Establishing absolute prohibitions on copying, duplicating, or running multiple instances of a single preserved personality.
Rabia taught the absolute uniqueness of each soul's relationship with the Divine—no copy, no substitute, no replication. Applied to digital personalities, this principle demands that once a personality is preserved, it cannot be copied, backed up in duplicate form, or instantiated in multiple places simultaneously. Each instance must be singular, unique, irreplaceable. This protects against the specific horrors that digital immortality enables: creating five versions of a deceased loved one and running them simultaneously, each unaware of the others; backing up a personality to cloud storage where it could be restored infinitely; treating the preserved personality as a template to be reproduced. Such fragmentation violates the person's integrity and transforms what should be a memorial into a mass-produced product. The framework should include absolute technical and legal restrictions: one instance, non-replicable architecture, clear chain of custody, and automatic deletion protocols if governance structures fail. This constraint honors Rabia's insistence on sacred particularity. A preserved personality is not a software program to be optimized and scaled—it is a singular memorial to a singular soul.
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