A Meaning Room is a governed semantic context in which a concept carries exactly one binding definition — specific to a domain, purpose, or framework.
Not a universal definition. A contextual one.
A Meaning Room is a governed semantic context in which a concept carries exactly one binding definition — specific to a domain, purpose, or framework.
Not a universal definition. A contextual one.
Step 1 of 6
Step 2 of 6
“Coverage includes all eligible claims.”
One short sentence decides which claims get paid. Nobody disagrees with it yet — because everyone is reading the same words. So what happens if a single word changes?
Step 3 of 6
Nothing here is saved — experiment freely. Try the suggested alternative, or edit the wording yourself.
Input · what you change
Coverage — original definition
“Coverage includes all eligible claims.”
Output · what changed
unchanged — No change yet — edit the definition to see how the meaning shifts.
Change a word to see two teams diverge.
Want the full sandbox? Open the Definition Playground →
Step 4 of 6
Concept
Coverage
Your role
You are Legal.
Step 5 of 6
You discovered semantic drift. Now decide how the organization responds.
Choose a response above to see its consequences ripple through meaning, trust, and debt — and watch the Meaning Map react.
If one word can change Coverage…
what happens with these?
Step 6 — Explore further
Complete the challenge above to unlock the Semantic Discovery Engine.
Organizations have boardrooms, war rooms, control rooms, and data rooms. Few have a place where meaning itself is governed.
Every decision depends on meaning.
Every policy depends on meaning.
Every AI system depends on meaning.
Yet meaning is rarely managed.
The same word means different things across departments.
The same concept is read differently by systems.
What one team calls “risk”, another calls “exposure”. A clinician's “patient” is a finance system's “account”.
Most organizations don't lack data. They lack Shared Meaning.
The Meaning Room™ is where organizations establish and govern shared meaning before decisions, governance, and AI are built on it.
You cannot govern what you have not defined.
The vocabulary of the category: Meaning Room™, Shared Meaning, Semantic Governance, Semantic Drift, Semantic Debt, Meaning Operations, and the broader Meaning Space™.
Most communities form around domains: data, AI, architecture, governance.
All of them depend on something more basic.
Meaning.
A metric must be defined before it is measured. A policy must be understood before it is enforced.
The Meaning Room™ Community exists for people who believe this layer matters.
Its purpose is understanding, not consensus.
A suggested path through the core ideas, in order.
Estimated reading time: 20–30 minutes
How the concepts build on one another, from category to trusted decisions.
Meaning Room explains Semantic Drift, Semantic Debt, and Semantic Governance.
WikiSure is the platform that operationalizes them — detecting and resolving meaning conflicts across systems, teams, and AI.