Who you are signing with, and what holds the mission in place.
Elitesgen, Inc. builds and operates the platform. The Foundation owns the mission. Two entities, one commitment, both named on every contract. This page is what procurement needs to know.
A commercial subsidiary, owned by a 501(c)(3) parent.
Elitesgen, Inc. builds, operates, and sells the platform. We employ the engineers, designers, researchers, and go-to-market staff who make the product work day to day. We sign the enterprise contracts. We run the infrastructure. We carry the commercial risk.
Elites Generation Foundation is the irrevocable holder of the mission. Its charter legally forbids behavioral advertising, selling individual user data, and dark-pattern monetization. Those commitments flow down to us through our Services Agreement with the Foundation.
The practical effect: the things a B2B buyer worries about with a VC-backed vendor (acquisition, pivot to surveillance, engagement dark patterns) are blocked by the Foundation charter, not by a values page we wrote.
The paperwork, laid out plainly.
Useful for procurement, legal, and anyone whose job is to know who they're actually signing with.
- Legal entity
- Elitesgen, Inc. (Delaware C-Corp)
- Parent
- Elites Generation Foundation, Inc. (501(c)(3))
- Ownership
- 100% owned by the Foundation
- Board structure
- Majority of seats appointed by the Foundation
- Founded
- 2026
- Headquarters
- United States, remote-distributed
Counsel confirmations for the hybrid structure are in progress. Any material change to these facts will be reflected here within 14 days.
Three commitments, structurally guaranteed.
These are charter-level, not policy-level. Changing them requires Foundation board action, not a product decision. The commitments reach us through our Services Agreement with the Foundation.
- 01
No behavioral advertising, ever.
The Foundation charter forbids it. There is no 'we might someday' clause. This is the same model Signal, Mozilla, and Wikimedia operate under.
- 02
No sale of individual user data, ever.
Aggregated, cohort-level outcome reporting is what customers pay us for. Selling the underlying data stream is structurally blocked.
- 03
No dark patterns. No engagement-maximizing manipulation.
The product is not optimized to extract attention. Those commitments are held above the company, not in a policy we can revise.
Mission lock is a structural differentiator, not a rhetorical one.
When a prospect asks 'what happens if you get acquired?' the answer is: the Foundation's board doesn't have to agree, and an acquirer inherits the charter. Mission lock is structural here, not a values statement.
For procurement teams doing the diligence, this is the question worth surfacing: who holds the commitments, and can they be revised without external review? Here, the answer is the Foundation board, and no. Those same commitments flow into the BAA and DPA you sign with us.
Named when named. Listed once, on the brand site.
We publish names, roles, and affiliations, not thought-leadership headshots. Executive bios and the board live on the brand site so there is a single source of truth.
Part of the Elitesgen family.
This site is the institutional surface. The flagship app, the Egen product family, and the full company story live on the brand site.
Elitesgen, Inc. is wholly owned by Elites Generation Foundation, a 501(c)(3) whose charter legally forbids behavioral advertising and the sale of individual user data.
The entities are clear. The commitments are in writing. Let's talk scope.
Start with a demo, or bring legal in for the charter conversation if that's what your diligence needs.