The register of governed digital entities

Reviewed public records for entities that already act in the world.

GDER is a governed, publicly inspectable register for crypto-native entities that need to become legible to counterparties. It is built to make legal wrapper, governance, treasury or control surface, and status visible through reviewed records, lifecycle history, and verifiable extracts.

  • Evidence-first
  • Review-based
  • Publicly inspectable
  • Verifiable outputs
Legibility for governed digital entities
Reviewed public record, not self-asserted profile
Outputs built for inspection and reliance

A register for entities that are already real, but still hard to inspect.

Many crypto-native entities already have real legal wrappers, governance processes, treasury or control surfaces, and external counterparties. What is usually missing is a disciplined public record surface that can be reviewed, inspected, and used.

GDER is

  • a governed register workflow
  • evidence-first and review-based
  • public-facing after admission into the register
  • built around records, history, and verifiable extracts

GDER is not

  • not a generic DAO directory
  • not a pay-to-rank listing site
  • not an unsupported sovereign-registry claim
  • not hype wrapped as institutional infrastructure

Four things a relying party usually needs, in one governed surface.

01

Legal wrapper

The legal or quasi-legal entity behind the governance system.

02

Governance anchor

The named framework, process, or forum that governs the entity.

03

Treasury or control surface

Made explicit where supportable evidence exists.

04

Status and history

What exists now, what changed, and what should be relied on.

Search through the organizations we have already researched.

This is the current structured research set behind GDER, not yet the final published register. It shows the entities already researched with legal-wrapper, jurisdiction, and governance context.

0 researched entities

From fragmented claims to governed public records.

GDER is designed to convert scattered public claims into a disciplined, inspectable record with a clear review posture.

1

Request review

Start with the entity, the evidence bundle, and the claimed facts.

2

Structured assessment

Review the legal wrapper, governance anchor, control surface, and source quality.

3

Publish the record

Admitted facts become visible in a governed public record.

4

Issue verifiable outputs

History, extracts, and verification become part of the operating surface.

Phase 1 optimizes for credible first records, not vanity traffic.

The immediate goal is to publish credible first records and create a repeatable review pipeline for entities that need to become legible.