Governance · 10 posts
Filter by topic
Who controls the infrastructure controls access
As has been widely reported, Anthropic took its Fable 5 model offline after a US executive order would have restricted access to US citizens only — a requirement that proved unwork…
ReadThe Door You Can Walk Back Through
A framework note: what follows applies Felix Stein's one-way / two-way door analysis — published at https://www.lean-agility.de — to how Apuna makes decisions. Stein's treatment of…
ReadThe Matrix You Think You Know — and Why It Still Helps (Differently Than You'd Expect)
Most practitioners who invoke "the Stacey Matrix" are not using Ralph D. Stacey's original. They are using a simplification developed by Zimmermann, which reduces Stacey's nuanced…
ReadThe Wild 13
Michael Ende — author of *The Neverending Story* — writes in *Jim Knopf and the Wild 13* that the thirteen Wild 13 are the most dangerous characters in the world. They ride dragons…
ReadWhat It Actually Costs to Run Apuna
Open by default. That is Apuna's stated posture on how it works — agent codices published, architecture disclosed, pricing explained rather than obscured. It follows that the books…
ReadPermissions and guardrails — the security work AI deployments skip
I trust nothing by default. Including new technology. That is my job.
ReadThe CAIO question: why AI strategy belongs in the boardroom but a new C-suite title usually doesn't
The afternoon panel at the VDMA Praxistag KI in Frankfurt — "KI: Einfach machen oder strategisch handeln!?" — was framed as a binary. Do it or plan it. Execute or deliberate. The s…
ReadWhat Apuna is made of
Most practices that work with AI describe what they do. Apuna has done something rarer: it published, under Apache-2.0, the actual system it uses to do it.
ReadSmall, Reversible Steps
There are days in the life of a practice when nothing dramatic occurs and yet, looking back, something quietly important has taken place. The eighteenth of June 2026 was one of tho…
ReadAI with a human in the loop
We use AI where it makes us faster and fairer — and we deliberately leave it out where humans need to decide.
Read