TL;DR:
This article argues that governance without interop is vendor-local theater.
It is not enough for one system to say *“we have receipts.”* If another vendor cannot parse the artifact, reproduce the digest, replay the bundle, and reach the same admissibility outcome, the claim is not really portable. So 175 defines a common interop layer: shared envelopes, pinned canonicalization, minimal portable schemas, and deterministic bundle formats.
Read:
kanaria007/agi-structural-intelligence-protocols
Why it matters:
• turns governance artifacts into cross-vendor verifiable objects rather than local implementation details
• fixes the classic failure modes of digest drift, schema drift, and bundle drift
• makes “same artifact / same verdict” a testable claim instead of a handshake promise
• gives courts, forgetting flows, and unlearning claims portable bundle formats
What’s inside:
• a common *interop envelope* for contracts, manifests, receipts, and bundles
• a pinned *canonicalization profile* plus conformance receipts to stop digest disagreements
• minimal portable schemas for core learning-world governance artifacts
• deterministic bundle formats like *Court ZIP*, *Forgetting ZIP*, and *Unlearning ZIP*
• replay/conformance receipts so another vendor can verify the same bundle and reach the same admissibility result
Key idea:
Do not say:
*“our system can export the evidence.”*
Say:
*“this artifact uses this schema registry, this canonicalization profile, this interop-safe digest model, and this bundle index—so another vendor can verify the same object and reach the same result.”*
That is how governance stops being local theater and becomes portable infrastructure.