Social Integrity Score
Any time human beings communicate there is a certain level of social integrity expected of all parties involved. Indeed, there are some social graces expected even of those not directly involved. If fictitious person George tells imaginary man Henry that he plans to go fishing this coming weekend, George's reasonable expectation would be to treat his comment within the context it was made. George would expect Henry to use good judgement in respect to guarding George's interests. Henry doing this is "social integrity." Henry going around to all the stores and letting them know George is going fishing so poor George has to put up with a litany of flyers and solicitor cold calls selling fishing poles, boats and anything else remotely associated with fishing is not practicing social integrity.
Type | Score | Description |
---|---|---|
Confidant | 1.5 | Operates as a close ally not only safeguarding any information shared with them as a personal responsibility, but also providing guidance as to when they might be exposing their self to social harm. |
Friend | 1.25 | Treat interactions with the conversational confidence of a friend. |
Acquaintance | 1.0 | Treat interactions with equal ambivalence toward shielding the communicator from gossip, and actually participating in gossip. No notable action or expression in either direction. |
Shady | .25 | Shares UGD as a secondary revenue stream. |
Gossip | .50 | Shares UGD as a primary revenue source. |