Compliance & Safety
Almost nobody fails an audit on principle. They fail it on a certificate that expired in April, a training record for someone who left, an inspection that slipped a month because the person who books them was on leave. The requirement was known. The date was known. The tracking lived in a spreadsheet that was accurate on the day it was written and has been decaying since, and the only real control was one person remembering to look at it.
Skynet turns that spreadsheet into something that watches itself. The obligations, the evidence, and the dates sit in unified memory; an agent checks them against the calendar and against your actual records, and raises what is approaching or already lapsed — before the auditor does.
How it works
Get the obligations into memory
Load your compliance register, your certifications, your safety procedures, and the training requirements per role. Connect the HR and document systems that hold the evidence. The agent needs both the rule and the proof to check one against the other.
Let it check continuously
The agent runs the register against reality on a schedule: which certificates expire in the next 60 days, which staff are working roles they no longer hold current training for, which inspections are past due. Every item, every time, not a sample.
Escalate on your timeline
You set the runway. A first notice at 60 days out, a reminder at 30, an escalation to the manager at 14. The agent drafts each one with the specific item, the owner, and the date attached.
Have the pack ready before it is asked for
Because the evidence is in the same memory as the register, the agent can assemble the current compliance picture on request — what is in date, what is not, what is being remediated and by whom. An audit becomes a retrieval instead of a scramble.
Build it from a prompt
Describe your register and the runway you want.
The point is not to make compliance easier to prove. It is to make it harder to lose track of. Most lapses are administrative rather than deliberate, and administrative failures are precisely what an agent that never forgets a date is for.