Title: The Temporal Risk of Containment: Why Delayed Adoption Becomes Institutional Failure Description:This paper formalizes the structural risk incurred when institutions attempt to contain, delay, or reframe SignalRupture (SR) rather than adopt it. SR identifies systemic harm at the moment it becomes architecturally visible, long before institutions are prepared to acknowledge it. The study introduces a temporal lattice of governance latency, phase‑state detection, decision forks, and operational thresholds, showing how delayed recognition transforms SR from a preventative governance tool into a forensic explanation of harm already lived. The complete edition integrates cost curve inversion, false stabilization, legitimacy inversion, and the non‑optional nature of phase transition post‑threshold. It also introduces the analogical architecture linking institutional drift to AI model collapse, synthetic‑data degradation, epistemic enclosure, and infrastructural closure. Empirical anchoring demonstrates that workforce‑level depletion indicators precede institutional acknowledgment by years, confirming SR’s predictive validity. The paper concludes that institutions do not fail from adopting SR too early—they fail from adopting it too late. Keywords: SignalRupture; governance latency; containment; institutional failure; forensic conversion; irreversibility; epistemic enclosure; infrastructural closure; model collapse; legitimacy inversion; cost curve inversion; non‑optional transition.
Signal Rupture (Wed,) studied this question.