One shared place
Keep every notification duty in one shared place, instead of scattered across spreadsheets and inboxes.
What Obligo is for
Obligo helps EU teams stay on top of cyber-incident notification duties — so the right person knows what is owed, by when, before a deadline passes.
Operating principle
Obligo is built so a named, accountable person always stays in control. Nothing becomes operational, and nothing leaves for an external party, without explicit human approval.
Keep every notification duty in one shared place, instead of scattered across spreadsheets and inboxes.
Obligo surfaces notification duties, deadlines, and evidence expectations so your team can confirm what must be tracked.
Named reviewers approve, reject, or adjust suggestions before they become tracked obligations.
Once approved, each duty has a clear owner and deadline, so nothing falls through the cracks.
Focus on what matters first, so the most urgent duties get attention before a deadline moves.
When an incident hits, your team stays oriented on what is owed and to whom — with people in control of every decision.
Capabilities
Keep owner-assigned duties with triggers, deadlines, and evidence expectations in one tracked register.
See your NIS2, DORA, GDPR, and contract duties side by side, in one place.
Keep personal accountability clear, so the people responsible know where they stand.
Keep contract, regulatory, and incident deadlines in one view so clashes are easy to spot.
Keep an organized record of every approval, file, and decision tied to each obligation.
Trust signals
The posture we can stand behind today: EU-hosted infrastructure, named human approval, and evidence attached to every obligation.
Designed for European teams that need their compliance workflow hosted in the EU.
AI can suggest, but people approve what becomes operational or leaves the workflow.
Approvals, files, and decisions stay attached to the obligation record.
Trust principle
Live risk signals and guided incident-response work stay under named human control. Obligo can help prepare structured records and drafts, but named humans remain responsible for approving what is used outside the system.