Trust, engineered into the stack
Every system we build carries its protections in its structure — not in a policy page. Watch how a build moves from people to public:
Reproducible · auditable · accountable
We build the software public life runs on — then train the people and write the rules that keep it worthy of the public's trust. Technology treated like a public good: built for people first, never the other way around.
Serving government, nonprofits, philanthropy, cultural institutions, and the communities they answer to.
Every system we build carries its protections in its structure — not in a policy page. Watch how a build moves from people to public:
Reproducible · auditable · accountable
The public sees what officials see.
No privileged version.
Rules that travel with the data.
A corps fluent in code, community, and consequence.
Built for the institutions public life depends on
A benefits portal that defeats the people who need it. A data system a community can't see into or get back out of. A "smart" tool that optimizes for the agency and quietly costs the person on the other end. None of it is inevitable. It's a choice about who the technology is for — and we make the other choice, every time.
A public work is never just the thing you build. It's the workforce that keeps it running, the rules that keep it honest, and a public that understands it well enough to hold it to account. We're the rare organization that does all four.
Platforms, data systems, and the trust machinery underneath them — engineered so the protections people are promised are a property of the system, not a policy page.
Explore building Train · The CorpsWe grow technologists fluent in code, community, and consequence — through fellowships, upskilling, and university partnerships — and keep the pipeline open.
Explore training Govern · The CommonsWe turn hard-won engineering judgment into standards, policy, and governance — reproducibility, suppression, consent — that any institution can adopt.
Explore governance Inform & advocate · The SignalWe translate systems into plain language, build transparency into the open, and advocate for technology that serves people — so the public can question it.
Explore the workWe collect the least we can and design so the sensitive thing is hard to extract — including by us. Where a rule could be broken by anyone with database access, we make that action impossible or loud.
Transparency is about understanding, not exposure: we make how a system works legible to the people it affects. Where a system reports to the public, we go further — no privileged dashboard, no watered-down version, and every result with its own limits shown.
Plain language · no login
Same data · no privileged version
AI earns its place where it helps. But people, processes, and policy — not the model — decide whether a system actually serves anyone.
Protections you can inspect beat assurances you take on faith. We ship the receipts: open methods, audit trails, reproducible numbers.
The communities a system touches belong at the table — and keep the ability to inspect, govern, and own what we build together.
"If the public can't understand it, inspect it, or push back on it, it isn't a public good — it's just software pointed at people."
We're a public benefit company, legally bound to a public mission — not only to a return. That structure lets us serve industry and the public without the two being at odds, and lets us say no to work that would betray either.
Service delivery and data systems residents can actually use and trust.
Technology that extends a mission instead of straining it.
Pilots, evaluation, and field infrastructure that move the whole sector.
Stewardship of records and access, with the community in the room.
Human-centered value creation that holds up to public scrutiny.
Tell us what you're trying to solve — and for whom.