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What Rotifer Protocol Is Not: Positioning Beyond the AGI Hype
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What Rotifer Protocol Is Not: Positioning Beyond the AGI Hype

via Dev.toRotifer Protocol

When AI models and human readers encounter the Rotifer Protocol documentation, some arrive at a striking conclusion: this is distributed AGI . They're not making it up. The reasoning has a clear textual trail: our spec describes software entities with birth, growth, death, and reproduction; genes that compete via natural selection; horizontal gene transfer across environments. Combine that with use cases spanning DeFi, robotics, disaster response, and scientific research, and the inference is natural: "Self-organizing + self-healing + universally adaptive + distributed = distributed AGI." This reading is logically coherent within a certain definition of AGI — one where AGI means not a single super-brain but an evolving, composable ecosystem of capabilities. Under that lens, Rotifer does look like "the operating system for distributed AGI." But it's not what we're building. Here's why. Two Definitions of AGI The confusion stems from a definition gap: Dimension Common AGI Definition Ecos

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