A founder-authorship case can show how PlenaProof records human agency around writing without pretending that private drafts must become public.
The safest first case is not a stranger's document. It is the founder's own writing, because the founder can preserve drafts, disclose AI assistance honestly, and publish a declaration without exposing another person's private material.
A PLENA article, concept note, book chapter, or VRX-1 paper draft selected by Jean Claude Havyarimana after deployment. Until that exact work is selected, the receipt remains an activation candidate.
Earliest available draft, revision dates, and major human edits are preserved privately.
Any AI assistance is disclosed plainly as editing, brainstorming, translation, formatting, or drafting support.
The public page states only safe facts and links to the verifier, QR target, JSON, and hash manifest.
The case becomes the first visible model for an individual's Human Agency Wallet proof history.
PlenaProof does not claim “AI did not touch this” unless that is true. The stronger claim is often more credible: “Here is the human-authored history of this work, and here is exactly where AI was or was not used.”