Launch an agent. Automate your business.
Point-and-click agent builder. Pre-wired skills for the tools you already use. Approvals and audit built in, so you actually sleep at night.
Tell CloudSwarm what you want done in plain English. It picks the right skills, asks for the creds it needs, builds and previews the work, then waits for your green light before it acts. Runs on the R1 runtime. Sovereign Canadian mode when jurisdiction matters.
Give it a job. It shows up every day and does the job.
Agents here aren't chat windows. They're small, scheduled workers with skills, budgets, and a paper trail — doing the repetitive work of your week so you can do the rest.
Three steps. No prompt engineering degree required.
You describe the outcome. We wire up the skills, the schedule, and the guardrails. You watch the first run, nudge it, and hand it the keys.
A home for every agent you launch.
One place to see what's running, what it cost, and what it did. Not a wall of logs — a calm list of workers showing up for you.
Point-and-click agent builder. Three minutes to launch.
Pick a template or start blank. Name it. Give it a goal. Turn on the skills it needs. Set a budget. Pick a schedule. Hit launch. Everything you toggle here is a real capability under the hood.
Tell it what you want. It does the rest. You approve each step.
Three real jobs from real customers, walked end to end. The agent figures out what it needs, asks for creds when it doesn't have them, drafts the work, shows you a preview, waits for approval, and only then acts. Every step is auditable.
One pane. Every agent. Every workspace. Every policy.
This is your CloudSwarm control plane once a few agents are running. Four panels, live. Click into any row to inspect. The whole operation is legible from one view.
Five trust levels. Agents earn their way up.
Every new agent starts at L0: read-only, approval on every action. Trust expands as evidence accumulates. You decide when to raise the cap. An agent never promotes itself.
Here's what a day looks like once they're running.
Not a flashy demo — just the calm, small stuff that adds up. You get coffee; they've already handled the first three things on your list.
Cedar policies. Evaluated inline. Explainable.
Toggle policies on and off. Run a sample agent action against them. See which matched, which denied, which advised. Real governance, not prompt gatekeeping.
Three days. Four approvals. One provider outage survived.
Scrub a real three-day outreach workflow. Four approval gates, a provider failover mid-day-two, resume from WAL after a restart on day three. This is what durable means.
current state
summary
Your monthly bill looks like a phone bill. Not a cloud invoice.
One line per agent. What it did, what it cost. No surprise egress charges, no "committed use discounts" math, no 47-page PDF from finance.
Same product. Two boundaries. One for your regulated work.
CloudSwarm is multi-tenant, US/EU/Asia, standard enterprise posture. CanadianClaw is single-tenant BC Canada, enforceable in BC courts under a Canadian-entity MSA. Pick the boundary that fits the contract you're signing.
Five things that don't exist in the rest of the market.
Not features. Architectural bets that only pay off because CloudSwarm is a GUI-first control plane built on a serious runtime (R1) with real governance underneath.
The builder does the hard parts for you.
Most agent platforms show you a blank prompt box and wish you luck. CloudSwarm asks what you want to do, picks the skills, requests the creds it needs, drafts the work, and stops at every risky step to check with you. You are the editor, not the operator.
Durability is structural, not a retry loop.
A WAL-backed event bus reconstructs an agent's entire state from the log. A provider outage mid-day-two does not reset day one. The agent picks up where it left off with full context.
Progressive trust is a product mechanic, not a config flag.
Agents literally cannot act at L3 if they haven't accumulated L2 evidence. Autonomy is a state the system arrives at because the evidence says it should, not a switch you flip.
Built-in skills for the tools you actually use.
RelayGate, Actium, Actium Studio, TrueCom, DeepTap, Veritize ship as first-party skills. Gmail, Stripe, QuickBooks, Calendly, Cloudflare, GoDaddy, Namecheap, Fly.io, Vercel, Expo, Google Sheets come out of the box. The agent uses them the same way you would: by logging in once and following the UI.
Two brands, one substrate, real sovereignty.
CanadianClaw is the same product under a Canadian-entity MSA enforceable in BC courts, running on the Good Ventures Lab BC-Canadian inference substrate. The no-logging posture is contractual, not just architectural.
CloudSwarm is the control plane. These are the pieces it conducts.
Every sibling ships as a first-party skill you can turn on from the builder. Use CloudSwarm alone or with any subset.
What changes after a month.
Not benchmarks. Just the mundane, human stuff people notice once a few agents have been running in the background for a while.
Three tiers. Plus a sovereign option when jurisdiction matters.
Start free. Upgrade when you ship real work. Full comparison on /pricing.
Starter
- 1 workspace, 3 running agents
- Core skill catalog, builder GUI
- Community support
Team
- Unlimited workspaces, up to 200 running agents
- Full skill marketplace, Cedar policies, vault, approvals
- Priority support, quarterly review
Enterprise
- SSO, SCIM, on-prem connect, dedicated success engineer
- SOC 2 report, DPA, custom DPIA support
- Per-region data residency
CanadianClaw
- Single-tenant BC Canada (Cube Global colo)
- Canadian-entity MSA, enforceable in BC courts
- No-logging contractual posture, no US cross-border flows
Two paths. Pick one.
Start free if you want to get your hands dirty. Walkthrough if you want to see it run on your actual use case first.
Start free
One workspace. Three agents. The full skill catalog. Build something this afternoon.
Book a walkthrough
Twenty minutes. We show you your actual use case running in a live workspace.