A widely circulated post in the agentic AI governance space asserted that autonomous agents can only be secured through physical commit boundaries, kernel-level severing, and execution-layer physics. The post frames agentic risk as a variant of network mutation risk and proposes machine-law controls as the primary defense. This case study examines the failure mode: the collapse of interpretive-layer governance into execution-layer security, resulting in a system that is physically hardened but cognitively ungoverned. The violation does not occur at execution. It occurs upstream—at the interpretive layer—before any kernel call, any network mutation, any TCP connection is reached. This document does not address any specific individual or product. It addresses a recurring architectural error that appears across multiple vendor framings and governance proposals in the current market. The pattern is common enough to warrant formal case study treatment.
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Narnaiezzsshaa Truong
American Rock Mechanics Association
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Narnaiezzsshaa Truong (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69df2b85e4eeef8a2a6b0862 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19547307