The substrate for the agent economy.
Memory and context are the unlocks that turn AI from a chatbot into something that operates your business. But the moment you give an agent memory of your customers, your IP, your processes — that memory becomes the attack surface and the liability.
You're either deploying agents into your most sensitive workflows, or wishing you could, but you don't have deterministic governance you'd actually trust with the risk. The secure and scalable infrastructure for the agent economy doesn't exist yet. We're building it.
Hedgerow is the substrate for governing and securing AI agents at scale. We structurally guarantee compliant behavior ahead of time — not monitor it after the fact. We record cryptographic provenance for every action, every data object, every agent decision. And we automatically build and maintain a live map of how your business actually operates, not how you think it does.
Built on the engineering discipline behind modern semiconductors — where billions of operations run concurrently and failure isn't an option. Agent governance at scale rivals the same complexity as a processor chip, and you wouldn't build or run your semiconductors on Python. Safety at this level is architecture, not policy.
We believe AI will be the greatest force for human flourishing in history, and that belief is exactly why this moment demands urgency. Agents enable people to focus on what actually requires human judgment, creativity, and care. But the people building the trust primitives and governance protocols right now determine what the future looks like and who gets access to it. That window does not stay open indefinitely. The patterns being laid today will calcify into the architecture of the next century.
The enterprises and builders who instrument with provable trust now will have an asymmetric advantage over those who try to retrofit later. That asymmetry is the opportunity.
If this resonates, we'd like to hear from you. We're looking for enterprises ready to pilot, partners for our nonprofit consortium, investors who see what we see, and builders who want to work on the hardest version of this problem.