01 // VISION The Future of Economic Trust

Building the Trust Infrastructure for the Digital Economy

The modern economy relies on millions of interactions between businesses, institutions, experts, and administrations.

Yet, these actors still work with fragmented systems, isolated documents, and information that is difficult to verify.

OnePlace exists to provide a common infrastructure where economic facts become verifiable, reusable, and understandable by all authorized actors.

Why OnePlace?

Economic trust should be built into infrastructure, not reconstructed for every interaction.

Today, every bank, administration, investor, or firm reconstructs its own view of a company.

  • The same documents are requested multiple times.
  • The same checks are repeated.
  • The same information is re-entered into dozens of systems.

This fragmentation slows down businesses, increases costs, and limits automation.

Mission

Create a common language for trusted economic information.

OnePlace's mission is to enable businesses, institutions, and organizations to exchange economic information based on verifiable facts rather than isolated documents.

The goal is not to replace existing actors, but to allow them to collaborate through a single trust infrastructure.

The Problem

The digital economy suffers from several structural limitations:

  • [01]data scattered across multiple tools
  • [02]lack of a common economic language
  • [03]constant duplication of checks
  • [04]poor interoperability between organizations
  • [05]trust rebuilt at every interaction
  • [06]largely manual compliance
  • [07]difficult access to expertise and proofs

Each organization holds a piece of reality, but no one has a coherent and reusable vision.

The Opportunity

Artificial intelligence, automation, and digital services demand reliable, structured, and contextualized information.

reduce complexity
automate decisions
share information
create trust

[ LAYER_01 ]

A New Economic Layer

OnePlace introduces a new digital layer between businesses and institutions.

This layer facilitates their exchanges through a common economic language.

Every interaction can be understood, verified, and reused by authorized actors.

Architecture

Economic Trust Infrastructure

Trust becomes infrastructure rather than process.

Instead of rebuilding trust for every operation, OnePlace allows it to be embedded directly into economic exchanges.

Products, organizations, and industries can thus share a common foundation of understanding while maintaining their own business rules.

Terminal Graph

Economic Claim Graph

Building a shared memory of economic activity.

Each interaction progressively enriches a structured economic memory.

This memory is not limited to documents. It connects events, claims, validations, and their relationships to enable faster, more transparent, and more automatable decisions.

Over time, this asset becomes one of the main drivers of value in the ecosystem.

Strategic Principles

All decisions made in the project are based on a few founding principles:

01

Infrastructure before applications.

02

Facts before opinions.

03

Trust before automation.

04

Interoperability before lock-in.

05

Minimal disclosure by default.

06

Security by design.

07

AI with human governance.

08

Global architecture, local adaptation.

Long-Term Vision

Our ambition goes beyond creating a new SaaS platform.

We want to build an infrastructure capable of supporting the evolution of the digital economy over the long term.

This infrastructure must be usable by an SME as well as a bank, an administration, a marketplace, or a State, without questioning its fundamental architecture.

Global Expansion

The core is designed to remain identical regardless of the country.

Only the following evolve:

  • regulations
  • authorities
  • trust policies
  • local integrations

This approach allows the platform to be progressively extended to new sectors and territories without rebuilding the system.

Why It Matters

The most sustainable infrastructures do not solve an isolated business problem.

Just as Internet protocols have allowed networks to communicate with each other, OnePlace aims to provide an infrastructure enabling organizations to share verifiable economic information simply, securely, and interoperably.

Measuring Success

The success of OnePlace is not measured solely by the number of users.

It is measured by the infrastructure's ability to progressively become a shared standard among businesses, experts, institutions, and administrations.

Every new product, every new partner, and every new sector reinforces the value of the entire ecosystem.