The creator of LAGK (AI governance framework) just did an AMA on r/artificial — here’s what sparked debate
The creator of LAGK (AI governance framework) just did an AMA on r/artificial — here’s what sparked debate

The creator of LAGK (AI governance framework) just did an AMA on r/artificial — here’s what sparked debate

Mike_Dooset from LightRest Consulting posted about LAGK on r/artificial 2 months ago. The framework got 3 upvotes (not viral, but the idea is interesting).

The controversial claim: Instead of "allow vs. block," we should adjust disclosure nature: Open, Guided, Shielded, or Sealed.

Critics might say: This is just classified information management repackaged for AI.

Proponents argue: Current governance treats all knowledge the same. LAGK accounts for how readily capability can be applied or expanded.

The AMA is finished, but the framework is live at lightrest-lagk.manus.space.

Should AI governance be more like arms control (graded disclosure) or more like pharmaceutical regulation (binary approval)?

submitted by /u/MikeDooset
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