About
CRAIGS is a protocol for decision integrity.
It exists to answer a single question: what can be proven to have occurred at the moment a decision was made.
Most systems rely on reconstruction. Events are logged, aggregated, and later interpreted as if they represent reality. In practice, systems drift. State changes, dependencies evolve, and records become artifacts of what can be assembled after the fact.
CRAIGS does not attempt to improve reconstruction. It removes reliance on it.
Each decision is anchored to provable state at the moment of action. Verification does not depend on replaying events or trusting system continuity over time. It depends on what can be independently shown to have been true when the action occurred.
This is the boundary:
Governance assumes systems behave correctly.
Observability attempts to explain when they do not.
CRAIGS establishes what is verifiably true regardless.
No analytics. No tracking. No hidden state. Nothing is inferred from behavior over time. The system does not observe users, and it does not reconstruct activity.
It records only what is explicitly created, and only in a form that remains attributable and verifiable.
Explore the system through the CRAIGS Index.