Platform
Deterministic logic people can trust.
RiGEL uses deterministic logic so the same information, rules, and assumptions produce the same outcome every time.
Trust starts when the path can be repeated.
In high-stakes decisions, a result is not enough. People need to know how that result was reached, what information shaped it, and whether the same facts would produce the same outcome again.
RiGEL applies structured rules and assumptions in a repeatable way, then preserves the path behind the result. That means decisions can be understood, explained, reviewed, and defended without rebuilding the logic from scattered spreadsheets or notes.
Same inputs, same outcome
When the information, rules, and assumptions stay the same, RiGEL produces the same result.
Visible assumptions
RiGEL shows what each outcome depends on, so people can see where judgment, policy, or review may be needed.
Reviewable logic
The path from input to outcome remains visible, making it easier to explain how a decision was reached.
Defensible records
RiGEL preserves the supporting record so decisions can be reviewed later without relying on memory or manual reconstruction.
Example: why repeatability matters
A family, advisor, trustee, or administrator may need to revisit a decision months or years later. If the same information, rules, and assumptions are used, the outcome should be reproducible.
Example path
- Information is entered.
- Rules and assumptions are applied.
- The outcome is produced.
- The supporting path is recorded.
- The decision can be reviewed later.
RiGEL makes the path visible so people are not forced to trust an unexplained answer.
AI helps explain. It does not decide.
RiGEL may use AI to improve clarity, usability, and plain-language explanation. But AI is not the source of truth for estate, wealth, trust, tax, or governance outcomes.
The core logic is deterministic and rule-based. RiGEL uses AI to help people understand the path, not to hide the decision behind a probabilistic answer.
Make important decisions repeatable, explainable, and defensible.
RiGEL helps turn complex rules and assumptions into outcomes people can understand and review.
