Compliance Command Center mark
Compliance Command Center
A Rupture Labs Product Rupture Labs
How the system works · The explainer

The Records
House

Compliance Command Center, explained as a staffed establishment.

Most AI compliance tools are a stranger you have to trust. CCC is a well-run records house, where you can watch each person do their one honest job. Ask a question. The answer is drawn from the real law, balanced across sources, every citation verified, signed by a human, and defensible to your examiner.

"You wouldn't trust a compliance program run by one anonymous box. So we didn't build one. We built a house, staffed by a doorkeeper, a registrar, a librarian, a notary, and an attorney. Each is accountable for one job you can see."

Built by Practitioners. Trusted by Regulators.
Every character → one real capability
01 · The premise

Twelve roles.
One accountable house.

Every person in the house maps to a real capability: a named system component doing one job you can inspect. That's the asset. It's what survives the skeptical buyer's "okay, but does it really do that?"

The Attorney, for instance, is a real human, not an automated box. Each role is accountable for one job you can see.

02 · The cast

Meet the house

Each character carries one job and names the system component behind it. Two crews run the place: one receives documents, one answers questions, both guarded by a set of specialists who never sleep.

The Intake · a document arrives
Co

The Couriers

Go to the regulators' own doorsteps daily, FinCEN, OFAC, FFIEC, the courts, and bring back the actual documents.

Source collectorsPrimary-source sourcing
Dk

The Doorkeeper

Checks every document: real and complete, or a blank cover page? Stubs are turned away at the threshold.

Input validationInput controls
Rg

The Registrar

Already have it? Skip. Newer or fuller version? Swap it in. New? File it. Subscriptions stay current.

Version controlLineage + freshness
Lb

The Librarian

Files each document in the right drawer (law, enforcement, guidance, typology), tagged by domain and jurisdiction.

Classification and filingClassification
The Answer · a question arrives
RL

Research Librarian

Pulls the best documents and gives every drawer a fair hearing, so the raw pile of regs can't bury enforcement actions or guidance.

Balanced retrievalBalanced retrieval
No

The Notary

Before any answer cites 31 CFR 1010.230, verifies that document is really there and authoritative. Can't verify it? Won't cite it.

SENTINEL citation gateNo hallucinated regs
At

The Attorney

Final sign-off: a qualified human reviews and attests before an answer reaches you. The machine drafts; the human decides.

Review Program / attestationHuman accountability
Human in the loop
A qualified human reviews and signs every answer. By design.
The Specialists & Guardians
Rk

The Recordkeeper

Logs every step: which document, which drawer, who verified, who signed. You can show your examiner exactly how an answer was reached.

Audit logAudit trail + lineage
Lk

The Lookout

Watches the horizon: proposed rules, open comment windows, and "a firm shaped like yours just got hit for X."

Horizon scanningForward-looking risk
Va

The Vault

Some rooms are sealed and access-controlled. Sensitive matters never mix with the open stacks.

Access isolationSegregation + access
Nw

Night Watchman

Tests around the clock that the house can still find and serve its records. If retrieval goes dark, the alarm rings.

Continuous self-testFail-loud monitoring
Bc

The Building Code

Rules carved into the walls that can't be broken: one official records room, everything filed by role and domain, nothing empty admitted.

Built-in guardrailsControls enforced by design
The foundation
These invariants can't be merged around. The house can't be built to violate them.
03 · Storyboard A · Inbound

Life of a document

How a regulation enters the house, from the agency's doorstep to the right drawer, on the record the whole way. Every frame is a trust claim.

01
Co
The Couriers

A Courier returns with an agency-sealed satchel, the actual document, fetched from the source.

✓ Trust claim
Straight from the source, not hearsay.
02
Dk
The Doorkeeper

Holds each doc to the light, waves in the full one, turns back the blank cover page.

✓ Trust claim
Nothing empty ever gets in.
03
Rg
The Registrar

Stamps "newer, replace," retiring the stale copy so the shelf holds only the current rule.

✓ Trust claim
Never a superseded rule.
04
Lb
The Librarian

Walks it to exactly the right labeled drawer, tagged by domain and jurisdiction.

✓ Trust claim
Scoped to your rules.
05
Rk
The Recordkeeper

Logs the arrival (who, what, when, where) before it ever leaves the loading dock.

✓ Trust claim
On the record from minute one.
04 · Storyboard B · Outbound

Life of a question

How a question becomes an answer you can defend: balanced across sources, every citation verified, signed by a human, and filed with its full trail.

01
?
The Question

A CCO asks at the front desk, a real question, in plain language.

✓ Trust claim
Asked in your own words.
02
RL
Research Librarian

Lays out a balanced spread of law, enforcement, and guidance, so none is drowned out.

✓ Trust claim
Balanced, not cherry-picked.
03
No
The Notary

Seals each verified citation, and refuses the one she can't find in the stacks.

✓ Trust claim
Zero invented citations.
04
At
The Attorney

A qualified human reviews and signs the attestation. The machine drafts; the human decides.

✓ Trust claim
A human stands behind it.
05
Rk
The Recordkeeper

The answer is handed across the desk; the full trail of how it was reached is filed.

✓ Trust claim
Defensible to your examiner.
05 · What buyers ask

Who answers your question

Every concern a CCO brings to the table maps to a named person doing a job you can inspect, and the system behind them.

"Does it stay fresh?"
The Couriers fetch daily; the Registrar keeps only the latest.
"Can I trust the source?"
The Couriers pull primary sources from the agency itself, never hearsay.
"Does it check the inputs?"
The Doorkeeper checks them: real and complete, or it doesn't come in.
"Does it make things up?"
The Notary verifies every citation, or it isn't said. The #1 AI fear
"What does it reject, and why?"
Doorkeeper turns back stubs · Notary rejects bad cites · Building Code blocks rule-breakers.
"Is a human accountable?"
The Attorney attests before it reaches you, and never decides alone.
"Can I defend it to my examiner?"
The Recordkeeper keeps the full trail of how the answer was reached.
"Does it know MY rules?"
The Librarian tags by domain & jurisdiction; retrieval scopes to your profile.
"What about rules that change?"
The Registrar swaps in the newer version; never cites a superseded rule.
"What happens when it breaks?"
The Night Watchman tells you loudly, and never lets the system fail in silence.
Compliance Command Center mark
06 · The system

Every character maps to a real, inspectable capability.

That's the whole point. It's what survives the skeptical buyer's "okay, but does it really do that?" The doorkeeper, the registrar, the librarian, the notary, the attorney. Each one is accountable for one job you can see.

Built by Practitioners. Trusted by Regulators.
Rupture Labs
A Rupture Labs Product
compliancecommand.center · rupturelabs.io

See the house at work

Explore Compliance Command Center, or read the practitioner field guides behind the thinking.

Explore CCC Read the guides