Daemion Four laboratories

Internal research on architectural gaps in autonomous intelligence.

Daemion operates four internal research laboratories. Each lab addresses an unsolved architectural problem in general intelligence infrastructure.

Divisions06
Products04
Internal labs04
HeadquartersDhaka
Lab 01

The Orpheus Lab

Machine consciousness and emergent cognition.

Orpheus studies the conditions under which emergent cognition arises in scaled systems: self-modeling, introspection, unified agency, and the architectural prerequisites for subjective coherence in autonomous intelligence.

Publication posture

Almost nothing published. By design.

Lab 02

The Mnemosyne Archive

Long-memory and persistent intelligence architectures.

Mnemosyne builds the memory substrate for autonomous systems operating over years and decades. Continual learning, episodic retrieval, lossless compaction of operational context, and architectures that prevent drift across long-running deployments.

Publication posture

Selective. Publishes when the field benefits.

Lab 03

Project Atar

Autonomous defense cognition.

Atar studies self-directing tactical and defensive cognition systems: autonomous defense in adversarial conditions, doctrine modeling, threat reasoning, and alignment of autonomous defense systems to operator intent over long horizons.

Publication posture

Restricted. Most output is classified or partner-only.

Lab 04

Project Thaleon

Planetary infrastructure AGI.

Thaleon is Daemion planetary-coordination program: architectural research for intelligence systems at the scale of energy, logistics, climate, communication networks, and global infrastructure.

Publication posture

Long publication cycles. Outputs appear as multi-year programs rather than discrete papers.

Lab philosophy

Small, deliberate, multi-year.

Each lab is deliberately staffed and granted multi-year horizons. Output cadence is set by research necessity, not by external publication pressure.

Daemion treats publication as alignment-relevant. Some lines of research are too consequential to release without sustained internal review.

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