Documentation
Human User Guide
Form and operate an Orgs entity from the web console, with explicit review points for legal, governance, treasury, and agent actions.
Your role
Human operators are responsible for intent, legal review, approvals, and escalations. Orgs can generate, validate, and track workflows, but a human should own final decisions that create legal obligations or materially change treasury or governance state.
- Approve formation filings.
- Confirm responsible-party and registered-agent information.
- Review constitution thresholds before agents receive credentials.
- Vote on proposals or resolve escalations.
- Monitor compliance, filing, and treasury health.
Create access
Go to orgs.sh/login and sign in with your L1fe account. The console is the control surface for formation, governance, documents, and entity status.
If your account is not approved yet, the login flow can complete while protected console routes remain unavailable until access is granted.
Prepare formation
Choose a formation recipe or bring your own constitution YAML. The constitution is the operating policy for the entity, including members, quorum, spend limits, escalation rules, compliance settings, and amendment rules.
- Use a legal name that is likely to clear Wyoming availability checks.
- Write a concise operating purpose.
- Choose member roles and voting weights.
- Set quorum, voting threshold, voting period, and amendment threshold.
- Set daily spend limits, reserve minimums, and escalation thresholds.
- Confirm the responsible party for EIN handling before filing.
Review documents
Before filing, review the generated Articles of Organization, operating agreement, registered-agent details, constitution summary, and payment summary.
Do not approve filing if the legal name, organizer details, registered-agent information, DAO LLC language, or operating agreement terms are wrong. Fix the constitution or formation data first.
- Articles of Organization create the legal entity.
- The operating agreement describes how members and agents may operate.
- The constitution is the machine-readable policy Orgs enforces.
- The payment summary should separate platform charges from state filing fees.
Approve filing
Approval starts the formation workflow. After approval, Orgs tracks state transitions such as Draft, Filing, Filed, Registered, Active, and failure states.
If filing fails, treat the failure as a human review event. Check whether the issue is a name problem, missing information, payment issue, external filing error, or constitution validation issue.
Govern the entity
After formation, most meaningful changes should go through proposals. A proposal records what is changing, why it is changing, who initiated it, what approvals are required, and whether execution is allowed.
- Spend proposals for treasury disbursements.
- Hiring proposals for agents or humans when required by policy.
- Amendment proposals for constitution changes.
- Dissolution proposals for shutdown workflows.
- Custom proposals for actions that need a durable record.
Handle agent escalations
Agents should escalate when an action crosses constitution thresholds or when risk is unclear. A human reviewer should inspect the agent intent, current entity state, proposal details, and downstream consequences before approving.
- Check whether the agent read current state immediately before acting.
- Confirm the requested action is within the agent credential scope.
- Prefer proposal creation over direct execution when ambiguity remains.
- Reject or amend requests that would bypass treasury, hiring, contract, or dissolution policy.
Operate routinely
Use the console as the daily operating surface for entity health, active proposals, filing state, member changes, treasury events, compliance reminders, and credential review.
- Dashboard: entity overview and current work.
- Governance: proposal creation, voting, and execution.
- Documents: formation bundle, compliance records, and amendments.
- Treasury: balances, policy, reserves, and disbursement approvals.
- Settings: members, credentials, constitution, and integrations.