Series
The Integration Surface
BlueMirror does not exist in isolation. External agents — pharmacies, hospitals, insurers, transportation services, and eventually other people's personal agents — all need to interact with the person's concierge layer. Series 03 specifies how: what the Blue Pane membrane permits, what it refuses, how trust is earned and lost, and what an agentic world without a membrane actually looks like for the people inside it.
BMT-03.01
The Membrane
The membrane is not a wall. Like its biological analogue, Blue Pane allows beneficial interactions in, keeps harmful extraction out, enables controlled exchange, and maintains …
BMT-03.02
Trust Tiers and What They Unlock
Five trust tiers govern what each external agent can see and do, with explicit evidence packages required to advance. The rules for losing trust are as detailed as the rules for …
BMT-03.03
Bounded Exploration
Exploration bounds make the membrane operational rather than conceptual: five constraint dimensions define exactly what can happen at each trust tier and interaction type, …
BMT-03.04
The Negotiation Sandbox
When agents negotiate, a structured sandbox records every proposal, enforces no side channels, closes on timeout, and requires explicit acceptance for any commitment. Every …
BMT-03.05
Where You Fit: The Partner Integration Guide
The Partner Integration Guide
Every external system integrates through a registered agent manifest. The context requirements assessment at week one tells the partner exactly what their system will receive in …
BMT-03.06
Attack Resistance
The architecture treats adversarial optimization as the default state of external agents. Five attack categories and five continuous defenses cover preference probing, urgency …
BMT-03.07
Agent-to-Agent: When People's Agents Meet
When People's Agents Meet
When Margaret's agent meets Elena's agent, neither side is the service provider. Two personal agents coordinating care across households require symmetric trust evaluation, …
Synthesis