PlenaProof is not only a software idea. It is a civilizational argument about human accountability, institutional memory, refusal, agency, and proof in the AI era. A serious book can make the vocabulary travel.
Alternative subtitles: Human Accountability After Artificial Intelligence; The Wallet, the Witness, and the Refusal; How to Prove What Still Matters.
A receipt that explains why something was not verified.
A wallet organized around accountable human action, not merely credentials.
A year-by-year archive of credible events, decisions, reviews, and refusals.
Receipts that prove what an AI agent was allowed to do.
The registry, reviewers, issuers, and refusal records that make digital proof socially meaningful.
The promise that proof remains intelligible beyond software cycles.
A writer and scholar can influence standards, vocabulary, ethics, and institutional imagination before a large engineering team exists.
The book turns PlenaProof from a bundle of pages into a named category: human accountability infrastructure for the AI era.