The OS Stack
Tythe is the first operating system designed to compute, enforce, and distribute digital credibility as an onchain primitive. It scores individuals, verifies behavior, and standardizes trust signals using a zero-knowledge architecture that protects privacy without compromising enforcement.
At its core, Tythe separates roles:
Individuals earn credibility.
Organizations help enforce it.
Each layer of the Tythe OS can operate independently, but when composed, they form a full-stack credibility system: interoperable, permissionless, and enforceable by design. This is not just modular infrastructure. It’s trust, built to function at protocol scale.
Tythe’s framework consists of seven core layers:
1. Identity & Activation
→ Entering the ecosystem: [Onboarding Layer]
→ Tythe's identity unit: [Identity Layer]
2. Token & Incentives
→ For scoring credibility: [TCT]
→ For participation and rewards: [TYT]
3. Data Input
→ Anchoring of important outsourced information for individuals: [Verifications]
→ Self-submission of inputs exlusive to individuals: [Submissions]
→ A tally for trusted validations received by an AI agent: [Sponsorships]
→ A network-wide system for mapping accurate credibility: [Relays]
4. Data Memory
→ A ZK hash registry for long-term auditability: [Trovebook]
4. Data Compute
→ A real-time scoring engine built for programmable trust: [Scoring Logic]
→ A modular framework of credibility categories: [Scoring Metrics]
→ Customizable logic for enforcement and access control: [Credibility Rulesets]
5. Data Output
→ A verifiable, privacy-preserving trust score: [DISC Score]
→ Modular, metric-specific trust reports for granular filtering: [DISC Reports]
6. Trust and Credibility Signals
→ Public-facing credibility ledgers: [Indices]
→ Tools for credibility utilization: [TCT Mechanisms]
→ A clear sign of untrustworthiness: [BAD Status]
→ The public face for organizational credibility: [Organizational Ranking]
7. Developer Infrastructure
→ Get started: [Quickstart Guide]
→ See what's available: [API References]
→ How to use: [Example Implementation Flows]
→ Coming soon: [SDK Library] & [Sandbox]
→ The benefits of implementation: [Use Cases]
8. Governance Framework
→ Explore how decisions are made: [Governance]
“For the Lord sees not as man sees ...”
— 1 Samuel 16:7
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