This is not hypothetical. This is engineering. And it changes everything.
AI narrative engine pulls from your vault. Your neighborhood is the world seed. Your family’s faces are the characters. Your kids’ builds are already there. Sovereign. Personal. Unrepeatable.
Your complete health history, summarized by an AI that only you control. No insurance company reads it. No advertiser buys it. No breach exposes it. It lives where you live.
A 3D scan of his tools, his hands, his workshop. An AI trained on his voice recordings. A heritage that survives you — stored in a vault your children inherit, not a platform that sunsets.
Same capabilities. Completely different power relationship.
| Capability | On Your Hardware | On Their Servers |
|---|---|---|
| The personal narrative game | Story lives in your vault. Deleted when you choose. | Your home, family, neighborhood — on a corporate server. Training their next model. |
| Health records & history | You control access. Zero third parties. | Subpoenaed in lawsuits. Sold to insurers. Breached in hacks. |
| Heritage & family memory | Your children inherit the vault. | Platform sunsets. Account banned. Terms changed. Gone. |
| Manufacturing & IP | Your process data stays on your machine. | Competitor intelligence. Vendor lock-in. Foreign server dependency. |
“$4.44 million. That’s the average cost of a data breach in 2026. 241 days to detect it. The data was never yours to lose — but you lost it anyway.”
Not a policy proposal. Not a concept paper. Running infrastructure, in Clinton Township, Michigan, five miles from the Detroit Arsenal.
Shaun Kavanagh started learning CAD at age nine, on an IBM 286, sitting next to his father. He got his first engineering job the Monday after high school graduation. He spent thirty years inside American manufacturing — AutoCAD, NX, Pro/E, SolidWorks, CATIA — and watched what happened when the platforms that held his work decided they owned it too. In 2026, he filed a patent and started building the infrastructure he wished had existed the whole time. A family business. Every pillar has a Kavanagh in it.
No cloud dependency. No foreign servers. Data lives on hardware in Michigan that you can visit, that you own, that runs when the internet is down. See how American sovereignty beats Swiss →
Nine Bills of Rights encoded as technical constraints, not policy promises. The platform cannot violate them even if it wanted to. Load-bearing walls, not paper rules.
Clinton Township, Michigan. The Detroit Arsenal is 5 miles away. This isn’t abstract. This is American manufacturing infrastructure, built for the defense supply chain.
In 1942, Isaac Asimov wrote the Three Laws of Robotics as fiction. We encoded them as architecture. Every AI module in this platform is constitutionally prohibited from harming a user, from deceiving them, or from overriding their explicit choices — even if doing so would produce a better result. Not a guideline. Not a terms of service clause. A hard technical constraint. The choice is the product. Respecting it is the promise.
They wrote it as load-bearing structure. Something that had to be violated actively, not just neglected passively. The protections worked because they were built into the architecture of governance itself — not because everyone agreed to be good. That is exactly what RigidTrust is. Constitutional principles enforced by technical architecture. Not policy promises. Walls.
“You cannot write policies fast enough to contain a technology that evolves faster than legislation. The answer is constitutional architecture — protections engineered as load-bearing walls, not paper rules.”
Kavanagh Industries · Always on