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posted an update about 15 hours ago
✅ Article highlight: *Latency Is Governance: When Autonomy Becomes Liability* (art-60-074, v0.1)
TL;DR:
This article argues that latency is not a performance footnote. It is a governance constraint.
When oversight cannot arrive inside the action window, centralized control is fiction. In that world, autonomy has to be precommitted as *bounded envelopes*: scoped effect permissions with budgets, time bounds, revocation semantics, and proof obligations. Otherwise “autonomy” is just unbounded risk transfer.
Read:
https://huggingface.co/datasets/kanaria007/agi-structural-intelligence-protocols/blob/main/article/60-supplements/art-60-074-latency-is-governance.md
Why it matters:
• reframes “AI rights” as distributed-systems reality, not sentiment
• shows why latency, partitions, leases, and revocation are governance questions
• explains how autonomy becomes liability when scope, budgets, or proof obligations are weak
• gives a clean operational model for safe local discretion
What’s inside:
• the thesis that *latency is governance*
• a mapping from caches / leases / capability tokens / revocation views to *operational rights*
• *autonomy envelopes* as runtime objects: effect permissions + budgets + expiry + audit
• failure modes such as over-scoped envelopes, stale revocation views, under-observation, and non-idempotent effects
• a degrade path from normal operation to safe mode, sandbox-only, and staged recovery
Key idea:
When oversight is late, governance cannot be centralized in real time.
It has to be embedded in advance as policy, bounded delegation, revocation freshness, and traceable commits.
*Latency demands autonomy. Governance makes autonomy safe.*
posted an update 3 days ago
✅ Article highlight: *Delegation and Consent in SI* (art-60-063, v0.1)
TL;DR:
This article makes delegation and consent into *first-class runtime objects*.
In SI, delegation is not a vague social gesture. It is an *effectful capability transfer* that must be bounded, signed, policy-bound, auditable, and revocable. And consent is not a formality: delegation is not complete until the delegate has accepted responsibility.
Read:
https://huggingface.co/datasets/kanaria007/agi-structural-intelligence-protocols/blob/main/article/60-supplements/art-60-063-delegation-and-consent-in-si.md
Why it matters:
• turns “who was allowed to do this?” into a deterministic audit question
• shows why delegation must be enforced at commit time, not assumed from role names
• treats consent as part of the accountability chain, not a UX nicety
• makes revocation, attenuation, and replay safety part of the runtime contract
What’s inside:
• *Delegation Token (DT)* as a bounded, signed capability transfer
• *Consent Record (CR)* as explicit acceptance of responsibility
• *Revocation Record (RR)* as a first-class validity change
• commit-time checks for signature, expiry, parent binding, consent, policy, revocation, budgets, and rollback floor
• delegation chains for human → AI → AI systems under L3 conditions
Key idea:
In governed systems, “delegation” is not complete when authority is granted.
It is complete only when the system can later prove:
*who delegated what to whom, under which policy, with what acceptance, and whether it was still valid at commit time.*
updated a dataset 4 days ago
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