For AI Operators

If you run AI agents,
this is for you.

You don't need to be an engineer or a regulated enterprise. If agents send, post, order, answer, or move money on your behalf — you're an AI operator, and GaaS gives you control over every one of them.

GaaS is the control layer for AI operators: before any agent you run sends, posts, orders, or touches a record, GaaS checks the action against your rules and allows it, holds it for you, or blocks it — with a receipt for every decision.

You're an AI operator.

Maybe you run one agent that answers customers. Maybe you run fifty that write, order, schedule, and bill. Either way, the job is the same: the agents do the work, and you answer for it. The email it sends carries your name. The order it places spends your money. The post it publishes wears your client's brand.

Today, most operators hold that responsibility with nothing but a carefully written prompt and crossed fingers. Hope is not a control. GaaS gives you the thing every other kind of operator already has — a control layer that makes every agent behave the same reliable way, whether you're watching or not.

Before any agent acts, GaaS decides.

Every consequential action — a send, a post, an order, a record touch — is checked against your rules first:

Allows it

Lets it through

Clearly fine actions clear in well under a tenth of a second. Your agents never break stride.

Holds it

Holds it for you

Anything that needs a human yes waits for one — yours, on your schedule.

Blocks it

Stops it cold

Actions that cross a line you drew never execute. Prevented once, prevented forever.

Every decision is kept as a receipt you can show anyone — a client, an auditor, or your own peace of mind at 2 a.m.

Control that pays you back.

Prompt-based guardrails burn 23,000 to 65,000 tokens every governance cycle. GaaS uses 200 to 500, and hands you back 30 to 60% of each agent's context window.

Read The Context Dividend

Start free, stay cheap.

Start free in Shadow Mode, no credit card. There is a free tier, plans from $99 a month, and less than a cent per governed action at scale. Nonprofits, NGOs, and veteran-owned businesses govern free for life.

See Full Pricing

Every objection, answered.

An external layer that checks what your AI agents are about to do and allows, holds, or blocks it against your rules, keeping an immutable record of every decision.

No. GaaS is for any operator running agents. Regulated teams get framework mappings; everyone else gets control over what their agents do.

No. Start in Shadow Mode with just an email; it runs the full pipeline on real actions without enforcing anything, so there is zero operational risk. A developer wires the SDK in an afternoon, and you author policies in plain language.

Start free in Shadow Mode, no card. There is a free tier, then plans from $99 a month, and under a cent per governed action at scale. Nonprofits, NGOs, and veteran-owned businesses govern free for life. See pricing.

Routine actions clear in well under a tenth of a second. Only high-stakes decisions take longer, and only because you asked them to.

No. GaaS sits outside the agent and needs no model changes and no cooperation from the agent to work.

The opposite. Prompt guardrails cost 23,000 to 65,000 tokens per governance cycle; GaaS costs 200 to 500 and returns 30 to 60% of your context window. See The Context Dividend.

Prompt guardrails live inside the model, get re-read on every call, and can be argued away. GaaS is external and enforced; the agent cannot talk it out of a block.

Run your agents like an operator.

Start free in Shadow Mode — full pipeline, real actions, zero enforcement, no credit card. See what every agent you run is actually doing, then decide when to turn the controls on.

Start Free Shadow Mode