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Protocol Schema

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By Robert | 1:29 PM EDT, Fri August 15, 2025

Protocol Schema

long text

www.seekdiscipline.com

A protocol schema is a systematic way of describing the set of rules that constitute a protocol. The schema is divided into four sections:

  • Classes - the groups of people who interact according to the protocol. This section should specify the relation between each class and any hierarchy within it. For example, waiters serve customers in a restaurant, but customers are served according to gender and then in decreasing order of age.
  • Dress and symbols - any restrictions or requirements relating to clothing, and any symbols such as collars.
  • Speech rules - rules relating to silence, forms of address, speaking only when spoken to, or ways of referring to oneself or others.
  • Deportment - rules governing how the individual walks, stands, kneels, or otherwise acts physically, in ways not covered by the previous sections.

Within D/s, it is natural that more emphasis will be placed on the submissive when writing out a protocol.

See Also

  • Marketplace protocol schema
  • Roissy protocol schema
  • Estate protocol schema

long text

www.slaveregister.com

text
Expected entry missing from this site
Entry not referenced on this site

 

External links

  • Essays by Mikail Togneri
  • Absolute_Dynamic on Yahoo Groups (formerly AbsoluteBDSM)

Archivist note: Yahoo Groups is no longer available and was not found in archive.org

 

long text

www.ownership-possession.com

A protocol schema is a systematic way of describing the set of rules that constitute a protocol. The schema is divided into four sections:

  • Classes - the groups of people who interact according to the protocol. This section should specify the relation between each class and any hierarchy within it. For example, waiters serve customers in a restaurant, but customers are served according to gender and then in decreasing order of age.
  • Dress and symbols - any restrictions or requirements relating to clothing, and any symbols such as collars.
  • Speech rules - rules relating to silence, forms of address, speaking only when spoken to, or ways of referring to oneself or others.
  • Deportment - rules governing how the individual walks, stands, kneels, or otherwise acts physically, in ways not covered by the previous sections.

Within D/s, it is natural that more emphasis will be placed on the submissive when writing out a protocol.

See also

  • Marketplace protocol schema
  • Roissy protocol schema
  • Estate protocol schema

Archivist note: yahoo groups is no longer available and was not found in archive.org

 

long text

Archivist note: yahoo groups is no longer available and was not found in archive.org

 

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Book traversal links for Protocol Schema

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  • Protocol, (High Protocol) ›
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