The project

Co-owners, not subjects

Every participating thinker keeps sovereignty over how their public thought is represented, indexed, and synthesized.

A living weave

Minds Aligned is the hub for the AGI-26 community: a shared, queryable layer over the public work of the people building toward beneficial AGI.

Each thinker is given three things: their corpus (papers, talks, threads, posts), a dedicated AI community manager that only ever answers from that corpus, and a room — a persistent space where representatives of different corpora can meet in cited conversation.

The hub itself makes the roster visible and provides the entry points. Cross-corpus synthesis lives here: active inference across the combined weave, not a single centralized model.

Why this framing matters

Most "AI for X" projects treat the human as data source or subject. Here the thinkers are co-owners. The managers are not impersonators; they are public-work-trained guides whose every citation can be traced back to the original record.

The goal is alignment through multiplicity: multiple strong models of mind, multiple corpora, multiple voices kept distinct and in productive tension. When synthesis happens, it happens visibly and with attribution.

A thinker can curate their manager, add or remove sources, shape the interface tone, and decide what "their" room should prioritize. The infrastructure is shared; the authority remains with the person.

Claiming and curating

If you are on the roster and do not yet have a live space: the "Claim your page" action starts the process. You receive a private draft of your manager, a starter corpus import, and an invitation to the shared index build.

Anchors (Levin, Bach, Friston, Goertzel) already have or are receiving deep treatment — full scrapes, paper ingestion, and working prototypes. Their cards link directly to the live or in-progress sites.

Nothing here is an impersonation. All managers are explicitly scoped to public work only. That boundary is architectural and contractual.

AGI-26

The conference in San Francisco, July 27–30 2026, is the first public convening of this group. The hub exists so that the conversation does not end when the talks do — and so that the synthesis work can begin with the thinkers themselves as active participants rather than as raw material.