1. What is Mahakali Tribunal?
Mahakali Tribunal is a global governance and cybersecurity platform that provides nations, institutions, and advocacy groups with tools to manage justice, digital sovereignty, cybercrime, and ethical AI governance across borders. We offer modular solutions for civilian, legal, defence, political, and diplomatic use cases.
2. Who is Mahakali Tribunal for?
We serve:
• National Governments – for election security, legal digitization, and cyberpeace infrastructure
• International Bodies (UN, AU, ASEAN) – for treaty enforcement, refugee arbitration, and digital diplomacy
• Civil Society & Legal NGOs – for evidence storage, case filings, and stateless rights
• Defence & Cybersecurity Agencies – for ethical surveillance, threat monitoring, and protocol compliance
3. What makes Mahakali Tribunal different from other governance tools or legal platforms?
• We are cyber-defence grade, treaty-capable, and multilingual by design
• Supports blockchain-secured arbitration, AI-powered case logic, and crisis-ready tools
• Designed to comply with and extend Cyber Geneva Protocols, data sovereignty laws, and UN human rights charters
• Built for fragile democracies, stateless populations, and post-conflict zones
4. Is Mahakali Tribunal open source?
The core protocol architecture is auditable and optionally open-source for sovereign clients. Deployment modules may be either public, hybrid, or fully private, depending on the client’s security needs.
5. Where is Mahakali Tribunal hosted?
We offer:
• Sovereign Deployments: Self-hosted in-country clouds or air-gapped environments
• Hybrid Cloud: Data sovereignty respected via localised storage and global orchestration
• Secure Multicloud: For IGOs, treaty coalitions, and diplomacy clusters
6. Can Mahakali Tribunal be used in conflict zones or fragile states?
Yes. The platform is built to operate in low-connectivity, high-conflict, and crisis regions, with offline-first modules, evidence encryption, local language interfaces, and audit-resistant security layers.
7. What products and verticals are available?
We offer modular apps under seven verticals:
1. News & Public Info Governance (e.g., Misinformation Map, Crisis Broadcast)
2. Civilian Tools (e.g., Digital Grievance Portal, eID Arbitration)
3. Legal Tech (e.g., Stateless eCourt, Evidence Blockchain Vault)
4. Defense Apps (e.g., Cyber Conflict Dashboard, Protocol Ops Tracker)
5. Political Integrity (e.g., Electoral Blockchain, Politician Accountability Index)
6. International Relations (e.g., Treaty Engine, Arbitration-as-a-Service)
7. Cybersecurity Services (e.g., Threat Intelligence, GovSec as a Stack)
8. How is pricing determined?
Our pricing is tiered by size, sovereignty, and deployment complexity.
Options include:
• SaaS Subscriptions (for NGOs or city govs)
• Enterprise Licensing (for national deployments)
• Sovereign Infrastructure Agreements (for treaty or defense integrations)
We also offer pilot programs, humanitarian grants, and multilateral discounts.
9. Is Mahakali Tribunal compliant with global standards?
Yes. We align with:
• UN Human Rights Digital Guidelines
• Cyber Geneva Protocol (beta)
• OECD & UNESCO AI Ethics
• Data sovereignty laws (GDPR, PDP Bill India, etc.)
Custom compliance packages are built per jurisdiction.
10. Can Mahakali Tribunal integrate with existing systems?
Absolutely. We offer API bridges, data migration, and middleware to integrate with:
• National ID systems
• Legacy court filing systems
• Defence command dashboards
• Election commissions and voter rolls
• Civil society databases (e.g., UNHCR)
11. Who developed Mahakali Tribunal?
Mahakali Tribunal was conceptualised by Sarv Singh, and built by a multidisciplinary team across cybersecurity, AI ethics, legal systems, and diplomacy—with a mission to protect human dignity and institutional trust in the digital era.
12. How can we get started?
• Step 1: Request a demo and scoping session
• Step 2: We offer a pilot deployment for 3–6 months
• Step 3: You choose between SaaS, Sovereign, or Hybrid Licensing
• Step 4: We assist in local training, integration, and scaling