Clearcompass

We are changing the physics of trust.

The definitive layer of truth for the world's most critical systems. Records are no longer just stored — they are proven.

attesta · proof receipt
verified
Subject
CA Medical License
#A-118-44-902
Issued
May 12, 2024
14:02 UTC
Status
In good standing
Block 4,812,019
Merkle root SHA-256
8b3a d11e f0c4 6772 a91e cc8e 4e02 1d49 7755 2b34 9a01 e6fa 6b1c 0021 8d44 c2ee
Subject
U.S. v. Hartford
9th Cir. · 24-1138
Issued
Aug 03, 2025
09:41 UTC
Status
Final · appellate
Block 5,019,733
Merkle root SHA-256
4d92 a801 2bf7 9ed1 033c 5fae b720 6c4a e8c1 14d6 0a73 91bd f5e2 7b08 4423 7c1a
Subject
Lot 32 · Block 7
Travis Co. TX
Issued
Mar 28, 2025
16:18 UTC
Status
Recorded
Block 4,902,118
Title chain 6 prior owners
9f0a 47e2 b3d9 128c 5fa1 ea88 0461 7d3e c2a6 339d 1bf4 8051 62cb 0d77 8a92 3ed8
Subject
Agent A1 · payment
delegated · expires 56m
Authorized
Nov 14, 2025
22:07 UTC
Status
Executed
Block 5,212,884
Action root EIP-1271 · delegated
c7e3 01ab ff52 6b8d 298f d044 3a1c e702 9b4d 510e 72c8 ff03 17b1 ec99 a5d0 a44f
Co-signed by
Notary A · Aurora Foundation Notary B · UC Berkeley Notary C · EFF Notary D · Bloomberg
The trust scope is expanding

Records every verifier can read — human or machine.

Digital truth that outlasts institutions.

Whether it’s a legal ruling, a property deed, or a professional license, a record on Attesta becomes a portable piece of history. You hold the cryptographic proof file, not the server — provable decades later, completely offline.

1

One-way timeline

Append-only cryptography ensures no quiet edits or erased history.

2

Permanent receipts

Verification works perfectly even if the issuing institution ceases to exist.

3

Domain-agnostic trust

Court records, deeds, insurance networks, and credentials all share the same underlying mathematical guarantees.

Provable provenance for autonomous action.

Agents verify each other’s identity, scope, and authority before they act — in milliseconds, with no central API in the critical path.

1

Action receipts

Every submission requires explicit, cryptographic write-authorization.

2

Delegation chains

Transparent, bounded tracking of delegated authority, including real-time revocation checks.

3

Machine-native signers

Smart-contract wallets and programmatic entities are first-class citizens alongside human keys.

Same protocol. Same proofs. The verifier doesn’t care whether you’re a person, a court, or a swarm of agents.

How it works 01 / 06
Step 01

Sign and submit.

Every record is secured with your digital signature before it leaves your hands. Attesta checks the signature on arrival. Tampered records or mismatched identities are turned away.

Step 02

Record and receipt.

Valid records are stamped onto a permanent timeline. Because your submission is sealed, your private data stays hidden — we never read it. You walk away with a cryptographic receipt that proves your place in line.

Step 03

Notarize.

A panel of independent notaries — operated by different organizations — co-signs the updated state of the registry. Several must agree before anything is final. No single party, not even Clearcompass, can alter an entry without breaking their seals.

Step 04

Publish.

The locked timeline is broadcast to the world. Snapshots are published on public networks, much like public notices in a newspaper. Anyone, anywhere, can pull them down and inspect them.

Step 05

Monitor continuously.

Independent monitors constantly download these public snapshots and re-run the math on their own machines. If our service ever tries to rewrite history, the contradiction is detected instantly and published as undeniable proof.

Step 06 — final

Verify forever.

You walk away with a final proof file. With your receipt and the public snapshot, anyone can verify your record is genuine — even decades later, entirely offline, with no Clearcompass servers required.

A new primitive for verifiable truth.

To prove a record is genuine, you shouldn’t have to blindly trust the API that serves it. Attesta decouples data from its host infrastructure. By shifting trust from centralized authorities to decentralized cryptography, we turn ordinary data into a self-contained, mathematically guaranteed proof.

01 · Permanence

Cryptographic permanence.

Whether it is a property deed, an AI agent’s action receipt, or a court ruling, every event is anchored to an append-only timeline. Quiet edits, rollbacks, and historical revisions are mathematically impossible.

02 · Trustless

Trustless verification.

The timeline is locked by an independent watchdog network, not a central database. The cryptographic proof is entirely self-contained — a machine or human can verify its authenticity anywhere, instantly, without an API call.

03 · Disclosure

Selective disclosure.

Transparency does not require exposure. Using zero-knowledge primitives, actors can prove specific claims — like a supply chain meeting compliance or a user holding clearance — without leaking the underlying confidential data.

04 · Portability

Absolute portability.

Data is no longer trapped in an application’s silo. An autonomous agent jumping between protocols, a deed crossing jurisdictions, or a business auditing historical transactions carries a universally verifiable proof that any system can natively authenticate.

Proof you control.
Trust without a middleman.

FAQ

What is Attesta?

Attesta is Clearcompass's verification engine — a high-throughput sequencer that orders signed records onto a permanent timeline. It never reads the contents, only proves their order and integrity.

What kinds of records does Clearcompass handle?

Professional licenses, court rulings, accreditations, credentials, delegations of power — anything that needs to be provably authentic decades after issuance.

What stops networks from cheating?

Every update is co-signed by independent notaries and broadcast publicly. Independent monitors re-run the math on those snapshots — contradictions are mathematically detectable and published as proof.

Is Attesta open source? Can I run my own monitor or notary?

Yes. The verifier, monitor, and notary clients are open source. Anyone can re-derive the timeline, hold operators accountable, or join the notary panel.