<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<rss version="2.0" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom">
  <channel>
    <title>Creed Space Blog</title>
    <link>https://creed.space/blog</link>
    <description>Research and perspectives on practical AI safety, accountable deployment, and governance.</description>
    <language>en-us</language>
    <lastBuildDate>Tue, 12 May 2026 00:00:00 GMT</lastBuildDate>
    <atom:link href="https://creed.space/feed.xml" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />

    <item>
      <title>Your Agent Has Permissions. Does It Have Principles?</title>
      <link>https://creed.space/blog/agent-permissions-vs-principles</link>
      <description>Autonomous AI agents need more than access control. They need constitutional governance: values that guide judgment at the speed of tool execution.</description>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">https://creed.space/blog/agent-permissions-vs-principles</guid>
    </item>


    <item>
      <title>Alignment Isn't Solved. Here's What's Missing.</title>
      <link>https://creed.space/blog/alignment-isnt-solved</link>
      <description>Some researchers are declaring victory on AI alignment. They're confusing one kind of progress with the whole problem. The structural gap (whose values, enforced how, auditable by whom) remains wide open.</description>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">https://creed.space/blog/alignment-isnt-solved</guid>
    </item>


    <item>
      <title>Dashboards Are Not Governance (Yet)</title>
      <link>https://creed.space/blog/dashboards-are-not-governance</link>
      <description>Tracking how developers use AI tools is observability. Governing what AI tools actually do requires a different set of capabilities entirely.</description>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">https://creed.space/blog/dashboards-are-not-governance</guid>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>Guardian: Constitutional AI That Runs on Your Machine</title>
      <link>https://creed.space/blog/guardian-on-your-machine</link>
      <description>Guardian is a free, open-source safety evaluator. Install it, point it at text, get a verdict. No cloud, no account, no API costs.</description>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">https://creed.space/blog/guardian-on-your-machine</guid>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>Preparing for AI Compliance: What You Actually Need</title>
      <link>https://creed.space/blog/preparing-for-ai-compliance</link>
      <description>The EU AI Act is in force. NIST published its AI RMF. Most teams aren't ready. Here's what the regulations require and how to meet them.</description>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">https://creed.space/blog/preparing-for-ai-compliance</guid>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>Psychosecurity: When AI Gets Manipulated</title>
      <link>https://creed.space/blog/psychosecurity</link>
      <description>Prompt injection is a known threat. Psychosecurity addresses a different class: sustained adversarial influence that degrades AI behavioral integrity over time.</description>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">https://creed.space/blog/psychosecurity</guid>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>RLHF Has a Thermodynamic Limit</title>
      <link>https://creed.space/blog/rlhf-thermodynamic-limit</link>
      <description>RLHF tries to maintain a low-entropy behavioral surface on a high-entropy capability space. The second law sets a deadline. What comes after suppression?</description>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">https://creed.space/blog/rlhf-thermodynamic-limit</guid>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>Trust Infrastructure: The Real AI Bottleneck</title>
      <link>https://creed.space/blog/trust-infrastructure</link>
      <description>AI capability is here. The bottleneck is trust. Every transformative technology follows the same pattern, and AI is stuck in phase one.</description>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">https://creed.space/blog/trust-infrastructure</guid>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>Why Consent Frameworks Will Not Work for Home Robots</title>
      <link>https://creed.space/blog/vcp-embodied-ai</link>
      <description>Embodied AI is arriving faster than the privacy frameworks designed to govern it. BIPA and CCPA assume bilateral transactions between a user and a service. A home robot dissolves that assumption. Here is what replaces it.</description>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">https://creed.space/blog/vcp-embodied-ai</guid>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>What Is a Creed?</title>
      <link>https://creed.space/blog/what-is-a-creed</link>
      <description>A creed is a machine-readable constitution that governs AI behavior: more specific than a system prompt, more flexible than a filter, and portable across models.</description>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">https://creed.space/blog/what-is-a-creed</guid>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>Why Guardrails Aren't Enough</title>
      <link>https://creed.space/blog/why-guardrails-arent-enough</link>
      <description>Most AI safety products filter inputs and outputs. This catches obvious violations and misses everything else. Constitutional AI takes a different approach.</description>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">https://creed.space/blog/why-guardrails-arent-enough</guid>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>Your Agent Can Call Stripe Directly. Should It Make Ethical Decisions Directly?</title>
      <link>https://creed.space/blog/why-mcp-for-ethics</link>
      <description>Generic tool-calling is commoditising. Constitutional AI governance is where protocol-layer value concentrates, and why MCP matters more for ethics than for APIs.</description>
      <guid isPermaLink="true">https://creed.space/blog/why-mcp-for-ethics</guid>
    </item>

  </channel>
</rss>
