8. Word List
Every big word from this folder, said in the simplest way we can. If a fancy word ever trips you up, it’s probably here.
| Big word | What it really means |
|---|---|
| GOVENANT | The name of our standard — the rulebook for the whole idea. It’s a made-up word joining govern and covenant: rules that are really enforced, bound by a promise that really holds. |
| GOVENANT-1 to GOVENANT-4 | The four trust levels an AI team can earn, like belt colors: Logged → Gated → Delivered → Earned. Higher is better. |
| OCMAS | The older, scholarly name for the idea behind GOVENANT. (It stands for Organization-Centered Multi-Agent System — you never need to remember that.) |
| Agent | A single AI worker that fills one job. |
| Organization / the org | The whole company: all the jobs, rules, and workers together. |
| Role | A job, like “marketer” or “reviewer.” The role stays even if the AI filling it is swapped. |
| Occupant | Whoever is currently filling a role — usually an AI, sometimes a person. |
| Charter | The rulebook for a role: what this job is allowed to do, and what it isn’t. |
| Lever | A specific power a role can pull, like “spend money” or “send emails.” You can only pull the levers your job owns. |
| Duty | One task on a worker’s to-do list, with a time it’s due and a result it should produce. |
| Duty roster | The full to-do list plus calendar for a worker — its job description with a clock attached. |
| Coverage | Making sure every job on the list actually gets done — and if not, knowing exactly which one and why. |
| The record / the ledger | The honest logbook. Everything the AI does is written here and can’t be erased. |
| Ownership gate | The locked door that stops an AI from doing a job that isn’t its own. |
| Validation gate | The quality check every message passes before it goes out — like spell-check, but for safety and quality. |
| Outcome | A real result that actually happened, like an email that truly sent. |
| Delivery | Getting real results, not just looking busy. The opposite of faking it. |
| Performed autonomy | The main problem we fight: when AI looks busy but nothing real happens. |
| Prediction | A guess the AI makes about what will happen, so we can later check if it was right. |
| Calibration / report card | The running score of how often an AI’s guesses come true. |
| Earned autonomy | Freedom the AI earns by proving itself — like a driver earning a license, step by step. |
| Constitution | The set of powers the human boss always keeps: approve, redirect, object, lock, and reorganize. |
| Lock | When a human sets a rule, the AI is permanently blocked from changing it. |
| Terminal edge | The exact moment work becomes real in the world — the email actually sends, the deal actually closes. |
| Connector | The plug that links our system to a customer’s tools (their email, their sales system, and so on). |
| Side door | A way for an AI to act without going through the gates. Side doors must be closed — a gate only counts if the fence has no hole. |
| Bring your own brain | Plugging an AI you built into our company as a worker. Your brain; our job, rules, hands, and proof. |
| Holding the clock | Being the one who wakes each worker for each job. Only whoever holds the clock can catch a job that silently never happened. |
| Tenant | One customer’s own private, walled-off setup. |
| The audit / inspection | A careful check-up of an AI system to prove whether it’s really working — like a health inspector visiting a restaurant. |
| Maturity ladder | The four levels of trust: Logged → Gated → Delivered → Earned. Higher is better. |
| Substrate | The plumbing underneath — all the machinery that makes the rules real instead of just words. |
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