Output Layer
Tythe’s Output Layer produces the core credibility signals that platforms can query, interpret, and enforce, all without compromising user privacy. This is where raw inputs (Verifications, Trovebook submissions, Relays, Sponsorships) are synthesized by the DISC Engine, and transformed into machine-readable, privacy-preserving trust data.
Core Outputs
DISC Score
A modular, impact-weighted reputation score bound to each TRIS ID, continuously updated in real-time as users complete verified actions or receive validation.
Individuals: Earn DISC Scores via Trovebook, Relays, Verifications, and Credonations
AI Agents: Earn DISC Scores via Decision Relays and Sponsorships
Organizations: Do not receive DISC Scores. They particpate at the enforcement layer
DISC Reports (DRs)
Metric-specific reports that reveal how an Individual’s DISC Score is distributed across the seven core trust categories: Financial, Creative, Educational, Behavioral, Social, Security, and Compliance
DRs enable:
Granular access control (e.g. GateCR enforcement)
Credibility-based filtering
Trust composability across platforms and DAOs
Only Individuals can generate and share DRs
AI Agents do not receive DRs (their score is queryable directly)
Organizations are the only identity class who can query DRs, and hence, are not DR subjects
Features of Tythe’s Output Layer
ZK-Native
All data outputs respect privacy by default — platforms only receive score metadata and validation lineage, never raw proofs.
Modular
DISC Reports are broken down by category, enabling selective filtering based on trust domains.
Verifiable
Outputs are backed by immutable TCT records and decision relays — making them tamper-proof and machine-verifiable.
Composable
Applications can integrate these signals into governance, lending, onboarding, credentialing, and more.
The Output Layer turns credibility from an abstract idea into a modular, enforceable primitive which is usable by any system that values integrity.
“He who walks with the wise grows wise, but a companion of fools suffers harm.”
— Proverbs 13:20
Last updated