Writing Hub
AI governance essays, reasoning systems notes, experiment logs, and technical writing across BioAI and engineering practice.
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"The Algorithm Did It": How YouTube's Liability Playbook Is Coming for Every Developer
What a platform's war on audio creators tells us about the future of software accountability — and why the craftsman's seal is the only thing that survives.

The Meeting Nobody Could Follow -The format of AI output is a design decision. We made it wrong for three years.
How our engineering team stopped sending 200-line Markdown files that nobody read — and what a nine-word post from an Anthropic engineer taught us about AI output format as a design decision. Includes token cost analysis, real prompt templates, and the HTML render layer approach used in production.

Crimson Desert and the Innovation Tax
Crimson Desert and the Innovation Tax: an essay on why ambitious systems can look like a 6/10 before their grammar becomes legible — and why AI teams must know what to patch, what to preserve, and how to turn criticism into a map.

The Alchemy of Ego - How AI Turns Unfinished Thought Into Fluent Certainty
A personal essay on how AI can turn unfinished thoughts into fluent certainty, why internal coherence is not external proof, and why falsifiability, failure conditions, and visible execution matter in AI-assisted thinking.

How Do You Trust the AI Auditor? STEM-AI v1.1.2 and Memory-Contracted Bio-AI Audits
STEM-AI v1.1.2 binds a bio/medical AI repository audit to a machine-checkable memory contract, then demonstrates it on a real open-source bioinformatics repository.

The Centaur’s Equation: Why the Stubborn Expert Wins in the Era of Infinite AI
Why Evaluation Ownership is the Ultimate Defensive Asset in the AGI Economy

What Anthropic’s 81k Survey Reveals About What the AI Market Still Gets Wrong
Users Don’t Want Faster AI — They Want AI That Helps Them Live Better Without Losing Their Humanity.

The Model Already Read the README. MICA v0.1.8 Made It a Protocol
v0.1.7 made scoring a contract with fail-closed gates. v0.1.8 recognized that README-first behavior could serve as invocation — and formalized it as a schema-level protocol. This article uses simplified examples to show how the invocation gap that had existed since v0.0.1 was finally closed

The Repo Is Right There. Why Are You Checking Their CV?
In 2026, AI researchers and engineers use the same words to mean opposite things. This is not a communication problem. It is an incentive problem with a vocabulary leak and it's where most AI projects actually fail.

I Built an Ecosystem of 46 AI-Assisted Repos. Then I Realized It Might Be Eating Itself.
An ecosystem of 46 AI-assisted repos can become a closed loop. This article explores structural blind spots, self-validating toolchains, and the need for external validators to create intentional friction.

What AI Changed About Research Code — and What It Didn’t
The old bottleneck was writing the code. The new bottleneck is proving that the code still means what the theory meant.

Is MCP Really Dead? A History of AI Hype — Told Through the Rise and Fall of a Protocol
When a protocol doesn’t die — it just stops being interesting. A forensic look at MCP, OpenClaw, and the psychology of AI hype cycles.
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