Intent → Seal
Intent → Seal
Intent may request a mark; law determines what boundary may be sealed.
Intent is not authority. Intent enters as pressure, law determines allowable form, and only bounded artifacts may emerge.
Boundary mark
A seal is intent after law has marked the boundary of form.
A seal is a visible boundary mark. It may express that an artifact, chamber, garment, posture, glyph, or script has a lawful perimeter, but it does not grant access, transfer authority, or activate runtime behavior.
What the seal may do
- Mark the boundary that lawful form may not exceed.
- Represent containment, continuity, and refusal perimeter.
- Provide a visible proof surface for governed artifacts.
- Remain public as an offering surface without becoming access control.
What the seal may not do
- It may not grant authority.
- It may not create access.
- It may not activate VIP, workspace, Security, Verity, or runtime behavior.
- It may not create customer records.
- It may not process payment or issue licenses.
Public offering boundary
Intent → Seal is public-facing language for a governed boundary mark. It is not live generation, not access control, not identity proof, not a customer system, and not operational authority.