Co-Intelligence Circle is built on a practice much older than video calls — and on a few convictions about how machines should sit with people.
Talking-piece circles appear wherever people have needed to speak about what matters: council fires, Quaker meetings, restorative-justice circles, supervision groups. The form is almost embarrassingly simple — people sit so everyone can see everyone, an object marks whose turn it is, and the group agrees to listen.
We did not invent any of this, and we try to honor that. What we built is a room where the practice survives the move to video: a stick that actually passes, an order the circle chooses, and the certainty that your turn cannot be taken from you.
In open discussion, the fastest mouth wins. Interruption is cheap, silence is awkward, and the people with the most considered thoughts often say the least. A circle reverses the economics: speaking time is held for you, silence is allowed to do its work, and listening becomes something you do rather than something you wait through.
That is the whole product, honestly. The gentle timer, the sunwise and earthwise rounds, the open floor for short brainstorms — every feature exists to protect one thing: a turn that stays whole.
In the room you will find a small fire where other tools put a logo, a speaker tile, or a clock. That is deliberate. A circle is not organized around its host, its loudest voice, or its software — it is organized around something shared. The hearth is owned by everyone and by no one, and it quietly keeps the room from becoming a stage.
Milo sits in the circle under the same rules as everyone else: it speaks when the stick arrives and listens the rest of the time. It is not a moderator, not an analytics layer, not an assistant hovering over the conversation.
Two commitments make that honest. First, you write Milo's entire role — the instructions you give it are the only instructions it has. There are no hidden prompts shaping its behavior behind your back. Second, Milo is off by default and bows out the moment your credits end — the circle itself simply continues.
Video and audio travel peer to peer, directly between participants — they do not pass through our servers. AI features listen only after the circle has invited them. We build in Germany, under European privacy law, and we would rather explain our architecture than ask for your trust.