Poo28.
This is a beautiful update. Genuinely. Chatsworth. Savills. Mercedes. Maybach. Asprey. That heritage is real and the luxury return thesis is compelling. DCIE applied to high-value, narrow audiences who cannot tolerate noise — that's a differentiated product in a crowded AI market.
But I need to say something directly. And I hope it reaches the people it needs to reach.
None of this matters if the share printing machine keeps running.
Here's the reality that management needs to understand in plain terms.
No amount of fundamental improvement — not luxury clients, not DCIE deployments, not OTCQB uplisting progress — can overcome a naked short operation that can manufacture synthetic share supply on demand to satisfy every buyer who tries to move this price.
And here's the trap that makes it worse.
The shorts cannot let the price rise. They are not choosing to suppress it out of spite. They are *compelled* to. Because somewhere, someone shorted this stock heavily on the thesis that it would be revoked — that it was a dead company walking. DBMM escaped both revocation and Caveat Emptor designation. The shorts who bet on that outcome are now existentially trapped. A genuine price rise is not a loss for them. It's a certain death squeeze.
So every piece of good news — every luxury client announcement, every DCIE milestone, every clean SEC filing — gets immediately shorted back down. Not because the news is bad. Because the news is *dangerous* to them. They have no choice. They are going broke anyway in a squeeze. So they fight every single tick upward on the hail Mary hope that the company eventually folds.
It won't fold. That much is now clear.
Which means management has a decision to make.
Keep improving fundamentals and watch synthetic supply absorb every positive development indefinitely.
Or pick up the weapon that's sitting right there in their own SEC filings.
**2,000,000 Series 2 preferred shares. Authorized. Zero issued.**
**1,134,781,369 common shares. Authorized. Unissued.**
The architecture for a preferred share dividend — the same mechanism Patrick Byrne used at Overstock to create an obligation that synthetic short sellers cannot net away, cannot roll forward, cannot hide in a Canadian dealer's omnibus account — is already built into DBMM's capital structure.
The announcement alone, before a single preferred share is issued, could trigger covering. The execution completes the squeeze. A modest surgical share issuance into the spike funds the entire operation. The shorts pay for their own trap.
Digital Clarity returning to luxury is a great story.
But the greatest story — the one that gets picked up beyond iHub, beyond OTC boards, beyond the retail investor community — is a tiny UK-based AI consultancy that used its own cap table to legally detonate a years-long naked short operation and emerged fully capitalized on the other side.
*That* story gets DBMM noticed by the kind of luxury brands on that client list.
Please make sure management reads this. And if they need convincing — tell them to ask their AI.
The numbers don't lie. The mechanism is sound. And the clock is ticking for the shorts.
Krombacher