Take the helm of every AI system you run.
KinHelm turns AI governance into three outcomes your board understands: faster compliance, complete visibility, and automated management. Running in production today inside a critical-infrastructure operator in a highly regulated industry.
Three outcomes. One governed execution path.
Every product in the stack exists to deliver these three results. Each product page shows exactly how.
Faster compliance
Audit-ready from day one. Evidence is generated by the execution path itself: structured logs, trust scores, STIG-documented controls, and mappings to NIST AI RMF, SOC 2, FedRAMP, and CMMC. Assessments that took quarters close in weeks.
Complete visibility
Every agent, model, interaction, and change on one pane of glass, attributed to a person. 211 agents inventoried, 4,963 runs tracked in 30 days, every action logged. Nothing runs that you cannot see.
Automated management
Governance that runs itself. Policy enforcement, drift detection, change control, and code validation operate continuously in the execution path, without adding review burden to your team.
Five patterns we see in almost every organization.
If any of these describe your environment, this stack was built for you.
Siloed AI
Everybody runs their own AI.
Marketing has one subscription, engineering another, and half the org uses personal accounts. The same work is paid for three times, nothing is shared, and no one can say what it all costs in time, money, or effort.
Hallucinations
Confident answers, wrong facts.
Bad data in, bad configurations, and quiet drift from approved baselines turn AI output into a liability. Teams either stop trusting the results, or worse, they keep trusting them.
Interface walls
The interface is the barrier to entry.
A blank prompt box and a wall of text is not simple for most users to navigate. Adoption stalls at the power users, and everyone else quietly goes back to old habits.
Translation gap
You say outcome. They hear implementation.
Leadership is talking about a business result. The developer is already thinking about coding strategies. The two never meet, and the project drifts into something nobody asked for.
Slideware
The outcome lives in a slide.
Talking about the result convinces no one. Stakeholders need to click the thing, see the number, and watch it work before they believe it.
Five layers. One governed execution path.
Each layer governs a distinct dimension of enterprise AI: the platform, the user interaction, the infrastructure, the code, and the lifecycle. Together they close the gaps that any single tool leaves open.
WALDO
Lifecycle oversight: component registry, trust scoring on a 0-1000 scale, drift detection, and classification-based data routing.
KinHelm Studio
Governed code generation: sprint-based plan-then-execute workflow, 14 pre-commit gates, CIS and STIG security profiles.
VILK
Governed operations: network, application, and operating system management with planned, approved, and audited change.
KinHelm Personal Assistant
The governed agent for everyday work. Inherits the user's identity, respects policy on every tool call, auditable to the individual invocation.
Kindo
The governed AI platform at the foundation: audit logging, DLP, RBAC, tool-action controls, model controls. SaaS, hybrid, or on-prem.
How it fits together
Defense in depth for AI: no component talks directly to another, and every interaction passes through the governance layer.
Not a demo. A production deployment.
This stack runs today inside a critical-infrastructure operator in a highly regulated industry, whose data directly supports public safety across dozens of national jurisdictions. Nearly 5,000 governed agent executions per month, fully auditable, all within policy boundaries.
The architecture is proven. Start now.
The question is not whether to govern AI adoption. It is how quickly you can start.