EVE AI Core
Credo AI is a capable AI governance & GRC platform. If you are evaluating it, here is the surrounding market — including the enforcement & evidence layer Credo AI does not target — with every claim drawn from public documentation as of 2026.
Credo AI is a recognized leader in the AI governance category (Forrester Wave Leader, Q3 2025; included in Gartner's Market Guide for AI Governance Platforms). It is purpose-built for program-level governance — an AI registry, regulatory framework mapping (EU AI Act, NIST AI RMF, ISO/IEC 42001), risk assessments, shadow-AI discovery, vendor assessment, and human oversight workflows.
Teams evaluate alternatives when they need a different layer of the stack — most often a deterministic enforcement plane that decides each regulated action before it runs and produces signed, replayable evidence. That is a different job from AI governance & GRC, and it is where EVE CoreGuard leads.
Best for: regulated decisions (lending, healthcare, claims, trading) that must be enforced at the moment of decision and proven to an examiner — the gap Credo AI does not fill.
| Dimension | EVE CoreGuard | Credo AI |
|---|---|---|
| Primary purpose | Deterministic pre-execution governance & enforcement (the enforcement plane) | Program-level AI governance, risk & compliance (GRC) |
| Enforcement timing | Pre-execution gate — decides ALLOW / BLOCK / MODIFY before the action runs | Primarily post-hoc governance workflow & monitoring; runtime enforcement is a documented roadmap item |
| Decision model | Deterministic rule evaluation — same input always yields the same verdict | Policy Packs (curated checklists) + human review; GAIA assistant uses an LLM |
| Zero-LLM enforcement verdict | ✓ Zero-LLM enforcement verdict (Layer A) | — Publicly documented capability not identified. |
| Fail-closed runtime blocking | ✓ Fail-closed by default | — Human-in-the-loop escalation; Publicly documented capability not identified. |
| Cryptographic decision certificate | ✓ Ed25519-signed decision certificate per verdict | — Publicly documented capability not identified. |
| Offline / replay verification | ✓ Offline + replay verification | — Publicly documented capability not identified. |
| Runtime attestation | ✓ Runtime attestation (attestation-bound execution authority) | — Publicly documented capability not identified. |
| Signed audit lineage | ✓ Signed audit lineage (signed audit bus + Merkle roots) | Structured governance audit log (signing / tamper-evidence not publicly documented) |
| AI registry & framework mapping | Partial — regulatory packs, not a portfolio registry | ✓ Core strength — registry, mapping, assessments |
| Deployment | SaaS, VPC, or on-prem — no data leaves your tenant | SaaS, self-hosted (Kubernetes), air-gapped |
✓ = publicly documented · Partial = partial / configurable · — = "Publicly documented capability not identified."
Different layers of the AI governance stack — observability, AI security, and open-source guardrails. Many regulated teams run more than one.
Tell us your regulated decision and we will walk it through EVE CoreGuard — including a signed decision record you can verify offline. Pilot from $37,500; Enforcement from $150,000/yr.
Comparison based on publicly available product documentation as of June 2026; competitor capabilities evolve — verify current specifics with each vendor. Capabilities not found in public documentation are marked "Publicly documented capability not identified." Each product named is a trademark of its respective owner; this independent comparison is not affiliated with or endorsed by them. Related: All comparisons · EVE CoreGuard.