Published January 8, 2026 | Version v1
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Financial Black Box

Authors/Creators

Description

Description (Canonical, Authority-Closed)

“Financial Black Box” is used here as a descriptive engineering term, not as a product name, system, service, or commercial offering.

This record presents a minimal, reproducible formal demonstration of a structural property of financial systems operating with intermediaries: in the absence of an independent, authoritative financial black box, the post-failure system state is not uniquely decidable, both technically and legally.

The accompanying artifact demonstrates that, without independent state capture, multiple mutually consistent system states remain admissible from the same observable facts. When an independent, authoritative state snapshot exists, the admissible interpretation space collapses to exactly one provable state. This distinction is structural, not semantic, legal, or procedural.

The term “financial black box” denotes an abstract architectural primitive: an external, authoritative state capture layer that exists outside operational workflows, records state atomically, and remains valid independently of system continuity. It is not a database, logging system, audit trail, reporting mechanism, or monitoring tool.

The included executable artifact is deterministic, uses only the Python standard library, requires no network access, processes no personal or confidential data, and produces reproducible outputs. It serves solely to demonstrate the existence of the described structural property and its consequences.

This record introduces no implementations, protocols, standards, architectures, policies, or operational mechanisms. It does not propose solutions. It establishes a problem boundary only.

Non-Claims

This record:

  • provides no legal, regulatory, or compliance guidance;

  • defines no governance process or responsibility model;

  • specifies no implementation, deployment, or operational behavior;

  • asserts no factual claims about any real systems, organizations, incidents, liabilities, intent, or fault.

Any interpretation of this record that implies validation, certification, evaluation, compliance determination, fault attribution, or legal conclusion is explicitly invalid.

Authority

This record is authority-closed.
Interpretation beyond the literal text of this specification
is not authorized without explicit consent of the authority holder.

Authority contact: governance@ai-admissibility.com

Absence of response via this contact does not imply consent, authorization, or license.

 

License and use notice:
 
This artifact is released under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.
 
It may be read, cited, linked, and referenced with attribution.
 
No commercial use, modified versions, derivative specifications, operational claims, service claims, or implied endorsement are granted by this publication.
 
No implementation, operational, commercial, licensing, evaluation, conformity, equivalence, endorsement, or authoritative interpretation rights are granted by this publication. Any such use requires separate written permission from the author.
 
Licensing and interpretation framework:
 
Current clarification version:
 
 
Related public project surface:
 
This link is provided for public project context only and does not convert this reference artifact into an operational service, implementation, or commercial offer.

Files

On_the_Provability_of_Financial_System_State.pdf

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Additional details

Related works

Is described by
Publication: 10.5281/zenodo.19846720 (DOI)
Is supplement to
Publication: 10.5281/zenodo.18381146 (DOI)