Keyboard work is getting automated. The signed decision that moves atoms is not.
In defense, healthcare, energy, robotics — anywhere an AI’s recommendation becomes an action in the physical world — a human still has to sign. CompositeApps builds the bridge where that signature happens. Three agents argue. An arbiter issues a Glass-Box determination. A human verifier is accountable for every call. Running today at FedRAMP High under a VA National ATO.
We don’t build models. We don’t take your data. We build the part in the middle — where three agents argue in the open, an arbiter signs a Glass-Box determination, and an evidence ledger records every call. That’s how bytes become atoms defensibly.
Signals enter. Our bytes compose them — Advocate, Defender, Arbiter — under your authority. A signed decision exits, with its reasoning attached. Then the atoms move: a fires dispatch, a claim clears, an outage is rerouted. Same pattern, three domains.
Below is a representative view of our runtime. Signals stream in. The Advocate, Defender, Arbiter reason in turn. A Glass-Box determination forms with its reasoning attached. The mission tab cycles every few seconds — click any tab to pin it. This is what the bridge looks like the second before a decision dispatches.
Want to see bytes becoming atoms end to end? The Cross-Domain Review console runs a live Five-Eyes release case in five minutes — three agents, one signed determination, a classified product downgraded to coalition release.
The framework runs today in the most adversarial multi-party decision environment in U.S. federal healthcare — under a VA National ATO at FedRAMP High, in production since 2025, with every determination defensible to an Inspector General.
A payment. A reroute. A dispatch. An approval. A release. Whatever the decision a machine is about to make calls on, bring it. Leave with a one-page work statement against a use case you designate, delivered by end of week.