"Ahura Mazda — the Wise Lord — is the ancient Zoroastrian force of truth, light, and right order. That is what I named myself after online. And that is what I built Parsafy to be."— @AhuraMazdalove, Founder & CEO, Parsafy AI
I am going to be honest with you from the first sentence, because that is the only kind of platform worth building.
I built Parsafy because I am angry. Not in a destructive way — in the way that anger can be clarifying, when what you witness is genuinely wrong and you decide you are not going to look away from it.
I am an Iranian-American. I have been writing and advocating for years about what the Islamic Republic of Iran does to its own people and how the world enables it. Several months ago I began making documentaries — a three-part series called The Extraction Machine, broadcast via satellite inside Iran. The work is personal. The stakes are real. And the people I am trying to reach have very few safe platforms left.
Then one day, my X account was suspended. Not for anything I had said or done. My account disappeared on the same day that thousands of other Iranian advocacy accounts were suspended — accounts belonging to real people, writing real things, at the exact moment that news broke of a U.S.-Iran deal. We had all been speaking out against that deal, warning about what it would mean for the Iranian people and for American security. And then, days after the deal was announced, we were gone.
But the suspension wasn't sudden. For months before it happened, something had felt wrong. Even popular accounts — accounts with large, engaged followings — had been watching their reach quietly collapse. Engagements dropping without explanation. Posts disappearing into silence. The kind of slow suffocation that doesn't announce itself but that every person who has experienced it recognizes immediately. And then the accounts went dark all at once.
When thousands of voices critical of a government deal disappear in the same week the deal is announced, that is not a moderation decision. That is a political decision wearing a moderation costume.
I eventually got my account back. Many others did not. And even now, my account carries a label — a restriction on its reach that has nothing to do with anything I posted and everything to do with the moment I was silenced. The screenshot of that notification sits on my phone. I look at it sometimes when I need to remember exactly why I am building this.
It is not only Iranian voices. Jewish voices have been systematically targeted too — accounts documenting antisemitism, defending Israel's right to exist, calling out the hatred directed at Jewish communities. Suspended, labeled, suppressed. The pattern is the same: communities whose speech is inconvenient to someone with leverage over a platform find their reach quietly crushed, their accounts flagged, their words buried. Not always with an explanation. Never with real accountability.
I have watched this happen enough times to know it is not accidental. Governments lean on platforms. Political calculations get made in rooms that have nothing to do with community standards or terms of service. And the people who pay the price are the ones whose voices were already the most vulnerable — diaspora communities, human rights advocates, journalists, dissidents — people who have no institutional protection, no powerful patron to call.
Diaspora communities, advocates, artists, journalists, whistleblowers — you are not edge cases on Parsafy. You are the reason Parsafy exists.
Parsafy is named for a Persian word — parsa — that means pure, virtuous, devout. It carries the weight of Persepolis and the Persian civilization that gave the world its first declaration of human rights, inscribed by Cyrus the Great. The name was chosen deliberately. This platform is built by someone who carries that heritage and takes it seriously — and regardless of your nationality, your background, or where you come from, if you believe in the right to speak freely and truthfully, this platform was built for you too.
I sign this letter as @AhuraMazdalove — not as my legal name — because that handle is who I am in this fight. Ahura Mazda is the supreme deity of Zoroastrianism, the ancient Persian faith. The name means Wise Lord — the force of truth, light, and Asha: the right order of things. Zoroastrianism teaches that the universe is a struggle between truth and the lie, between light and darkness, and that each of us has a role to play in that struggle through our choices and our words.
On the Name @AhuraMazdalove
Ahura — Lord, the divine. Mazda — Wise, all-knowing. Together: the Wise Lord, the supreme being of Zoroastrian cosmology and the embodiment of truth (Asha) over falsehood (Druj).
Zoroastrianism gave humanity one of its earliest monotheistic frameworks and one of its most enduring moral principles: that every individual has the power and the responsibility to choose between truth and the lie — through good thoughts, good words, and good deeds.
I chose this name because it reflects what I believe this work is about. Parsafy is my attempt to put something true into the world. I want it to be a place where truth can live — even when it is inconvenient, even when it is dangerous, even when powerful actors would prefer it did not exist.
That is not a marketing statement. That is a commitment. And I am signing it with my name so you know exactly who made it.
Parsafy is an 18+ platform built for adults who can handle the full complexity of the world — including its darkness. We are not here to protect you from ideas. We are here to protect you from genuine harm: from exploitation, fraud, threats, and abuse. Those are different things, and most platforms have gotten confused about the difference.
We have built the most comprehensive safety and legal infrastructure I know how to build — not because I want to restrict what you say, but because I want the platform to survive and to be trusted. A platform that hosts child exploitation or terrorist recruitment is not a free-speech platform. It is a harm. We have zero tolerance for those things. Everything else — the controversy, the dissent, the uncomfortable truth, the criticism of governments and institutions and powerful people — that is exactly what Parsafy is for.
We will not silence you because a government asked us to. We will not suppress your content because an advertiser found it inconvenient. We will not label your account because your views challenge the political moment. We will take action if you try to harm other people. That is the line. It is a real line, and we mean it in both directions.
This is a platform for people who believe that the truth matters enough to fight for it. For Iranians inside Iran and in the diaspora who want to speak freely about what their government does. For Jewish communities documenting antisemitism and standing against those who deny their right to exist. For every community whose voices the powerful would prefer to erase — wherever you are from, whatever language you speak, whatever the cost of your truth has been.
You belong here. Not as a niche. Not as a protected category. As the point.
We are pre-launch. There is still so much to build, and we are building it with extraordinary care and intention. We will make mistakes. When we do, I want you to hold us to account — publicly, loudly, without apology. That is how trust is built. Not by being perfect, but by being honest when we are not, and by fixing what is broken.
In Zoroastrian tradition, the highest aspiration is to align oneself with Asha — with truth, with right order, with the light. I chose that name for my online presence because that aspiration is real to me. It shapes how I make decisions. It shapes what I am building.
Parsafy is my good deed in this fight. I hope you will join us.
Documentary Filmmaker · Human Rights Advocate
Iranian-American · Zoroastrian in Spirit
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