Service catalogue
What the heritage desk provides
Five documented offerings for individuals, classrooms, and newsrooms. Each service stops at education and archival critique — never at order placement or model deployment.
Regulatory notice. ForexWithAI is a heritage reading desk dedicated to the historical and archival study of foreign-exchange markets and to the critical retrospective analysis of academic claims about artificial-intelligence applications to currency research. We are not registered with the Canadian Investment Regulatory Organization (CIRO), the Canadian Securities Administrators (CSA), or any provincial securities regulator as a dealer, adviser, or investment fund manager. We do not provide real-time quotes, trading signals, broker referrals, leveraged products, MetaTrader expert advisors, or any form of currency-trading service. Foreign-exchange trading involves significant risk and is, in Canada, available only through CIRO-registered dealers; we are not such a dealer. Historical exchange-rate episodes presented as exhibition material are offered for educational and archival purposes only; they do not forecast future currency movements.
Service 01
Self-guided chart-room admission
Receive a floor plan, pencil, and stamped pass valid for a three-hour visit during public hours. Staff remain available for directional questions but do not lecture unless you upgrade to a curator slot. Audio guides are deliberately absent — we want rustle of paper and sound of map drawers, not podcast chatter. Admission includes access to FXWA-001 through FXWA-004 placards and a single photocopy allowance of ten pages from designated folders. Ideal for independent readers who already know which historical episode they wish to inspect. Cannot be combined with brokerage demonstrations because none exist on premises.
Service 02
Archival folder consultation
Book a ninety-minute session at the heritage desk with an archivist who retrieves pre-indexed folders matching your topic — for example, Scandinavian krona pegs or early euro convergence literature. You may take notes longhand or on a laptop without network tethering to external trading APIs. The archivist explains document hierarchy, redaction marks, and translation quirks. If you bring born-digital PDFs, they help compare metadata to our physical holdings. Deliverable: annotated reading list with shelf marks, not forecasts. Remote consultation via encrypted video is available for out-of-province researchers who accept screen-share only — no file uploads of proprietary tick databases.
Service 03
Curator-led classroom session
Accredited instructors may reserve the east gallery for up to twenty-four students. A senior curator narrates one exhibit module — chosen in advance — using primary facsimiles on the document camera. Students complete a worksheet identifying source bias, unit consistency, and anachronistic vocabulary in secondary blog posts. Sessions end with a ten-minute regulatory briefing distinguishing heritage education from dealer marketing. We supply risk disclaimers on paper for each attendee. Suitable for economics, history, and journalism programmes within Atlantic Canada; travel bursaries unavailable but virtual audit seats offered when gallery capacity fills.
Service 04
AI claim bibliography audit
Journalists, thesis supervisors, and compliance trainers submit up to five published claims about artificial intelligence predicting exchange rates. Curators map each claim to primary papers, noting dataset identifiers, horizon mismatches, and whether authors disclosed transaction costs. Output is a bound memorandum suitable for editorial review — not a rebuttal blog or social thread. Turnaround typically ten business days; expedited service unavailable because rushed audits skip footnotes. We do not run models on your behalf or certify strategies. If a claim lacks citable literature, we say so plainly in the memorandum header.
Service 05
Regulatory orientation briefing
A forty-five-minute seated briefing for newcomers to Canadian market structure: CSA harmonization themes, CIRO dealer categories, and where foreign-exchange contracts typically sit relative to securities law — explained with timeline posters, not product pitches. Facilitators answer definitional questions (“What is a dealer?” “What does registration mean?”) and distribute printed directories of official regulator websites. We explicitly refuse to name or rank firms. Briefings complement but do not replace legal counsel. Corporate compliance teams may book private sessions with signed non-disclosure for internal training logs; content remains educational.