Three layers. One cooperative utility.
Most robotics companies sell you one thing — a unit, a subscription, or an app. We operate all three as a single, community-owned stack so the value stays local instead of leaking to distant shareholders.
Quick definitions
If you've never heard the acronyms before, here's the plain-English version.
A subscription model where a customer pays a recurring fee to use a robot rather than buying it. The provider owns the hardware and is responsible for deployment, uptime, maintenance, and end-of-life.
A flat monthly rate ($99 residential / $199 estate). A local Privateer places the unit, monitors telemetry, hot-swaps degraded units from a spare-hardware float, and pulls it for off-season storage at the regional hub. You never own, store, or service the equipment.
A model for sourcing physical equipment — outright purchase at wholesale, leasing, or bundled hardware-plus-service contracts — typically aimed at operators who need the asset on their own balance sheet.
Privateers, commercial landscapers, and schools buy mowers, the Universal 5-Bay Charging Rack, batteries, blades, and accessories at cooperative wholesale pricing. A Privateer service contract is an optional add-on, so an operator can own the unit and still outsource the labor.
Cloud-hosted software delivered over the internet on a subscription, with the vendor handling hosting, updates, and security so customers can use it from any browser without local installs.
Sovereign OS is the cooperative's SaaS layer. It schedules units across vendors via Service Templates, routes Privateers, captures telemetry, and posts the 10/20/70 settlement, R&R bounties, and patronage dividends to the cooperative ledger automatically — same dashboard for one mower or a fleet of fifty.
Subscribe to the outcome — not the machine.
A subscription, not a purchase. A local Privateer places, maintains, and seasonally swaps your unit. No mowers in the garage, no batteries to replace, no warranty calls.
- Flat monthly rate — Residential ($99) or Estate/Commercial ($199), planned/illustrative.
- Hot-swap service: a degraded unit is replaced from the spare-hardware float, often before you notice.
- Off-season pickup and storage at the regional adaptive-reuse hub.
- Telemetry-monitored runtime — your Privateer is dispatched before failures.
Who it's for: Homeowners, seniors on fixed incomes, estates, HOAs, and small municipal sites who want the outcome without the equipment.
See subscription pricing
Wholesale hardware, cooperative pricing.
For the operator who wants to own. Buy the mower, the universal 5-bay charging rack, replacement batteries, and Privateer-grade accessories at the cooperative's per-unit wholesale price — with the option to layer service on top.
- Open catalog — we pick units by quality, tech, and durability, not by brand.
- The Universal 5-Bay Charging Rack standardizes garage storage and transport.
- Some units enter inventory at reduced or zero OEM cost; cooperative pricing reflects the real wholesale.
- Optional Privateer service contract — own the unit, outsource the labor.
Who it's for: Privateers building out a sector, commercial landscapers, schools running their own STEM fleet, and prosumers who want full control.
Browse the shop
Sovereign OS — the brain of the fleet.
Every robot on the platform — regardless of brand or type — is described by a Service Template that defines its telemetry, tasks, and schedule. Adding a new robot category never requires rebuilding the platform.
- Works on any robot we trust — mowers today; pool, floor-scrubbing, and window-washing units next.
- Service Templates standardize tasks across vendors so a Privateer can support any unit on day one.
- Cooperative ledger built in — the 10/20/70 settlement, R&R bounties, and patronage dividends post automatically.
- Sovereign by design: the data, the schedules, and the financial logic stay with the cooperative.
Who it's for: Privateers, sector admins, the cooperative board — and eventually, other community-owned utilities licensing the same OS.
How it's built
Stacked, the layers are a Greedless Grid.
Sold separately, each layer is just another extractive product line. Stacked under one cooperative — RaaS earns the recurring revenue, HaaS turns over the hardware at honest prices, and Sovereign OS keeps the schedules and the dollars routed through the community — the platform becomes a permanent guard against monopoly capture.
Mowing is the Trojan Horse. The same three-layer stack will run pool robots, floor scrubbers, and window-washing units the moment those Service Templates ship.
Your data, your agents, your exit.
The next extraction frontier isn't dollars — it's data and AI agent lock-in. As coding agents collapse the cost of building software, value moves to the data layer underneath. The cooperative's response is structural: published schemas, member-scoped read-only tokens, and a planned guarantee that our dashboard is one reference UI, not the only one.