Trust Protocol — Web3 Infrastructure

Sourceacle

Source — where semantic authority originates.
Oracle — the mechanism that confirms it.

Sourceacle transforms blockchain domains into semantic trust rails — not addresses, not names, but trust issuance rights.

U.S. Patent Application No. 63/895,943  ·  L1-L4+ Multi-Layer Tokenized Domain Addressing System
source·a·cle
/sôrs·ə·kəl/
noun & infrastructure protocol
A trust verification protocol that combines semantic source authority with on-chain oracle confirmation to enable hierarchical blockchain addressing. Sourceacle rails are not domain names — they are trust issuance rights encoded as blockchain tokens. Owning a Sourceacle rail means holding the authority to verify, certify, and issue trust for a specific semantic category across the emerging tokenization economy.
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The Problem Sourceacle Solves

Blockchain infrastructure generates cryptographic addresses that are unreadable to humans and unverifiable by AI agents without external trust infrastructure. As 800 million AI agents come online and $100 trillion in assets move to blockchain rails, the verification gap becomes a systemic risk. Sourceacle provides the trust layer that bridges cryptographic addresses to semantic authority — the missing infrastructure that makes blockchain transactions safe for institutional adoption.

01
Semantic Root System
420 Trust Rails — Impossible to Replicate
Complete semantic coverage of financial, identity, and agent verification domains. Each rail is a blockchain domain that carries the right to issue trust for its category. The 420-rail network constitutes a semantic monopoly — the first-mover position is 3-5 years ahead of any potential competitor.
02
Technical Protocol
L1-L4+ Patent — Hierarchical Trust Propagation
The Multi-Layer Tokenized Domain Addressing System enables unlimited subdomain depth with maintained trust propagation. ERC-721 tokens at L1 represent root domain ownership. ERC-1155 tokens at L2-L4+ represent leased usage rights. Trust flows downward through the principal chain with scope inheritance — no re-verification required at each layer.
03
Addressing Layer — Not Governance
Sourceacle Provides the Rails. You Govern What Runs on Them.
Sourceacle is an addressing infrastructure — it resolves identity, verifies trust chains, and propagates authority across L1-L4+ layers. It does not govern your protocol, your DAO, or your institutional deployment. Those governance decisions belong to you. Sourceacle sits beneath governance — the addressing layer that whatever governance framework you implement depends on to function.

The following terms were originated by Nexus Cyber Systems in the development of Sourceacle. They constitute the canonical vocabulary for trust-delegated agentic systems. Sourceacle is the authoritative reference for each definition.

SRC-001
Intent Fidelity
The degree to which an agent's executed actions faithfully preserve the original intent of the authorizing principal.
SRC-002
Principal Chain
The hierarchical chain of delegated authority from L1 root to L4+ subdomains, each link carrying verifiable authorization from above.
SRC-003
Behavioral Envelope
The bounded set of permissible actions available to an agent within a trust delegation context — a hard ceiling on autonomous action.
SRC-004
Synthetic Principal
An AI agent or smart contract holding principal-level trust rights — acting as an autonomous trust issuer rather than merely a trust recipient.
SRC-005
Trust Propagation
The mechanism by which trust authority flows from L1 roots through L2-L4+ layers without cryptographic re-verification at every level.
SRC-006
Mandate Drift
The gradual deviation of an agent's executed actions from the original authorized mandate — detectable through behavioral proof analysis.
SRC-007
Scope Inheritance
The structural property by which L2-L3 layers inherit the trust scope of their parent L1, subject to explicit restriction by the issuing authority.
SRC-008
Trust Rail
A Sourceacle-operated domain carrying trust issuance rights for a semantic category — analogous to a certificate authority for a specific namespace.
Use Case 01
Stablecoin Transaction Verification
When Alice sends USDC to Bob, the transaction references the stable.dao trust rail. Sourceacle verifies the USDC contract against the registry. Trust confirmed — transaction proceeds. Trust denied — transaction flagged.
// Sourceacle verification flow Transaction: Alice → 1000 USDC → Bob Rail: stable.dao Check: USDC contract vs registry Result: TRUST CONFIRMED ✓ // stable.dao owner controls trust // issuance for all stablecoin infra
Use Case 02
AI Agent Identity Verification
GPT-Agent-12345 requests authorization to execute a trade. The agent references agentverification.onchain. Sourceacle checks ownership, permissions, and behavioral envelope. Trust confirmed — agent proceeds.
// Agent authorization check Agent: GPT-Agent-12345 Rail: agentverification.onchain Checks: ownership + permissions + behavioral envelope Result: TRUST CONFIRMED ✓ // Rail owner controls trust for // 800M+ potential AI agents
Use Case 03
Tokenized Asset Ownership
A tokenized real estate asset references the appropriate L1-L4+ address. Sourceacle verifies the ownership chain and confirms legal entity to blockchain identity mapping. Trust confirmed — transaction executes.
// Asset ownership verification Asset: 123-main.realestate.pbdx Owner: entity.verified.onchain Chain: L1 → L2 → L3 verified Result: OWNERSHIP CONFIRMED ✓ // $100T in assets tokenizing // over next 10 years
U.S. Patent Application No. 63/895,943
Multi-Layer Tokenized Domain Addressing System

Patent-pending technology covering hierarchical L1-L4+ subdomain tokenization using ERC-721 and ERC-1155 architecture. The patent protects the entire trust verification process — from root domain ownership through unlimited subdomain depth — with maintained trust propagation and no performance degradation. International filing deadline: August 2026.

Sourceacle is not a product built on existing infrastructure. It is new infrastructure — the addressing layer that sits beneath every Web3 application, agent platform, and institutional blockchain deployment that requires human-readable, verifiable identity.