DEINO is the modern Graeae: an ensemble of cognitive sister-LLMs sharing one versioned ontology, producing forecasts grounded in what’s observable — with an audit manifest for every output. The name is the architecture.
Five sisters, one ontology · hover a sister to meet her personality.
Before the Oracle of Delphi there were the Graeae — three gray sisters who shared one eye and one tooth, said to have been born already old. Deino, the eldest, was associated with prescient knowledge: she saw what was coming.
The metaphor isn’t decorative. Five ensemble sister-LLMs share one versioned ontology and produce one synthesized forecast per query. Deino did not predict or guess — she queried what existed and reported what she saw. That is what we built.
Stop guessing the future. Query it. — not marketing, but structure, encoded in the architecture from crate one.
DEINO brand promise · “Query the future. Defend the answer.”Specific numbers, sourced claims, calibrated confidence. We don’t say “revolutionary,” “leverage,” or “unlock.” We say what’s true, with the evidence to back it.
If it can’t be defended to a regulator, we don’t ship it. Audit is the architecture, not the afterthought. That trade-off is the moat.
BYO LLM keys, sovereign deployment, open core at V3. We sell infrastructure, not lock-in. The day you can replace us with our own open foundation is the day we know we earned you.
The first five enterprise customers get direct access to Carlos and Carolina — permanently. Not “during onboarding.” Permanently. It’s how the product stays calibrated to real audit reality.
Three forces converge in the next 24 months. DEINO is built at their intersection — not betting on the LLM race, but on the audit-defensibility race.
EU AI Act enforcement Q3 2026. SEC guidance maturing. BCRA finalizing principles. Regulators move from “we’ll think about it” to “show us the manifest.”
Frontier models become substitutable; the moat moves up the stack into ontology, audit, and integration. The edge shifts from “best LLM” to “best inference infrastructure.”
Mid-market regulated firms can now deploy what previously required Palantir-scale budgets. The infrastructure exists; the question is just who provides it.
That race has barely started, and the architectural bar is high enough that the second-fastest entrant will be 18 months behind.
We’re hiring engineers, GTM, and operations, raising a $1M pre-seed, and onboarding design partners. Whatever brings you here, start a conversation.