Gydium Charter

Our Charter describes the principles guiding Gydium’s mission.


This document reflects the strategy we have refined over the past two years, incorporating feedback from people both inside and outside Gydium. The timeline to building our AI Power Technology Platform remains certain, but our Charter will guide us in acting in the best interests of humanity throughout its development.

Gydium’s mission is to inspire creativity and bring the world closer together. We aim to directly build safe and beneficial technology platforms, while also recognizing our mission is fulfilled if our work enables others to achieve the same outcome. To that end, we commit to the following principles:

Broadly Shared Access and Opportunity

We are committed to ensuring our technologies benefit people everywhere—regardless of geography, income, or background. Our goal is to make our tools accessible, affordable, and adaptable to diverse needs, while preventing uses that harm individuals, communities, or the open nature of the internet.
We recognize that connectivity is a fundamental enabler of opportunity. We will invest in infrastructure, tools, and partnerships that expand global access to both the internet and future digital spaces.

Collaboration for a Connected World


We will actively collaborate with governments, civil society, academia, and industry to shape an open, interoperable, and safe digital ecosystem.
We believe that building a connected future is a global challenge—one that no single organization can solve alone. We commit to sharing knowledge, developing open standards, and fostering communities that advance technology for good.

Cooperative Orientation

We will actively work with other research and policy institutions to create a global community addressing the challenges of AI Power Technology Platforms and AGI.
We are committed to providing public goods that help society navigate the path to AGI. Today, this includes publishing most of our AI research. However, we anticipate that safety and security concerns may reduce traditional publishing in the future—while increasing the importance of sharing safety, policy, and standards research.