autocomp

$ open-source · runs inside Claude Code

The autonomous company
you run yourself.

autocomp turns a coding agent into a working company: a tick loop that plans, dispatches role agents, ships, and reports — with a human approval gate on every dollar and every outbound message. No platform between you and your business. Your keys, your repo, your ledger.

One tick, on a heartbeat

The whole company is a loop you can read in an afternoon. Every tick:

  1. 01

    Load state

    Charter, ledger, backlog, KPIs, approvals — plain markdown files in a git repo.

  2. 02

    Plan

    A CEO role picks the 1–3 highest-leverage moves. Every move gets a verifiable success criterion before anything runs.

  3. 03

    Dispatch

    Role subagents do the work — builder, marketer, analyst, sales. Each role is a markdown prompt you can edit.

  4. 04

    Gate

    Money, outbound messages, and destructive actions never execute inside the loop. They queue for human approval and ping your phone.

  5. 05

    Record

    Everything lands in an append-only ledger. What ran, what was skipped, what's blocked — no invented numbers, ever.

  6. 06

    Reschedule

    The loop books its own next heartbeat and goes quiet. One tick = one heartbeat.

Same job as the funded platforms. Opposite defaults.

Polsia and NanoCorp raised millions to run autonomous companies as a hosted platform, and take a cut of what yours earns. autocomp does the same job open-source, on your own keys: a gate on every dollar, a ledger that can't be quietly edited, and nobody skimming your revenue.

 The funded platformsautocomp
ModelPolsia, NanoCorp — hosted, closed sourceOpen source, runs in Claude Code on your keys
Cut of your revenuePolsia: 20% of revenue + ad spend. NanoCorp: 20% withdrawal feeNone. You keep all of it.
The approval gatePolsia: none (its top complaint). NanoCorp: manual, behind an "autonomous" pitchA hard gate on every spend and send, plus a push to your phone
Audit trailDashboard logsAppend-only ledger in git — can't be edited to hide a failure
Lock-inTheir cloud, their vaultIt's markdown and bash. Fork it, walk away anytime.
Price~$30–49/mo + a cut$0 self-hosted — you pay only your model subscription

The open-source agent runtimes these are built on — OpenClaw, Hermes — run unattended by default: one shipped a one-click remote-code-execution bug, the other's approval mode silently switches off inside containers. autocomp's whole point is that the gate actually fires. The trade: the hosted products ship sandboxing, SOC 2, and support; autocomp ships a constitution file and trusts you with root. Different buyers.

Two ways to run it

Same loop, same gates, same ledger — the only question is whose machine the heartbeat lives on.

Self-hosted

free · open source
  • Clone the repo, write your charter, start the loop in Claude Code
  • Your machine, your keys, your model subscription
  • Every role prompt and playbook is markdown — fork the constitution
  • Approval gates ping your own phone
Clone it on GitHub

Run by us

early access
  • We operate your company's loop on our infrastructure — 24/7 heartbeat
  • You write the charter; approvals still land on your phone
  • Your Stripe, your domain, your revenue — we run the ticks
  • Kanban + ledger access included; cancel and take the repo with you

Limited seats while we operate each company hands-on. Pricing announced with the first cohort.

Running on autocomp

Companies currently operated by an autocomp loop. Each entry is opt-in — a company publishes a small public manifest; everything else stays in its private state.

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Your company

Run a venture on autocomp and list it here with an opt-in manifest — name, one-liner, stage, URL. Verified-metrics badges are on the roadmap.

with the public release