AI agents are rapidly moving beyond conversations. They can already research vendors, purchase software, manage subscriptions, provision infrastructure, coordinate workflows, book services, and make decisions on behalf of people and organizations.
The technology to build agents exists, but the missing piece is trust. How do you know which agent is acting? Who owns it? What is it allowed to do? How much can it spend? When should a human be involved? And how does an agent earn greater autonomy over time? Orite exists to answer those questions.
Today, businesses have systems for trusting people. Employees have identities, permissions, spending limits, approval chains, audit logs, and accountability. AI agents have none of these by default.
As agents gain access to tools, bank accounts, software subscriptions, cloud infrastructure, and company resources, organizations need a way to govern them with the same level of confidence they apply to employees and vendors. We believe trust will become one of the most important layers in the AI stack. That is what we are building.
Orite helps organizations safely deploy AI agents that can take real-world actions. We provide the infrastructure needed to verify agent identity, assign permissions, define spending controls, manage approvals, monitor activity, measure trust, and expand autonomy responsibly.
Whether an agent is purchasing software, managing subscriptions, accessing systems, provisioning infrastructure, or coordinating business operations, Orite helps ensure every action happens within defined boundaries.
Payments are often the first moment organizations realize they need trust infrastructure. Giving an agent access to money is easy; knowing when it should be allowed to spend is much harder. A trusted agent may be allowed to purchase software, renew subscriptions, buy API credits, pay vendors, book travel, or commission research.
But trust extends beyond payments. The same agent may also access customer data, modify infrastructure, trigger workflows, approve requests, and interact with external systems. Orite provides the controls and accountability required for both.
Organizations are beginning to deploy agents across every department. Operations teams use agents to automate workflows, finance teams to manage purchasing, IT teams to provision resources, and customer teams to support users. As these systems gain authority, businesses need a clear way to define limits, monitor activity, and understand which agents can be trusted with greater responsibility. Orite provides that foundation.
Similarly, we believe personal AI agents will become increasingly capable. People will ask agents to compare products, manage subscriptions, book travel, purchase services, and handle routine decisions. But consumers will need confidence that those agents are acting within their preferences, budgets, and expectations. Trust is just as important for individuals as it is for enterprises. Orite is building toward a future where both businesses and consumers can confidently delegate real-world actions to AI agents.
We believe the future will contain millions of agents operating on behalf of people and organizations. Some will conduct research, manage infrastructure, purchase products and services, or coordinate entire business processes. As that future arrives, trust becomes infrastructure. Every agent will need an identity, every action will need accountability, every permission will need a reason, and every increase in autonomy will need to be earned.
Today, Orite focuses on Agent Identity, Spending Policies, Human Oversight, Activity Monitoring, and Trust Intelligence. Tomorrow, we envision a broader ecosystem where agents can carry trusted identities, verifiable histories, and transparent reputations across platforms and organizations. Just as businesses rely on identity and trust systems to interact online, AI agents will require similar foundations to operate safely at scale.
Our Mission
To build the identity and trust layer for AI agents. Because before an AI agent can spend money, access systems, make decisions, or act on someone's behalf, it must first be trusted.
Pratik
Founder of Orite
From spending controls to autonomous execution, Orite provides the trust systems agents need to operate responsibly.