What the pilot is
The AI Non-Delegation Doctrine is frozen. The Companion Book is in final review. The assessment process has been tested against real documented cases. The foundation is sound.
What is new is you. The pilot opens the public-facing assessment process to individuals who have received decisions they want to examine. Your experience — what works, what doesn't, what you needed that wasn't there — is the data that improves the product.
You are not a beta tester in the software sense. You are a person who may have received a decision that deserves scrutiny. We take that seriously. The process you go through is real, grounded in a frozen governance doctrine, and designed to give you something useful.
What the pilot gives you
- A structured analysis of whether the decision about you was made by legitimate authority
- A clear identification of which failure mode applies, if any
- Precise questions to ask the organisation that made the decision
- A summary you can take to a lawyer, advocate, or ombudsman
- The knowledge that your experience informs what this becomes
What the pilot does not give you
- Legal advice or representation — Warrentor is not a law firm
- A guarantee of outcome — no analysis can promise that
- A complete picture in every case — some decisions are complex and will require further work
- A finished product — we will improve, and we want your help to do it
What we ask of you
Only this: tell us what we got wrong. If something in the process didn't make sense, if a question was unclear, if the analysis missed something important, or if what you received wasn't what you needed — say so.
The feedback form at the bottom of this page takes less than five minutes. There is no obligation. But if you choose to complete it, your input goes directly to the people building Warrentor, and it will be used.
The doctrinal foundation
The AI Non-Delegation Doctrine v2.0 is the basis of every assessment Warrentor conducts. It was written by Frank C. Schouten and frozen on 20 March 2026. The State Zero frameworks — which address the human and institutional conditions that determine whether authority is usable — were developed by Toni Scorsese, Ph.D., and are formally attributed in the doctrine.
The doctrine is publicly available on SSRN at no cost. This is deliberate. The doctrine is not Warrentor's product to sell. It is a governance instrument, and it belongs in public view.
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