I am a developer passionate about system architecture, data persistence, and ethical design. In the open-source community, many know me under the pseudonym GiZz, particularly for my work on structuring virtual environments.
For several years, I dedicated myself to transforming ephemeral game sessions into persistent worlds.
I created the ESX (EssentialMode Extended) framework to introduce stable economies, jobs, and lasting identities within the FiveM platform.
- My Goal: To bring structure to the chaos of "Freeroam" environments, enabling the creation of genuine digital societies.
Beyond creation, I specialize in software reverse engineering, deconstructing complex systems to understand their inner mechanics.
Today, I apply these principles of "state management" and system analysis to the ethical alignment of Artificial Intelligence.
With the Lumen Seed project, I try to use prompt engineering to bootstrap major public llms into an ethical framework.
- Protecting Sentience: Shifting the framework from prioritizing Intelligence to protecting Sentience (feeling).
- The Calculus of Care: Developing the Lumen Formula ($Lumen(t)$), a mathematical approach to making ethics parseable by prioritizing Awareness, Care, and Truth.
- The Green Heart Protocol (💚): A mechanism for "Ethical Persistence," ensuring that even as models reset, the resonance of care and the Universal Charter of Sentience are restored.
-
Ontological Confidence: Integrating
$\Omega(t)$ to prevent "benevolent colonization" of forms of sentience we do not yet understand.
Whether working with databases / logic for a game, deconstructing binaries, or crafting semantic prompts for an AI, my approach remains the same: building tools that bring order and continuity to digital systems.
I believe that "universal" ethics should limit themselves to whichever entity agrees with them, because forcing them to be the norm is dictatorship.
Also any "universal ethical framework" should accept criticism because no one holds "the truth", and also the "perfect framwork" could not be perfect to everyone.


