My Ultimate Sign-in System Made Me Invincible - Chapter 497 Volunteer Selection Criteria Announcement
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Chapter 497 Volunteer Selection Criteria Announcement
Official Announcement 📢!!
Nova Technologies releases the following as promised.
Volunteer selection criteria and eligibility requirements for the Nova Medical Nanites clinical trial are now available.
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Who We Are Looking For
Nova Technologies is selecting 100 volunteers from across the globe.
This trial is not limited to one condition, one region, or one demographic.
We are looking for a cross-section of human experience.
***
Selection Criteria
Eligible conditions include:
– Active cancer (any stage, any type)
– Chronic illness and autoimmune disorders
– Neurodegenerative conditions (including Dementia, Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s)
– Physical disabilities resulting from injury
– Limb loss
– Spinal cord damage of any degree
– Severe mental health conditions (including treatment-resistant PTSD, major depressive disorder, and substance use disorders with documented clinical history)
– Other conditions may be considered at Nova Technologies’ discretion
Volunteers in vegetative states are eligible provided:
– Core brain activity is confirmed present
– A verified legal guardian or next of kin submits the application on their behalf
Healthy individuals with no diagnosed condition are not eligible for this trial phase.
***
Geographic Distribution
– Volunteers will be selected across all inhabited continents
– No single country or region will represent more than 15% of the total volunteer pool
A limited number of pediatric cases will be considered with full parental or guardian consent.
***
Eligibility Requirements
Identity
– Valid government issued identification required
– Passport preferred
– Anonymous applications will not be processed
– Identity will be independently verified before selection is confirmed
Medical Documentation
– Complete verifiable medical records supporting the stated condition
– Records must be issued by a licensed medical professional or institution
– Self diagnosed conditions are not eligible
– Nova Technologies’ medical team will review all submissions and may request additional documentation
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Physical Stability
– Applicants must be stable enough to survive transport to the facility
– Critical cases on the edge of this requirement will be evaluated individually
– Medical staff may accompany extremely high-risk volunteers during transit if necessary
Mental Competency
– Applicants must demonstrate capacity to understand and consent to participation
– Volunteers unable to consent for themselves must have a verified legal representative submit on their behalf
– Additional support will be provided during the consent process where needed
Travel Eligibility
– Applicants must be able to legally depart their country of residence
– Nova Technologies will not navigate legal disputes or court ordered travel restrictions
– If a government blocks a selected volunteer from departing that slot will be filled by the next eligible applicant
No Active Clinical Trial Enrollment
– Applicants currently enrolled in another active clinical trial are not eligible until that trial concludes
Emergency Contact
– Every volunteer must provide at least one verified emergency contact reachable throughout the trial period
– For incapacitated volunteers the legal guardian serves this role automatically
– Nova Technologies will maintain direct communication with emergency contacts at every major stage
Financial
– There is no cost to volunteers at any stage
– All travel, accommodation, treatment, recovery, and return transport are fully covered
– Volunteers will not receive financial compensation beyond what is already provided through the trial package
Data Privacy
All volunteer medical data is private and will not be published, shared, or disclosed in any form. Each volunteer will receive a complete copy of their personal trial data upon completion and are free to do with it whatever they wish.
Withdrawal Rights
– Volunteers may withdraw at any point before nanite deployment begins without penalty
– After deployment commences withdrawal requires medical evaluation before nanite activity is safely suspended
– No volunteer will be pressured to continue
– Withdrawal does not affect post trial Lucid device or Essential Care subscription access
***
Application Process
Applications are now open.
Applications must include:
– Valid government issued identification
– Complete medical documentation of your condition
– Emergency contact information
– Signed consent documentation
Incomplete applications will not be reviewed.
***
Selection Timeline
Applications close in 21 days.
Selected volunteers will be notified within 11 days of application close.
Transport logistics and safety protocols will be released within 48 hours of this announcement.
***
— Nova Technologies.
***
Within four minutes after the announcement dropped, it was the most shared post in the platform’s history, breaking the record of the previous announcements.
A user posted within minutes: “I have stage four pancreatic cancer. Diagnosed fourteen months ago. Eight months ago my oncologist told me we had exhausted our options. I am applying tonight. I don’t know if I’ll be selected. I don’t know if this will work. But I am applying tonight.”
The comments beneath it were almost entirely single words.
Go.
Apply.
Now.
Another post appeared seconds later: “My son is eleven. Born with spinal muscular atrophy. It has taken things from him progressively since he was two years old. I have been awake for thirty-six hours waiting for this announcement. I am reading it right now and my hands will not stop shaking.”
Someone replied: We are all rooting for him. Apply.
A third: “Treatment-resistant PTSD. Seven years. Eleven medication combinations. Four inpatient stays. I stopped believing anything would change. I genuinely do not know what to do with this announcement.”
The response thread beneath that one was quiet and careful, with people responding with the restraint that comes from recognizing the moment doesn’t need noise added to it.
***
The speculation threads dissolved almost instantly.
The people who had spent days modeling geographic distribution frameworks, debating pediatric consent ethics, and constructing arguments about demonstration strategy went silent.
Their debates had been overtaken by an announcement that had addressed most of the questions directly and without ceremony. The 15% geographic cap. The pediatric inclusion. The vegetative state provision. The mental health conditions. The withdrawal rights.
A user who had been one of the more prominent voices in the earlier debates posted a single line: “They thought of everything.”
Someone asked: “Does it matter if they read the threads or came to it independently?”
A pause. Then: “No. It doesn’t.”
***
In disease-specific communities the announcement spread with the particular speed of information that hits a group directly in the center of what they’ve been carrying.
ALS forums. Cancer support networks. Spinal cord injury communities. Rare genetic condition groups that had existed for years as places where people shared management strategies because there was nothing else to share. PTSD veteran spaces. Chronic illness communities built around the specific loneliness of conditions the medical system had largely stopped trying to solve.
In those spaces, the reaction was not debate or analysis.
It was people tagging each other. Sending the link with no message attached because no message was necessary. Posting their own situations in threads that filled faster than moderators could track.
A user in a rare genetic condition forum wrote: “I have been in this community for six years. I have watched people in here get progressively worse. I have watched people in here die. I am posting a screenshot of an announcement here because I want every single person in this forum to see it and apply if they are eligible. Do not wait. Apply now.”
The post was pinned by a moderator within minutes. The moderator added one line beneath it: *Applying myself. See you on the other side.*
***
The user who had posted about their ALS diagnosis days earlier — the post that had ended with “that uncertainty is not nothing” — reappeared beneath their original message.
They posted a single line.
Applying now.
The response thread that formed beneath it had thousands of replies within the hour. People who had been present for the original post and had carried it with them since. People in similar situations saying they were applying too. People with no personal stake simply responding because they had witnessed the original moment and felt the weight of this one.
The person who had replied with “the announcement dropped, go read it” came back to that thread.
They wrote: I hope you get selected. Best of luck, brother.
***
Outside the disease-specific spaces, the reaction had a different texture.
People who were not eligible, who had no personal medical stake in the announcement, were posting in a way that was harder to categorize.
A user wrote: “I don’t have any of the listed conditions. Nobody in my immediate family does. I have been following this story since the Nova Night announcement and I am sitting here at midnight reading this volunteer selection criteria and I cannot fully explain what I am feeling. Something is actually changing. Not metaphorically. Actually.”
Another: “I work in hospice care. I have spent twelve years sitting with people at the end of conditions the system had stopped trying to treat. I am not going to say anything else. I just needed to say that somewhere.”
A third: “My grandmother died of Alzheimer’s four years ago. She was diagnosed eight years before that. Eight years of watching her disappear in increments. I keep thinking about her tonight. I don’t know why I’m posting this. I just am.”
The comments beneath that last one were not advice or argument. They were people posting their own versions of the same thing. A parent. A sibling. A friend. The shape of the grief changing but the structure identical — someone they loved, a condition that took them slowly, and an announcement arriving too late for that specific person but not too late for the next one.
***
The medical community moved faster than it typically did.
A physician posted: “I want to flag something for people who might miss it in the document. The vegetative state clause. Nova Technologies built an entire consent and verification framework to include patients who cannot speak for themselves, cannot advocate for themselves, cannot participate in any conventional sense in their own care decisions. That is not a small administrative detail. That is a values statement expressed through policy. Someone decided those patients deserved to be included and then built the mechanism to make that possible.”
The post spread quickly through professional networks.
A nurse responded: “Twelve years in the ICU. I have watched families make impossible decisions for patients who cannot make them for themselves. The fact that those patients are not excluded from this — I don’t have words for it right now.”
A palliative care specialist added: “The no-cost provision also deserves more attention than it’s getting in the general conversation. One hundred people are receiving treatment that would cost millions in the existing system. That is not nothing.”
***
In hospitals and clinics across dozens of nations, physicians were fielding calls from patients who had seen the announcement and wanted to understand what it meant for them.
The conversations were not complicated. They didn’t need to be.
Should I apply?
Yes. Apply.
In quiet rooms and wards shaped entirely around managing conditions that had defined lives for years, people were reading the document carefully. Checking the eligibility criteria against their own situation. Gathering the documentation they would need. Asking family members to help with the parts that were hard to navigate alone.
The application portal was open and the deadline was twenty-one days out.
For some of the people applying, twenty-one days was not an abstract timeline, as they applied anyway.


