Verified knowledge · weighed on the feather of Ma'at
Ma'at Codex is a verification-first knowledge engine. It answers only from the primary sources it holds, quotes every passage verbatim, cites what it says, and never fabricates. When the record does not hold the answer, it says so.
Access by appointment. The engine is sealed; the truth is served.
What it is
Ordinary AI guesses when it doesn't know. Ma'at Codex refuses to. Every answer is grounded in a document it actually holds, every quotation is checked against the source byte-for-byte, and every claim carries its citation. It is built for people who are accountable for being right.
Answers come only from the primary sources in the Codex — statutes, rulings, scripture, and canonical texts it has verified and holds.
Every quotation is reproduced exactly and traced to its source. No paraphrase passed off as the record; no orphaned claims.
When the Codex does not hold the answer, it abstains and says so. Silence over invention, every time.
Each figure and passage traces back to the document it came from, so what you rely on can always be shown.
How it serves
Today, Ma'at Codex powers applications as their grounded reference — the layer they consult when an answer has to be real. Soon, patrons will consult it directly. In every path, the engine stays sealed and private; only verified, cited answers come out.
Verified retrieval for accounting, legal, and knowledge workflows — the source of truth other tools call on.
Direct, cited research access for those who need the record itself — granted deliberately, not opened to the crowd.
The corpus and models never leave the private fleet. The public sees answers; it never reaches the engine.
The weighing
In the old telling, the heart was weighed against the feather of Ma'at — truth against the record. The Codex keeps that measure.
The source, exactly as written.
Every claim shows its origin.
Only what the record holds.
Silence over a false answer.
Nothing without a source.
Access granted with intent.
Ma'at Codex is open to applications and to patrons by appointment. Enter the Codex, or request access.