docs.digitalworld.earth
Digital World LIFE Stack
Technical Documentation
A complete reference guide, technical specification, deployment manual, and architecture guide for the Digital World sovereign digital life platform. It serves engineers, operators, government integration teams, and the Digital Intelligence systems that build, deploy, and operate on the stack.
How to read this documentation
Every capability carries a status label. Existing is deployed and operational today. In Development is under active construction. Planned is on the roadmap, not yet started. Confidential marks material reserved for internal or government review. Reality before roadmap, always.
The internet connected computers. The web connected information. The missing layer connects people, organizations, devices, Digital Intelligences, communications, and value through one common trust framework. That layer is the LIFE Protocol, and the Digital World LIFE Stack is its reference implementation.
A reader should be able to understand the entire system from one stack diagram and one sentence: one identity, controlled by one human, powering every layer of digital life.
The Volumes
| Volume | Title | Covers |
| I | Foundation | Why the platform exists, the Constitution, the six trust principles, the maturity model. |
| II | Architecture | The thirteen-layer LIFE Stack (L0 to L12), the entity model, the seven-step flow, trust levels. |
| III | LIFE Identity | Self-certifying identity, credentials, authority, recovery, the LIFE Login system, the SEDI bridge. |
| IV | LIFE Pay | Digital World Chain, DUSD, DGOLD, NATIVE, convert and swap and bridge flows. |
| V | LIFE Communication | Identity-bound, relationship-based messaging, voice, video, presence. |
| VI | LIFE Social | Portable social graph, communities, content, reputation, feeds. |
| VII | LIFE Storage | Encrypted personal vault, sharded backup, data markets, sync. |
| VIII | LIFE Health | Records, vitals, wearables, care network, medical vault. |
| IX | Digital Intelligence | Personal DI, agent framework, the principle of human authority over DI. |
| X | Governance | Life Council decision support, Digital World Councils, the governance suite. |
| XI | Node and Network | Home, edge, cloud, mobile, enterprise, validator nodes, resolution, the namespace. |
| XII | Deployment | Personal to sovereign, adoption playbooks, migration guides. |
| XIII | Reference Deployments | Utah Life Pilot, the Digital World app, banking, dashboards, the innovation district. |
| XIV | Standards and Build | Open standards mapping, the Login and Pay APIs, how to build on the stack. |
Getting Started / The LIFE Framework
What LIFE means
A Framework for the Future
LIFE is both a protocol and a promise. The name carries the four commitments that the whole architecture is built to keep.
| Letter | Pillar | Meaning |
| L | Living | Technology should serve real life. |
| I | Identity | Trust begins with identity. Individuals control their credentials and data. |
| F | Freedom | Freedom to build and participate. Open innovation lets individuals create value. |
| E | Estate | Ownership and legacy matter. Build lasting value through assets, businesses, and digital identity. |
Guiding principle
Identity is not a document. It is the verified relationship between people, organizations, and communities. Every layer of the stack is an expression of that single idea.
Getting Started / Why DI, not AI
Terminology
Digital Intelligence, not Artificial Intelligence
Throughout this documentation the term Digital Intelligence, abbreviated DI, replaces the term artificial intelligence. The choice is deliberate and reflects the architecture.
Human Intelligence leads. Digital Intelligence assists. A Digital Intelligence operates only under the authority of a human identity, with permissions the human grants and can revoke.
| Concept | Conventional framing | Digital World framing |
| Actor | AI acts on the user | DI acts for the human, under granted authority |
| Data | Platform holds and trains on user data | Human holds data, grants permissioned, revocable access |
| Authority | Platform owns the assistant | Human owns authority, DI is delegated by the human |
| Privacy | Interaction is observed by the platform | Human remains private, DI sees only what is authorized |
Getting Started / Glossary
Reference
Glossary of Core Terms
Each core term is defined once, precisely, here, and referenced by name elsewhere.
| Term | Definition | Status |
LIFE Protocol | The open architecture that unifies identity, storage, intelligence, communication, social, and verification under one trust framework. | Existing |
LIFE Identity | Self-certifying identifiers, chained verifiable credentials, key management, and recovery. | Existing |
DID | Decentralized Identifier. A self-certifying identifier derived from cryptographic key pairs, requiring no central registry. | Existing |
LIFE Login | Passwordless authentication. A relying party shows a challenge, the LIFE app signs it with the user DID, a session is established. | Existing |
LIFE Pay | The payments and settlement system. Convert, swap, and bridge value across wallets and jurisdictions. | Existing |
Digital World Chain | The sovereign settlement and transaction layer for the finance stack. | Existing |
DUSD | Digital World USD. A stablecoin used for payments, merchant settlement, and cross-jurisdiction transfer. | Existing |
DGOLD | Gold-backed digital value, supported under the Utah Gold and Currency Innovation Acts. | Existing |
DI | Digital Intelligence. Intelligence bound to and accountable to a human identity, acting only under granted, revocable authority. | Existing |
SEDI | State Endorsed Digital Identity. Utah's model for government endorsement without holding or controlling the underlying identity. | In Development |
ClearNODE | A sovereign Life node operated by a family, business, community, or organization. | Existing |
Life App | The regional mobile application that holds a person's DID, credentials, vault, and wallet. | Existing |
Volume I / Foundation
Volume I
Why Digital World Exists
Before architecture, before code, before deployment — this volume sets out why the platform exists, what rights it upholds, and the principles that govern everything built on top of it.
1.1 The problem
Digital life today is fragmented. Identity lives in one system, communication in another, social networks in a third, storage somewhere else. Each piece is controlled by a different institution, each requires a separate account, and each can revoke access on its own terms.
1.2 The approach
Digital World is not a product. It is infrastructure. The LIFE Stack is the open reference implementation. ClearSoftware is the managed distribution. ClearFoundation holds the trademarks and stewards the open source.
The vision in one sentence
Just as one protocol family became the way to move information, the LIFE Protocol seeks to become the way to hold digital existence: identity, value, memory, relationships, and intelligence — all under the authority of the person they belong to.
Volume I / The Constitution
Chapter 1.4
The Digital World Constitution
The foundational rights document. These principles are enforced by the cryptographic architecture, not by policy.
| Principle | Statement | Enforcement |
| Identity Sovereignty | A human owns their identity. No platform, government, or organization may claim ownership without explicit, revocable consent. | Self-certifying DIDs. No registry can revoke or reassign an identifier. |
| Data Sovereignty | A human owns their data. Third parties may access it only with consent, and that consent is revocable. | Vault encryption keyed to the identity. |
| Consent Sovereignty | Consent can be revoked. Any permission granted to any system can be withdrawn without penalty. | Revocation is immediate in a single transaction. |
| Portability Sovereignty | Data must be exportable. No system may lock a person's data. | A standard portable export format is mandatory. |
| Transparency Sovereignty | People can inspect decisions that affect them. | Key event logs are append-only and auditable. |
| Human Primacy | Humans remain accountable. Digital Intelligence may assist but may never replace human accountability. | The Life Council is decision support, not decision making. |
Volume I / Six Trust Principles
Chapter 1.5
Security and Trust: Six Principles
The six principles that keep a person in control.
You Own You
Your identity, your data, and your life belong to you, not to a platform.
Privacy by Design
Encryption and zero-knowledge methods are used wherever possible, by default.
User Authority
You decide who and what acts on your behalf, and you can withdraw that authority.
Verifiable Trust
Everything is provable. Nothing is assumed. Trust is in the math, not in a list.
Open and Interoperable
Built on open standards for innovation and global adoption.
Built for Humanity
Aligned with freedom, dignity, and progress.
Volume I / Maturity Model
Chapter 1.9
Digital World Maturity Model
A five-level framework for understanding where an individual, organization, community, or government sits in their deployment.
1
Identity
Identity established. DIDs created. Basic credential issuance and verification. Vault initialized.
Existing
2
Identity and Trust
Verifiable credentials in use. Trust relationships established. Reputation active.
Existing
3
Plus Communication
LIFE Communication active. Relationship-based messaging operational.
Existing
4
Plus Payments
LIFE Pay operational. DUSD wallet active. Identity-linked transactions and merchant tools.
Existing
5
Full Sovereign Deployment
All layers active. Life Council operational. Jurisdiction established. ClearNODE running.
Existing
Volume II / The LIFE Stack
Volume II
The LIFE Stack: Thirteen Layers (L0 to L12)
Thirteen layers secure digital life, from foundation to experience. Each layer is independently valuable. Together they form one universal protocol stack.
On the layer numbers
L0 is Governance. Numbers ascend by dependency. Identity at L4 is the root. Payments at L5 settles value on the Digital World Chain. Assets at L6 holds durable ownership records that bridge the real world to the digital one.
MobileDesktopWebVoiceXR / ARWearables
Personal DIAgent FrameworkMemory LayerModel NetworkSkills & Tools
Social GraphCommunitiesContentReputationMarket / FeedEvents
MessagingVoiceVideoPresenceRooms / GroupsBroadcast
Personal VaultFile StorageSharded BackupData MarketsMemory StoreSync
Health RecordsVitalsWearablesActivityCare NetworkMedical Vault
L6
Assets
Ownership & Records
Property / TitlesVehiclesBusiness EntitiesCivic RecordsGenealogy (UGS)Estate / Inheritance
Multi-WalletDUSDNATIVEDGOLDConvert / SwapSettlementMerchant
DIDCredentialsAuthorityRecoveryTrust NetworkReputation
LIFE NamespaceDID ResolutionService DiscoveryRoutingEndpoint MapSearch
Home NodeEdge NodeCloud NodeMobile NodeEnterprise NodeValidator Node
Compute NetworkStorage NetworkValidation NetworkRouting NetworkP2P OverlayBandwidth Layer
Protocol GovernanceStandards CouncilDispute ResolutionTreasury / FundingUpgradesEcosystem
Volume II / The Entity Model
Chapter 2.2
The Entity Model
Every participant in the LIFE Stack holds a verifiable identity.
People
Individuals and families. The sovereign root of the stack.
Organizations
Companies and nonprofits, with verifiable legal-entity identity.
DI Agents
Personal and autonomous Digital Intelligence, acting under human authority.
Devices
Phones, IoT, XR, and more, each with its own identity.
Applications
Web, mobile, and desktop software, identified and permissioned.
Things / IoT
Sensors, machines, and systems that act and report verifiably.
Volume II / How LIFE Works
Chapter 2.3
How LIFE Works
The same seven steps run beneath every interaction on the stack.
1
Interact
The person, or an agent acting for them, interacts through the LIFE interface on any surface.
2
Authenticate
The interface uses the person's identity to authenticate the request. No password, no shared secret.
3
Discover
Services are discovered and connected through LIFE resolution.
4
Store
Data is stored securely in the person's storage layer, encrypted under their keys.
5
Act with authority
Digital Intelligence and agents act only with the person's granted authority.
6
Connect
The communication and social layers connect the person to others.
7
Verify and power
The network verifies, routes, and powers everything beneath.
Volume II / Trust Levels
Chapter 2.4
Trust Levels Framework
Trust levels gate access to payments, governance, communication, and credentials across the stack.
| Level | Name | How achieved | Capabilities |
| 0 | Anonymous | No verification. | Limited access. No payments, no governance. |
| 1 | Self-Attested | Identity claimed, not verified by a third party. | Basic communication, self-declared claims only. |
| 2 | Verified | Verified by another trusted entity. | Standard payments, community access, counterparty trust. |
| 3 | Professionally Attested | Verified by a licensed professional or accredited institution. | Advanced capabilities, high-value agreements. |
| 4 | Government Validated | Validated by a SEDI or JEDI government issuer. | Full governance, high-value transactions, cross-jurisdiction recognition. |
| 5 | High-Assurance | Multi-factor, multi-issuer, cryptographically anchored. | All capabilities. ClearNODE sovereignty. Institutional trust. |
Volume III / LIFE Identity
Volume III
LIFE Identity
The core of the stack. How identities are created, verified, anchored, and maintained without a central authority.
3.1 Why self-certifying identity
Most identity systems solve the wrong problem. They ask whether an issuer is on a trusted list. LIFE Identity asks whether the math verifies. A self-certifying identifier derives its authority entirely from cryptographic key pairs — no central registry, no certificate authority, no ledger.
3.2 The three domains
| Domain | Role |
| Identity domain | Creates self-verifiable identifiers without a central authority. |
| Record domain | Links identity to verifiable records without revealing any other data. |
| Storage domain | Encrypts and stores data across secure jurisdictions, using keys held solely by the user. |
Volume III / LIFE Login
Chapter 3.6
LIFE Login
Passwordless, identity-bound authentication. A relying party presents a challenge. The person's Life App signs it. A session is established. No password, no email, no shared secret.
1
Download the regional Life App
The person installs their regional Life App from the store or the Clear marketplace.
2
Create a decentralized identity
The app generates the person's identity locally. No account is created on a server.
3
Scan the QR code
The relying party shows a QR challenge. The person scans it with the Life App.
4
Access instantly
The app signs the challenge, the session is established, and access is granted.
Volume III / SEDI Government Bridge
Chapter 3.7
SEDI: State Endorsed Digital Identity
Utah's model for how a government endorses an individual credential without holding or controlling the underlying identity.
What SEDI does not do
The State does not surrender legislative authority. It does not adopt a private currency. It does not hand residents' data to any company.
Three steps to integrate
One, establish a state issuer identity. Two, issue an endorsement credential at the end of the existing verification pipeline. Three, expose a discovery endpoint for the issuer. Implementable in weeks.
Volume IV / LIFE Pay
Volume IV
LIFE Pay and Commerce
Trusted value exchange built on identity. LIFE Pay moves value across wallets and jurisdictions, settled on Digital World Chain.
| Value | Role | Status |
| DUSD | Dollar stablecoin for payments, merchant settlement, and cross-jurisdiction transfer. | Existing |
| DGOLD | Gold-backed digital value, supported under the Utah Gold and Currency Innovation Acts. | Existing |
| NATIVE | The network value token, swappable against DUSD and other assets. | Existing |
| Linked accounts | Bank, card, and external wallet balances shown in a unified view, never taken into custody. | Existing |
Volume V / LIFE Communication
Volume V
LIFE Communication
Trusted, relationship-based communication anchored to verified identity. No spam, no unknown senders, no platform lock-in.
Capabilities: Messaging, Voice, Video, Presence, Rooms and Groups, Broadcast. Each message and call is end-to-end encrypted and bound to the participants' identities.
Volume VI / LIFE Social
Volume VI
LIFE Social
A portable, user-owned social layer. The social graph, communities, content, and reputation all belong to the person, not to a platform.
Status
LIFE Social is under active development. The reference implementation, ClearCommunity, is being built by forking the AT Protocol and binding accounts to LIFE Identity. In Development
Volume VII / LIFE Storage
Volume VII
LIFE Storage and Vault
Encrypted personal storage that the person controls. Files are encrypted and sharded across the network.
Capabilities: Personal Vault, File Storage, Sharded Backup, Data Markets, Memory Store, Sync.
Volume VIII / LIFE Health
Volume VIII
LIFE Health
A health and wellbeing layer built on the same identity, storage, and consent guarantees as the rest of the stack.
Capabilities: Health Records, Vitals, Wearables, Activity, Care Network, Medical Vault.
Status
The health layer is defined in the architecture and partially implemented. In Development
Volume IX / Digital Intelligence
Volume IX
Digital Intelligence
The intelligence layer of the stack. Personal DI, an agent framework, a memory layer, a model network, and skills and tools.
Portfolio Analyst
Analyzes portfolio performance and provides insights.
Finance
Market Researcher
Real-time market insights, trends, and competitor analysis.
Research
Compliance Advisor
Tracks regulations and helps keep activities compliant.
Compliance
Transaction Assistant
Helps prepare, review, and track transactions.
Operations
Document Summarizer
Summarizes long documents and extracts key information.
Productivity
Community Manager
Helps manage community communications effectively.
Community
Volume X / Governance
Volume X
Governance and Councils
Decision support, not decision automation. Digital World governance helps humans ask better questions while remaining accountable at every step.
Constitutional requirement
The Life Council is decision support, not decision making. Under the Human Primacy principle this distinction is non-negotiable.
Volume XI / Node, Network, Resolution
Volume XI
Node, Network, and Resolution
The three layers beneath identity that make the stack run and make identities findable.
| Node | Role |
| Home Node | Household storage, local DI, resolution, validation, under the family's control. |
| Edge Node | Low-latency presence near the person for fast responses. |
| Cloud Node | Heavier compute and reasoning for deeper work. |
| Mobile Node | The phone, fast and private, holding identity and signing. |
| Enterprise Node | Organizational deployment with team and agent management. |
| Validator Node | Verifies events and secures the network. |
Volume XII / Deployment Guide
Volume XII
Deployment Guide
Everything needed to deploy the LIFE Stack in any environment, from a personal phone to a sovereign national deployment.
| Model | Serves | Hardware | Layers active |
| Personal (App) | Any individual, any phone | Existing smartphone | Identity, Pay, Communication, Vault, Recovery |
| Personal (ClearPHONE) | Individuals wanting full hardware integration | ClearPHONE | All personal layers plus hardware key management |
| Family or Organization | Families, businesses, communities | ClearNODE | All layers plus jurisdiction and agent management |
| Enterprise or Government | Institutions, agencies, jurisdictions | Server cluster or cloud | Full stack plus SEDI and councils |
Volume XIII / Reference Deployments
Volume XIII
Reference Deployments
Real-world implementations that show how the LIFE Stack operates across industries, regions, and use cases.
| Deployment | Region | Context | Status |
| Utah Life Pilot / SEDI | Utah, USA | Government identity endorsement | In Development |
| Digital World App | Global | Consumer life operating system | Existing |
| BNZ.exchange | New Zealand | Private banking on LIFE rails | Concept Pilot |
| NZ Life Dashboard | New Zealand | Full-stack financial and governance | Existing |
| Aotearoa Life | Aotearoa / NZ | Indigenous-governed sovereign platform | Existing |
| Pacific Union | Pacific | Union of sovereign kingdoms | In Development |
| Tongan Life | Kingdom of Tonga | National digital platform | Pilot |
| University Place District | Orem, Utah | Physical innovation district | Planned |
Volume XIII / Reference Deployments / Utah Life Pilot
Reference Deployment 01
Utah Life Pilot and SEDI
The primary government reference implementation.
Government Identity -- Utah -- SEDI -- In Development
A family-centric identity Utah already has the law for.
Utah Life lets individuals and families manage licenses and state records, birth, marriage and death certificates, guardianship approvals, payments and assets, and reputation — privately and verifiably.
Privacy ActDigital Choice ActDAO ActGold ActHB 470SB 260
Stakeholder
State of Utah Governor's Office of Planning and Budget. RFI response submitted 6 October 2025.
The offer
ClearFoundation contributes the full fifty million dollar Utah Life system at no cost, contingent on inclusion as a SEDI reference implementation.
What the State provides
Verification of facts and issuance of an endorsement credential. No personal data in the credential.
What the State retains
Full legislative authority. All personal data stays in existing State systems.
Why Utah is the global reference
Three-step integration, no changes to existing agency databases, implementable in weeks. The model is exportable to any state, nation, or tribal government.
Volume XIII / Reference Deployments / Digital World App
Reference Deployment 02
Digital World App
The consumer life operating system. One application that carries a person's identity, wallet, communication, agreements, vault, and Digital Intelligence agents.
Consumer -- Any Device -- Global
One identity, every layer.
Identity, Communication, Assets, Property, Business, Community, Health, Agreements, Travel, Digital Agents — all in one application.
IdentityCommunicationAssetsCommunityHealthDigital Agents
Login
QR scan with the Life App. No password.
Assets
Accounts, assets, currencies, crypto. Convert, swap, and bridge confirmed by QR signature.
Digital Agents
Built-in and private DI agents, each acting under the person's authority.
Jurisdictions
Multiple wallets for multiple jurisdictions, switchable from the header.
Volume XIII / Reference Deployments / BNZ.exchange
Reference Deployment 03
BNZ.exchange
Private banking where linked accounts, real assets, digital currencies, and smart loan agreements live in one secure balance sheet.
Deployment context
A concept pilot demonstrating how an existing financial institution adopts the LIFE Stack without replacing its current systems. Concept Pilot
Volume XIII / Reference Deployments / NZ Life
Reference Deployment 04
New Zealand Life Dashboard
A full-stack native deployment reaching Maturity Level 5, with financial, governance, and community capabilities in one interface.
Lesson for deployers
NZ Life is the reference for a fully sovereign life operating environment with governance included. Any deployment aiming for Level 5 should use it as the architectural reference.
Volume XIII / Reference Deployments / Aotearoa Life
Reference Deployment 05
Aotearoa Life
An Indigenous-governed sovereign life platform — independent authority over one's own identity, data, and digital life, expressed in te reo Maori.
Why this matters
Aotearoa Life shows the stack carrying a people's own language, governance, and data sovereignty. This is the governance reference for Indigenous and treaty-based deployments.
Volume XIII / Reference Deployments / Pacific Union
Reference Deployment 06
Pacific Union
A union of sovereign kingdoms, countries, and communities. Twelve deployments on one stack.
Union of Sovereign Jurisdictions -- Pacific
One standard, twelve jurisdictions.
Digital identity and passports, voting, birth certificates, civic records, assets. Each kingdom keeps its own brand, currency, and governance on shared infrastructure.
AtooiAotearoaHawaiiSamoaFijiTongaTuvaluVanuatuMaliSaudi ArabiaTexas
Why this is the scale reference
Twelve deployments on one stack, each with its own brand, currency, and law, interoperating through common identity and records.
Volume XIII / Reference Deployments / Tongan Life
Reference Deployment 07
Tongan Life
The official digital platform of Tonga, a Digital Kingdom.
Lesson for deployers
Start with services people already want — weddings, travel, family, and registration — then expand into full membership and sovereign digital relationships.
Volume XIII / Reference Deployments / University Place District
Reference Deployment 08
University Place Digital Innovation District
A physical-world reference combining digital infrastructure, commerce systems, education, and venture development at University Place in Orem, Utah.
Lesson for deployers
The value of the stack becomes tangible when it bridges into the physical world: identity at the door, commerce in the shops, credentials at the university, infrastructure in the buildings.
Volume XIV / Standards and APIs
Volume XIV
Standards and APIs
The open standards the LIFE Stack is built on and the interfaces a builder uses to integrate.
| LIFE capability | Built on | Status |
| LIFE Identity | Self-certifying key event identity, chained verifiable credentials. | Existing |
| LIFE Identity (issuance) | OID4VCI and OID4VP with selective-disclosure tokens. | In Development |
| LIFE Identity (mobile) | ISO 18013-5 and 18013-7 for mobile driver license compatibility. | In Development |
| LIFE Communication | Open federated messaging protocol, with identity binding. | Existing |
| LIFE Social | AT Protocol fork. Reference node: ClearCommunity. | In Development |
| LIFE Storage | Content-addressed storage network, with identity-keyed encryption. | Existing |
| LIFE Login | QR challenge, signed presentation, session establishment. | Existing |
| LIFE Pay | Quote, convert, swap, bridge, QR-signed settlement on Digital World Chain. | Existing |
Volume XIV / Building on Digital World
Chapter 14.5
Building on Digital World
So that any builder, including a Digital Intelligence, can construct applications, browsers, services, and communications on the Digital World Login and Payments system.
Every application on the stack follows the same shape: authenticate with LIFE Login, resolve what is needed, read and write data with consent, move value with LIFE Pay, and delegate work to a DI agent under the person's authority.
- Applications. Web, mobile, and desktop apps that log a person in by QR and act on their data with consent.
- Browsers. An identity browser that resolves LIFE addresses to services.
- Services. Back-end services that verify a presentation locally and never hold a password.
- Communications. Messaging and social experiences bound to identity rather than to accounts.
- Digital Intelligence. Agents that read a person's authorized context, act within scoped authority, and remain revocable.
Appendix A / Utah Legislative Framework
Appendix A
Utah's Leadership in Digital Freedom
Utah has led the nation in digital rights and innovation. These frameworks form a blueprint where identity, payments, and records are controlled by the people.
| Framework | What it does |
| The Privacy Act | Ensures user-first control over personal data. |
| The Digital Choice Act | Codifies the right to self-owned logins, applications, and data. |
| The Currency Innovation Act and Utah Gold Act | Enable physical and digital gold and silver payments, supporting DUSD and DGOLD. |
| The Utah DAO Act | Allows autonomous digital entities such as decentralized registries. |
| House Bill 470, the Government Digital Identity Act | Powers decentralized civic records. |
| SB 260, Individual Digital Identity Amendments | Protects personal choice, control, and privacy in state-recognized digital identity systems. |
| SB 725 and the SEDI framework | Legislative basis for the State Endorsed Digital Identity program. |
Appendix B / The Clear Companies
Appendix B
The Clear Companies
The organizational foundation behind the reference implementation.
| Entity | Role |
| ClearFoundation | Holds trademarks, stewards the open source, submitted the Utah Life Pilot. |
| ClearHoldings | Holds the patents. Proposed Nasdaq listing: CLEAR. |
| ClearFund | The capital vehicle for building and deploying the ecosystem. |
| ClearCenter | ClearNODE, ClearVM, ClearOS — simplified, secure, decentralized deployment. |
| ClearCellular | ClearPHONE, ClearCELL, ClearID — individuals control how their data is stored and shared. |
| ClearSoftware | Managed commercial distribution of the LIFE Stack. |