Proof Receipt

BSV mainnetStandard proofAnchored on chain

Standard receipt — file never left your device. Your file was NOT uploaded. Only its SHA-256 hash, file size, and any label you typed were transmitted.

File SHA-256
f7b36d6f8caf0724763b170e20eb430eedbc560dad3b34e50d84a4b091bec2e5
File size
92 bytes
Filename label
sample.txt
Anchored at (UTC)
2026-05-02T00:27:00Z
Transaction
ec339fda9793379b5a10cb3db55f8f3449cd5200cca191d338c8e80769f592d3
On-chain commitment
fe0b39be185d7d64cc24982168108bcd6b34137a (sha256 of canonical receipt doc, first 20 bytes)
What this receipt proves — and what it does not.
A valid receipt proves the file existed in this exact form at the time of the on-chain transaction. It does not prove:

Proofs anchored

Three orthogonal proofs about your file are committed in a single on-chain anchor. Use whichever the situation calls for.

Byte-exact
f7b36d6f8caf0724763b170e20eb430eedbc560dad3b34e50d84a4b091bec2e5
SHA-256 of the file as uploaded. A single-byte change anywhere produces a different hash.
Content-canonical
d9199e0a52f985a06a38acd018e4a2e11595791cc2f8623d582c7bb41f30e19c
Scheme: text (NFC + line-ending normalized). Resilient to non-meaningful changes (resave, metadata churn, line-ending drift).
Per-section commitment
7a7878242812ddcd3dc2ae6846d1fdba9ca2eafde2d8b090a53494ee172c6759
Scheme: per-line · 3 leaves. Lets a holder later prove a single chunk was part of this file without revealing the rest.

Includes the bundle, a printable PDF receipt, and a verify guide. Keep alongside the original file.

Other download options
Bundle only (.mbnt)

Create another proof →

How to verify this receipt yourself (manual recipe)
In one sentence: re-fetch the transaction from any BSV block explorer, recompute the canonical receipt's hash, and check that your file's SHA-256 matches the one inside — if all three match, the receipt is intact and the original file is the one anchored. The verifier at /verify does this for you in your browser in one click.

For an audit trail or scripting, here are the manual steps anyone can run with jq + sha256sum:

  1. Re-fetch the on-chain transaction: https://whatsonchain.com/tx/ec339fda9793379b5a10cb3db55f8f3449cd5200cca191d338c8e80769f592d3 — confirm an OP_RETURN output starting with the bytes MBNT.
  2. Decode the OP_RETURN payload: bytes 6–25 are the document_hash (sha256 of the canonical receipt doc, truncated to 20 bytes). It must match fe0b39be185d7d64cc24982168108bcd6b34137a.
  3. Re-canonicalize the included canonical.json from the .mbnt bundle (jq -cS . canonical.json), sha256 it, take the first 40 hex chars — must equal fe0b39be185d7d64cc24982168108bcd6b34137a.
  4. Sha256 the original file — must equal the File SHA-256 above. The bundle does not contain the bytes; you kept them.
What we kept: this bundle (downloadable above) and one access-log line for this request. What we did NOT keep: the original file — the bytes never reached us. The on-chain anchor is permanent.