FoundationOS

The Foundation for Everything You Build

Layers into any existing network. Bridges local and edge infrastructure. Collapses tool sprawl into one cohesive ecosystem.

Build on foundation. Not on sand.

The vision

Everything You Build,
on Ground You Own

Not rented from a platform. Not leased from a cloud provider. Not borrowed from a vendor. The foundation under every part of your digital life — your data, your work, your business, your code, your systems, your capital — is yours. It can't be taken away, changed without your knowledge, or held hostage by someone else's terms.

You build. You own. Period.

fios — workflow
$ fios domain register yourcorner.com
Domain available. Registered. Expires 2028.
$ fios site create yourcorner.com --type personal
Site created. Pages + CDN + DDoS protection.
DNS configured globally.
$ fios email enable yourcorner.com
Mailboxes created. DKIM signed. SPF aligned.
$ fios status
yourcorner.com — live | uptime: 100% | cost: \$0

▼ all from one CLI, one directory

The reality

Everything You Build Is
Sitting on Rented Ground

Your website lives on a platform that can delete your account. Your email is on a service that can lock you out. Your content is stored on infrastructure that belongs to someone else. Every layer of your digital life is borrowed — and the terms can change at any moment.

You built it. They own it.

fios — audit
$ fios audit --dependencies
Cloud provider: terms changed 14x this year
Email vendor: pricing up 40% in Q2
CDN: cache purge limited — control plane locked
Analytics: data export restricted to CSV only
AI API: model deprecated, migration required
$ fios audit --exit-cost
Estimated migration cost: 6 months eng time
Vendor lock-in: critical — no replacement path

▼ run this on your own stack

FoundationOS — Personal

Your Digital Life, Your Data, Your Terms

A single page, a single domain, a single corner of the internet that no platform can delete, no algorithm can hide, no terms of service can take away.

It should not be this hard to own a piece of the internet.

The vision

Imagine Owning Your
Corner of the Internet

A website that is yours. A blog on your domain. A portfolio that cannot be taken down. An email address you keep forever. Your words, your photos, your work — reachable at an address you control, served from infrastructure you own.

It should not be this hard to own a piece of the internet.

fios — workflow
$ fios domain register yourcorner.com
Domain available. Registered. Expires 2028.
$ fios site create yourcorner.com --type personal
Personal site created. Pages + CDN.
$ fios email enable yourcorner.com
Mailbox created. DKIM signed. SPF aligned.
$ fios status
yourcorner.com — live | uptime: 100% | cost: $0

▼ all from one CLI, one directory

The reality

Your Digital Life Is Built
on Borrowed Ground

Your website lives on a platform that can delete your account. Your email is on a service that can lock you out. Your content is stored on servers that belong to someone else. You built it. They own it.

It should not be this hard to own a piece of the internet.

fios — audit
$ fios audit --platform-dependency
Social platform: can delete your account anytime
Email provider: free tier discontinued, data held
Website builder: terms updated — content rights change
Photo storage: compression downgraded, quality lost
$ fios audit --ownership
Ownership score: 0/10 — every asset is borrowed

▼ run this on your own stack

FoundationOS — Creator

Your Work, Your Audience, Your Independence

Your audience is not a platform asset. Your content is not their inventory. A direct pipeline to the people who follow you — no algorithm, no middleman, no rent.

You built the following. You should own the relationship.

The vision

Imagine a Direct Pipeline
to Your Audience

A site where your content lives permanently. A mailing list that belongs to you. A store where every dollar goes to you. No algorithm deciding who sees your work. No platform changing the rules. Just you and the people who follow you.

You built the following. You should own the relationship.

fios — workflow
$ fios domain register myaudience.com
Domain registered. Pages + CDN.
$ fios site create myaudience.com --type creator
Creator site live. Mailing list connected.
$ fios store enable
Store active. 100% revenue retention.
$ fios status
myaudience.com — live | audience: direct | no algorithm

▼ all from one CLI, one directory

The reality

You Are Creating on
Someone Else's Land

Your audience is not yours — it is rented from platforms that control who sees what and when. Your content fills their library. Your income depends on algorithms you do not control. One policy change and everything you built can evaporate.

You built the following. They own the relationship.

fios — audit
$ fios audit --platform-rent
Algorithm reach: down 60% this year
Platform cut: 40-50% of every dollar
Audience: 0 owned emails — all borrowed
Content: hosted on their servers, not yours
$ fios audit --moat-score
Moat: none — business evaporates if policy changes

▼ run this on your own stack

FoundationOS — Business

Your Stack, Your Infrastructure, Your Control

Your cloud bill should not be your second-largest expense. Every dollar you spend on infrastructure is rent. Every vendor you depend on is a risk you cannot control.

Your infrastructure should cost less than your coffee.

The vision

Imagine One CLI for
Your Entire Business

No twenty dashboards. No fifteen logins. No ten support contracts. One command line manages every domain, every service, every deployment. Your infrastructure costs do not grow when your business grows.

Your infrastructure should cost less than your coffee.

fios — workflow
$ fios domain register mybusiness.com
Domain registered. SSL + CDN active.
$ fios site create mybusiness.com --type business
Business site with analytics.
$ fios email enable mybusiness.com
Team mailboxes created. DKIM signed.
$ fios integrate --existing
Existing infrastructure bridged to edge.
$ fios status
mybusiness.com — live | 15 vendors → 1 CLI | cost: $5/mo

▼ all from one CLI, one directory

The reality

You Are Managing Tool Sprawl,
Not Your Business

Twenty dashboards. Fifteen logins. Ten support contracts. Each tool costs $20-500 per month alone. None of them talk to each other. You spend more time managing the tools than using them — and you cannot leave any of them without rebuilding.

Your infrastructure should cost less than your coffee.

fios — audit
$ fios audit --vendor-count
Active vendors: 15 — each has its own login, bill, and support queue
Monthly vendor cost: $2,400 — second largest expense after payroll
$ fios audit --lock-in
🚩 High risk: 3 vendors hold read-only data access
🚩 High risk: 2 vendors have no export API
⚠️ Medium risk: 5 vendors changed pricing in last 12 months

▼ run this on your own stack

FoundationOS — Developer

Your Entire Stack, One Directory, One CLI

Not a replacement for your operating system. A layer on top of it. Five layers, one directory, zero system dependencies, every component vendored into one place.

You have better things to build.

The vision

Imagine One Directory for
Your Entire Stack

Every language runtime, every service, every deployment — vendored into one directory. No pip, no brew, no npm, no system dependencies. Back up the directory, you back up the entire system. Clone it to a new machine, you are running in minutes.

You have better things to build.

fios — workflow
$ fios init --type omx-kernel mykernel
Kernel scaffolded. FIDISC header stamped.
$ fios build mykernel
Build complete. 0 system dependencies.
$ fios deploy mykernel
Kernel registered in mesh. PME agent active.
$ fios status
5 layers · 1 directory · complete sovereignty

▼ all from one CLI, one directory

The reality

You Are Managing Too Many
Systems, Not Building

CI/CD here. Docker there. Kubernetes somewhere else. Database hosted with one vendor. Queue with another. Monitoring with a third. Each system adds complexity, not capability. The cloud just shifted where the complexity lives — it did not eliminate it.

Every new system is a new thing to maintain.

fios — audit
$ fios audit --stack-complexity
Runtime deps: 200+ packages across 3 language ecosystems
Infra layers: 7 (cloud + container + orchestrator + db + queue + cache + cdn)
Config files: 12 YAML files just to deploy one service
$ fios audit --migration-cost
Estimated time to replicate stack from scratch: 3 weeks

▼ run this on your own stack

FoundationOS — Architect

Your Systems, Built on a Foundation of Truth

Ten laws. Four planes. Three keys. Every component declares its contracts, its governance, its identity. Infrastructure built on epistemology, not hope.

A system that never hides from you.

The vision

Imagine a System That
Never Hides from You

Every component declares its identity, its contracts, and its governance. Every truth has a timestamp and a hash. Every decision is traceable to a source. No black boxes. No magical abstractions. Everything is queryable. Everything is auditable.

A system that never hides from you.

fios — workflow
$ fios compliance check sia
FIDISC: pass | Contracts: pass | Governance: pass
$ fios doctrine promote law.7 --to P3
Law 7 promoted. Deferral now operational.
$ fios mesh verify
All kernels compliant. Contracts enforced.
$ fios status
System: self-auditing | truth: time-indexed

▼ all from one CLI, one directory

The reality

Most Systems Are Built
on Sand, Not Foundation

Infrastructure today is built on trust — trust that the cloud provider will not fail, trust that the API will not change, trust that the vendor will not be acquired. There are no contracts between components, no governance at the kernel level, no epistemic foundation beneath the stack.

Everything is held together by hope and SLAs.

fios — audit
$ fios audit --epistemic-integrity
Contract enforcement: none — no component declares its dependencies
Governance: absent — no rules governing inter-component behavior
Truth anchors: 0 — no hashes, no timestamps, no evidence trails
$ fios audit --system-truth
Epistemic score: 1/10 — system cannot distinguish truth from speculation

▼ run this on your own stack

FoundationOS — Investor

Your Capital, Vertically Sovereign Transparency

Cloud, SaaS, AI APIs — every layer of the modern stack extracts rent. FoundationOS eliminates every layer. Complete vertical sovereignty at a fixed cost.

A $1.2 trillion market needs a better answer.

The vision

Imagine a Company That
Owns Every Layer

The metal, the runtime, the data, the intelligence — all owned, none rented. No cloud bill that grows with usage. No SaaS vendor that can change terms. No AI API that can deprecate. A company built on a foundation that cannot be taken away.

A $1.2 trillion market needs a better answer.

fios — workflow
$ fios domain register portfol.io
Domain registered. Portfolio initiated.
$ fios portfolio init
Portfolio scaffolded. 0 vendors added.
$ fios integrate --legacy
Existing infrastructure bridged. Cost: fixed.
$ fios status
Portfolio: sovereign | cost: $5/mo | scale: unlimited

▼ all from one CLI, one directory

The reality

Most Companies Rent
Everything but the Brand

90% of startups are fully dependent on cloud vendors they cannot leave. Every layer extracts rent. The cloud owns the metal. SaaS owns the data. AI APIs own the intelligence. The company owns the brand and the customer relationship — everything else is leased.

The infrastructure tax is unsustainable.

fios — audit
$ fios audit --infrastructure-tax
Cloud spend: $680B market — every dollar grows with usage
SaaS burn: $300B market — per-seat cost that never plateaus
AI dependency: $200B market — per-token, per-call pricing
$ fios audit --vertical-sovereignty
Owned layers: brand + customer list only
Rented layers: compute, storage, data, identity, ai, analytics

▼ run this on your own stack