Preserving the Record: The Journey to Outpost 422’s First Declaration of Use
By Bradley J. Burt

There are moments when a person looks backward and realizes that what appeared to be a collection of unrelated projects was actually the construction of something much larger.
For me, that realization arrived while preparing for the first Declaration of Use filing for Outpost 422.
What began as pandemic-era journaling, livestream reporting, independent studies, honors research, student veteran advocacy, documentary storytelling, and WordPress blogging evolved into a single archive documenting the interaction between people, technology, institutions, and society. The journey was never about building a trademark. The trademark became the vessel carrying years of preserved work product.
The origin traces back to Gonzo-19, an independent study documenting life during the COVID-19 era. At the time, I was not attempting to create a media theory. I was simply preserving the record. Every livestream, article, interview, journal entry, QR code, social media post, and blog publication became another timestamp within a growing digital archive.
Over time, patterns emerged.
The same storytelling framework appeared repeatedly:
- Characters
- Conflict
- Journey
- Obstacles
- Turning Points
Whether examining student veterans transitioning into higher education, entrepreneurs launching projects, employees navigating workplace disputes, or communities adapting to technological change, the same variables surfaced. Human behavior remained the constant.
As the archive expanded, WordPress became more than a publishing platform. It became a preservation platform. QR codes transformed static stories into gateways leading readers through networks of evidence, interviews, videos, podcasts, reports, and supporting documentation. Each URL became another node within a larger ecosystem.
Then artificial intelligence arrived.
Contrary to popular perception, AI did not create the methodology. The methodology already existed. AI simply accelerated it.
Human experience supplied the observations.
Human judgment supplied the analysis.
Artificial intelligence supplied organization, synthesis, and translation.
The result became Human–AI blended work product: a collaborative process where technology assists in managing complexity while people remain responsible for interpretation, ethics, and decision-making.
Looking ahead to the 2027 Declaration of Use, the filing itself will not tell this story. The United States Patent and Trademark Office only needs evidence that the OUTPOST 422 mark remains actively used in commerce. Yet behind that filing stands years of documented development preserved through class projects, honors research, journalism, podcasts, websites, legal studies, and public records.
What Outpost 422 ultimately represents is not merely a website or a brand.
It is an archive.
It is a living record of adaptation.
It is a longitudinal study of technology, resilience, institutional interaction, and communication.
Most importantly, it is proof that preserving the record matters.
The event passes.
The conversation ends.
The institution changes.
The technology evolves.
But the record remains.
And sometimes, preserving the record long enough allows a person to discover what they were building all along.








