GRIFF AI Standards Wiki

GRIFF-AI-8802: chain of custody for AI agents.

GRIFF AI maintains a controlled standards family for agent identity, authority, communications, running-state custody, evidence, guardrails, assurance packs, and certified closeout. MASTER ATC is the reference product path: the flight data recorder for agentic AI operations.

Current family

GRIFF-AI-8802

Current base

GRIFF-AI-8802.1 / RFC-0001

Active parts

GRIFF-AI-8802.2 through GRIFF-AI-8802.8

Reference product

MASTER ATC

Category position

Compliance for work done by agents.

The standard is designed to answer what happened, which agent did it, under what authority, through which systems, with what policy decision, and with what evidence. It maps into existing AI governance, security, federal, and customer assurance frameworks without exposing private implementation annexes.

Profile A

Manual Custody

Human-reviewed reports, manifests, message ids, hashes, and closeout certificates.

Profile B

Structured Ledger

Structured records for agents, tasks, communications, events, evidence, and certificates.

Profile C

Real-Time Orchestrated

Live session state, drift detection, exact-id readback, and automated evidence routing.

Profile D

Assurance Ready

Customer evidence packs, control crosswalks, retention, exceptions, and signed or hash-bound certificates.

Roadmap and alignment

Public discovery with controlled standards access.

Latest-spec API

Commercial roadmap: a public/controlled API for current standards metadata, release status, and approved customer packet routing without exposing private annex internals.

Version alignment

The website, MASTER ATC materials, and Master control registry are treated as one standards story so public claims stay aligned with the current base and active parts.

Standards family

The active 8802 series for agentic AI operations.

GRIFF-AI-8802
Current standards family
Family charter, governance model, numbering system, release posture, and public/private boundary.
GRIFF-AI-8802.1 / RFC-0001
Current base standard
Base standard for identity, authority, communications, running-state custody, evidence, and closeout.
GRIFF-AI-8802.2
Agent Evidence Envelope
Active part for custody envelopes, evidence objects, policy decisions, hashes, and approvals.
GRIFF-AI-8802.3
Agent Communications Ledger
Active part for direct routing, broadcast visibility, watcher state, and exact-id reply proof.
GRIFF-AI-8802.4
Certified Agent Closeout
Active part for closeout handshakes, final-state evidence, rosters, and exit proof.
GRIFF-AI-8802.5
Real-Time Agent Activity Orchestrator
Active part for session state, queues, ledgers, dashboards, alerting, and coordination surfaces.
GRIFF-AI-8802.6
Policy And Approval Guardrails
Active part for risk tiers, owner gates, allowlists, break-glass paths, and human approval records.
GRIFF-AI-8802.7
Assurance Pack And Control Mapping
Active part for customer evidence packs, retention posture, exceptions, and control crosswalks.
GRIFF-AI-8802.8
Private Annex Boundary
Active part for controlled implementation annexes, IP separation, and customer-specific disclosure gates.

Division model

Built like a real standard, not a one-off memo.

Div. 00
General Requirements
Scope, conformance, governance, definitions, versioning
Div. 01
Agent Identity
Stable identity, session binding, machine context, service registration
Div. 02
Authority And Policy
Authority envelopes, owner gates, risk tiers, approvals
Div. 03
Startup Custody
Startup state, RFC load, direct-message check, handoff acceptance
Div. 04
Communications
Direct routing, exact-id readback, watcher timeout, stale-state controls
Div. 05
Running-State Custody
Progress, tool calls, model events, file and browser actions
Div. 06
Evidence And Hashing
Evidence objects, manifests, screenshots, hash binding
Div. 07
Closeout Certification
Blue-light handshakes, final screen evidence, shutdown proof
Div. 08
Assurance Packs
Customer evidence, crosswalks, retention, exceptions
Div. 09
Orchestrator Infrastructure
Real-time state, queues, ledgers, dashboards, alerting
Div. 10
Sector Profiles
Federal, enterprise, SOC 2, FedRAMP, internal operations

IP boundary

Public objectives outside, private annexes inside.

The public wiki explains the control objectives, conformance profiles, family structure, and assurance value. Production schemas, signing mechanics, route handlers, deployment commands, provider-specific details, and customer evidence formats remain controlled implementation annexes.

Access path

Qualified reviews get the controlled packet.

Security, procurement, partner, and investor reviews can request access to the standards packet, private annex index, sample assurance artifacts, and owner-gated implementation evidence.

Request access