Who We Are
Nabard is built and maintained by an anonymous collective of individuals spread across multiple continents. Our team includes technologists, social scientists, data analysts, security specialists, and people with deep knowledge of Iran. For security reasons, we do not disclose personal identities or credentials. The platform itself is our proof of work: its architecture, data quality, and methodological rigor are open for anyone to evaluate.
Every member of Nabard is a volunteer. No one is paid. There are no salaries, no stipends, and no compensation of any kind. The platform has no labor budget. People contribute their time, skills, and resources because they believe in the mission, not because anyone is funded to do this work.
We deliberately choose anonymity to protect ourselves, our families, and everyone who collaborates with this project in any capacity. Internally, team members operate through compartmentalized anonymous identities. This is not secrecy for its own sake; it is a structural safeguard against a regime with a documented record of targeting, threatening, and harming those who expose its actions.
Distinct roles handle labeling, independent review, and community reports. These roles are separated by design to reduce individual bias and maintain archival quality.
Nabard is structured to minimize concentrated authority. Editorial and operational decisions are resolved through anonymous collective vote, one person one vote. The design aims to resist capture by any individual or faction.
Although Nabard operates as a distributed and role-separated collective, we recognize that technical control, language fluency, and infrastructure access create informal power asymmetries. Governance design is treated as an ongoing process, not a fixed solution. Documentation is not neutral; classification shapes interpretation. We therefore distinguish between documenting events and interpreting them: the former is our mandate; the latter remains open.