The Enterprise Context Layer
Posted by zachperkel 13 hours ago
Comments
Comment by vidimitrov 9 hours ago
Which makes me wonder: how does the maintenance agent know when to revisit a rule like that? "Feature X ships in Q3" is easy - facts go stale and you can detect it. But "don't let reps answer data retention questions" - that rule could still look valid in the ECL long after the original reasons for it stopped applying. Does it track enough of its own provenance to catch that kind of drift?
Comment by scrumper 2 hours ago
Ha, then it'd be doing a great job of internalizing institutional knowledge! Wait a few years and then put another one on top. I'm not sure how these things incorporate new knowledge over time, or handle re-orgs and strategy shifts, or adapt as new verticals are added. Do you need ever increasing numbers of agents to keep things in line?
As much as I'd love to have a perfect example of one of these running - it really would be very beneficial - I do have a vague feeling that these ECL concepts (and similar Enterprise-wide knowledge management AI panaceas) are the 21st century equivalents of trying to build comprehensive expert systems in Prolog.
This is cool though. Agents make it seem more plausible in a way that pure RAG systems don't. I am sure there is mileage in more focused cases (like at the author's startup, or departmentally.)
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