A protocol built to outlive its makers.
ELAI is a new way to prove trust online — one where your keys never leave you, and no company stands between you and your own security. We're building it to last three hundred years.
The trust layer beneath OuiAmi — and everything after.
Trust today is borrowed.
Every account you make is a small act of faith. You hand a company your identity and trust them to guard it.
They store it on their servers, behind their walls, under their rules. When they're breached, it leaks. When they're sold, it transfers. When they're gone, so is the proof of who you are. For decades we've been renting our own identities from people who can't promise to keep them — and paying with every detail we hand over.
What it is — and what's new about it.
Today, even "passwordless" sign-in still leans on a company or platform to vouch for you from its servers. ELAI is built to remove the middleman: trust is proven directly between devices, with no company, platform, or server in between — on a cryptographic method all its own. That's the part that didn't exist before.
What ELAI is
A way to prove who you are, and to check that others are who they say, without handing your identity to anyone to hold. Your proof is a key created on your device that never leaves it.
What it does for you
- Sign in to any app without a password — nothing to remember, reset, or steal.
- Nothing about you sits on a server, so you can't be exposed in a breach that isn't yours.
- One trusted identity that works across every app, instead of starting over each time.
- You choose who can verify you — and revoke it the instant you change your mind.
ELAI flips the arrangement.
Instead of trusting a server to vouch for you, trust is proven on your own device — by a key that never leaves it.
There's no central vault of identities to breach, because there's no central vault at all. Underneath is a new cryptographic method: layered and counter-shifting, designed so that the proof of your trust can't be lifted, replayed, or forged. It's the part nobody else has — and the reason the rest of this is possible.
Your key lives inside you.
It's generated on your device and stays there. We never hold it — so we can never lose it, leak it, or be made to hand it over.
Nothing to store, nothing to steal.
Trust is verified locally. There's no honeypot of personal data sitting on a server, waiting for the breach that eventually comes for all of them.
It travels with you.
The same proven trust moves across every product that speaks the protocol — starting with OuiAmi, and not ending there.
Take your security personally.
For thirty years, security has been something done to you — by IT departments, by platforms, by terms you didn't read. ELAI makes it something you hold. Your safety stops being a service you hope works and becomes a property you own. That's the whole move: from trusting the institution to carrying the proof yourself.
Built for three hundred years.
Infrastructure ages. Companies fail. Standards rot. So we anchored ELAI to the things that don't.
Mathematics, and the person holding the key. A protocol that depends on no single server, no single company — not even on us — is one that can keep working long after any of us are gone. We're not designing for the next product cycle. We're designing for the next three centuries.
One app today. A foundation underneath.
OuiAmi is the first place you'll feel ELAI — a network where trust is real, and yours.
But the protocol beneath it is bigger than any single app. It's a trust layer the internet can stand on: for people, for devices, for anything that needs to prove it is what it says it is — without surrendering itself to do it.
Where there is safety, there is love.