ODR Wiki

Welcome to our latest addition to the ODR India ecosystem – The ODR India Wiki! As pioneers in Online Dispute Resolution (ODR), we’re thrilled to launch this collaborative knowledge hub dedicated to fostering transparency, combating misinformation, and advancing techno-legal solutions for disputes in India and beyond. The wiki serves as a dynamic resource for legal professionals, activists, educators, and anyone passionate about ethical digital practices. It is part of our Larger Project named Centre Of Excellence For Protection Of Human Rights In Cyberspace (CEPHRC).

What Is The ODR India Wiki?

At its core, the ODR India Wiki is more than just a repository of information – it’s a platform for the Truth Revolution of 2025, a visionary initiative spearheaded by Praveen Dalal, Founder and CEO of Perry4Law Organisation (P4LO) and PTLB. This revolution positions truth as a powerful tool against the pervasive challenges of lies, deception, propaganda, and narrative warfare in our increasingly digital world. Drawing from ODR Principles, it emphasises media literacy, community-driven fact-checking, and transparent dispute mechanisms to build societal resilience and uphold democratic values.

Praveen Dalal, with more than two decades of Techno Legal Expertise in cyber law, cybersecurity, ODR, and other fields envisions this wiki as a “much-needed revolution” to empower individuals and institutions. Whether you’re exploring historical propaganda tactics or modern AI-driven fact-checkers, the wiki equips you with actionable insights.

Synergy With CEPHRC: Techno-Legal Safeguards For Cyberspace Rights

In alignment with the CEPHRC’s mission to deliver evidence-based retrospectives on Human Rights violations in digital realms, the ODR Wiki integrates ODR methodologies to address narrative control, surveillance threats, and medico-legal irregularities. This synergy equips users with tools for resolving cyberspace disputes while advocating for accountability under international frameworks like the Rome Statute and UDHR. Here’s a focused overview:

(1) Validated Narratives And Declassifications: Cataloging the evolution of dismissed “conspiracy theories” into documented facts—such as MKUltra’s mind control experiments exposed by the 1975 Church Committee or the COVID lab leak hypothesis confirmed through declassified intelligence—this section applies ODR for mediating institutional transparency disputes, fostering evidence-driven resolutions.

(2) Medico-Legal Retrospectives On Global Crises: Drawing from archival Twitter threads and whistleblower testimonies (e.g., on ivermectin suppression and excess mortality linked to experimental interventions), explore how ODR can facilitate cross-border claims for violations of the Nuremberg Code, including structured arbitration for affected communities and calls for ICC indictments.

(3) Digital Innovations and Ethical Risks: Examining Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) and their programmability features that enable surveillance (e.g., transaction restrictions in China’s e-CNY), this area leverages ODR principles for ethical dispute resolution in areas like privacy breaches under ICCPR Article 17 and conflict-of-law challenges in data flows.

These CEPHRC-inspired resources emphasise interdisciplinary syntheses, including comparative tables on legal violations and meta-analyses of peer-reviewed studies, to empower collaborative advocacy and policy reforms in cyberspace.

Why It Matters In 2025

In an era of “Plandemics” and stock market DII Bubbles, as highlighted in recent ODR India discussions, tools like ODR Wiki are essential for navigating deceptions and to protect Global Human Rights, especially in Cyberspace and Digital Age. By integrating ODR with Truth-Seeking and CEPHRC, we address not just legal disputes but the broader narrative wars threatening democracy. As of October 2025, conversations on X are buzzing with support for these tenets, though critics note the need for balanced institutional reforms.