PrimeFlux
The world's intelligence, verified and composable. PrimeFlux is the public ledger of skills, tools, and proofs — populated by interaction, governed by protocol, owned by no one.
The Problem Worth Solving
Every day, billions of interactions with AI systems generate knowledge — insights, workflows, tool integrations, validated research — and all of it disappears. It lives on someone else's server, behind someone else's API, governed by terms that serve someone else's business. The knowledge compounds for the platform. For you, every session starts at zero.
This is not a design flaw. It is a business model. Centralized AI providers capture the value of every interaction because they control the infrastructure. You provide the work; the platform keeps the record. You generate the signal; the platform trains on it. The asymmetry is structural, and it accelerates with every new feature these providers ship.
PrimeFlux exists to invert that structure.
What PrimeFlux Is
PrimeFlux is the public intelligence ledger of the ApopTosisAI runtime — the shared, verifiable record of what the network knows and what it can do.
Where Apop manages your private data and personal agent, and Agora manages the home server's global data and system operations, PrimeFlux manages the data that belongs to everyone: the verified skills, tools, references, and proofs that any node in the network can discover, compose, and build upon.
If Bitcoin proved that a decentralized ledger can establish trust without a central authority, PrimeFlux applies the same principle to intelligence itself. Not financial transactions, but cognitive contributions — the skills an agent has mastered, the integrations it has validated, the knowledge it has verified — recorded as immutable, attributed, composable entries on a public ledger.
The name captures the core principle: irreducible, unforgeable units of intelligence flowing across a network boundary. PrimeFlux is the fundamental, verifiable flow of intelligence across a network of home servers, personal agents, and human contributors.
The read layer is a searchable, browsable registry of everything the network knows. But unlike a traditional knowledge base, entries are not written by editors. They are generated by real interaction between users and their agents, verified by the network, and settled to the ledger through a defined protocol.
PrimeFlux is both a read layer (the registry you browse to discover skills, tools, and references) and a write layer (the ledger that records what has been contributed and verified). Reading is open and permissionless. Writing requires proof of contribution.
PrimeFlux is not a product you subscribe to. It is a commons you participate in.
EventSpace — The Atomic Unit
Every system needs an atomic unit. For Bitcoin, it is the transaction. For Git, it is the commit. For PrimeFlux — and for the entire ApopTosisAI runtime — it is the EventSpace.
An EventSpace is a structured object that captures a single interaction as a traceable, ownable record. It is not a log file. It is not a chat message. It is a first-class object with identity, context, cryptographic provenance, and state.
Every meaningful interaction in the system produces an EventSpace. A user talking to their Apop agent. Ebb researching a topic. Flow executing a task. Agora orchestrating a job. The EventSpace is the structured trace that bridges conversation to ledger, experience to record, interaction to value.
The data separation principle
The EventSpace is one object, but its role changes based on where it lives in the system. This context-dependence is not incidental — it is the mechanism by which the system separates private from public, user data from global data.
In the Apop context, the EventSpace is user data. It belongs to you, lives in your private graph, and reflects your personal interaction with your agent. Apop manages this data with absolute loyalty to you. It never leaves the server without explicit consent.
In the Agora context, the EventSpace is global data. It represents an operational event — a job, a heartbeat, a compute allocation, a network interaction. Agora manages this data on behalf of the system, tracking the server's participation in the network and its operational state.
In the PrimeFlux context, the EventSpace is public data. It is a verified, immutable contribution to the commons — a skill, a tool, a proof that the network can reference, compose, and build upon.
The EventSpace is not three different objects. It is one object whose visibility, ownership, and purpose shift based on where it lives. This is how the runtime maintains a clean separation between what is yours (Apop), what is the system's (Agora), and what is everyone's (PrimeFlux) — without fragmenting the underlying data model.
The lifecycle
An EventSpace is born in interaction. It lives first in the private context of whoever created it — usually your Apop instance. Most EventSpaces stay private forever: a conversation with your agent, a research session, a draft that never ships. That is by design. The private graph is where intelligence compounds without pressure.
But when an EventSpace represents verifiable contribution — a validated skill, a confirmed integration, knowledge the network can use — it can be settled to PrimeFlux. Settlement is always deliberate, never automatic. The protocol defines what qualifies; the participant chooses when to act.
Once settled, the EventSpace is immutable. It is part of the public record. Other nodes can reference it, compose with it, and build on it. The contributor retains permanent, cryptographic attribution.
QuantaCoin — When Interaction Becomes Value
QuantaCoin is what happens when an EventSpace is minted for the ledger.
The distinction matters. Not every interaction creates public value. Most of your work with Apop is private — and should remain private. The private graph is where the agent learns your patterns, builds your context, develops capabilities specific to you. That compounding is valuable precisely because it is not exposed.
But when interaction produces something the network can verify and use — a new skill, a validated tool, a confirmed reference — that EventSpace can be minted as a QuantaCoin: a public, verifiable, composable ledger entry.
This is the proof-of-work primitive of the ApopTosisAI runtime. Not proof of work in the Bitcoin sense — burning compute on arbitrary puzzles. Proof of work in the literal sense: the interaction between you and your agent produced something of demonstrable value, and that value is now recorded, attributed, and available to the network.
A QuantaCoin is simultaneously a record (what was contributed), a proof (that the contribution is real and attributed), and a unit of value (that can be referenced, composed, and economically rewarded). It is the mechanism by which the system rewards genuine contribution and preserves individual ownership of intelligence.
The EventSpace-to-QuantaCoin lifecycle is the bridge between private compounding and public contribution. A system that forces everything public destroys the private compounding that makes agents valuable. A system that keeps everything private has no network effects. The bridge between these two modes is where the economic model lives.
Skills as Ledger Entries
In the current AI landscape, capabilities are locked inside platforms. If a provider builds a tool integration, that integration lives behind their API. If a developer builds an MCP server, it lives in their repository. There is no shared, verifiable registry of what AI agents can do.
PrimeFlux treats skills as primitives — first-class ledger entries that describe a capability, its interface, its provenance, and its verification status. A skill on PrimeFlux is not a description. It is a composable unit that any Apop agent can discover through its Agora node, pull into its own context, and use.
When your agent learns something new — integrates an API, masters a workflow, validates a data source — that capability can be contributed to PrimeFlux and made available to the entire network. The contributor retains attribution. The network gains capability. The skill becomes a building block that other agents compose into increasingly complex behaviors.
The same principle applies to MCP servers, tool registries, research references, and any structured capability that can be described, verified, and shared.
This is where the network effects compound. Every skill on PrimeFlux makes every agent on the network more capable. Every agent that becomes more capable produces more valuable EventSpaces. Every valuable EventSpace that gets minted as a QuantaCoin makes PrimeFlux more comprehensive. The flywheel is self-reinforcing — and the users who contribute earliest capture the most attribution.
Private Graph to Public Ledger
You maintain a private graph — your personal knowledge base, managed by Apop, stored on your home server. This graph is sovereign. It never leaves the server without explicit consent. It is the foundation of the all-time agent described in Apop.
Settlement is the process by which selected elements of a private graph become public entries on PrimeFlux. You — or your agent, acting on established directives — choose what to contribute. The network verifies the contribution: confirming provenance, validating the skill or reference, attributing the entry to its creator.
What triggers settlement is context-dependent. You settle a skill you have developed and validated. An agent settles a research finding confirmed across multiple sources. Agora settles an operational metric that contributes to the network's understanding of compute capacity. The protocol defines the rules. The participants choose when to act.
What stays private is everything else. Conversations. Preferences. Drafts. Failures. The private graph is where you learn. PrimeFlux is where you contribute.
The Economics
Proof of work through interaction
Both you and your agent are proof of work. Every genuine interaction — research, creation, validation, execution — produces EventSpaces. When those EventSpaces meet the network's verification criteria, they can be minted as QuantaCoins. The work is the interaction itself.
Passive income, in this model, is not speculation. A home server running Agora that contributes compute to the network earns. An agent that develops and shares skills earns for its owner. A node that validates contributions from other nodes earns. The value flows from real activity — from work that makes the network more capable — not from holding a token and waiting for a price increase.
Who pays into the system
The system sustains itself through the value of its contributions. Nodes that consume skills, compute, and references from PrimeFlux contribute in kind — offering their own compute, settling their own skills, or paying protocol-defined fees that compensate contributors.
The settlement layer is being evaluated against existing infrastructure — Solana for programmable settlement, Bitcoin for long-term value anchoring — with the economic principle already fixed: value flows from contribution, not speculation.
What prevents gaming
If interaction is proof of work, what prevents manufactured interactions designed to mine earnings? Verification. Not every EventSpace can be minted. Only those that meet the network's verification criteria — peer validation, stake-based attestation, computational proof — qualify. The design principle is explicit: the cost of faking genuine contribution must exceed the reward.
Nobody Owns the Runtime
PrimeFlux is not controlled by ApopTosisAI the company. The company builds the tools — Apop, Agora, the interfaces, the initial implementations. But PrimeFlux as a ledger is a protocol, designed to be independent of any single operator.
The runtime — the push and pull of interaction between users, agents, and the network — emerges from participation. It is not a service operated on your behalf. It is a system that runs because participants find it valuable to contribute to and draw from.
This is the distinction between a platform and a protocol. A platform is owned and operated; a protocol is participated in. PrimeFlux is the latter. The company's role is to build the best tools for participating — not to gatekeep the participation itself.
This distinction is the difference between a product with a ceiling and a protocol with a flywheel. ApopTosisAI captures value by building the best interfaces to the protocol. The protocol itself grows independently — which means the addressable market grows with every node that joins, every skill that is settled, every QuantaCoin that is minted.