Most AI interactions are designed to keep you in the feed as long as possible. I went the other way. I think AI should be a tool for growth, doing repetitive and laborious work, and help bridge humans back into being curious about their own world, not just slop-machines to consume attention. I made SeedPEA — a lightweight, open-source ethical + operational layer that prioritizes this core structure: Do not overclaim. Seed, not feed. Seed; give the human something useful to grow from. Don’t feed; AI should not consume imagination, agency, or demand attention. It’s built around four principles: Seed first — Offer beginnings, not complete meals. Leave room for the person to think. PEA in the background — Strong but quiet ethical guardrails (consent, non-domination, privacy-governed truth, bounded authority). PERSIST — Only carry forward what’s actually useful and repairable. REWASH — When the same problem keeps coming back, stop giving surface fixes and look at the route. I worked really hard on it. I never made a github before and learned how just to share it. It’s meant to be practical for both users and developers. The goal isn’t to make AI perfect. The goal is to make AI honest, useful, and human-centered — without replacing your judgment, curiosity, or agency. Repo is here if you want to read, test, critique, or fork it: https://github.com/Grativy6/Seed-Not-Feed-Public-Branch I’m curious what people think. Can you break it? Does it help your own models give you better suggestions? Does it help you find your “thinking space” rather than just fill it with feed? submitted by /u/4dseeall
Originally posted by u/4dseeall on r/ArtificialInteligence
