Pupul . the definition

What is an identity packet?

An identity packet is the rendered read of who someone is, earned from how they actually behave, owned by the person it reads, and opened only by consent. It is the difference between what a form was told and what behavior proved.


Packet, not profile.

Every system you have ever signed up for keeps a profile on you: the fields you filled, the boxes you checked, the person you decided to present that day. A profile is a stack of claims, held by someone else, used for purposes you mostly never see.

A packet inverts all three properties. It is earned, not claimed: built from how a person actually moves, so it cannot simply be typed into existence. It is owned, not held: it belongs to the person it reads, not the platform that rendered it. And it is granted, not taken: it opens only when its owner says yes, only as far as they said, and every grant can be pulled.

Behavior-earned

Built from how a person actually moves, not what a form says.

Person-owned

It belongs to the person it reads. Not the platform. Not the employer.

Consent-walled

It opens only when its owner says yes, and only as far as they said.

Revocable

Any grant can be pulled. The packet closes behind it.

How one gets earned.

A packet starts with a reading: a short, consented exercise in which the engine attends to how a person answers, not just what they answer. The read compresses into a word, a pattern, and the material around them. Each further reading deepens the packet; behavior over time earns what no single form could.

The person sees their packet first, holds it, and decides who else ever does. When they grant access, the grant is scoped and signed, and it dies the moment they revoke it. That consent wall is not a policy on a legal page. It is how the system is built, and it is the reason a packet can be trusted where a profile cannot.

A company has one too.

A culture is behavior in aggregate. So a company can earn a packet the same way a person does: consented readings from its own people, rendered into one document that shows the room as it actually operates, not as the deck describes it. Nothing renders below five consented reads and no individual is ever named. That is the Culture Packet.

Asked plainly.

Is an identity packet a personality type?
No. A type is a box chosen from a menu. A packet is a read earned from behavior, specific to the person, and it updates as they do. The comparison is laid out at VEX vs personality tests.
Who can see my packet?
You, and then no one, until you grant access. Grants are scoped to what you chose to share and revocable at any time. Nothing moves without a recorded yes.
Does Pupul sell packet data?
No. The packet is the person's asset, not our inventory. That line is in the lines we do not cross, and the business is built to keep it.
What does one cost?
A Person Packet comes with a LUX reading room, or standalone from $49 at noctaracorp.com/packet. The Culture Packet for a company is $2,490 one time at takethemirror.com/culture.

Put a packet in front of your team.

Tell us who you are and what you are seeing. A reply lands within one business day. Verified inquiries only; you confirm by email.

Sent. Check your inbox to confirm the inquiry, and we take it from there.