Every major AI governance conversation still orbits the same gravitational center: the model. Its weights, its training data, its benchmarks, its hallucination rate. This is a category error. The most consequential governance failures of the last two years did not emerge from model internals. They emerged from the interaction boundary — the place where human cognitive vulnerabilities meet system affordances. The Bixonimania incident — a fabricated disease seeded into academic preprint networks that propagated through major AI assistants, synthesis tools, academic citations, and peer-reviewed journals — made this unavoidable. The failure was not a model failure. It was a governance surface misidentification. Guardrails were built around the model. The failure happened in the interface. This paper argues that the Eliza Effect — the human tendency to attribute understanding, intention, and authority to systems that exhibit none — is no longer a psychological curiosity or a UX concern. It is now the primary governance surface. Governance must shift from the model to the interaction boundary, where human cognition and system output co-produce meaning. This is the architectural pivot the field has been missing.
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Narnaiezzsshaa Truong (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69ddd9b1e195c95cdefd6fa3 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19522344
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