◢ about · apg/0x14

One letter. One moment.
One unrepeatable key.

APG — Asymmetric Polygonal Geometry — was first drafted in 2019 by Grant Brodie Womersley in Belair, South Australia. It treats a single letterform as a polygon and folds it through a chosen instant in time, producing a fingerprint that cannot be re-derived without both the glyph and the exact moment.

The protocol is intentionally narrow. It does not encrypt files, messages, or streams in the conventional sense. It produces a geometric attestation — proof that a particular hand drew a particular letter at a particular instant, and that no other hand can reproduce it.

The forge itself remains private. What this site exposes is the gate: an admittance ritual where identity is bound, settlement is folded, and the attestation is presented — in that order.

◢ provenance
  • 2019 — APG drafted, notarised privately.
  • 2022 — protocol 0x0E retired after a single ceremonial forge.
  • 2024 — APG/0x14 sealed under patent.
  • today — homepage and forge consolidated behind one door.