Proposed European Standard · RFC · v1.2

DWS Ontology Standard

A decision-centric ontology for EU-sovereign enterprise AI — unifying Data, Logic, Action, and Security in one model.

Published 29 April 2026 · Lifetime Oy · Espoo, Finland

Why an ontology, and why now

Off-the-shelf LLMs fail in regulated industries because they have no model of the enterprise — no semantic objects, no committed actions, no policies that propagate at runtime. The decision-centric ontology pattern that solves this has been proven by US incumbents over the last twenty years, but always on US-hyperscaler infrastructure. Europe needs the same architecture, sovereign by design, with EU regulations baked in as first-class entities — not encoded by every customer from scratch.

The DWS Ontology Standard is our attempt at that. We are publishing it as an open RFC because terminology, schemas, and policy envelopes are stronger as shared standards than as proprietary moats. The value lives in the runtime and the regulatory content, not the schema shape.

The four pillars

1. Data — the nouns

Semantic objects, properties, and links representing the enterprise in its own language. Spatial, temporal, causal, and entity ontologies; ERPs, MES, IoT, and unstructured sources unified — not flattened into golden tables.

2. Logic — the reasoning

SQL functions, ML models, optimizers, simulators, and LLM tools exposed through one logic-binding registry. Agents and humans see the same surface; new capability = new registry entry, not new integration.

3. Action — the verbs

Decisions are staged, reviewed, committed, and written back to ERP, WMS, edge devices, and email. Every action carries a rollback plan and a policy envelope. Agents propose; humans (or trusted automations) commit.

4. Security — the envelope

Role + purpose + markings evaluated at runtime on every data, logic, action, and tool invocation. Covers EU AI Act Articles 12 and 14 (logging + human oversight) automatically, not by review.

What makes DWS different

v1.2 roadmap — closing the operational gap

Knowledge-centric ontologies (v1.0–1.1) capture learning. To run operations, we must close seven gaps. Each is dated and owned in ONTOLOGY.md §13.

Gap Target
Actions / write-back layer Q3 2026
Per-decision lineage Q3 2026
Purpose- and marking-based policies Q3 2026 (before AI Act enforcement)
Scenarios / Global Branching Q4 2026
Logic Binding registry Q4 2026
Multi-tier agent memory Q1 2027
Embedded edge ontology (Lifetime Fleet) Q2 2027

Open European standard, RFC

We propose the DWS Ontology Standard as a candidate European standard, in the spirit of Gaia-X: schemas open, runtime competitive. The full specification — pillar definitions, schema templates for Action, Scenario, DecisionRecord, LogicAsset, PolicyEnvelope, and CCP — is maintained in ONTOLOGY.md and revised in the open.

Comments, critique, and adoption are welcome. Reach Risto at [email protected]. We intend to submit the spec to CEN-CENELEC JTC 21 (AI) and EFRAG (regulatory entity layer) once two pilot customers have adopted it.