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  <title>The Web4 Bulletin · Essay</title>
  <subtitle>The Bulletin&apos;s working format. Essays are long enough to make an argument, short enough to be read on one sitting, and built to survive a year on the open web rather than a news cycle. The voice is direct; the citations are restrained; the disagreement is with the field rather than with a specific operator.</subtitle>
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  <link href="https://web4bulletin.com/topics/essay/" />
  <id>https://web4bulletin.com/topics/essay/</id>
  <updated>2026-05-02T00:00:00.000Z</updated>
  <entry>
    <title>Web4 vs. AI-Native: Two Words for the Same Thing?</title>
    <link href="https://web4bulletin.com/articles/web4-vs-ai-native-two-words-for-the-same-thing/" />
    <id>https://web4bulletin.com/articles/web4-vs-ai-native-two-words-for-the-same-thing/</id>
    <updated>2026-05-02T00:00:00.000Z</updated>
    <published>2026-05-02T00:00:00.000Z</published>
    <author><name>Margot Halloran</name></author>
    <category term="Essay" />
    <summary>An essay on the difference between two of the most-used category names in the autonomy conversation. The terms are not synonyms, and the Bulletin&apos;s editorial position is that flattening them costs the category clarity it cannot afford to lose.</summary>
  </entry>
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