We created Superwisdom after reading the terms of service with our cloud and AI providers.

At large enterprises, like law firms, we knew our data was largely safe and confidential. But much of life takes place outside of large law firms.

Big AI companies seemed eager to scoop up the details of our lives, with or without permission.

As a result, we built Superwisdom for ourselves, and then began sharing it with our friends.

Spencer E. Adler, Esq., is a Washington, DC lawyer with a long history in the philanthropy, trusts and tax planning community, where he is known for coining the term “Limited Liability Trusts” as a modern synonym for the centuries old term “Irrevocable Trusts” (see LLTrusts.org). After witnessing the need for the legal and fiduciary communities to better protect PPLI owners, he founded the PPLI Association. Over the course of his career as an attorney, investor, entrepreneur, and public speaker, he has co-founded and exited multiple technology companies and investment funds. He founded Superwisdom after deciding he did not like the confidentiality loopholes he saw in his terms of service with big cloud and AI provider. In his words, “It was revealing to see them promise not to train on our data today, while storing that data and retaining the right to train on it tomorrow. I realized how many of us do not want Superintelligence. We want Superwisdom.”

John Paul, Chief Technology Officer, lives in Texas. He formerly managed a fifty-person IT and Digital Security Department at a heavily regulated Texas bank. Since then, he has been managing Digital Infrastructure at a heavily regulated debt and lending institution, also in Texas. At Superwisdom, he oversees security, privacy, and confidentiality matters of our entire tech stack.