About Blamer
Blamer is the AI authorship attribution engine built on the ARIADA platform. It identifies which AI tool wrote each line of your code, attaches a signed audit trail, and is built for teams where AI generates 30-50% of new code and someone has to answer for what shipped.
Ownership & operator
Blamer.ai is owned and operated by Agonist Development AB (org.nr 559452-5726, Stockholm, Sweden) and its U.S. sister entity Agonist Inc (Wyoming). Customers in EU jurisdictions contract with the Swedish AB; U.S. customers contract with Agonist Inc. Full company detail and founder bio are on the umbrella property: ariada.ai/about.
Underlying technology & IP
Blamer is one of several specialised engines built on the ARIADA platform. ARIADA holds filed provisional applications in the United States. Provisional applications are not granted patents; conversion to non-provisional (or PCT national-phase entry) is in flight. Full IP disclosure is available under NDA via legal@ariada.ai.
Open-source users of the EUPL‑1.2-licensed rule pack receive the standard patent-peace grant under EUPL Article 2: any contributor's patents needed to exercise the licensed rights are licensed royalty-free for use within the scope of the licence.
Trust signals
- EU residency by default — all infrastructure in eu-north-1 (Stockholm).
- WCAG 2.2 AA self-certification — this site is checked with axe-core (0 violations target) and Lighthouse (a11y score 100). Cobbler's shoes apply: a scanner site must itself be impeccable.
- Open methodology — the scanner engine
ships under Apache-2.0 at
github.com/ariada-org/ariada(publishes with first release tag). - GDPR controller — Agonist Development AB (org.nr 559452-5726). Article 28 DPA available on request.
What Blamer is not
Blamer is not a legal certification body, not an audit firm, not a notified body, and not a registered auditor. We do not issue legally-binding compliance certificates. For regulatory submission — EAA notified-body certification, court-defensible VPAT, AI Act Article 50 attestation, SOC 2 Type II, and similar — consult an accredited audit body. Our reports support that process; they do not replace it.