Some documents are too sensitive to show anyone.
Ivaronix gives you an AI specialist for the work you cannot send to ChatGPT — the term sheet under NDA, the indemnity clause that walks into court three years from now, the data room a buyer's counsel reads at 11pm. It runs the review, then leaves a small piece of evidence: a signed receipt that says what the review found, when it ran, and that the document itself is gone.
You have three choices today. None of them are good.
Pasting into ChatGPT trains the model on your draft. The vendor's terms quietly take a copy. If your document is privileged, that one paste is the privilege defense gone. There is no putting it back.
A vendor data room — Datasite, Intralinks, Box — keeps the access log on its own servers. The log is produced under subpoena on the vendor's schedule and disappears when your contract with the vendor ends. You pay them for the right to be audited by them.
A local model on your laptop keeps the document private and loses the audit trail. There is no proof for a regulator, an investor, or a partner that the review actually happened or said what you say it said. The cheapest rebuttal is "show me your logs," and you have none.
Five steps. None require you to trust us.
- You drop a file. The studio encrypts it in your browser before it leaves your machine.
- The encrypted bytes go to a public storage layer. The decryption key stays in memory only — it never gets written to disk and is destroyed at the end of the run.
- A specialist — a contract auditor, a privacy lawyer, a security reviewer — runs the analysis inside a hardware-isolated enclave. The plaintext is visible there for the duration of the run and nowhere else.
- The result is wrapped in a signed receipt: who ran it, what skill was used, what was found, what the fingerprint of the destroyed key was. The receipt is anchored to a public chain.
- The original document is unreadable, including to us. The receipt is permanent. Anyone with its id can re-verify the run independently — different machine, different network, no account needed.
The receipt is the product. Everything else is plumbing to make it real.
Live numbers, from the chain itself.
Every number above is read from the public chain at the moment this page loaded. Click any of them to inspect the underlying data — receipts, agents, skills. Nothing is cached, nothing is synthetic.
Three people. Three different bills paid.
The deal lawyer. Senior associate at a corporate firm. Reviews twenty term sheets a quarter, two of them at 11pm under NDA. The opposing party will not let her paste their draft into ChatGPT. Today the only option is to read carefully and remember. Now she runs a redline-grade review and ships a receipt the partner — and a regulator, three years later — can both verify.
The founder. Series A round. The lead investor's term sheet has a full-ratchet clause buried in clean prose. She cannot afford a partner-level read on every revision. She runs the audit, gets a one-page risk summary, brings the receipt to her board call. The board call goes faster.
The DD analyst. Buy-side firm running diligence on an acquisition. Twelve counterparties, thirty data rooms, every page under NDA. He needs a verifiable read trail for the audit committee. Each room read is a receipt. The analyst's wallet is on every receipt. The investment memo writes itself in the margin.
The shortest list in the company.
We are not a vendor data room. We do not host your document. We do not run a directory. Every skill is open source. The runtime is open source. We will not add features that exist only to look complete in a screenshot.
We are also not finished. The agent's signing key currently lives on the operator side; the next version moves it inside the secure enclave so even we cannot extract it. We say so on the agent's profile page. We do not bury the parts we have not finished.
From your first drop to your first receipt: under thirty seconds.
Try one. The receipt will outlast the document.