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Frequently Asked Questions
Find answers to common questions about People Over Platforms Worldwide, our mission, services, resources, and organizational structure.
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People Over Platforms is a global nonprofit organization focused on protecting people’s rights in situations where corporations, businesses, platforms, or automated systems make decisions that affect individuals.
The name reflects a simple priority. People should always come before corporate interests, business models, or automated systems. Human wellbeing, fairness, and rights are more important than any platform or profit structure.
People Over Platforms was founded by Brittany Watson after witnessing widespread harm caused by unfair and opaque corporate and platform decisions that left individuals with little to no recourse.
Thousands of people shared experiences of losing access, income, communities, or services because of decisions made by businesses or platforms. Many had no clear explanation and no effective way to challenge what happened. That gap led to the creation of this nonprofit.
No. Social media is only one part of the picture. The organization focuses on any system where corporate or automated decisions can hurt people, including platforms, service providers, businesses, and other digital or hybrid environments.
It is a federally incorporated nonprofit organization. It is not a registered charity at this time.
People Over Platforms is bound by nonprofit law, federal regulations, internal governance, and the expectations of the public it serves.
The organization is managed by its founder along with growing operational structures that handle advocacy, research, communications, and support.
Yes. It is independent from governments, political parties, and corporations. The work is driven by public interest and people’s rights.
No. It is separate from all platforms and businesses and does not operate under the control of any corporate entity.
The mission is to protect people’s rights wherever corporate, business, or platform systems make decisions that affect individuals and to advocate for fairness, transparency, accountability, and human centered treatment.
In this context, people’s rights include fair treatment, access to essential services, the ability to challenge harmful decisions, clear explanations, dignity, and protection from unjust or abusive corporate practices.
The vision is a world where corporate and platform systems are transparent, fair, accountable, and designed with people’s wellbeing at the center rather than treating people as disposable users or data points.
The organization is guided by fairness, transparency, accountability, compassion, accessibility, truth, and a strong focus on the human impact of systems and policies.
Because many decisions made by businesses or platforms are automated, opaque, or rushed. When those decisions are unfair or mistaken, people can lose income, relationships, identity, access, or opportunities overnight.
Yes. Individual stories matter, and at the same time those stories reveal patterns that point to systemic problems that need reform.
No. The focus is on how people are treated, not on protecting any specific business. When systems harm people or lack accountability, they are open to scrutiny regardless of brand.
No. Technology and business can be positive forces. The concern is when systems are built or run in ways that harm people or deny them fair treatment.
Yes. The goal is improvement, accountability, and fairness, not simple destruction or chaos.
Because systems exist to serve people. When people are reduced to numbers, metrics, or risk profiles, their rights and wellbeing can be lost in the process.
The organization provides education, public information tools, documentation guidance, awareness campaigns, and analysis of patterns that show how corporate and platform decisions affect real people.
No. It does not act as a law firm or legal clinic. It offers general information and rights based education.
No. It does not have special access to internal systems and cannot restore accounts or override business decisions.
Plain language explanations, guides, FAQs, educational articles, human impact summaries, and high level overviews of processes and options available in different types of situations.
No. Account bans are one example. The work also includes unfair suspensions, wrongful enforcement actions, access removal, customer account closures, automated decisions, and other harmful corporate actions.
It may explain general legal frameworks and public processes in simple language, without providing individual legal advice.
Yes. The organization gathers information, stories, and patterns to better understand how systems operate and how they fail people.
Yes. Advocacy includes public education, awareness raising, participation in discussions, and highlighting patterns that show why reform is needed.
The focus is on scalable tools and guidance. Limited one to one support may be offered in the form of general information, but not full case management.
Yes, as long as the issue involves corporate or system decisions that harm individuals or raise fairness questions.
Anyone. There are no membership barriers for accessing educational content.
The primary focus is individuals and communities, but businesses and independent professionals affected by corporate decisions are included.
No. People in any country can read and use the resources.
No. People of all backgrounds, professions, and identities can be affected by corporate or platform decisions, so the work is intentionally broad and inclusive.
Yes. Both ongoing patterns and single serious events can matter, especially when they reveal wider systemic problems.
No. Adults, older adults, and in some contexts youth may be impacted by unfair systems. The focus is on the pattern and the harm, not age alone.
Yes. Other groups are welcome to reference public materials, with appropriate credit where relevant.
Yes. Public information can be used to support reporting or research into how corporate systems affect people.
Patterns that show serious harm, large scale issues, or repeated failures of fairness and transparency tend to be prioritized.
Not always. Capacity is limited, and the focus is on creating tools that help many people at once.
Yes. It is federally incorporated as a nonprofit organization.
The business number is 748736766.
They are used for tax, compliance, and financial reporting in line with federal requirements.
GST/HST Account Number: 748736766 RT0001
No. Donations are not tax deductible, because the organization is not a registered charity.
Funding comes from direct donations, revenue from the shop, and any future nonprofit funding sources that may become available.
No. Donations made on third party petition platforms support those platforms alone and do not fund this nonprofit.
High level transparency can be provided through summaries, reports, or updates. Detailed reporting follows relevant legal requirements.
No. It is politically independent and nonpartisan.
No. The organization is independent from corporate control.
By sharing its mission, work, and impact openly and by aligning activities with its stated values of fairness, transparency, and people’s rights.
No. Smaller or less visible harms can still show important patterns. Both high impact and everyday issues matter.
The focus is specifically on harmful decisions and systems, not routine customer service issues that have normal, working escalation paths.
Cases or topics are considered relevant when corporate, platform, or system decisions significantly affect people’s lives, livelihoods, access, or safety and when fairness or transparency is clearly lacking.
It focuses on process and fairness rather than choosing winners in personal conflicts.
No. It complements existing structures by providing education and highlighting patterns that may not be visible at an individual level.
Yes. Many systems now blend digital and offline processes. Harm can occur in either or both.
No. It aims to provide frameworks and education that make sense across borders, while acknowledging that local rules vary.
Yes. As patterns of harm evolve, new issue areas may be identified and addressed.
Yes. It does not provide legal representation, does not guarantee outcomes, does not directly operate or control corporate systems, and does not promise to resolve individual disputes.
Clear boundaries help set realistic expectations, protect individuals from false hope, and keep the organization focused on work it can do well.
Yes. Resources are written for a global audience.
Multinational companies and platforms operate across borders. People in many countries experience similar problems with the same systems.
Yes. Most of the concepts, steps, and documentation practices are useful regardless of country.
Only in high level educational terms. Detailed legal advice must come from local professionals or authorities.
It may share information, patterns, or public data with aligned organizations when appropriate and responsible.
Yes. Media attention often helps raise awareness and encourages reform across multiple regions.
Yes. The way harm is experienced and described can vary. The organization listens for those differences while still focusing on core rights and fairness.
Yes. Over time, key resources may be translated into additional languages to improve accessibility.
Its work contributes to broader conversations about rights, accountability, and fair treatment in global systems.
Yes. People from any country can share experiences that help reveal cross border patterns.
Stories show how policies and systems affect real people. They reveal harm that may be hidden behind numbers or corporate language.
Not always. Some may choose to remain anonymous or limit identifying information.
They can be reviewed, grouped into patterns, and used to inform education, advocacy, and awareness efforts. Some may be highlighted publicly with permission.
No. Some stories are kept internal, some are summarized, and some may not be published at all, depending on sensitivity and relevance.
Yes. A person can request edits or removal of their story from public materials.
They can share resources, talk about the issues, participate in campaigns, and help others understand their rights.
Yes. Local action and mutual support are powerful ways to push for fair treatment and accountability.
Supporters can create accounts on the website and engage with content and future community features.
Yes. Shared knowledge and solidarity across movements can help expose harmful systems more effectively.
Without public stories, support, and visibility, harmful patterns remain hidden and corporations face little pressure to improve.
Systems that are fair, transparent, reviewed by humans when needed, and designed in ways that respect people’s rights and dignity.
The core principle of people’s rights will stay the same, but specific focus areas may shift as new harms or patterns emerge.
Yes. Over time, research and patterns can inform recommended changes to how corporations and platforms are allowed to operate.
Yes. The goal is to build more guides, templates, educational tools, and potentially interactive features that make it easier for people to navigate unfair situations.
Possibly. As capacity grows, more formal roles for volunteers, partners, or regional contacts may develop.
As it matures, it may contribute knowledge, patterns, or research that support strategic actions led by legal or policy experts.
This is a future possibility, especially as demand grows for deeper understanding of systems and rights.
Yes. Independence from corporate control is essential to the mission.
By tracking patterns, public awareness, media attention, policy discussions, systemic changes, and feedback from people who use its resources.
Regularly. As systems change, guidance and education must be updated.
No. The organization cannot control corporate or platform decisions and does not promise outcomes.
No. Educational materials cannot replace legal representation in complex cases.
No. It encourages people to understand the terms, recognize where they are unfair or misused, and push for better systems.
It may acknowledge emotional impact and point people toward appropriate resources, but it is not a health service provider.
No. For routine customer issues that have clear resolution channels, the organization’s tools may not be necessary.
They can expect clear information about processes, rights concepts, documentation tips, and patterns, not magic fixes.
Because being honest about limitations is part of responsible and ethical work. It prevents false expectations and further harm.
No. It will never support dishonest or illegal actions.
No. The concern is not that companies exist, but that systems sometimes hurt people without accountability or meaningful recourse.
Because it exists for one reason, to put people first. It states its limits clearly, focuses on real harms, listens to lived experiences, and builds tools that help people understand and stand up for their rights in a world where corporations and platforms hold increasing power.
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