Canon² — Trust Layer Research Archive. The transition toward decentralized, multi-agent computational frameworks inherently surfaces the challenge of executing unverified or partially verified instruction sets within environments that demand absolute deterministic consistency. Within such ecosystems, admitting arbitrary logic into a unified memory space threatens overarching consensus models and compromises node integrity. I introduce the Autonomous Guardrail framework: a self-monitoring, self-correcting, and self-limiting sandboxing methodology designed to manage unverified deterministic code execution without requiring manual developer intervention at any stage of the containment lifecycle. Traditional sandboxing confines application memory but cannot react intelligently to logical or semantic breaches. The framework proposed herein implements active execution envelopes bound to Lume-V semantics and Trust Layer certificate hooks, creating a containment architecture that understands both the resource consumption and the behavioral intent of the confined code. These guardrails operate autonomously, assessing runtime telemetry and state-change velocity to dynamically escalate containment or trigger state rollbacks through a formalized four-tier escalation hierarchy. I formalize how these boundaries wrap synthetic organism logic pathways and generalized cyber-physical commands, demonstrating how anomalous behaviors are halted before hardware commit phases. This paper details what is, to my knowledge, the first comprehensive model for deploying autonomous, reactive containment boundaries inside trust-bound decentralized ecosystems.
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Ronald Jason Andrews (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a00205ec8f74e3340f9b3ea — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20074828
Ronald Jason Andrews
Research Studios Austria
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