A live view while the answer is written
PsiGuard pays attention while the reply is still being typed out — caring about how the model reaches its answer, not only the answer itself. You can watch that play out as it happens.
PsiGuard watches how a reply is taking shape, not just the words at the end. The moment the AI starts to wander, repeat itself, or sound certain while quietly losing the thread, PsiGuard catches it and stops the answer — and the second attempt usually comes out clean, before anyone sees the first.
Today's models rarely admit they've lost the plot. They just keep going. The subject slides, earlier details fall away, and the reply wanders off from what you actually asked — while still reading like a perfectly good answer.
By the time the trouble is obvious, your user has already believed it.
As the reply forms, PsiGuard follows the shape of the model's reasoning — the way it carries from one point to the next. When that shape begins to come apart, PsiGuard pauses the response before the mistake fully lands and lets the model take another run at it. Most of the time, the user only ever sees the good one.
PsiGuard tries to help without getting in the way. In the chat you'll notice three things — and not one of them needs a manual.
PsiGuard pays attention while the reply is still being typed out — caring about how the model reaches its answer, not only the answer itself. You can watch that play out as it happens.
Most safety tools wait for the finished answer and then inspect it. PsiGuard looks for the harder case they miss: a reply that sounds rock-solid while it has quietly come loose from the conversation it belongs to. We call that Brittle Confidence.
When a reply starts to wobble, PsiGuard cuts it off before the trouble reaches the screen. The model gets another try, and that one usually holds — so the shaky first pass stays out of sight.
If you're weighing PsiGuard as a safety layer for something real, here's the short version of what's going on behind the conversation.
It isn't comparing your answer against a list of facts — it's watching whether the model's thinking stays in one piece. The quickest way to feel the difference is to open the demo and try to throw it off.
PsiGuard isn't selling anything yet — right now we're just proving it works, on real models, in real conversations. Use it freely. Each provider has a monthly usage cap that keeps the lights on; when we reach it, that provider pauses until the next cycle, then comes back. Paid plans will arrive later. For now: open the demo, hand it something genuinely hard, and tell us where it slips.
Open the demo and push a conversation until it should fall apart. PsiGuard usually feels the trouble before you do.