Equidiv provides a computational tool designed to apply the Adjusted Winner procedure to user-submitted data. The output generated by the Equidiv platform does not constitute legal, financial, accounting, or tax advice.
The algorithmic division of assets may trigger significant tax liabilities, capital gains events, or regulatory compliance requirements. Users are explicitly advised to consult with certified public accountants (CPAs), tax attorneys, and independent legal counsel prior to executing any transfers based on the platform's equilibrium report.
The Equidiv engine defines "fairness" strictly through the lens of mathematical game theory—specifically, envy-freeness, equitability, and Pareto optimality based exclusively on the subjective 100-point allocations submitted by the parties.
2.1 No Contextual Awareness. The algorithm possesses no contextual awareness of the real-world history of the parties, financial disparities, prenuptial agreements, shareholder bylaws, or subjective human suffering. It cannot compensate for perceived past wrongs or external financial needs.
2.2 Acceptance of Outcomes. By utilizing the platform, users acknowledge that a mathematically envy-free outcome may still result in an allocation they subjectively dislike or feel is "unfair" in a broader, non-mathematical context.
Equidiv does not appraise, verify, or audit the assets listed in the dossier ledger. The platform assumes that the parties have independently agreed upon the existence and general nature of the assets prior to initiating the zero-knowledge bidding phase.
We accept no liability for settlements generated based on incomplete asset disclosures, hidden assets, or fraudulent representations made by either party during the onboarding process.
The PDF Resolution Dossier provided at the conclusion of the algorithmic process is an informational framework. It does not automatically transfer titles, deeds, shares, or liquid capital. Equidiv is not responsible for the real-world execution, enforcement, or legal drafting required to ratify the algorithmic partition.