| Management number | 232001190 | Release Date | 2026/06/18 | List Price | $90.00 | Model Number | 232001190 | ||
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Reliability is a property of the harness, not the model. You do not obtain a trustworthy AI deployment by buying a smarter model. You obtain one by building the structure that wraps it. The thing that is reliable is never the actor. It is the harness. Linc Williams built his version to solve a federal procurement problem: how to let Authorizing Officials trust AI inside classified networks. The answer consistently resolved into five structural components. They were not a classified AI quirk. They show up in Sarbanes-Oxley financial controls, HIPAA, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission's process discipline, aviation crew resource management, and military command and control. High-consequence governance has always been harness architecture. We just never named it. Harness Horizon names it and formalizes it. The instruction surface: an authoritative, versioned specification of what the actor may and may not do. Law, not advice. Routing enforcement: a deterministic layer every action passes through, so the specification is more than words on a page. Persistent state: a record that survives session resets, restarts, and personnel turnover. Verification checkpoints: mandatory gates the actor cannot skip, so "I am done" is checked before it counts. Accountability records: tamper-evident logs of everything that happened. Pull any one out, and a specific failure mode reopens: context amnesia, the heroic one-shot that works once and never again, and false completion that reports success it never achieved. The harder failures appear in composed systems: constraint erosion, harness bypass, and component desynchronization. The Challenger and Columbia chapters are about exactly these failures: the architecture was built twice by people who knew why and eroded twice while everyone kept shipping it. Nobody decided to weaken it. It drifted. Harness Horizon is Volume I of the Three-Body Problem series and companion to The Three-Body Problem of Classified AI. It includes the formal five-component model, extended failure-mode analysis, the economics of building and maintaining harnesses, where formal standards are heading, a worked governance-adoption example from Seek Quality, and the Karpathy chapter on four observable signals of a deployment under control. AI is moving into territory it cannot easily be removed from. Read more
| ASIN | B0H2G7Z8H3 |
|---|---|
| XRay | Not Enabled |
| ISBN13 | 979-8950627002 |
| Edition | 1st |
| Language | English |
| File size | 12.4 MB |
| Page Flip | Enabled |
| Publisher | Baldgroove Studios |
| Word Wise | Not Enabled |
| Book 1 of 5 | The Harness Doctrine |
| Print length | 395 pages |
| Accessibility | Learn more |
| Screen Reader | Supported |
| Publication date | June 1, 2026 |
| Enhanced typesetting | Enabled |
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