FluidIntent · Governed agentic substrate

Agents commit before they can be corrected.

FluidIntent closes the gap between human intent and trusted action, so enterprises can create, operate and evolve complex systems without losing understanding or control. Governance moves to the one place it matters: the point of commitment.

reasoning commitment boundary committed · evidenced

Reliability is bought before the action is released.

The substrate

Five properties an agentic system has to make native.

Once an agent becomes an actor, the platform has to know what actions mean. These are not governance ornaments bolted on after the fact. They are consequences of letting agents act, and they cannot be retrofitted onto a substrate built for humans.

01

Grounded world model

A live, typed, queryable domain model the agent reasons against and the system actually runs on, not two descriptions that quietly drift apart.

02

Governance before action

The valid action space is defined before the agent acts. An invalid operation does not exist as something callable in that context.

03

Structural audit

The unit of audit is the committed operation, carrying its own evidence: actor, intent, authorisation, preconditions, decision and effect.

04

A real commitment boundary

One place where a consequential action becomes a committed, evidenced operation or a structured refusal. It can suspend for human approval without losing the causal context.

05

Persistent provenance

Lineage intrinsic to how state changes are represented, so the current state of any object traces back to the intent, policy, actor and action that produced it.

Design partners

In conversation with a small number of teams on governed agentic delivery.

If you are putting agents into systems that matter and you want them governed at the point of commitment rather than policed after it, I would like to talk.

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