Verify Human-Authored Content
The AI Disclosure Rule
Every member of the Accountable Humanity network agrees to a simple but powerful rule: all content authored and signed by their identity must include a disclosure about AI involvement in the content creation process.
This is not a ban on AI. It is a commitment to transparency. If AI helped write, edit, or generate the content, the author discloses that. If the content is entirely human-authored, the signature itself serves as that attestation.
Cryptographic Signatures You Can Verify
When a verified human on the network signs a piece of content, that signature is cryptographically linked to their identity. Anyone — a platform, a reader, a search engine — can verify that the content was signed by a real, unique human being.
These signatures are recorded in a tamper-evident transparency log, ensuring that they cannot be forged, backdated, or silently removed. The result is an auditable chain of human authorship that persists independently of any single platform.
Why It Matters
As AI-generated content becomes indistinguishable from human-written content, the ability to verify authorship becomes essential. Not because AI content is inherently bad, but because consumers deserve to know what they are reading.
A product review signed by a verified human carries different weight than one generated by a bot farm. A news article with a human authorship signature means a real person staked their reputation on its accuracy. A political comment from a verified local resident means something different than one from an anonymous account.
Human authorship verification does not replace critical thinking. It gives people one more signal — a strong, cryptographic signal — to help them evaluate what they encounter online.
How Platforms Can Use It
Any platform can integrate with the Accountable Humanity network to offer human-verified content labels. Social media platforms can let users filter for human-authored posts. Review sites can highlight verified-human reviews. Content management systems can embed verification metadata directly in published articles.
The infrastructure is open source and the APIs are free to use. Platforms do not need permission to integrate — they just need to verify signatures against the public network.
Stand Behind Your Words
Join the waitlist to be among the first to cryptographically sign your content as a verified human.
Join the Waitlist