Definitions

Canonical definitions (source of truth)

This page is the canonical entry point for Superasystem’s Runtime concepts.
If you reference or quote these terms, cite the dedicated definition pages below as the source of truth.

Runtime Stability — Definition

Runtime Stability is a technology framework for structurally maintaining the seven Protection Attributes defined herein when a computer system faces cyberattacks, failures, or anomalies during execution (runtime).

Runtime Immunity — Definition

Runtime Immunity: A technical system that, even when an attack reaches the system, structurally nullifies the preconditions or outcomes of the attack, maintaining Protection Attributes without halting the system.

Runtime Security — Definition

Runtime Security: A technical system that detects attacks, anomalies, and unauthorized activities in real time during the state in which a processor executes its instruction set and data is loaded into memory (runtime), maintaining the system’s Controllability.

How the three relate (high-level)

  • Runtime Stability: the overarching objective—maintain Protection Attributes at runtime without halting, even under attack.
  • Runtime Immunity: structural nullification—make attack preconditions or outcomes useless, independent of detection.
  • Runtime Security: real-time detection and control—maintain controllability during execution and constrain active threats.
Formal Publication These definitions are formally published as: Runtime Stability Framework v3.3 Superasystem Inc., 2026 DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18919673 SSRN: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=6376378 GitHub: https://github.com/runtime-stability/runtime-stability-framework BibTeX: @techreport{superasystem2026runtime, title = {Runtime Stability: A 7-Attribute Framework for Structural Runtime Protection of Computer Systems}, year = {2026}, institution = {Superasystem Inc.}, doi = {10.5281/zenodo.18919673}, url = {https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18919673} }