PLENA's receipt grammar is designed to support the AU Continental AI Strategy's stated principles. This is alignment in principle and architecture — not a claim of partnership, endorsement, or accreditation.
The African deployment is the clearest case of PlenaProof as non-aligned planetary trust grammar. The strategy's own organizing principles — sovereignty, strategic autonomy, equitable adoption — describe exactly what a non-aligned receipt grammar provides: each member state stays locally sovereign over its own records and law, while one shared receipt format lets those records be verified across the continent and beyond. PlenaProof is not anchored in Silicon Valley, Beijing, or Brussels; a VRX-1 receipt issued under one national framework reads the same under another, without any member state joining a foreign database or depending on a foreign pole's infrastructure. This is structural, not political — PLENA takes no geopolitical position; it offers institutions across the continent trust infrastructure they can adopt on their own terms.
The African Union Executive Council endorsed the Continental AI Strategy in July 2024. Phase I (2025–2026) focuses on creating governance frameworks, national AI strategies, resource mobilization, and capacity building. A $60 billion Africa AI Fund was announced at the April 2025 Kigali Summit. Smart Africa established the Africa AI Council in November 2025. The Pan-African Parliament has announced the development of a Cybersecurity and Artificial Intelligence Model Law building on the AU Malabo Convention on Cybersecurity and Personal Data Protection. The AU Continental AI Strategy's organizing principles are sovereignty, strategic autonomy, and equitable adoption.
How PLENA's existing architecture maps onto each stated AU principle.
PLENA's non-aligned positioning, multilingual cultural verification, and mobile-first, offline-first design choices — together with the open VRX-1 standard — support data sovereignty and digital independence in member states.
PLENA's receipt grammar is designed to layer on top of W3C Verifiable Credentials, Decentralized Identifiers, and open identity standards rather than proprietary platforms — preserving autonomy of choice for African institutions and ministries.
PLENA's 9-language interface, accessibility-first design, and mobile-money-aware architecture serve populations that hyperscale AI infrastructure does not structurally serve.
PLENA's founder narrative — building accountability infrastructure from lived experience of how systems close doors to those without institutional protection — is rooted in the same Pan-African inheritance that informs the AU's Continental AI Strategy. PlenaProof does not claim to speak for any African institution, but the trust infrastructure it has built reflects the realities those institutions exist to address.
For ministries, regulators, multilateral institutions, and civil society organizations engaging with the AU Continental AI Strategy implementation: PlenaProof welcomes pre-pilot conversations.