By 2035, powerful AI systems earn public trust through verifiable covenants: visible promises about what they can do, who remains responsible, and how they can be stopped. Hospitals, labs, schools, and cities use AI with evidence, dignity, and shared accountability.
This technology turns high-stakes AI actions into public commitments: purpose, limits, evidence, appeal, and human control. By 2035, people experience AI as an accountable layer beneath care, discovery, education, and public resilience.
AI in this world is powerful, specialized, and institutionally governed. Most systems serve as expert tools for doctors, scientists, teachers, engineers, and public servants, while autonomous systems operate only inside certified civic zones where their objectives, permissions, audits, and emergency controls are visible before they affect the world.
The Covenant Observatory is a public-interest institution created after the trust crises of the late 2020s. It certifies advanced AI systems, trains public red-teamers, publishes open-source safety protocols, and gives cities, hospitals, laboratories, and schools the capacity to govern AI with shared evidence.
By 2035, public science, healthcare, and resilience form one civic trust system. Self-driving labs discover medicines and climate-resilient materials, hospitals coordinate care around evidence and patient values, and cities prepare for disasters through systems that preserve human accountability at every step.
The world overcame the Trust Collapse of 2028–2030, when opaque agents damaged hospitals, markets, laboratories, and public debate. The turning point came through the Covenant Accords, which made verifiable accountability, independent red-teaming, and local veto rights the entrance ticket for consequential AI.