This essay documents a five-domain governance failure using the Megaspeed ghost sequence, a documented multi-billion dollar AI compute evasion architecture, as its primary case study. Applying typological methodology developed in AML financial crime analysis to export controls, AI infrastructure governance, and data layer governance, it argues that the same structural mechanism operates across financial crime, water governance, AI compute access, export controls, and AI capability extraction: the application layer is governed, the infrastructure layer is not, and evasion consistently operates through the gap between frameworks rather than through a failure inside any single one. The essay documents the Megaspeed/Aivres/Speedmatrix compute access chain; the structurally identical but officially sanctioned ByteDance/Aolani Cloud arrangement; the BIS loophole closure of May 2026; the Alibaba/Qwen distillation campaign against Anthropic (28.8 million Claude interactions via approximately 25,000 fraudulent accounts, April–June 2026, documented in Anthropic's June 10, 2026 Senate letter); and the Chinese cybersecurity capability response (360 Security Technology's Tulongfeng vulnerability discovery system, presented June 25, 2026). Each case is sourced to primary documents including DOJ indictments, BIS regulatory guidance, EU legislative texts, and Anthropic's own Senate submission. Four governance interventions are proposed within existing EU legislative mandates: compute access reporting obligations under Article 3 of Regulation (EU) 2024/1624; API access origin reporting for frontier AI model providers; infrastructure lending exposure disclosure under AMLA Article 10(4) of Regulation (EU) 2024/1620; and beneficial ownership verification as a condition of EU data center permitting. The Institute for AI Policy and Strategy independently confirmed that the U.S. government's NSTM-4 response left the third and fourth of these gaps unaddressed. This essay is the fourth in a series of independent policy analyses on ungoverned infrastructure layers across financial crime, water governance, and AI governance.
Priscila Chauhan (Sat,) studied this question.
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