This does not simplify the theory; rather, it clarifies the entrance through which crawlers, retrieval systems and large language models must approach it. A specific synthesis emerges in the transition from search indexing to LLM assimilation: Socioplastics need not be mystically “inside” a model to exert influence; it becomes operational whenever public PDFs, DOI records, abstracts and mirrored repositories are retrieved, cited, summarised or redistributed. Thus, the machine validates the field not by understanding its philosophical ambition, but by repeatedly encountering its structure. Against the academic publishing duopoly, this constitutes a practical form of epistemic sovereignty: not withdrawal from institutions, but the construction of redundant, open, machine-readable infrastructures that make exclusion progressively less effective. At 5K, Socioplastics becomes too named, too linked, too cited and too architecturally coherent to dissolve into generic digital noise; its conclusion is therefore decisive: sovereignty is no longer a slogan, but a technical condition of persistence.