A CFO should never have to take a vendor's prevented-loss number on faith. So ours is not a marketing figure — it is Governed Execution Value (GEV), computed from live governed decisions and gated so it can never be inflated past what the data supports.
The public trailing-window sample is currently below our render threshold, so we show an early-seed-cohort status instead of a dollar figure. This is the honesty gate working as designed: rather than publish a number a single large decision could distort, we wait until the sample supports it. Raw counts are available to design partners via the metrics API.
For every decision that carries a monetary amount — an order's net-margin exposure, a payment, a purchase order, a refund — Decionis records the amount at the moment it is evaluated, before execution.
Each priced evaluation is bucketed by its deterministic verdict: authorized (cleared through), escalated (routed to higher authority), blocked (stopped before execution), or delayed (held for human review).
Governed Execution Value is the sum of those amounts — the economic authority that flowed through the control plane. Prevented loss is the blocked-and-restrained share: value that would have executed without a gate in front of it.
When the trailing-window sample is below a public-render threshold, the site shows an early-seed-cohort status instead of a number. A dollar figure is only ever shown when the underlying sample supports it.
The credibility of a prevented-loss figure is defined as much by what a vendor won't say as by what it will.