use Official Sources
If you are unsure whether a statement is accurate, the safest and strongest approach is:
Quote or link the official source
Avoid adding assumptions
Ask the Gen6 team for clarification if needed
This protects you, the audience, and the credibility of the entire ecosystem.
14.Shared Responsibility
Everyone communicating about Gen6 contributes to how the project is understood. That is a powerful role.
The Company is responsible for its own official statements and publications. Community members, representatives, referrers, and contractors are responsible for ensuring that their own communications remain accurate and aligned with this guide.
15. Final Principle
Be enthusiastic. Be clear. Be factual. Be proud of the project.
The strongest Gen6 communication inspires confidence because it combines vision with responsibility.
16. Suggested Standard Disclaimer
The following disclaimer may be used in relevant public-facing communications:
“This material is provided for informational purposes only. It does not constitute financial, investment, legal, or tax advice. No guarantee is made regarding future token utility, liquidity, price, market access, project milestones, or economic outcomes. Readers should rely on official Gen6 materials and make independent decisions based on their own assessment.”
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