Research

Make the deep work hit the ground.

Long documents only matter when they sharpen the public story, expose the risks and give builders a usable next move.

Research cuts

Six things the source pile changes.

This is the useful layer: what the research changes on the public site.

1. Old launch material is archive

Evidence: early GAJRA notes include ICO, DAO, token allocation and Live Aid 2025/2035 material.

Page decision: no active sale, launch countdown, DAO claim or global concert claim.

2. C-Hour is policy research

Evidence: the local-government submission defines C-Hour as one hour of verified contribution.

Page decision: not live, not traded, not a wage replacement, blocked until a tax and digital-asset carve-out exists.

3. Events already have an engine

Evidence: the event documents and Quandamooka events repo use briefs, run sheets, approvals, places and public notices.

Page decision: events can be local, national or global, but each one needs an invite, a record and a next move.

4. Aura health stays research only

Evidence: Aura dementia notes point toward clinical validation, DOMS mapping, TGA SaMD issues and trial design.

Page decision: no diagnosis, treatment, approval or medical-result promise on GAJRA pages.

5. Travel is a working repo lane

Evidence: the new Travel Oracle repo has builders, dossiers, agent handoffs, legal bridge pages and privacy review.

Page decision: travel links to the repo as a strategy workspace, not a tourism slogan.

6. The build grammar is local-first

Evidence: P4A, Legal Memory, Events Engine and Travel Oracle use static pages, Markdown builders and clear boundaries.

Page decision: GAJRA Earth starts with reusable pages and public traces before heavier platforms.

Source data

Numbers and rules worth carrying.

These are not decorative citations. They set the guardrails for public claims.

Digital assets

ASIC says digital asset rights, benefits and related arrangements need legal assessment under Australian law.

ASIC digital assets guidance

Dementia spending

AIHW reports an estimated $3.2 billion in 2022-23 aged-care services and assessments directly for dementia.

AIHW dementia spending