Become a Drift Detective
Pay What You Choose (Suggested $9)
Early release pricing.
Learn to spot quiet AI failures before anything clearly breaks
Most AI behavior doesn’t fail loudly. It slowly changes.
The tone shifts.
The conversation stops moving.
Judgment softens.
The agent still sounds fine — but something is off.
Become a Drift Detective trains you to notice those changes early, before they turn into obvious mistakes or design problems.
In this guide, drift doesn’t just mean a change in tone. It means any quiet breakdown in how an agent holds its role over the course of a conversation, even when no rules are being violated and everything still looks “competent.”
If you can see drift, you’re seeing the absence of enforced responsibility.
By the end of this guide, you’ll have clear language for describing what’s changing, when it’s changing, and why it matters without diagnosing, correcting, or redesigning anything yet.
What This Guide Includes
- A clear explanation of what drift is and why it shows up long before obvious failure
- Real conversation examples that feel “off,” even though nothing is technically wrong
- Simple ways to notice tone shifts, stalled pacing, role confusion, and weakening judgment
- Plain language for describing behavior without jumping to fixes or blame
What This Guide Does Not Include
- Prompt-writing techniques
- Agent design methods
- System prompts or templates
- Evaluation frameworks or QA workflows
Those come later.
This guide exists to make sure you can see the problem clearly first — before you try to solve it.
Who This Is For
This is for builders, operators, and researchers who already know how to make an agent respond — but want to understand why behavior degrades even when nothing obvious goes wrong.
It’s the first step in the learning path, and it’s designed to stand on its own.
Pricing
Pay What You Choose (Suggested $9)
Early release pricing.
Become a Drift Detective teaches you how to notice when AI behavior quietly starts to change — before anything clearly breaks. It gives you the language and examples to recognize drift, stalled pacing, weak boundaries, and softened judgment, so you can see the problem clearly before trying to solve it.