The counsel-reviewed catalog
Behind the register sits a catalog: the classifications that say a given tool, used a given way, is a given tier. It is reviewed once and inherited by everyone. Owners and Admins can see it.
Updated May 2026
What the catalog is
When a tool is used a certain way, the classification is the same for everyone who uses it that way. So Veillo classifies it once, in the catalog, and every workspace that adds that tool for that use inherits the answer with the reasoning attached. The Catalog screen is where Owners and Admins can see those entries.
Reviewed and pending
Each entry is either counsel-reviewed, meaning a lawyer has signed it off as authoritative, or catalog · pending review, meaning it is a structured entry awaiting that sign-off. The same badge shows on the systems in your register, so you always know which state an answer is in. See what "pending counsel review" means.
Who can see it
The Catalog is limited to Owners and Admins. Everyone still sees the resulting tier and reasoning on each system in the register; the Catalog is the shared source behind it. For how a tier is decided, see how Veillo classifies a system.
Veillo is compliance tooling, not a law firm. Even counsel-reviewed content is general reference, not legal advice on your specific situation.
The two ways Veillo decides a risk tier: the counsel-reviewed catalog and AI-assisted suggestions you confirm. Plus the four tiers and why the basis is always shown.
The pending counsel review label explained: what it is, why Veillo shows it honestly, and what you can do with an entry that carries it.
What it means that Veillo is software rather than a law firm: where the legal judgment comes from, and when you still need your own lawyer.
Still need help?
Get in touch and a human will answer, or book a short walkthrough.