Prove you said it first.
Build the internet's memory.
TruthStamp isn't just a timestamping tool — it's a proof layer for the internet. Whether you're a creator protecting originality, a founder protecting ideas, a journalist preserving evidence, or an AI builder asserting authorship, TruthStamp creates tamper-proof records that exist independently of any platform, server, or institution.
Creator Economy
The creator economy doesn't only monetize content — it monetizes originality, timing, credibility, and authenticity. With AI making everything copyable in seconds, proof of creation has never mattered more. TruthStamp is the missing layer between creating something and being able to prove you created it first.
A creator stamps a video script and concept brief before sending it to editors, co-writers, or agencies. If the concept later appears in someone else's video, they have immutable proof their version existed first — with an exact timestamp that predates any dispute.
A musician stamps unreleased lyrics, melody notes, and demo audio hashes before sending them to labels, collaborators, or producers. After official release, the timestamps provide cryptographic proof that the songs existed months before publication — protecting against "we wrote that first" disputes.
A finance or crypto newsletter writer stamps their draft analysis the night before publishing. If a major publication runs the same thesis days later, the creator has verifiable proof of independent, prior authorship — building long-term credibility and a public track record.
Memes are increasingly valuable IP. Creators who originate viral formats, templates, or moments now fight ownership battles publicly. Stamping an original meme or format before it spreads gives the creator verifiable first-origin proof — the internet's version of copyright registration, done in one click.
A freelance designer or illustrator stamps client deliverables, concept boards, and portfolio pieces before handoff. If clients later claim ownership or use the work beyond agreed scope, the timestamped proof establishes when the work was created and by whom.
Course creators frequently find their curriculum structures, frameworks, and educational materials copied and resold. Stamping the original content structure before launch creates a verifiable creation timeline — protecting against plagiarism while maintaining privacy if hash-only mode is used.
Creators can timestamp deliverables, campaign briefs, and content approval records before submission. If brand clients later claim non-delivery or dispute timelines, the creator has independent receipts showing exactly when content was created and submitted — outside any platform's control.
Analysts, commentators, and creators who build audiences on being "early" need proof that their takes preceded the crowd. Stamping threads, essays, and hot takes before posting gives them cryptographic receipts that no one can dispute — turning intellectual credibility into something verifiable.
AI Agents & Autonomous Workflows
As AI agents take autonomous actions — researching, writing, deciding, transacting — the question of when something happened, what state the world was in, and who instructed what becomes critical for governance, trust, and accountability. TruthStamp gives AI-generated outputs and agent instructions the same permanence as human-authored content.
A founder building AI automations stamps agent workflows, prompt chains, and system instructions before publishing or selling them. The proof establishes when the architecture was created — protecting against copycats in the emerging AI tooling market where ideas spread and get re-packaged instantly.
A prompt engineer creates a viral, high-value prompt that significantly improves LLM outputs for a specific workflow. Stamping the prompt before public release creates timestamped ownership proof — especially valuable as prompt marketplaces grow and monetization of prompt IP becomes mainstream.
A company that publishes AI-generated analysis, research summaries, or recommendations stamps each output before distribution. This creates an immutable audit trail showing what the AI produced at what time — critical for compliance, governance, and for distinguishing original AI outputs from later altered versions.
An AI artist stamps prompts, seed values, model versions, and generated outputs before public posting. This establishes a verifiable creation timeline for each piece — proving originality and temporal priority as AI-generated content attribution becomes a contested and legally relevant area.
A machine learning team stamps model checkpoints, training configurations, evaluation results, and safety assessments at each development milestone. If questions later arise about when a model had certain capabilities or what guardrails were in place, the timestamped snapshots provide independent evidence — decoupled from internal systems that could be altered.
As regulators and platforms increasingly demand disclosure of AI-assisted content, creators can stamp original human drafts, instructions, and editorial decisions before AI enhancement. This creates verifiable proof of the human's role and timing — demonstrating originality and editorial control even when AI tools are used in the workflow.
When AI agents execute consequential actions autonomously — executing trades, sending communications, making bookings, initiating contracts — timestamped proof of the instructions and context at the moment of action becomes critical. TruthStamp can serve as the receipts layer for autonomous AI systems operating in high-stakes environments.
Public Predictions & Forecasting
Anyone can claim they predicted something after it happens. TruthStamp's sealed stamp mode locks in predictions before events occur — content stays hidden, but the timestamp is immediately verifiable. When the reveal date arrives, the proof speaks for itself.
A crypto analyst seals a Bitcoin price prediction with a 6-month reveal date. The content stays hidden but the timestamp is immediately public. When the reveal date arrives, the prediction auto-unlocks on-chain — with mathematical proof it was written before the market moved.
A political researcher stamps constituency-level election predictions before results day. The immutable timestamps prevent any accusation of editing predictions after results are known — building a transparent, verifiable forecasting track record.
A technology researcher stamps predictions about AI capability milestones, drug approval timelines, or climate data thresholds before outcomes are known. The sealed stamp creates a permanent, independently verifiable record of when the prediction was made.
Education & Research
Plagiarism disputes, originality claims, and proof-of-work problems are endemic in academic settings. TruthStamp gives students, researchers, and institutions a way to create independently verifiable proof of when work existed — without relying on institutional systems that can be altered.
A university student stamps their final-year AI project draft before submitting to professors. If plagiarism disputes arise later, the student can independently prove the exact version existed at a specific timestamp — evidence that predates any accusation.
A researcher stamps an unpublished paper in hash-only mode before sharing with collaborators or journals. If authorship disputes arise, the timestamped proof establishes prior existence without ever revealing the confidential content to anyone.
An institution stamps digital certificates, transcripts, and award records on-chain. Employers and verifiers can independently confirm authenticity without contacting the institution — and the records remain verifiable even if the institution later changes systems or closes.
Startup Ideas & Concept Protection
Founders constantly worry about sharing ideas too early. A pitch deck shown to the wrong investor, a roadmap shared before funding, a whitepaper distributed before launch — all carry risk. TruthStamp lets founders protect ideas without lawyers, patents, or filing fees.
A founder stamps their pitch deck in hash-only mode before meetings. Months later, if similar products appear from investors who saw the deck, the timestamped proof establishes that the idea existed before those conversations — creating a documented prior art record.
A Web3 project timestamps its tokenomics draft and product roadmap before the public launch. This prevents later accusations of roadmap changes and establishes an immutable record of what was promised — and when.
Two founders stamp their initial equity split agreement and roles document before formally incorporating. The on-chain timestamp provides evidence of the original arrangement if disagreements arise later during the incorporation process.
Legal Agreements & Confidential Documents
TruthStamp's hash-only mode is uniquely suited for legal and confidential contexts — the document never leaves your device, but its existence at a specific timestamp becomes permanently and independently verifiable. No third party ever sees the content.
A startup hashes and stamps a signed NDA before sharing confidential business information with a new partner. The document remains completely private, but the proof that a signed NDA existed at a specific time is permanently verifiable — without relying on email servers or cloud storage that can be altered.
A consulting firm stamps every contract revision during negotiations. This creates an immutable timeline showing exactly which version of the contract existed at each stage — making "that clause was added after we agreed" disputes immediately resolvable.
A property buyer and seller stamp their initial agreement terms before formal contracts are drawn up by lawyers. This creates a prior-existence record of the agreed terms, protecting both parties if terms are disputed during the formal documentation process.
Journalism, OSINT & Evidence Preservation
Journalists, investigators, and OSINT researchers regularly face situations where critical evidence is deleted, edited, or disputed. TruthStamp allows them to create permanent, independent records of what existed — before platforms, governments, or subjects can remove it.
A journalist stamps article URLs and screenshots during a rapidly developing news story. Even if the publisher later edits the story, adds corrections without disclosure, or removes it entirely, the proof preserves what was publicly stated at the exact moment of capture.
An investigator timestamps wallet screenshots, deleted tweets, website snapshots, and whitepaper versions while building a case against a fraudulent project. Even if the perpetrators delete all traces, the on-chain proof trail remains independently verifiable — and usable as documented evidence.
An open-source intelligence researcher timestamps publicly visible information about developing geopolitical situations. The immutable timestamps create a verifiable sequence of events — establishing when information became publicly known, which matters for accuracy, attribution, and disinformation research.
Business & Invoice Verification
Small and medium businesses regularly face disputes around quotations, invoices, approvals, deliveries, and payment timelines. TruthStamp creates an independent audit trail that no one party controls — giving both sides verifiable ground truth.
An MSME stamps a project quotation PDF hash before sending it to the client. If pricing or scope disputes arise later, the original proposal is independently verifiable — no one can claim the document was altered after submission.
A logistics company stamps invoice and delivery confirmation hashes before sending them to partners. The tamper-proof audit trail is invaluable for accounting disputes, insurance claims, and multi-party supply chain verification.
Agriculture & Supply Chain
Agriculture supply chains suffer from provenance fraud, quality disputes, and record tampering at scale. TruthStamp provides a lightweight, tamper-proof layer that doesn't require expensive enterprise blockchain systems — just a hash of the record and a timestamp.
A mango exporter stamps inspection certificates and shipment photos before goods leave. If buyers later claim poor quality or damaged goods, the exporter has timestamped evidence showing the original condition at the point of departure — independent of any party's internal records.
A farming cooperative stamps harvest records, farm certifications, and batch inspection reports to prove authenticity for premium organic buyers — creating verifiable provenance that doesn't depend on a centralised certification database that could be compromised.
Real-World Assets (RWAs)
Real-world assets require trusted records, provenance integrity, and timestamped audit trails. TruthStamp provides the proof layer underneath tokenization — establishing that valuations, inspections, and reserve records existed at specific points in time, independently of any custodian.
A property valuation company timestamps appraisal reports and inspection documents before sharing them with investors or banks. The records cannot be silently altered later — any change to the document would produce a different hash, making tampering immediately detectable.
A tokenized gold issuer stamps reserve audits and inventory snapshots at regular intervals. Investors can independently verify that reserves existed at the claimed amounts at specific points in time — without trusting the issuer's internal reporting systems.
Start building verifiable history.
Whether you're a creator protecting originality, a founder protecting ideas, a journalist preserving evidence, or an AI builder asserting authorship — TruthStamp creates proof that survives independently of any platform, server, or institution.
Social Media & Internet Receipts
Posts get deleted, threads get edited, articles disappear overnight, and creators struggle to prove who said something first. TruthStamp creates tamper-proof timestamps for social content, public statements, and internet history — before platforms rewrite it.
A crypto analyst stamps their thread before posting. Months later, when the thesis proves correct and debates about "who said it first" emerge, the timestamped proof shows the exact original content — written before any of it became obvious.
A journalist or researcher stamps article URLs and screenshots during a developing news story before edits or removals occur. The proof preserves what was publicly said at a specific moment — even if the publisher later changes or deletes the story.
A startup founder stamps their public announcement threads, roadmap posts, and launch promises before publishing. If posts are edited after the fact, the original claims remain independently verifiable — creating transparent accountability that builds community trust.
A creator stamps a concept, hook, or post draft in hash-only mode before sharing it with collaborators. The content stays completely private, but the proof of its existence is permanently locked — giving the creator undeniable evidence if ideas are later taken and posted by others.