AccordsServers
The public/private boundary. Enforced in code, not promised in a policy.
Public frontier models for general reasoning. Private models for regulated data. The routing is deterministic — not a model guessing whether a request is safe.
The hybrid architecture is straightforward. A frontier model handles general planning, conversation, and reasoning. A private path handles the turns of the conversation that involve sensitive data. The customer experiences one assistant. The enterprise never sends a confidential record through a public endpoint.
What makes the architecture trustworthy is that the routing decision is code-enforced. Every request gets classified against an explicit policy. The private path is not a preference the model tries to honor — it is a rule the request cannot bypass.
One query. Two paths. One answer.
The on-prem alternative is worse than it looks.
The instinct at many large enterprises is to solve data sensitivity by shipping an on-prem model army. Train a model for every regulated domain, host them privately, route every request internally. It is expensive, it is slow, and it locks the business into whatever capability the private model hits today.
Frontier models improve every quarter. On-prem deployments improve on a budget cycle. Over a three-year horizon, the gap between the two widens. Hybrid closes it. The frontier improves, the private path stays under your control, and the routing decides which one handles which turn. The business gets the brain of a public model and the privacy posture of an on-prem stack — at a fraction of either cost.
A primitive the vault already enforces, made standalone.
The public/private routing decision already lives inside AccordsVault. AccordsServers formalizes that primitive as a first-class product — standalone routing infrastructure that enterprises can adopt without adopting the full vault. That is the Phase 2 delivery. Today, the boundary is real. GA makes it easier to buy as its own thing.
If your agent architecture is blocked on a hybrid story today, reach out. Early design partners are shaping what GA looks like.