Standards Body · Foundational source, public edition · Released July 17, 2026

Canonical record: https://standardsbody.ai/library/foundational-source/project-identity/

Standards Body is an independent research and institutional-design project. It is not currently a regulator, accreditation body, certification body, or governmental authority. This document is research; it is not an adopted standard.

PROJECT_IDENTITY.md

Standards Body Project Identity

Project name: Standards Body
Primary domain: standardsbody.ai
Secondary domain: thestandardsbody.ai
Core line: Foundations for Frontier AI
Document type: Canonical project identity and positioning source
Version: 1.0
Status: Approved foundational source
Document owner: Standards Body
Applies to: Website, publications, partnerships, contributor materials, research outputs, public statements, media descriptions, institutional documents, and future organizational development
Review cycle: Annual review, with event-triggered revision after a material change in mission, institutional status, governance, authority, organizational structure, or public role


Document Purpose

This document defines the identity of Standards Body.

It is the authoritative source for:

All public descriptions of Standards Body should remain consistent with this document.

Where another project file conflicts with this document on matters of identity, present authority, mission, public positioning, or institutional status, this document governs unless it has been formally superseded.


1. Canonical Identity Statement

1.1 Primary Identity

Standards Body is an independent research and institutional-design project developing foundations for frontier AI evaluation, assurance, standards, and governance.

1.2 Extended Identity

Standards Body develops the concepts, methods, institutional frameworks, and shared language needed for credible frontier AI evaluation and standards. Its work focuses on dynamic evaluation, held-out testing, high-stakes capability assessment, independent review, third-party assurance, progressive requirements, incentive alignment, and global interoperability.

1.3 Present Status

Standards Body is presently:

Standards Body is not presently:

1.4 Core Line

Foundations for Frontier AI

This line expresses the project's role.

Standards Body is building the intellectual and institutional foundations required before credible frontier AI standards can mature.

It does not imply that the project has already established binding standards.

1.5 Central Identity Boundary

Standards Body may research, propose, organize, convene, evaluate, publish, and develop frameworks. It may not imply that its work has legal, regulatory, accreditation, certification, or governmental authority unless such authority is later lawfully and explicitly established.


2. Why Standards Body Exists

2.1 The Institutional Gap

Frontier artificial intelligence is developing faster than the institutions responsible for evaluating and governing it.

Current systems often depend on fragmented arrangements:

Standards Body exists to help close this gap.

2.2 The Foundational Problem

A credible standards system cannot begin with a badge, certification mark, or regulatory claim.

It must begin with:

The project begins at this foundational layer.

2.3 The Long-Term Need

Frontier AI will require institutions capable of answering questions such as:

Standards Body is developing a coherent architecture for these questions.

2.4 The Project's Response

Standards Body responds by building:

  1. A first-principles foundation
  2. A common intellectual framework
  3. A standards-development architecture
  4. An evaluator and assurance model
  5. A transparent institutional design
  6. A living knowledge base
  7. A pathway toward future legitimate standards work

3. Mission

3.1 Canonical Mission

The mission of Standards Body is to develop credible foundations for frontier AI evaluation, assurance, standards, and governance in the public interest.

3.2 Mission in Practice

Standards Body advances this mission by:

3.3 Mission Constraints

The mission does not include:

3.4 Public-Interest Orientation

Standards Body's work should support:

The project does not define the public interest as opposition to technological progress.

It defines the public interest as the responsible development and use of frontier AI under conditions that make important claims reviewable, evidence-based, and accountable.


4. Vision

4.1 Long-Term Vision

A world in which consequential claims about frontier AI are supported by credible, current, independently reviewable, and internationally interpretable evidence.

4.2 Institutional Vision

The long-term institutional vision includes an ecosystem in which:

4.3 Vision Without Presumption

Standards Body does not presume that it must become the sole institution performing these functions.

Its work should remain useful whether future responsibilities are carried by:

4.4 Preferred Future

The preferred future is plural and interoperable.

No single developer, evaluator, government, or standards organization should become the unquestionable authority over all frontier AI evidence.


5. The Problem Standards Body Is Solving

5.1 The Evaluation Problem

Frontier AI evaluation faces:

5.2 The Assurance Problem

Independent assurance faces:

5.3 The Standards Problem

Standards development faces:

5.4 The Governance Problem

Governance faces:

5.5 The Communication Problem

Public understanding is weakened when:

Standards Body treats precise institutional language as part of substantive integrity.


6. What Standards Body Builds

6.1 Foundational Research

Standards Body develops first-principles papers concerning:

6.2 Intellectual Infrastructure

The project develops:

6.3 Institutional Infrastructure

The project develops:

6.4 Operational Templates

Standards Body may publish templates for:

6.5 Living Knowledge Base

The project maintains:

6.6 Public Explanation

Standards Body translates technical and institutional questions into:

6.7 Future Pilots

Subject to competence, resources, security, and governance, Standards Body may support limited pilots involving:

A pilot does not itself establish formal authority.


7. What Standards Body Does Not Build

Standards Body should not present itself as building:


8. Core Principles

8.1 Evidence Before Authority

Institutional claims should not exceed the evidence supporting them.

8.2 Independence Without Isolation

Independent scrutiny should combine genuine judgment with sufficient system access and developer cooperation.

8.3 Proportionality

Evaluation and assurance should become more rigorous as consequence and uncertainty increase.

8.4 Revisability

Protocols, standards, and institutional positions should be versioned, correctable, and retireable.

8.5 Transparency With Security

Public accountability and protected information must be balanced through explicit disclosure levels.

8.6 Precision of Language

Terms such as standard, audit, certification, accreditation, recognition, and regulation should be used only when their institutional meaning is justified.

8.7 Public Interest

The work should improve the quality of decisions affecting people, institutions, and society.

8.8 Pluralism

No single technical discipline, institution, geography, ideology, or stakeholder group should control the complete agenda.

8.9 Global Interoperability

Shared evidence should support cooperation without erasing legitimate local authority and difference.

8.10 Accountability

Developers, evaluators, standards bodies, and Standards Body itself should be subject to challenge, correction, and documented decision processes.

8.11 Anti-Capture

The project should actively examine financial, institutional, ideological, professional, and geopolitical conflicts.

8.12 Contribution Over Prestige

Recognition should follow demonstrated contribution rather than status alone.

8.13 Safety and Benefit

The project should support beneficial frontier AI development while strengthening the evidence and safeguards appropriate to consequential capabilities.

8.14 Institutional Humility

Standards Body should state what it does not know and avoid performing authority it has not earned.

8.15 Show the Work

Important conclusions should be traceable to:


9. Foundational Positioning

9.1 The Project Is Pro-Evidence

Standards Body is not defined by optimism or pessimism about AI.

It is defined by the position that consequential claims require credible evidence.

9.2 The Project Is Pro-Institution

Standards Body recognizes that technical systems require institutional infrastructure.

It does not assume that markets, laboratories, governments, or civil society can solve every problem alone.

9.3 The Project Is Pro-Progress

The project supports beneficial scientific and technological progress.

It rejects the assumption that supporting progress requires weak evaluation or that supporting safeguards requires opposition to innovation.

9.4 The Project Is Non-Aligned

Standards Body should not be institutionally aligned with:

This does not require neutrality toward evidence.

9.5 The Project Is Non-Alarmist

Standards Body should discuss severe possibilities proportionately and precisely.

It should avoid:

9.6 The Project Is Not Complacent

Non-alarmism does not mean minimizing credible high-consequence risk.

Where the consequences of error are large, the project supports stronger evidence, review, safeguards, and institutional preparation.

9.7 The Project Is Institutionally Serious

Public materials should communicate:


10. Present Institutional Stage

10.1 Current Stage Name

Foundational research and institutional design

10.2 Current Activities

At this stage, Standards Body may:

10.3 Current Non-Activities

At this stage, Standards Body should not:

10.4 Stage Transition

Any move into a materially different institutional role should require:

10.5 No Implied Future Authority

References to a possible future standards institution are exploratory.

They do not create present authority or guarantee that Standards Body will adopt that role.


11. Future Institutional Possibilities

Standards Body may study or prepare for future roles such as:

More formal possibilities may be examined only after adequate governance and competence exist.

These include:

No such role should be publicly claimed before formal establishment.


12. Audiences

12.1 Frontier AI Developers

Standards Body provides:

The project should neither treat developers as enemies nor permit developer access to determine conclusions.

12.2 Independent Evaluators and Auditors

Standards Body provides:

12.3 Researchers

Standards Body provides:

12.4 Governments and Public Institutions

Standards Body provides:

It does not present its work as official policy.

12.5 Standards and Accreditation Organizations

Standards Body provides:

12.6 Purchasers, Insurers, and Investors

Standards Body provides:

It does not provide investment, insurance, or legal advice.

12.7 Open-Source and Open-Weight Communities

Standards Body provides:

12.8 Civil Society and Public-Interest Organizations

Standards Body provides:

12.9 Journalists and Public Communicators

Standards Body provides:

12.10 The General Public

Standards Body should make its core ideas understandable without reducing complexity to slogans or fear.


13. Primary Areas of Work

13.1 Evaluation Science

Questions include:

13.2 Independent Review

Questions include:

13.3 Assurance Ecosystems

Questions include:

13.4 Standards Development

Questions include:

13.5 Institutional Governance

Questions include:

13.6 Incentive Alignment

Questions include:

13.7 Global Interoperability

Questions include:

13.8 Public Knowledge Infrastructure

Questions include:


14. The Eight Foundational Papers

The initial foundational library consists of:

  1. FOUNDATION_01_DYNAMIC_EVALUATION_PROTOCOLS.md
  2. FOUNDATION_02_HELD_OUT_EVALUATIONS.md
  3. FOUNDATION_03_HIGH_STAKES_CAPABILITY_EVALUATION.md
  4. FOUNDATION_04_INDEPENDENT_EXPERT_REVIEW.md
  5. FOUNDATION_05_THIRD_PARTY_AUDITOR_ECOSYSTEM.md
  6. FOUNDATION_06_PROGRESSIVE_STANDARDS_AND_REQUIREMENTS.md
  7. FOUNDATION_07_INCENTIVES_AND_PRESTIGE.md
  8. FOUNDATION_08_GLOBAL_INTEROPERABILITY.md

Together they define the project's initial view of a credible frontier AI standards architecture.

14.1 Foundation Relationship

The foundations form a sequence:

14.2 Foundation Status

The foundation papers are:


15. Relationship to Existing Institutions

15.1 Governments

Standards Body may support public institutions with research and frameworks.

It does not speak for governments.

15.2 Regulators

Standards Body may analyze regulatory questions.

It does not make binding regulatory decisions.

15.3 Standards Organizations

Standards Body may contribute research and proposals.

It should not claim equivalence with formally recognized standards organizations unless such status is established.

15.4 Accreditation Bodies

Standards Body may study accreditation.

It does not accredit.

15.5 Certification Bodies

Standards Body may study certification schemes.

It does not certify.

15.6 AI Developers

Standards Body may collaborate with developers for access, evidence, and technical understanding.

Collaboration should not purchase conclusions or control identity.

15.7 Evaluators

Standards Body may support evaluator methods and institutional development.

It should not describe an evaluator as formally approved unless a legitimate process exists.

15.8 Academic Institutions

Standards Body may collaborate on research.

Academic affiliation does not automatically validate project claims.

15.9 Civil Society

Standards Body should include public-interest perspectives and affected-party knowledge.

15.10 International Organizations

Standards Body may participate in or support international discussions.

It should not imply membership, recognition, or endorsement without evidence.


16. Independence

16.1 Independence Position

Standards Body should remain sufficiently independent to:

16.2 Independence Dimensions

The project should monitor:

16.3 Funding

Funding sources should be disclosed according to the future transparency framework.

No funder should receive:

16.4 Partnerships

Partnerships should be:

16.5 Independence Is Not Non-Engagement

Standards Body may engage deeply with institutions it evaluates or studies.

The requirement is not distance.

The requirement is freedom of judgment and transparent conflict management.


17. Political and Ideological Position

17.1 Nonpartisan Position

Standards Body should remain nonpartisan.

Its work may have policy implications.

That does not make it a political-party organization.

17.2 Evidence-Based Disagreement

The project may support or oppose a proposal when evidence and institutional reasoning justify a position.

Nonpartisanship does not require silence.

17.3 Ideological Pluralism

Standards Body should not define participation by adherence to:

Contributors should be evaluated by relevance, evidence, competence, integrity, and conduct.

17.4 Values Are Explicit

The project is not value-free.

It values:


18. Voice and Tone

18.1 Canonical Voice

Standards Body should sound:

18.2 Avoided Voice

Standards Body should not sound:

18.3 Public Writing Principles

Public writing should:

18.4 First-Person Use

Use "Standards Body" for formal institutional positions.

Use "we" sparingly in public-facing writing where a human and accountable institutional voice is appropriate.

18.5 Tone Under Disagreement

Disagreement should be expressed through:

Avoid personal attacks and motive speculation without evidence.


19. Naming and Brand Architecture

19.1 Official Project Name

Standards Body

19.2 Approved Extended Form

Standards Body, Foundations for Frontier AI

19.3 Primary Domain

standardsbody.ai

19.4 Secondary Domain

thestandardsbody.ai

19.5 Core Line

Foundations for Frontier AI

19.6 Name Interpretation

The name expresses the long-term subject and institutional ambition of the project.

It does not claim present statutory status.

19.7 Name Usage Rule

Public materials should include a clear present-status description where the name could reasonably be interpreted as an official regulator or formally recognized standards authority.

19.8 Prohibited Name Extensions

Do not use without formal authorization:

19.9 Product and Program Names

Programs should use clear descriptive names and avoid authority inflation.

Preferred:

Avoid:


20. Approved Public Descriptions

20.1 One-Sentence Description

Standards Body is an independent research and institutional-design project developing foundations for frontier AI evaluation, assurance, standards, and governance.

20.2 Two-Sentence Description

Standards Body is an independent project developing the concepts, methods, and institutional frameworks needed for credible frontier AI evaluation and standards. Its work focuses on dynamic protocols, held-out testing, high-stakes capabilities, independent review, third-party assurance, progressive requirements, incentive alignment, and global interoperability.

20.3 Short Website Description

Standards Body develops foundations for credible frontier AI evaluation, assurance, standards, and governance. We are building the shared language, evidence principles, institutional frameworks, and public knowledge needed before durable standards can mature.

20.4 Extended Website Description

Standards Body is an independent research and institutional-design project focused on frontier artificial intelligence. We develop foundational work on evaluation protocols, protected testing, high-stakes capability assessment, independent expert review, third-party assurance, progressive standards, incentive alignment, and global interoperability. Standards Body is not a regulator, accreditation body, or certification authority. Our current role is to build the intellectual and institutional foundations required for more credible standards work.

20.5 Publication Boilerplate

About Standards Body: Standards Body is an independent research and institutional-design project developing foundations for frontier AI evaluation, assurance, standards, and governance. Its work is research and framework development and does not constitute certification, accreditation, regulatory approval, or legal advice.

20.6 Partnership Boilerplate

Standards Body is an independent frontier AI standards research project. Participation or collaboration does not imply endorsement, certification, accreditation, regulatory recognition, or agreement with every Standards Body position.

20.7 Media Description

Standards Body is a developing independent initiative focused on the infrastructure behind credible frontier AI standards, including evaluation methods, independent review, assurance systems, and international interoperability.

20.8 Social Profile Description

Independent research and institutional design for frontier AI evaluation, assurance, and standards. Foundations for Frontier AI.


21. Approved Authority Disclaimers

21.1 General Disclaimer

Standards Body is an independent research and institutional-design project. It is not a government agency, regulator, accreditation body, certification body, or legal authority.

21.2 Publication Disclaimer

This publication presents research, analysis, and proposed frameworks. It does not constitute a legal standard, certification decision, accreditation decision, regulatory determination, or guarantee of system safety.

21.3 Evaluation Disclaimer

An evaluation result describes evidence under specified conditions. It should not be interpreted as proof of universal capability, incapability, safety, legal compliance, or future behavior.

21.4 Partnership Disclaimer

Collaboration with Standards Body does not imply institutional endorsement, conformity, approval, certification, accreditation, or regulatory status.

21.5 Contributor Disclaimer

Contributor participation does not imply that the contributor or their organization endorses every Standards Body position.


22. Prohibited Public Claims

Standards Body should not claim:

These claims may become appropriate only after a lawful and formally documented institutional change, and only within the resulting authority.


23. Claims Standards

23.1 Institutional Claims

Every institutional claim should answer:

23.2 Technical Claims

Every technical claim should identify:

23.3 Consensus Claims

Do not say "experts agree" unless:

23.4 Global Claims

Do not say "global standard," "internationally recognized," or "worldwide consensus" without documented institutional basis.

23.5 Safety Claims

Prefer:

Avoid:


24. Evidence and Research Position

24.1 Evidence Hierarchy

Standards Body should prefer:

24.2 Current Information

Time-sensitive institutional, technical, legal, and standards claims should be verified before publication.

24.3 Confidential Evidence

Confidential evidence may inform a conclusion only when:

24.4 Model-Generated Work

AI tools may assist research and drafting.

They should not be treated as independent evidence.

Human responsibility remains with the publication owner.

24.5 Correction

Material error should be:

24.6 Uncertainty

Uncertainty is an output, not a failure.


25. Contributor Identity

25.1 Contributor Definition

A contributor is a person or institution that provides documented work to the project.

25.2 Contributor Does Not Mean Representative

A contributor does not automatically speak for Standards Body.

25.3 Contributor Does Not Mean Endorser

Participation does not imply agreement with every position.

25.4 Contributor Recognition

Credit should reflect actual contribution.

25.5 Contributor Authority

Authority should be granted by role and governance, not prestige alone.

25.6 Conflicts

Contributors should disclose material conflicts relevant to their work.

25.7 Conduct

Contributors should engage through:

Detailed rules belong in CONTRIBUTOR_FRAMEWORK.md.


26. Partnership Identity

26.1 Partnership Purpose

Partnerships may support:

26.2 Partnership Does Not Mean Endorsement

A partnership does not mean:

26.3 Partnership Review

Before announcement, evaluate:

26.4 Logo and Name Use

Partners should not use the Standards Body name to imply approval beyond the written partnership scope.

26.5 Exclusive Partnerships

Avoid exclusivity where it would:

Detailed principles belong in PARTNERSHIP_PRINCIPLES.md.


27. Funding Identity

27.1 Funding Purpose

Funding should support:

27.2 Funding Boundaries

Funding should not purchase:

27.3 Funding Disclosure

Material funding should be disclosed according to the transparency framework.

27.4 Funding Diversity

The project should seek funding diversity to reduce dependence.

27.5 In-Kind Support

Access to models, compute, data, facilities, or personnel is a material contribution and potential conflict.


28. Public Trust Position

28.1 Trust Is Earned

Standards Body should not ask for trust based only on:

Trust should follow:

28.2 No Institutional Theater

The project should not imitate the appearance of a mature authority before building the systems that make authority credible.

28.3 Transparency Limits

Trust does not require public release of every sensitive artifact.

It requires clarity about:

28.4 Trust and Dissent

Visible disagreement can strengthen justified trust.


29. Relationship to Regulation

29.1 Research Role

Standards Body may provide research relevant to regulation.

29.2 No Regulatory Substitution

Technical standards should not replace accountable public decision-making where legal authority is required.

29.3 Standards in Law

Standards may support:

Their incorporation into law requires public authority and due process.

29.4 Regulatory Critique

Standards Body may identify:

29.5 Policy Neutrality Is Not Required

The project may recommend institutional action when supported by evidence.

It should distinguish technical findings from policy judgment.


30. Relationship to Industry

30.1 Constructive Engagement

Industry holds essential technical knowledge and implementation capacity.

30.2 Independent Judgment

Industry participation should not determine conclusions.

30.3 No Anti-Industry Identity

Standards Body is not organized around opposition to AI companies.

30.4 No Industry-Association Identity

Standards Body does not represent collective industry interests.

30.5 Evidence Expectations

Developers should support:

30.6 Commercial Benefit

Commercial benefit from standards is not inherently improper.

It should not control standard content or public claims.


31. Relationship to Open-Source Communities

31.1 Equal Legitimacy of Evidence

Open-source contributions should be evaluated by evidence and competence.

31.2 No Ideological Presumption

Open systems are not inherently safe or unsafe.

Closed systems are not inherently safe or unsafe.

31.3 Distinct Institutional Needs

Open-weight systems require attention to:

31.4 Participation

Open-source experts should receive meaningful roles in relevant standards work.

31.5 Avoiding Tokenism

Participation should include:


32. Relationship to the Public

32.1 Public Legibility

Standards Body should make important distinctions understandable.

32.2 No Fear Marketing

The project should not build attention through panic.

32.3 No False Reassurance

The project should not minimize uncertainty to make technology appear settled.

32.4 Public Participation

Public and affected-party input is relevant to:

32.5 Technical Boundaries

Public participation does not require treating every technical claim as a matter of preference.

32.6 Education

Standards Body should explain:


33. Website Identity Requirements

The initial website should communicate five facts immediately:

  1. Standards Body is focused on frontier AI.
  2. Its present work is foundational research and institutional design.
  3. It develops frameworks for evaluation, assurance, standards, and governance.
  4. It is independent.
  5. It is not presently a regulator, accreditor, or certification authority.

33.1 Homepage Priority

The homepage should prioritize:

33.2 Avoided Homepage Signals

Avoid:

33.3 Website Source of Truth

Exact public copy belongs in WEBSITE_SOURCE_OF_TRUTH.md.


34. Publication Identity Requirements

Every major Standards Body publication should include:

34.1 Status Labels

Approved status labels:

34.2 Prohibited Status Labels Without Formal Basis


35. Institutional Identity Tests

Before publication or partnership, ask:

35.1 Authority Test

Could a reasonable reader believe Standards Body has official authority it does not hold?

35.2 Evidence Test

Does the claim exceed the supporting evidence?

35.3 Independence Test

Could funding, access, or partnership reasonably be seen as controlling the conclusion?

35.4 Scope Test

Is the claim limited to the actual system, method, domain, and period?

35.5 Public-Interest Test

Does the activity advance credible public value rather than status alone?

35.6 Capture Test

Does the activity give one institution disproportionate influence?

35.7 Reversibility Test

Can the decision, claim, designation, or partnership be corrected or ended?

35.8 Legibility Test

Can a non-specialist understand what Standards Body is and is not claiming?

35.9 Security Test

Does transparency create avoidable harm or exposure?

35.10 Identity Consistency Test

Is the language consistent with this document?


36. Public FAQ

36.1 Is Standards Body a regulator?

No. Standards Body is an independent research and institutional-design project.

36.2 Does Standards Body issue official AI standards?

Not at its present stage. It develops foundational research, proposed frameworks, and standards architecture.

36.3 Does Standards Body certify AI systems?

No.

36.4 Does Standards Body accredit AI evaluators?

No.

36.5 Is Standards Body affiliated with a government?

Not by default. Any specific government partnership or funding should be disclosed.

36.6 Is Standards Body affiliated with an AI company?

Not by default. Any specific partnership or funding should be disclosed and governed.

36.7 Is Standards Body opposed to frontier AI?

No. Standards Body supports beneficial progress under stronger systems of evidence, evaluation, assurance, and accountability.

36.8 Does Standards Body believe frontier AI is safe?

Standards Body does not issue broad declarations that frontier AI as a category is safe or unsafe. It evaluates claims, methods, risks, safeguards, and institutions within defined contexts.

36.9 Who can contribute?

Relevant contributors may include researchers, developers, evaluators, standards professionals, domain experts, open-source contributors, public-interest organizations, and affected communities, subject to competence, conduct, conflict, and governance requirements.

36.10 Are Standards Body papers final?

They are canonical and versioned, but revisable when evidence, systems, or institutional understanding changes.

36.11 Does Standards Body speak for the public?

No single private institution speaks for the public. Standards Body works in the public interest and should support accountable public participation and government authority where appropriate.

36.12 Why use the name Standards Body now?

The name expresses the project's subject and institutional direction. Clear public descriptions and disclaimers must distinguish the current foundational project from any future formal role.


37. Media Response Guide

Question: What is Standards Body?

Standards Body is an independent research and institutional-design project developing foundations for frontier AI evaluation, assurance, standards, and governance.

Question: Are you trying to regulate AI?

Standards Body is not a regulator. Our work focuses on the technical and institutional foundations that credible standards and public policy may eventually rely upon.

Question: Do you certify AI models?

No. We currently conduct research and framework development. We do not certify or approve AI systems.

Question: Are you affiliated with the major AI laboratories?

Standards Body is independent. Any specific funding, research access, or partnership should be disclosed and governed through conflict and transparency rules.

Question: Are you focused on catastrophic AI risk?

Our work covers high-stakes frontier capabilities as well as the institutional systems needed for credible evaluation. We approach severe risks proportionately and without sensationalism.

Question: Are you anti-innovation?

No. Credible evaluation and standards can support beneficial innovation by improving confidence, comparability, and accountability.

Question: Why is a new institution needed?

Frontier AI evaluation is fragmented, rapidly changing, and difficult to interpret across institutions. Standards Body is developing the shared foundations needed for more credible and interoperable standards work.


38. Identity Risks

38.1 Authority Inflation

Risk:

The name or visual identity may cause people to assume official authority.

Control:

Use clear present-status language and disclaimers.

38.2 Premature Institutionalization

Risk:

The project may imitate a mature standards institution before it has governance, competence, funding, and participation.

Control:

Stage-bound public claims and formal transition requirements.

38.3 Founder-Centric Identity

Risk:

The institution may become inseparable from one person.

Control:

Build documented governance, contributor credit, decision processes, and institutional continuity.

38.4 Corporate Capture

Risk:

A developer or evaluator may gain disproportionate influence through funding or access.

Control:

Funding diversity, conflict disclosure, publication independence, plural participation.

38.5 Government Capture

Risk:

A government may use technical work to advance narrow national interests.

Control:

Mandate clarity, international participation, technical-policy separation.

38.6 Ideological Capture

Risk:

The project may be identified with one AI worldview.

Control:

Evidence standards, contrarian review, contributor pluralism.

38.7 Standards Theater

Risk:

Public documents may create the appearance of standards without testing, implementation, or legitimacy.

Control:

Precise status labels and pilot-based progression.

38.8 Certification Confusion

Risk:

Frameworks may be marketed as approval.

Control:

Prohibited claims and public-claims review.

38.9 Prestige Capture

Risk:

High-status institutions may dominate participation.

Control:

Contribution-based credit, open pathways, conflict review.

38.10 Mission Drift

Risk:

The project may expand into unrelated AI commentary or commercial consulting.

Control:

Mission test and documented scope.

38.11 Overbreadth

Risk:

Attempting to cover every AI issue may weaken depth.

Control:

Maintain focus on frontier evaluation and standards infrastructure.

38.12 Public Misunderstanding

Risk:

Technical nuance may be lost.

Control:

Plain-language summaries and claims boundaries.


39. Mission Test for New Work

A proposed project should ordinarily satisfy most of the following:

  1. Does it concern frontier AI evaluation, assurance, standards, or governance?
  2. Does it strengthen evidence or institutional capacity?
  3. Does it fill a documented knowledge or coordination gap?
  4. Is Standards Body competent to conduct or convene the work?
  5. Can the work remain independent?
  6. Can the output be reviewed and revised?
  7. Does it serve a public-interest purpose?
  8. Can authority claims remain bounded?
  9. Does it avoid unnecessary duplication?
  10. Does it fit the canonical architecture?
  11. Can conflicts and security be managed?
  12. Is the work more than public commentary?

Projects that fail the mission test should be narrowed, referred elsewhere, or declined.


40. Source-of-Truth Hierarchy

Identity and public language should follow this hierarchy:

  1. PROJECT_IDENTITY.md
  2. PROJECT_MANIFESTO.md
  3. BRAND_POSITIONING.md
  4. FOUNDATIONS.md
  5. The eight individual foundation papers
  6. TERMINOLOGY.md
  7. WEBSITE_SOURCE_OF_TRUTH.md
  8. Individual publication files
  9. Temporary drafts and working notes

This hierarchy applies only to identity and public positioning.

Specialized documents may govern their own domain once approved.

Examples:

Where a specialized document would materially change project identity or authority, this document must also be updated.


41. Document Architecture Position

Standards Body's canonical architecture includes four layers.

Layer 1: Philosophy

Defines:

Layer 2: Intellectual Framework

Defines:

Layer 3: Institutional Design

Defines:

Layer 4: Living Knowledge Base

Maintains:

The architecture should remain coherent.

New files should have a defined role and avoid duplicating canonical sources.


42. Identity Change Control

42.1 Material Identity Changes

A material change includes:

42.2 Required Change Record

A material change should document:

42.3 Public Notice

Material public identity changes should be visible in:

42.4 No Silent Authority Expansion

Standards Body should never expand its claimed authority through gradual language changes without formal review.


43. Initial Institutional Commitments

Standards Body commits to:

  1. Describe its present status accurately.
  2. Distinguish research from standards, standards from certification, and certification from regulation.
  3. Publish versioned canonical documents.
  4. Correct material errors.
  5. Disclose material conflicts and funding according to approved frameworks.
  6. Preserve reasoned dissent.
  7. Avoid unsupported claims of consensus.
  8. Avoid implying government or international authority.
  9. Keep public claims within evidence.
  10. Treat contributor credit seriously.
  11. Support participation beyond dominant institutions.
  12. Protect sensitive information proportionately.
  13. Review standards and frameworks for capture and market effects.
  14. Maintain a public record of superseded and withdrawn work.
  15. Evaluate its own institutional development before claiming new roles.

44. Identity Success Criteria

Standards Body's identity is functioning well when:


45. Identity Failure Conditions

The project should pause and review its identity if:


46. Canonical Public Position

The following position governs all public descriptions:

Standards Body is an independent research and institutional-design project developing foundations for frontier AI evaluation, assurance, standards, and governance. Its present work consists of research, framework development, shared terminology, institutional design, and public knowledge infrastructure. Standards Body is not currently a regulator, accreditation body, certification body, or governmental authority. Its long-term purpose is to help make consequential frontier AI claims more credible, current, independently reviewable, and internationally interpretable.


47. Final Identity Statement

Standards Body exists because frontier AI requires more than technical progress and more than broad policy principles.

It requires institutions capable of producing and interpreting evidence.

Those institutions need:

The project begins before formal authority.

It begins with foundations.

Standards Body should be judged not by the authority implied by its name, but by the quality of the intellectual and institutional infrastructure it builds.

Its identity is therefore deliberately bounded.

It is ambitious about the problem.

It is careful about its present role.

It supports beneficial progress.

It takes high-consequence uncertainty seriously.

It seeks shared understanding without forced uniformity.

It values contribution over prestige.

It treats standards as institutions that must earn trust.

The defining commitment of Standards Body is this:

Build the foundations first. Make the evidence credible. Keep authority accountable.


Revision Record

Version 1.0

Date: July 16, 2026

Change type: Complete foundational edition

Summary: Establishes the canonical identity of Standards Body, including its mission, vision, current institutional stage, authority boundaries, public-interest orientation, core principles, audiences, work areas, foundational library, relationships with governments and industry, independence, political and ideological position, voice and tone, naming, approved public descriptions, disclaimers, prohibited claims, contributor and partnership identity, funding boundaries, public trust position, website and publication requirements, institutional identity tests, public FAQ, media responses, risks, mission test, source-of-truth hierarchy, change control, initial commitments, success criteria, and final public position.

Status: Approved foundational source.