A survey just dropped covering 200+ federal IT leaders. 53% of agencies are already planning or running agentic AI pilots. Another 15% have fully deployed something. That’s moving fast for the government. But here’s the part that should make you pause. Only 8% have an incident response framework. Fewer than a third have documented kill switch procedures. And 77% say oversight frameworks are “essential,” but haven’t actually built them yet. So you’ve got autonomous AI systems taking actions inside federal infrastructure, touching national security data, benefits claims, financial systems, and the human approval layer barely exists on paper. The report basically says: agencies want human-in-the-loop control but don’t have the plumbing to enforce it. That’s the exact gap World’s AgentiKit was designed for. The idea is simple. Before an AI agent takes a high-stakes action, it calls out to World ID, gets a zero-knowledge proof that a real unique human authorized it, and proceeds. No PII stored. No surveillance trail. Just a cryptographic confirmation that a person exists and consented. The human stays in the loop without being exposed. Right now agencies are trying to solve this with IAM tools built for humans logging into dashboards, not agents making decisions at machine speed. That won’t hold. The demand signal is loud. The infrastructure gap is real. And the window before something goes wrong is shorter than most people think. submitted by /u/Capital-Run-1080
Originally posted by u/Capital-Run-1080 on r/ArtificialInteligence

