Situation Room · Rolling intelligence brief

Four AI shifts are changing what institutions must govern, buy, and redesign.

A decision brief for leaders deploying AI in regulated institutions. We track verified market moves, test whether they change mandates, money, machinery, or buying criteria, and show what those changes require next.

90-second brief Resolving latest ledger Rolling window Next review soon

Evidence collection and structural classification are automated. Conclusions, actions, and disconfirming evidence are written editorially by Gagan. See the method.

The directions hardening underneath the news.

Read the conclusion first. Open the full brief for the decision, action, watch indicators, and evidence that would weaken it.

How the verified moves converge.

The map is supporting evidence, not the answer: individual moves pass the gate, then bind into a direction when independent actors point the same way.

Decision briefs · conclusion → action → watch → disconfirm

How the gate works.

A move becomes signal when it changes a constraint, institution, price, or buying criterion. Corroboration strengthens a direction when independent actors repeat the move; each direction must still contain structural evidence.

Open the five tests and integrity ledger

The ledger begins with verified moves. Classification is automated and deterministic; attractor ownership, interpretation, actions, and falsification criteria are editorial. Unresolved structural signals remain visible until enough evidence exists to bind them into a direction.

MandateA rule turns from suggested to required.
MoneySomeone attaches a price or a threshold.
MachineryA one-off becomes a permanent institution.
CorroborationIndependent actors make the same move.
Criterion-shiftWhat buyers are judged on changes.

What the gate rejected — and why.

Filtering only earns trust if the exclusions are inspectable. These moves tripped no structural test in the current window.

Open rejected items