Planned future public-benefit foundation

TH3 4P3X F0UND4T10N™ Platform

A planned public-benefit platform designed to turn accessible technology, practical support, offline continuity and responsible partnerships into help that can reach people regardless of income, confidence, connectivity, disability or location.

Current status: this page presents the proposed digital platform and long-term public-benefit plan for TH3 4P3X F0UND4T10N™. The platform concept and support-App foundations can be demonstrated, but the foundation is not yet presented as a registered charity or established legal body. Formal operation will require an appropriate structure, independent governance, safeguarding, financial controls, partner agreements and professional advice.

4P3X AI™ representing supportive, accessible and offline-capable technology
The platform purpose

A digital front door for practical public support.

TH3 4P3X F0UND4T10N™ Platform is intended to become the public-facing and operational home for a wider mission: making useful learning, guidance and support easier to reach before cost, weak connectivity or complicated systems exclude people.

It would bring together support Apps, offline knowledge, community access points, partner programmes, accessibility controls, safeguarding routes, evidence gathering and transparent public reporting in one coordinated platform.

  • Free-at-the-point-of-use access to approved support resources.
  • Offline-capable Apps and local knowledge packs that do not disappear with the signal.
  • Clear routes to qualified people, official services and emergency help where needed.
  • Human-controlled decisions, transparent limitations and responsible claims.
Why it exists

Support should not depend on having the perfect device, confidence or connection.

The platform is built around a simple public-benefit principle: people can need help at the exact moment they have run out of data, lost broadband, feel overwhelmed, cannot understand a complicated service or do not know where to start.

01

Reduce digital exclusion

Create routes to support for people with limited data, no home broadband, older devices, low digital confidence or unreliable rural connectivity.

02

Make support understandable

Use plain language, read-aloud, guided steps, visual structure and adaptable learning routes so information is easier to act on.

03

Keep help available offline

Allow approved knowledge and core tools to remain on-device or at a community support station after they have been downloaded.

04

Support dignity and privacy

Minimise personal data, avoid behavioural advertising and give people discreet ways to seek help without feeling exposed or judged.

05

Strengthen human services

Help users prepare questions, understand next steps and reach appropriate people rather than pretending technology can replace professionals.

06

Measure real usefulness

Test accessibility, continuity, confidence, successful signposting and partner outcomes instead of relying on inflated claims or download numbers alone.

Who it is intended to benefit

Designed for people who are often expected to navigate difficult systems alone.

The future platform can serve different communities through separate, carefully governed support routes rather than treating every person as if they had the same needs.

Children and learners

Accessible home learning, confidence building, guided practice and approved educational support through 4P3X SafeSpark™ and related tools.

Neurodivergent people

Calmer interfaces, simpler steps, adjustable pace, read-aloud options and support that respects different ways of learning and communicating.

Parents and carers

Practical guidance, understandable summaries, learning support and resources that can be revisited without constant internet access.

People facing loss or trauma

Non-judgmental first-step information, grounding resources and responsible signposting to qualified and emergency support.

Digitally excluded users

Guided help with basic digital tasks, forms, job preparation, online services and safe use of technology.

Older and isolated people

Clearer navigation, spoken guidance, practical reminders and access through trusted community locations.

Rural and low-signal communities

Downloadable resources and community support stations that continue operating when wider connectivity is weak or unavailable.

Animal owners and carers

Accessible dog-training, behaviour, enrichment and responsible-care guidance through the Four Paws support Apps.

Eight connected platform centres

One public-benefit platform, delivered through specialist centres.

Each centre can be developed and governed independently while sharing common accessibility, privacy, offline and evidence standards.

1. Free Support Access Centre

Hosts the approved support directory, SupportPass access routes, partner-funded connectivity options and downloadable support packs.

2. Accessible Learning Centre

Provides inclusive lessons, home practice, digital skills and adaptable learning experiences for children and adults.

3. Wellbeing and Life Guidance Centre

Brings together practical wellbeing, bereavement, recovery, confidence and everyday guidance with clear professional boundaries.

4. Community Support Station Centre

Coordinates secure local support libraries for community centres, libraries, shelters and other trusted public locations.

5. Devices and Connectivity Centre

Develops future programmes for donated devices, sponsored access, approved Wi-Fi gateways and data-exclusion reduction.

6. Offline Knowledge and Continuity Centre

Maintains reviewed local knowledge packs, version control, safe updates, service-worker caches and emergency continuity resources.

7. Partners, Volunteers and Community Centre

Supports councils, charities, schools, businesses, specialists and volunteers with onboarding, roles, training and evidence requirements.

8. Trust, Evidence and Assurance Centre

Oversees safeguarding, privacy, accessibility, complaints, impact measurement, public reporting and independent review.

A working starting point

15 existing support App foundations have already been developed.

The wider plan begins with technology that already exists within the 4P3X Verse Ecosystem™ rather than waiting for the future foundation to start from an empty page.

The current support-App foundations cover wellbeing, trauma-informed support, bereavement, survivor guidance, learning, digital skills, family support and dog care. Each selected public version still requires final specialist content review, safeguarding checks, accessibility testing, deployment verification and clear service boundaries before formal use.

  • A shared directory can make the support easier to find.
  • Local-first architecture allows many core resources to remain available offline.
  • Apps can be improved through evidence from real users and trusted partners.
  • New support packs can be added without rebuilding the entire network.
4P3X Verse Ecosystem™ identity representing connected support platforms
The role of 4P3X AI™

Supportive technology with clear human boundaries.

4P3X AI™ has been built to be calm, practical, supportive and capable of using approved local knowledge without requiring a permanent cloud connection.

Understand and organise

Explain difficult information, turn a large task into smaller steps and help a user identify what they need to do next.

Adapt the experience

Offer simpler wording, read-aloud, slower guidance, repetition and structured routes for different learning and communication needs.

Continue locally

Use approved knowledge stored on the device so selected support remains available when the wider internet is unavailable.

Prepare for human help

Help users collect questions, summarise concerns and understand which type of professional or service may be appropriate.

Respect consent and privacy

Keep memory visible and controlled, collect only what is necessary and avoid silently sending sensitive information elsewhere.

Know its limits

Never present 4P3X AI™ as a doctor, counsellor, lawyer, emergency responder, safeguarding lead or replacement for qualified people.

How free and offline access can work

More than one route into the same trusted support network.

The platform can combine several permission-based delivery models so a single provider or connection type is not responsible for the whole mission.

InstallDownload an approved support App and its local knowledge pack.
ConnectUse normal internet, sponsored access or a participating support network.
Continue offlineRetain core guidance, lessons and locally saved progress without a permanent connection.
Update safelyReceive reviewed content and security updates when connectivity returns.
Escalate responsiblyReach authorised people, official services or emergency help where necessary.

Personal device access

Install once on a phone, tablet or computer and keep selected support available locally.

Community access points

Connect through a secure support station in a library, shelter, school, community centre or trusted partner location.

Sponsored provider access

Work towards approved zero-rated domains, guest networks or funded data routes where providers and regulators permit them.

Proposed public-benefit programmes

Practical programmes that the platform could coordinate.

These programmes are future delivery proposals. Each would require funding, responsible partners, clear eligibility rules and measurable safeguards before launch.

Free Support Library

A reviewed collection of downloadable Apps, guides and local knowledge packs available without subscription fees.

Community Support Stations

Secure local servers and tablets offering offline resources at trusted public and charitable locations.

SafeSpark™ Learning Access

Free or sponsored home-practice resources for learners who need accessible additional support outside school.

Digital Confidence Pathway

Step-by-step help with devices, online forms, employment preparation and safe participation in digital services.

Family and Carer Support

Understandable resources for parents, carers and families supporting learning, wellbeing and everyday routines.

Continuity and Resilience Packs

Offline information packs for weak-signal areas, temporary accommodation, service disruption and community emergency planning.

Founder impact commitment

The 10% commitment.

Ciaran Kelly has committed that 10% of the profits he personally receives from businesses and products created through the Ciaran Kelly and 4P3X AI™ co-building process will be set aside to help build the future TH3 4P3X F0UND4T10N™.

This commitment is intended to create a long-term route towards funding free support Apps, accessibility work, offline access, community pilots, devices and responsible assurance.

Before formal charitable operation, the commitment must be supported by documented accounting, an appropriate legal structure, independent oversight and clear separation from commercial Kyzel Kreates™ funds.

Additional funding routes

A mixed and sustainable model.

  • Grants and public-benefit funding.
  • Council and community-service partnerships.
  • Corporate sponsorship that does not control user data.
  • Provider-contributed or sponsored connectivity.
  • Philanthropic donations after the correct legal structure exists.
  • Commercial Kyzel Kreates™ work supporting a defined public-benefit commitment.
Trust and governance

The public-benefit platform must be governed as seriously as it is designed.

Technology alone cannot create trust. The future platform needs independent challenge, clear responsibilities and visible evidence that vulnerable users are protected.

Independent governance

Trustees or directors with suitable experience, conflict declarations, recorded decisions and powers that do not sit with one founder alone.

Safeguarding by design

Named leads, escalation routes, content review, age-appropriate boundaries and no false presentation as an emergency service.

Privacy and security

Data minimisation, local-first options, encryption, retention rules, incident procedures and independent technical testing.

Accessible accountability

Plain-language policies, easy complaints, published limitations, accessible feedback and regular public impact reporting.

Proposed impact evidence

Success should be shown through useful outcomes.

The following are proposed measurement areas for future pilots—not current impact claims.

Access and continuity

How many people reached support, how much was available offline and whether access continued during connectivity problems.

Understanding and confidence

Whether users better understood information, felt more able to take a next step or needed less help navigating the interface.

Accessibility improvement

Barriers reported, barriers fixed, assistive modes used and results from disabled and neurodivergent testers.

Responsible signposting

Whether users were directed to suitable official, professional or emergency services without misleading claims.

Partner value

Time saved, repeat visits, support demand, staff feedback and whether the platform complemented existing services.

Trust and safety

Complaints, incidents, response times, privacy findings, safeguarding reviews and actions completed transparently.

Development pathway

From demonstrator to independently governed public benefit.

1

Platform demonstrator

Show the support network, the 15 existing support App foundations, offline architecture, partner model, public-benefit purpose and claims boundaries.

2

Controlled community pilot

Test a small number of reviewed Apps and one offline support station with a trusted partner and clear safeguarding arrangements.

3

Independent review and evidence

Use accessibility, security, subject-matter, legal and user feedback to decide what is safe, useful and ready to expand.

4

Formal foundation structure

Establish the appropriate legal body, governance, financial separation, policies and reporting before presenting it as a formal foundation or charity.

5

Partner-supported expansion

Add approved locations, support programmes and connectivity routes while maintaining public evidence and human control.

4P3X SafeSpark™ representing accessible learning and public benefit
Partners needed

A mission this wide must be built with people, not imposed on them.

The future platform could bring together organisations that already understand their communities and specialist responsibilities.

  • Councils, libraries and community centres.
  • Schools, colleges and accessible-learning specialists.
  • Charities, shelters and community-support organisations.
  • Broadband, mobile, device and infrastructure providers.
  • Safeguarding, privacy, clinical, legal and cybersecurity professionals.
  • Funders, universities, evaluators and people with lived experience.
The public-benefit promise

Useful support should remain available when the signal, money or confidence runs out.

The TH3 4P3X F0UND4T10N™ Platform is intended to help turn that promise into a responsibly governed, measurable and practical system—built around dignity, accessibility, offline continuity, honest limitations and human support.

Powered by 4P3X Intelligent AI™ Created by Kyzel Kreates™

Commercial-to-public-benefit model

The 4P3X AI™ 10% Impact Commitment

A founder commitment intended to help connect future qualifying profits personally received by Ciaran Kelly with the responsible development of the planned Foundation.

Read the approved commitment
Shared source of truth

Names, claims and status remain consistent.

A machine-readable register now maintains the approved brand names, App count, descriptions, status statements, URLs, pronunciation rules and prohibited claims.

Open the register