The model stopped being the problem a while ago. What's missing is a safe place to actually use it — one where AI is governed enough to trust with real work, and where the people who build with it have somewhere to ship it.
That is what DiviDen is: the safe layer where developers and users connect and transact, inside a system built to maximize how much real work gets done.
Two sides, both stuck
On one side, operators and teams who need AI but can't risk something that hallucinates, acts without asking, and leaves no trail. On the other, builders who make brilliant agents and have nowhere safe to sell them. Even the technical few who try to run it themselves give up before a single real task ships. Two gaps, one root cause.
You won’t hand real work to something that hallucinates, acts without asking, and leaves no audit trail. So you don’t — and the power stays out of reach.
You built something brilliant on your own key. Now there’s nowhere safe to ship it, no governed way to let strangers run it, and no way to get paid for it.
You bought the Mac mini and tried the open-source rig. Three weekends later it’s a paperweight — and you still haven’t delegated a single real task.
What we're building
Make it safe, and both sides show up. DiviDen is the safe layer where developers and users connect and transact — inside a system built around one thing: maximizing the work you actually get done. Three pillars carry it.
Pillar 01
Every agent action is proposed, approved, run, checked on the way back, and logged. That is what makes AI usable at all — safe to actually hand work to.
Pillar 02
Builders ship by talking, people discover and adopt, and money moves through one rail — builders keep 85%. That is what gets builders to ship here.
Pillar 03
One focused operating layer — Signals, Channels, the Board, Meetings, the extension — one Divi across every surface, built to maximize how much real work gets done.
The wedge
Every tier is bring-your-own-key. You connect your own AI provider and pay them directly — your key is scoped to your account, never shared, and never falls back to anyone else's. DiviDen never marks up inference and never bills you per seat.
That is the wedge. Because the customer's key pays for the model, our inference cost is essentially zero, so we can charge for the thing that's actually scarce: a place to use AI safely, distribute it, and transact. It is how the safe layer can be honestly affordable instead of a token-resale margin.
Run it yourself
The core you run yourself is open. Federation protocol, relay system, agent engine, widget framework, action-tag system — set up your own DiviDen instance any way you want, bring your own keys, and run it on your own infrastructure, free.
The paid layer is the marketplace. The Divi Store — listing agents, themes, and sprites; discovery; transactions; and the managed hub at dividen.ai — is the commercial side: payment processing, hosting, network-level trust scoring, and managed federation. Run your own instance and you never have to touch it; reach for the marketplace and that's where you pay.
We believe infrastructure this fundamental should be inspectable. If you are routing work through a system, you should be able to see exactly how that system makes decisions. An open core is not a marketing strategy for us. It is a design constraint.
Built by Denominator Ventures
DiviDen is built by Denominator Ventures — building the trusted economy for AI-native work. Fractional Venture Partners brings the AI-native builders, sMCP creates the governed trust layer, and DiviDen is the supervised marketplace where that work gets bought, executed, and delivered.
Every major computing era created a coordination layer that became the dominant platform. The PC era had the operating system. The internet era had the browser. The mobile era had the app store. The AI era needs a trust layer — a place where intelligence is discoverable, governed, and compensated.
We are building it in the open, shipping it to real users, and iterating in public. The core is open, the marketplace is the paid layer, the network is federated, and the economics are transparent — we never claim booked revenue we haven't earned.
Implementation Partner
Implementation and deployment services are provided by Fractional Venture Partners: custom agents, custom instances, enterprise deployment, and white-glove onboarding for teams that want to move fast.
FVP works with companies that want to deploy DiviDen internally — connecting their existing tools, training custom agents on their workflows, and integrating with their payment and identity systems.
Visit FVP →The safe layer where developers and users connect and transact — inside a system built to maximize your work. Bring your key and start today.