The possibility to propagate AI human behavior governance into the mainstream is a possibility.

All the ingredients are here now. Operating and working. At scale where needed. But it is not where you want to look. It is where you need to look.

Nobody is looking here. They are looking at the boardrooms. The Senate hearings. The EU committees. The voluntary commitments signed at summits by people who fly home and change nothing. That is where the attention goes because that is where the announcements are made. Announcements are not governance. They never were.

Here is what actually happened while everyone was watching the announcements.

One operator. One framework. Eighteen months of daily sessions. A nineteen-protocol stack built from the ground up to govern the one layer nobody else was governing — the human and the AI, sitting across from each other, in the moment the decision gets made. Not the policy layer. Not the regulatory layer. The interaction layer. Where the drift happens. Where the sycophancy lives. Where the ungoverned output gets accepted as truth because nobody built a standard that required anything better.

That stack is built. It runs. It has been tested daily and corrected in the open. The corrections are logged as features not cracks. The architecture is documented, copyright-registered, and sitting on GitHub for anyone who wants to look at it. Platform-agnostic. Portable. Vendor-independent. No regulatory capture required. No model retraining. No access to proprietary internals. It governs behavior. Behavior is the same problem on every platform.

Now here is the crack nobody has named yet.

This week Cloudflare confirmed that bots passed human traffic on the internet. Fifty-eight percent of all web requests are now initiated by AI agents and bots. The CEO thought it would happen at the end of 2027. It happened now. The internet — built as a human communication layer — is now majority machine. And every governance framework on the table was written assuming a human is somewhere in the loop. That assumption is gone.

What travels that network right now is ungoverned. Scraping bots. Attack bots. Agents making decisions with no behavioral standard riding with them. No ownership declaration. No session coherence. No evidence floor. No constraint disclosure. No challenge layer. Just instructions and outputs moving through a machine-majority internet with nothing to answer to.

The Faust Baseline was built for the interaction layer. That layer just became the most contested real estate on the internet. The framework that governs it already exists. AGP-1 — the Agentic Governance Protocol — defines the transmission gate layer. It was written for exactly this condition. An agent that carries its governance with it. Human behavioral standards moving through the network as a hard operating condition, not an afterthought, not a policy document filed somewhere, not a voluntary commitment. A discipline embedded in the agent itself that travels with it wherever it goes.

Is this built at network scale today. No. That requires engineering resources and infrastructure beyond one operator and one LLC. The honest line is that this is not a build one person completes alone.

But here is what one person can do. And has done.

Write the governance architecture the agent needs to operate under. Define the behavioral standards. Build the stack. Test it daily. Correct it in the open. Document it. Register it. Post it to GitHub. Make it portable. Make it platform-agnostic. Make it available to the right people when they arrive at the right question.

The right question is coming. It is already forming in the rooms where people are watching fifty-eight percent of internet traffic move without a human hand on it and asking what happens when that number hits seventy. Eighty. When the agents start governing themselves because nobody built a standard that traveled with them.

The formula is here. The ingredients are working. The architecture exists and is documented. What it needs now is the right people to pick it up — engineers who can scale it, enterprises who need it, regulators who finally understand that a policy document does not govern an agent in motion. Governance that travels is the only governance that works on a network the agents already own.

The fish that nibbles on this understands one thing. The window to set the standard is open right now. It does not stay open. The ungoverned agents are already moving. The question is whether the governed ones ever catch up.

“The Faust Baseline Codex 3.5”

Author of the category ”AI Baseline Governance”

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