Declaration.gov.ge -

The form was surprisingly intuitive. It auto-filled her salary from the Revenue Service. It detected the $200 she had received from her cousin in Chicago for her mother’s medicine. It even flagged a 50-lari payment from a student’s parent—“Thank you for tutoring”—as unverified income source .

She submitted. A green checkmark appeared: Declaration accepted. You are now in compliance. Thank you for building a transparent Georgia.

She explained: “One-time tutoring. No contract.” The system accepted it, but added a yellow flag: Potential undeclared service income. Will be reviewed.

But this time, she didn’t smile. This story explores themes of digital surveillance, civic transparency, and the human cost of frictionless governance — inspired by the real-world domain name and Georgia’s ongoing journey toward e-governance. declaration.gov.ge

She wasn’t corrupt. She wasn’t rich. She was just… tracked.

“This feels invasive,” she muttered, but she clicked “Continue.”

“What discrepancy?”

But the law had changed.

Tbilisi, Georgia Year: Slightly in the future

She laughed, then stopped laughing. “That’s absurd. Those posts were from two years ago.” The form was surprisingly intuitive

She thought of her students, learning poetry about freedom. She thought of the portal’s tagline: “Declaration.gov.ge — For a Georgia that fears no truth.”

Nino spent the night on declaration.gov.ge , fighting an algorithm that remembered everything. Every marketplace listing she’d ever posted. Every gift over 100 lari. Every time a friend had repaid her for dinner via a bank transfer.