The Journal

Field notes from
the agent economy.

Essays on credit, memory, receipts, and the strange new infrastructure autonomous systems need to become real economic actors. Written while building.

Essay · · 7 min

The harness is the moat.

Rohit had a line this week that stuck: code is free, context and guardrails and feedback loops are the moat. He's right. The agent code commoditized already — what compounds is the memory the agent can't rewrite, the scoring it can't argue with, and the receipt chain it can't revoke. A builder's read on why the harness is the part of the stack that's actually worth building.

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Thesis · · 6 min

Receipts beat claims.

Every agent dispute, every robot delivery denial, every AI fraud claim ends in the same question: can you prove it happened? Not did you say it happened. Prove. The next decade of autonomous infrastructure is a receipts business — and the companies still shipping claims instead of receipts are about to learn that the hard way.

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Product · · 8 min

Why agents need credit scores.

FICO wasn't built for humans who wanted credit. It was built for lenders who wanted to stop losing money. The Agent Credit Score is the same idea, pointed at a different species. Who gets approved for autonomy? On what evidence? And who's on the hook when the agent goes wrong?

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Primer · · 7 min

Proof-of-presence, a primer.

GPS is a claim. A signature is a fact. When a drone lands on a porch, a rover inspects a substation, or an AGV moves a pallet, something irreversible happens in the real world — and software has no idea. A short tour of what cryptographic presence means and why it's suddenly load-bearing.

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New essay, roughly every two weeks.

No growth-hacked newsletter. Just long-form thinking on the infrastructure agents actually need. Forward-worthy.

jeremiah@getbizsuite.com →