Ambassador status is designed as a credibility layer: clean profile, useful educational contribution, opt-in public portfolio, and clear conduct.
The ambassador program helps users identify educational, consistent, and transparent profiles. It is not meant to promote a stock, a strategy, or past performance.
Criteria should combine profile quality, clarity of explanations, rigor, absence of return promises, and conduct aligned with community rules.
A badge is not a financial certification, regulatory authorization, or recommendation. Readers should verify data, filings, and their own constraints before any decision.
The ambassador program should reward clarity, education, and monitoring discipline. Useful contributions explain a method, show how to verify data, or help read a filing without turning the exchange into a buy or sell signal.
Borsalia may remove or refuse a badge if a profile creates confusion: return promises, promotional pressure, excessive promotion of one stock, lack of transparency, or behavior that weakens community trust.
A good ambassador routes readers back to symbol pages, filings, guides, and disclaimers when a discussion becomes specific. The badge signals useful contribution; it does not signal regulated competence, future performance, or personalized recommendation.
Borsalia should evaluate an ambassador on the ability to explain, contextualize, and point users toward verifiable data. A profile that multiplies quick claims, dramatizes moves, or turns every publication into a personal signal does not match the program's purpose.
The right behavior is to show a method: check the price, open filings, compare the sector, state limitations, and remind readers that every user has personal constraints. The badge rewards this ongoing education, not a promise of outcome.
An ambassador can enrich the community by explaining how they read data, why they monitor a sector, or how they organize lists. They should not turn the profile into advertising, urgency signaling, or an invitation to copy a position.
This distinction is essential to Borsalia's credibility. The program should encourage contributions that reduce noise, improve understanding of documents, and state the limits of each readout. The clearer the frame, the more the community can grow without losing quality.
An ambassador badge should indicate useful contribution to the community: clear explanations, respect for limits, links back to data pages, and regular education. It should never be read as validation of a strategy, a portfolio, or a specific stock.
The program therefore stays tied to product quality. If a contribution helps a reader verify a filing, organize a watchlist, or understand a metric, it strengthens Borsalia. If it creates urgency or social pressure, it should be limited. That line keeps the community useful for learning instead of turning it into a noisy signal channel, and it keeps recognition focused on clarity, consistency, and respectful education rather than popularity alone.