The most consequential decisions cross organizational boundaries — the infrastructure for those decisions does not exist.
Threadline is memory-anchored decision coordination built on Connected Autonomy.
The Problem
Multi-party decisions have no foundation.
When multiple organizations make a consequential decision together, the record remains scattered. Positions live in email. Revisions happen in documents without version control. Nobody can prove what was agreed, who consented, or what changed between versions. When regulators ask for the decision chain, you reconstruct it from memory.
The fragmentation is not a tool problem. It is a structural gap. Multi-party decisions deserve the same accountability infrastructure as single-organization workflows. They deserve version control over positions. They deserve provable consent. They deserve receipts that can answer: who decided, when, based on what information, with whose authority.
Threadline exists to close that gap.
How Threadline Works
Memory-anchored coordination across boundaries.
Capability 01
Memory-Anchored
Every position, every revision, every point of agreement anchors to a shared decision memory. No document exists in isolation. The full record — who said what, when, why — persists. Context is never lost when parties move between versions.
Capability 02
Versioned
Every change to the decision is tracked and timestamped. Versions are immutable. You can see exactly what changed, when, and who proposed the change. No ambiguity about what version each party was responding to when they gave consent.
Capability 03
Cross-Organizational
Parties remain independent. Each organization maintains its own authority and records. The shared decision record connects them without collapsing boundaries. Consent from one party never gives authority to another.
Capability 04
Receipted
Every decision point generates a deterministic receipt. The receipt proves what was decided, by whom, based on what record. If regulators ask, you do not reconstruct. You produce the receipt.
Applications
Where accountability crosses organizational lines.
M&A due diligence. Buyer and seller negotiate positions across multiple documents, each revised multiple times. Threadline keeps the version record shared while preserving confidentiality. When due diligence closes, the entire decision chain is complete and auditable.
Regulatory submissions. Companies collaborate on compliance filings that require multi-party sign-off. The regulator can verify that each party consented to the same version, not different drafts.
Cross-organizational AI governance. Organizations deploying AI systems together need shared governance decisions — data access policies, model deployment approvals, incident response protocols. Threadline ensures all parties consent to the same policy version before activation.
Joint ventures. Partners in a joint venture make decisions that bind all parties. Every decision needs to be recorded in a way both parties can verify independently. Threadline is the infrastructure for that.