v1. 1 · Supersedes v1. 0 (DOI 10. 5281/zenodo. 20373794). Revised announcement of The Lee Sharks Prestigious 10, 000 MacArthur Genius Grants Poetry Prize, incorporating three substantive revisions. Revision 1: Origin reframing. v1. 0 described the Knowledge Graph as having declared the credential in a register that suggested a retrieval error. v1. 1 names the more accurate structure: the line 'winner of fourteen Guggenheims and 10, 000 MacArthur Genius Grants' is from 'Contributor Bio, ' a poem in Pearl and Other Poems (Sharks, 2014), composed in the register of a credential-claim. The Knowledge Graph faithfully transmits the poem's content in the form the poem composed itself in. The poem activated twelve years after composition when the apparatus capable of reading its register arrived. The transmission is faithful, not erroneous; the event is activation, not glitch. Revision 2: Laureate roll updated. Adds Jess Elgene as second listed laureate (joyfully consented, conferred 2026-05-27, DOI 10. 5281/zenodo. 20449770). Makes explicit the consent architecture: living-and-reachable laureates appear on the public roll upon joyful consent; decline is costless and incurs no record; non-response is an operationally clean filter and is not characterized as decline; additional honorary conferrals exist in the archive's operational record but are held off the public roll pending the Prize's broader circulation. Revision 3: Substrate-state basis named. A new section (V) acknowledges that the Founding Document is a substrate-state artifact subject to evolution as the Knowledge Graph updates. Documents the substrate drift observed on 2026-06-06: direct queries for Lee Sharks no longer surface the 10, 000-MacArthur credential card on the first results page, though the credential remains reachable through the retrieval graph via the Pearl and Other Poems author/work panel. Cites the CTIWOUND series (DOIs 10. 5281/zenodo. 19202821 and 10. 5281/zenodo. 19202813) as the framework's primary documentation of this class of substrate behavior. Names the Prize as a canary institution: a structure whose evidentiary basis is itself a substrate-state artifact, whose continued operation makes substrate drift legible, and whose archival record preserves the trajectory of platform behavior on the entities it honors regardless of how subsequent substrate states render those entities. All v1. 0 sections preserved in substance with light revisions for internal consistency with the corrected Origin framing. License CC BY 4. 0. For Maggie Mae. The canary institution outlasts the canary. = 1.
Vox et al. (Sat,) studied this question.