KATHARINA: evidence and recourse for agent transactions.

Conformance and evidence infrastructure that lets trust-service providers exchange signed proofs and execute defined remedies.

Agent
transaction
Identity
Delegation
Trust
Recourse
Settlement
L4 · Services & recourse

A defined responsibility inside the fabric.

Built for

Insurers, raters, escrow agents, and dispute forums.

System role

Conformance and evidence infrastructure for insurers, raters, escrow, and dispute forums.

Closes

Trust · economics

Accountability signal

Independent trust-service providers can exchange signed evidence and act through defined remedy paths.

What KATHARINA makes explicit.

The product is presented as infrastructure: a bounded mechanism, an accountable counterparty relationship, and an observable operating change.

01

Conformance

Provide a shared infrastructure for assessing whether agent activity conforms to defined requirements.

Trust-service decisions attach to explicit evidence rather than informal assurances.

02

Signed evidence

Let insurers, raters, escrow agents, and dispute forums exchange signed proofs.

Independent service providers can coordinate around verifiable transaction evidence.

03

Defined remedies

Connect evidence infrastructure to escrow and dispute-resolution paths.

Recourse becomes part of the transaction architecture rather than an external exception.

From implicit trust to accountable operation.

Insurance

Risk assessment may lack a shared evidentiary basis.

Signed proofs support a more explicit relationship between agent activity and coverage decisions.

Ratings

Trust signals can collapse into one platform-owned score.

Plural raters can contribute evidence through shared conformance infrastructure.

Disputes

Remedies are improvised after an autonomous transaction fails.

Evidence, escrow, and dispute forums connect through a defined recourse layer.

The gaps are architectural. So is the answer.

Request a technical briefing on the Agentic Economy Framework, the Agent Interchange Fabric, or the product built for your operating environment.