Context Propagation System
CPS supports environments where conversation has an afterlife. Information can be remembered, retold, withheld, distorted, and traced across a group instead of disappearing after one exchange.
The Social Life of Information
Most AI systems treat conversation as an isolated exchange. CPS treats information as something that can enter a bounded group state: it may be remembered, shared, blocked, distorted, or return later as consequence.
CPS does not move knowledge just because it exists. A remembered event must become socially relevant, pass relationship and privacy checks, and then create a new traceable memory in another actor.
Who knows what?
See which actors hold which memories, how they are connected, and whether knowledge is shared, isolated, one-way, or mutual.
Why can it move?
Inspect the route before propagation happens: relationship strength, trust, sensitivity, privacy gates, cooldowns, and blockers.
Where did it come from?
Trace a memory back to its source. Distinguish direct knowledge, hearsay, repeated rumor, mutation, and blocked private information.
Did the system behave correctly?
Run bounded demo profiles to verify public propagation, private containment, observer isolation, repeatability, and loop prevention.
Where CPS can be used
CPS can support research prototypes, organizational communication scenarios, interactive worlds, cultural installations, AI safety and privacy tests, and future multi-agent assistant concepts.
Development Journal
Continuity, Prototypes, and the Temptation of Simulation
A tighter essay on prototype discipline, Autonomuse, and why continuity systems need structure around the model.
Read the entryDevelopment Update: Bridging the Neural Gap
A compact update on CPS Studio, structured memory records, and controlled social propagation.
Open postBrowse the Development Journal
See the full index of essays, notes, and system framing as more entries are published.
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