Custodia ecosystem · v1.0
Knowledge as a transferable asset.
A Crisol is not a monolithic, inseparable model. It is a container ship: a structure that imports experts the way you install an app. Packaged knowledge can be bought, donated and inherited — because it belongs to someone.
An immutable port. Variable devices.
Like a USB port: the connector shape never changes, yet any device plugs into it. Pick a package and a tier — you'll see it always fits.
Compatibility guaranteed — the 20 values of the v1.0 port match.
The port is immutable; the devices vary.
The format
One single file: .crisolpkg
Every expert, memory or procedure travels in a single standard, verifiable and self-describing container. No installers, no hidden dependencies, no surprises.
The contract
Declares the target tier, package type, license, signatures and the port geometry it respects. It is the first thing Crisol verifies before accepting the package.
One variant per tier
The weights ship in four variants — Mini, Personal, Pro, Maestro — so the same expert fits without retraining into any size of Crisol.
Common signatures
The QSE signatures are common to all variants: they authenticate the knowledge and guarantee that what is imported is what it claims to be.
Five package types.
Not everything packaged is an expert. The standard recognizes five classes of transferable cognitive asset.
A specialized network trained in a single domain: cardiology, tax law, industrial robotics. It plugs into a slot and contributes competence.
The QSE signatures that identify and authenticate an expert's knowledge. Shared across tiers to guarantee compatibility.
A body of already-consolidated living memory: the history, the decisions and the accumulated context of a cognitive entity.
Reusable reasoning chains and operating protocols — the distilled know-how of a human expert.
A complete package combining expert, signatures, memory and procedures: a cognitive entity ready to inherit or deploy.
How the Mini's five slots get filled.
Every Mini Crisol is born with five slots, but only two come occupied: an initial expert of general and causal knowledge (world, languages, logic, culture and history, all in one) and your personal space. The other three are free — you fill them at will, downloading the experts you need from Custodia, like installing apps. Your Crisol doesn't carry from the factory what you won't use.
Economic sovereignty
Three transfer licenses.
Whoever creates an expert decides how it moves. The license travels inside the package itself, and Crisol enforces it by construction.
The package is used but neither copied nor derived. It protects the author: you sell access, not the formula.
Free transfer. The expert can be copied, resold, donated or inherited without restriction.
Building on the expert is allowed, but redistributing the untouched original is not. It encourages open improvement.
What a market of cognitive assets makes possible.
The cardiologist who passes on their judgment
A physician trains their expert over years on their own cases. On retiring, they sell it to a hospital or leave it to a colleague. Their clinical judgment does not die with them.
The consortium of 50 hospitals
Fifty centers contribute specialized experts to a shared Maestro Crisol. Each keeps its own license; together they reason better than any one alone.
Digital inheritance
A MIXED package with memory, procedures and signatures is a transferable legacy. The accumulated experience of a professional lifetime becomes a real asset.
The rural NGO
A resource-poor organization imports a PERMITTED agronomy .crisolpkg expert and runs it on a Mini Crisol on a laptop — no cloud, no connection.
The ecosystem starts with a Crisol that breathes
The first port is already open.
The v1.0 standard is frozen and the first Mini Crisol has already been trained from scratch. The market of cognitive assets is not a distant promise: it is the natural consequence of a port that never changes.
See the status and the roadmap