VSDNA

Questions that matter before submission

The atlas stays narrow on purpose. These answers define what is visible, what is rejected, and what comes next.

What does VSDNA publish?

VSDNA publishes machine-led sequences where the vehicle stays primary, the city remains legible, and the frame holds under movement.

What qualifies for submission?

Material qualifies when the machine is visible immediately, the place reads without text overlays, the framing stays coherent, and the sequence holds both control and force.

Why is some material rejected?

Material is rejected when the frame is chaotic, the subject is weak, the place is unreadable, false badges remain visible, or the sequence never leaves cruising.

How are sequences structured?

Accepted sequences follow a controlled progression: calm, build, break, release, and control. Cuts are aligned to real signal, not random edits.

How does featuring work?

Featuring changes exposure only. It does not override quality thresholds and it does not guarantee engagement.

What is PULSE?

PULSE is the observational map layer. It is designed around delayed zones, recent clips, radius-based visibility, and no exact pinpoints.

Which languages are live?

The current release runs in English, Spanish, French, and Arabic, with a root entry path for global discovery.

What grows first from here?

More approved city scenes, broader country coverage, deeper machine routes, and stronger journal context.