License Purchase Agreement Explained
Before You Review the Autonomy v2 License Purchase Agreement
The Autonomy v2 License Purchase Agreement allows a prospective Business Establishment Provider to place its geolocation in a seven-day temporary reservation status without immediate payment of the license fee. The purpose of this holding period is to provide a defined review window during which the business may continue examining the Autonomy v2 system before moving into a final license commitment. This prevents premature financial pressure while preserving order within NorthStar’s location-based allocation structure.
Within the Autonomy v2 framework, geolocation refers to the reserved ZIP code assigned to the provider’s business establishment. In most ZIP codes, only one provider position is available, though certain metropolitan ZIP codes may allow up to two providers based on local market conditions. When two or more Purchase Agreements are submitted for the same geolocation within the same general time period, reservation priority is determined strictly by the recorded submission timestamp, down to the minute. The earliest received qualifying submission secures the temporary hold. Any later-submitting business is notified that the geolocation is not available for reservation at that time and may re-check after the seven-day hold expires to determine whether that geolocation was ultimately converted into a finalized license.
The Autonomy v2 License Purchase Agreement allows a prospective Business Establishment Provider to place its geolocation in a seven-day temporary reservation status without immediate payment of the license fee. The purpose of this holding period is to provide a defined review window during which the business may continue examining the Autonomy v2 system before moving into a final license commitment. This prevents premature financial pressure while preserving order within NorthStar’s location-based allocation structure.
Within the Autonomy v2 framework, geolocation refers to the reserved ZIP code assigned to the provider’s business establishment. In most ZIP codes, only one provider position is available, though certain metropolitan ZIP codes may allow up to two providers based on local market conditions. When two or more Purchase Agreements are submitted for the same geolocation within the same general time period, reservation priority is determined strictly by the recorded submission timestamp, down to the minute. The earliest received qualifying submission secures the temporary hold. Any later-submitting business is notified that the geolocation is not available for reservation at that time and may re-check after the seven-day hold expires to determine whether that geolocation was ultimately converted into a finalized license.
There are two annual license options because Autonomy v2 operates through two separate intelligence environments. The first is the K-SPEC Intelligence Hub, licensed at $1,000 per year. The second is the AQP Intelligence Hub, licensed at $1,800 per year. Both licenses include 25 allocation tickets and provide the provider with full operational access to the Autonomy v2 system across all supported session frequencies.
The difference lies in the level of intelligence infrastructure the provider chooses to deploy to support client programs, with each environment offering a different tier of system capabilities.
The K-SPEC Intelligence Hub is a voice-enabled environment. It is designed to address provider and client questions, usage inquiries, and program-related support needs within the Autonomy v2 system. It gives clients an interactive support channel tied directly to their program experience, allowing them to ask questions and receive guided clarification while staying within the platform's governed structure.
The AQP Intelligence Hub includes that same support function, but extends far beyond question handling. Through AQP, provider clients can submit videos for analysis through the Shadow Demo process. The Shadow Demo represents a major advancement in virtual coaching by bringing real-world movement observation into a digital environment. Clients record a short series of unloaded movements, which is then processed through the Autonomy v2 Advanced Query Praxis (AQP). Rather than relying on quick visual impressions, AQP evaluates joint alignment, sequencing patterns, stabilization behavior, and structural interaction across the kinetic chain. This allows the system to detect subtle biomechanical relationships that are often missed in traditional coaching or live observation. In practical terms, AQP turns a simple movement video into an advanced analytical coaching tool, creating a much higher level of virtual coaching intelligence.
Both license options include 25 allocation tickets. An allocation ticket is the assignment unit used to issue a single Autonomy v2 program allocation to a provider client. In simple terms, each ticket allows one client to be added to the system and assigned to a program. These tickets are included with the annual license and define the provider’s initial client allocation capacity.
It is also important to understand that all session frequencies are included. That means the system includes the 2X, 3X, 4X, and 5X formats. These are not minor scheduling variations of the same plan. They are different programs with their own methodologies, structural logic, and training applications. Each frequency reflects a different program design within the broader Autonomy v2 framework.
This page is meant to help the reader understand what the two purchase forms actually represent before selecting one. Both licenses provide access to the Autonomy v2 system, both include 25 allocation tickets, and both include all session-frequency formats. The difference is that K-SPEC provides a voice-enabled client support environment, while AQP provides that same support environment plus advanced video-based movement analysis through the Shadow Demo system.
The difference lies in the level of intelligence infrastructure the provider chooses to deploy to support client programs, with each environment offering a different tier of system capabilities.
The K-SPEC Intelligence Hub is a voice-enabled environment. It is designed to address provider and client questions, usage inquiries, and program-related support needs within the Autonomy v2 system. It gives clients an interactive support channel tied directly to their program experience, allowing them to ask questions and receive guided clarification while staying within the platform's governed structure.
The AQP Intelligence Hub includes that same support function, but extends far beyond question handling. Through AQP, provider clients can submit videos for analysis through the Shadow Demo process. The Shadow Demo represents a major advancement in virtual coaching by bringing real-world movement observation into a digital environment. Clients record a short series of unloaded movements, which is then processed through the Autonomy v2 Advanced Query Praxis (AQP). Rather than relying on quick visual impressions, AQP evaluates joint alignment, sequencing patterns, stabilization behavior, and structural interaction across the kinetic chain. This allows the system to detect subtle biomechanical relationships that are often missed in traditional coaching or live observation. In practical terms, AQP turns a simple movement video into an advanced analytical coaching tool, creating a much higher level of virtual coaching intelligence.
Both license options include 25 allocation tickets. An allocation ticket is the assignment unit used to issue a single Autonomy v2 program allocation to a provider client. In simple terms, each ticket allows one client to be added to the system and assigned to a program. These tickets are included with the annual license and define the provider’s initial client allocation capacity.
It is also important to understand that all session frequencies are included. That means the system includes the 2X, 3X, 4X, and 5X formats. These are not minor scheduling variations of the same plan. They are different programs with their own methodologies, structural logic, and training applications. Each frequency reflects a different program design within the broader Autonomy v2 framework.
This page is meant to help the reader understand what the two purchase forms actually represent before selecting one. Both licenses provide access to the Autonomy v2 system, both include 25 allocation tickets, and both include all session-frequency formats. The difference is that K-SPEC provides a voice-enabled client support environment, while AQP provides that same support environment plus advanced video-based movement analysis through the Shadow Demo system.