FutureNative is the neutral, cryptographically verifiable layer that lets a business prove what its AI agents did — to a board, an auditor, a regulator, or a D&O insurer. We're not an AI company. We're the trust layer for AI. Think SOC 2 + PCI-DSS + Equifax for the agent economy.
A company puts an AI agent into a real role — approving refunds, moving money, sending commitments. Then risk, legal, or compliance asks: who acted, on whose authority, within what scope, and who's liable if it's wrong? There's no artifact that answers them. So the agent stalls in a pilot, or ships with a human babysitting every action — destroying the ROI that justified it.
~88% of organizations use AI; ~62% are piloting agents. The shift from "chatbot" to "takes consequential action" is exactly when an accountability record stops being optional.
OpenAI's "DeployCo" + Anthropic's JV (May 2026) made the spend real — two single-vendor stacks where the vendor is provider, action-taker, and attestor. Zero neutral counterparties.
Insurers can't underwrite a black box; regulators need an answer and none will run a registry — they will accredit one. FutureNative is what they accredit.
The identity primitive is now table stakes — everyone ships it. The only uncontested position is structural neutrality × regulatory designation. Click a layer to see who owns it and what we do there.
Built on the open Trust Manifest standard. Records stay off-chain and encrypted; only a salted hash / Merkle root is anchored (EAS on Base, Ethereum L1 root) — that's the integrity backstop, not the source of truth.
A signed, scope-bounded grant issued before an agent acts — "may create purchase orders up to S$50,000."
A signed, anchored record of each executed action across six dimensions — which agent, on whose authority, doing what, on what data, when, against whom — referencing the manifest it ran under.
The verifiable bundle a compliance officer hands upward — checkable against the registry and the chain without trusting the issuer.
Three revenue surfaces that turn on in sequence. Attestation writes are free forever — write-volume is the data moat, so taxing it would suppress the thing we're maximizing. We never charge the thing that builds the moat.
Per certified entity / year, tiered ($5–15K Starter → $100–500K+ Sovereign). A CFO/GC buys the right to deploy agents in regulated contexts.
Basic status free so the registry becomes canonical; the live answer (revocation, scope) is metered — charged to the verifier, never the certified business.
The Agent Incident Database + risk feeds to insurers and regulators. High-margin, compounding, last to arrive.
How the engine starts: not by waiting on a regulator. The commercial bootstrap — an anchor insurer's premium discount + an enterprise buyer mandate (the SOC 2 path) — drives certification demand in parallel. Designation is the endgame moat, not the gate on first revenue.
A model company can't be the neutral auditor of actions its own agents took — it's the counterparty in every dispute. That's true on day one and can't be manufactured. Designation is a ladder; the flywheel ignites at Rung 3.
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