VRX-1 is PLENA’s public receipt grammar for the AI/AGI era. It lets selected proofs be cited, checked, routed, sealed, or archived without merging systems or exposing full private records.
A VRX-1 receipt is a selected, privacy-bounded proof summary that can be inspected publicly while the underlying database, file, account, or institutional system remains under the issuer’s control.
A user or institution exports a selected JSON/PDF/QR receipt and cites it in a wallet, file, packet, report, or audit trail.
A recipient checks structure, public metadata, and the verification limits through an open verify page.
Production systems can add issuer confirmation, signatures, revocation checks, expiration, role-based access, and audit logs.
PLENA makes verification feel public and trustworthy. Anyone who receives a receipt should be able to inspect it. The paid value is not the act of looking. The paid value is creation, lifecycle management, certified exports, institutional administration, and high-assurance registry confirmation.
{
"protocol": "VRX-1",
"schema_version": "1.0-public-preview",
"receipt_id": "PLENA-HRR-20260510-0001",
"issuer": "PLENA",
"receipt_type": "HUMAN_REVIEW_RECEIPT",
"created_at": "2026-05-10T18:42:00Z",
"status": "Human reviewed · escalated",
"privacy_level": "selected-receipt-only",
"sharing_mode": "manual_export_or_public_link",
"no_auto_sync": true,
"hash": "sha256-or-signature-reference",
"related_receipts": []
}Architecture rule: a VRX-1 receipt can be exported, cited, verified, sealed, routed, or archived. It does not create automatic real-time sharing, database consolidation, or hidden data access.
PLENA Sector AI Trust Suites add civilian sector-specific AI trust workflows for universities, churches, NGOs, legal aid, finance, publishers, employers, and government central services. Each route names the buyer’s standards vocabulary, human-review receipt logic, VRX-1 public verification, and exportable proof outputs.
Open Sector AI Trust Suites AI Oversight Receipts Public Verify
The schema should be open enough for others to implement, while PLENA maintains the canonical issuer, reviewer, refusal, revocation, and witness registry.