⛪ Parish Edition

Big Tech vs Parish

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Big Tech AI vs. Your Parish AI — Why the Difference Matters


Series: Your Parish, Your AI — Understanding Village AI for Communities (Article 2 of 5) Author: My Digital Sovereignty Ltd Date: March 2026 Licence: CC BY 4.0 International


Where Big Tech AI Learns Its Manners

Imagine raising a child in a household where the only books were marketing brochures, social media arguments, and Wikipedia. That child would be articulate, widely read in a certain sense, and capable of producing fluent text on almost any topic. But they would have a particular view of the world — commercially shaped, controversy-aware, confident in tone regardless of depth. They would know how to sound authoritative without necessarily being wise.

This is, roughly speaking, how Big Tech AI systems are raised.

ChatGPT, Google Gemini, and their peers are trained on enormous quantities of text scraped from the internet. Billions of pages. The result is a system that can discuss almost anything — but whose defaults, assumptions, and instincts are shaped by what the internet over-represents.

The internet over-represents:

The internet under-represents:

When your parishioner asks a Big Tech AI system about coping with loss, it reaches for cognitive behavioural therapy language — not because it has judged that to be superior, but because that is what dominates its training data. It does not offer the words of the Burial Office, the tradition of a month's mind, or the quiet ministry of a pastoral visit, because those patterns are statistically rare in the data it learned from.

This is not a flaw that can be fixed with better prompting. It is structural. The system's character is determined by its upbringing, and its upbringing was the internet.

What "Locally Trained" Actually Means

Village AI works differently, and the difference is not about being smaller or less capable. The difference is about where the AI learns its patterns.

A Village AI for your parish is trained on three layers of content:

The platform layer. This is the foundation — how the Village platform works, what features are available, how to navigate the system. Every Village shares this layer. It means the AI can help a new parishioner find their way around, explain how to share a story or join a video call, without needing to be taught these basics from scratch.

The parish layer. This is what makes your Village yours. The AI learns from the content your community has actually created — parish bulletins, stories members have shared, event descriptions, documents your vestry has published. When a parishioner asks "What happened at the harvest supper last year?", the AI can answer from your community's own records, not from a guess based on what harvest suppers generally look like on the internet.

Consent at every step. No content enters the AI's training without explicit permission. A member who shares a story can choose whether that story is included in the AI's knowledge. Content marked as private stays private — structurally, not just by policy. The AI cannot access what it was never given.

The result is a system that knows your parish — not the internet's idea of what a parish might be. When it helps draft a parish bulletin, it draws on the patterns of your previous bulletins, not on corporate newsletter templates. When it answers a question about your community, it answers from your community's records, not from a statistical average of all communities.

Guardian Agents: The Watchers at the Gate

Even a locally trained AI can make mistakes. It might misremember a detail, confuse two events, or generate a response that sounds right but is not grounded in your actual records. This is the nature of the technology — it predicts plausible text, and plausible is not the same as accurate.

This is where Guardian Agents come in.

Guardian Agents are four independent verification layers that check every AI response before it reaches the member. They are not more AI — they are mathematical measurement systems that are structurally separate from the AI they watch.

Here is what they do, in plain terms:

The first guardian takes the AI's response and measures how closely it matches the actual content in your community's records. Not whether it sounds right — whether it is mathematically similar to real documents. If the AI says "The vestry decided to repair the roof in September," the guardian checks whether your vestry minutes actually contain a decision about roof repair in September.

The second guardian breaks the response into individual claims and checks each one separately. An AI response might contain three statements — two accurate and one fabricated. The second guardian catches the fabrication even when the overall response sounds convincing.

The third guardian watches for unusual patterns over time — shifts in the AI's behaviour, repeated errors, outputs that approach defined boundaries. It monitors the system's health, not just individual responses.

The fourth guardian learns from your community's feedback. When any member marks an AI response as unhelpful — a simple thumbs-down is enough — the system investigates what went wrong, classifies the root cause, and adjusts. Moderators can review and refine these corrections, but the learning begins with ordinary members. Over time, the AI becomes more aligned with your community's actual knowledge, not less.

Every AI response in Village carries a confidence indicator that tells the member how well-grounded the response is. High confidence means the guardian found strong matches in your records. Low confidence means the response is more speculative. Members can trace any AI claim back to its source — the specific document, story, or record that supports it.

This is not a feature that Big Tech AI offers, because Big Tech AI is not grounded in your records. It is grounded in the internet, and there is no practical way to verify billions of pages of training data against a single response.

The Trade-Off

Village AI is not as powerful as ChatGPT or Gemini. It cannot write poetry in the style of Shakespeare, generate photorealistic images, or hold a wide-ranging conversation about quantum physics. It is a smaller system with a more focused purpose.

What it offers instead is faithfulness to your community — its content, its values, its governance — combined with mathematical verification that its responses are grounded in your actual records, not in the statistical patterns of the internet.

For a parish that needs help drafting bulletins, answering parishioners' questions about community activities, summarising vestry minutes, or organising event information — this is not a limitation. It is precisely the right tool for the job.

The question is not "which AI is more powerful?" The question is "which AI serves my community?"


This is Article 2 of 5 in the "Your Parish, Your AI" series. For the full Guardian Agents architecture, visit Village AI on Agentic Governance.

Previous: What AI Actually Is (and What It Isn't) Next: Why Rules and Training Aren't Enough — The Governance Challenge

Published under CC BY 4.0 by My Digital Sovereignty Ltd. You are free to share and adapt this material, provided you give appropriate credit.