

Now deploying in select jurisdictions
Machine Laws. Sovereign-Grade.
Early Access to Future of AI Growth
Govern faster. Transact safer. Audit instantly.



Americas · Gulf States · Asia-Pacific



Americas · Gulf States · Asia-Pacific



Americas · Gulf States · Asia-Pacific
Governments
Govern AI. Capture value. Stay relevant.
Governments
Govern AI. Capture value. Stay relevant.
Governments
Govern AI. Capture value. Stay relevant.
Enterprises
Compliance before action. At scale.
Enterprises
Compliance before action. At scale.
Enterprises
Compliance before action. At scale.
AI Systems
The legal API layer for autonomous systems.
AI Systems
The legal API layer for autonomous systems.
AI Systems
The legal API layer for autonomous systems.
Yesterday, law was text. Tomorrow, it's protocol.
Yesterday, law was text. Tomorrow, it's protocol.
Yesterday, law was text. Tomorrow, it's protocol.
The international rule of law
is becoming the rule of code.
The international rule of law is becoming the rule of code.
Law is the operating system of civilization. For centuries, law has encoded agreements, resolved disputes, and scaled civilizations.
Now AI is entering the economy as an active participant. It will transact faster than any human can read the rules that govern it.
Everyone's building AI. No one's building what AI needs.
Code of Nations compiles national law into machine-readable protocols — so AI can operate under verifiable rules, and governments can govern at machine speed.
Timeline:
Pilots commencing 2026
Scope:
Commercial & Contract Law
Partners:
Americas · Gulf States · Asia-Pacific
Americas · Gulf States · Asia

Founder & CEO, Code of Nations
FAQs
FAQs
FAQs
Common Questions
Common Questions
Common Questions
For government and enterprise evaluation teams.
Why would a nation adopt this?
Relevance. Nations that cannot govern AI at machine speed will lose capital, talent, and tax base to those that can. Machine-readable law gives you three things: the ability to regulate autonomous systems before they act (not after they cause harm), a new mechanism to capture value from AI-driven commerce, and a competitive edge in attracting the companies building the future.
What does Code of Nations build?
Legal infrastructure for the AI economy. We compile national law — statutes, regulations, commercial rules — into machine-readable protocols. The output is a canonical legal repository with cryptographic provenance and a Legal API that systems can query in real time. We turn law into code. That's it.
What happens if laws change?
Law changes. The system is designed for it. Every legal protocol is versioned with cryptographic provenance — you always know which rules applied at which time. When a jurisdiction updates its laws, amendments flow through the same publishing pipeline: drafted, validated, signed by the appropriate authority, and deployed. Governments retain full control over their legal updates. We provide the infrastructure; you control the content.
How do jurisdictions start?
Small scope. Fast proof. We begin with a single legal domain — typically commercial and contract law — and compile it into a working module. This takes 3-6 months depending on complexity. The pilot includes: a machine-readable legal repository, a Legal API for compliance queries, and a small cohort of enterprises or developers testing real transactions under verifiable rules.
Does this replace courts?
No. Courts interpret. We translate. Code of Nations converts existing law into machine-readable format — it does not write new law or adjudicate disputes. Judges remain the final authority on interpretation. Legislatures remain the source of law. We provide infrastructure that makes compliance faster, enforcement more auditable, and ambiguity visible before it becomes litigation. Think of it as a layer beneath courts, not above them.
Who controls the data?
Deployment options include sovereign infrastructure — on-premise or government-cloud — for jurisdictions that require full data residency. Nothing leaves your environment without explicit authorization. Access controls, audit logs, and encryption are standard. We build the rails; you control what runs on them.
Why would a nation adopt this?
Relevance. Nations that cannot govern AI at machine speed will lose capital, talent, and tax base to those that can. Machine-readable law gives you three things: the ability to regulate autonomous systems before they act (not after they cause harm), a new mechanism to capture value from AI-driven commerce, and a competitive edge in attracting the companies building the future.
What does Code of Nations build?
Legal infrastructure for the AI economy. We compile national law — statutes, regulations, commercial rules — into machine-readable protocols. The output is a canonical legal repository with cryptographic provenance and a Legal API that systems can query in real time. We turn law into code. That's it.
What happens if laws change?
Law changes. The system is designed for it. Every legal protocol is versioned with cryptographic provenance — you always know which rules applied at which time. When a jurisdiction updates its laws, amendments flow through the same publishing pipeline: drafted, validated, signed by the appropriate authority, and deployed. Governments retain full control over their legal updates. We provide the infrastructure; you control the content.
How do jurisdictions start?
Small scope. Fast proof. We begin with a single legal domain — typically commercial and contract law — and compile it into a working module. This takes 3-6 months depending on complexity. The pilot includes: a machine-readable legal repository, a Legal API for compliance queries, and a small cohort of enterprises or developers testing real transactions under verifiable rules.
Does this replace courts?
No. Courts interpret. We translate. Code of Nations converts existing law into machine-readable format — it does not write new law or adjudicate disputes. Judges remain the final authority on interpretation. Legislatures remain the source of law. We provide infrastructure that makes compliance faster, enforcement more auditable, and ambiguity visible before it becomes litigation. Think of it as a layer beneath courts, not above them.
Who controls the data?
Deployment options include sovereign infrastructure — on-premise or government-cloud — for jurisdictions that require full data residency. Nothing leaves your environment without explicit authorization. Access controls, audit logs, and encryption are standard. We build the rails; you control what runs on them.
Why would a nation adopt this?
Relevance. Nations that cannot govern AI at machine speed will lose capital, talent, and tax base to those that can. Machine-readable law gives you three things: the ability to regulate autonomous systems before they act (not after they cause harm), a new mechanism to capture value from AI-driven commerce, and a competitive edge in attracting the companies building the future.
What does Code of Nations build?
Legal infrastructure for the AI economy. We compile national law — statutes, regulations, commercial rules — into machine-readable protocols. The output is a canonical legal repository with cryptographic provenance and a Legal API that systems can query in real time. We turn law into code. That's it.
What happens if laws change?
Law changes. The system is designed for it. Every legal protocol is versioned with cryptographic provenance — you always know which rules applied at which time. When a jurisdiction updates its laws, amendments flow through the same publishing pipeline: drafted, validated, signed by the appropriate authority, and deployed. Governments retain full control over their legal updates. We provide the infrastructure; you control the content.
How do jurisdictions start?
Small scope. Fast proof. We begin with a single legal domain — typically commercial and contract law — and compile it into a working module. This takes 3-6 months depending on complexity. The pilot includes: a machine-readable legal repository, a Legal API for compliance queries, and a small cohort of enterprises or developers testing real transactions under verifiable rules.
Does this replace courts?
No. Courts interpret. We translate. Code of Nations converts existing law into machine-readable format — it does not write new law or adjudicate disputes. Judges remain the final authority on interpretation. Legislatures remain the source of law. We provide infrastructure that makes compliance faster, enforcement more auditable, and ambiguity visible before it becomes litigation. Think of it as a layer beneath courts, not above them.
Who controls the data?
Deployment options include sovereign infrastructure — on-premise or government-cloud — for jurisdictions that require full data residency. Nothing leaves your environment without explicit authorization. Access controls, audit logs, and encryption are standard. We build the rails; you control what runs on them.
contact@codeofnations.org
HQ: Miami, Florida
© 2026 Code of Nations
All Rights Reserved
HQ: Miami, Florida
© 2026 Code of Nations
All Rights Reserved