Legal

ImmutableProof provides a cryptographic proof-of-existence and finalization service only.

ImmutableProof does not assert the truth, accuracy, legality, or ownership of any content.

ImmutableProof does not interpret content and does not provide legal, financial, or compliance advice.

A valid proof indicates only that specific content existed in a specific form at a specific point in time and was cryptographically finalized.

A valid proof does not indicate who created the content, whether the content is accurate or complete, whether the content is lawful or authorized, or whether the content is relevant for any legal or regulatory purpose.

Verification results are deterministic for a given proof and protocol version, and are derived from the proof provided and the published protocol specification.

Verification results do not depend on payment status or user identity.

Verification is specified to be possible without reliance on ImmutableProof services.

No guarantee is made regarding the future availability of ImmutableProof services.

Payment is required only to create a new finalized proof.

Payment does not alter proof semantics and does not affect verification outcomes.

If payment is not completed, no proof is created.

ImmutableProof does not certify compliance with any law, regulation, standard, or framework.

Users are responsible for determining whether use of ImmutableProof is appropriate for their legal, regulatory, or compliance obligations.

ImmutableProof is provided on an “as-is” and “as-available” basis, to the maximum extent permitted by law.

No warranties are made, express or implied, including merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, and non-infringement.

Protocol semantics for INP v1.0 are frozen and will not change.

Any future protocol versions, if introduced, will exist in separate namespaces and will not reinterpret or modify existing proofs.

ImmutableProof does not assume or enforce jurisdiction-specific rules regarding evidence, records retention, or admissibility.

Jurisdiction-specific interpretation is the responsibility of the user.