SecLog is the system of record for events your business has to defend — trades, settlements, decisions. Any outside party can verify a record independently, without your cooperation and without access to your systems.
The systems we trust to record the most consequential events cannot prove their own records. Three failure modes, one consequence: every audit becomes a matter of belief, not evidence.
A privileged operator can change a record after the fact, and the system itself cannot contradict them. When a regulator or a counterparty asks "prove this hasn't moved", the answer is a promise, not a proof.
Today, verification means a sample, an interview, and a written attestation that the logs are what the operator claims they are. Independent verification — the kind that doesn't require the operator's cooperation — isn't structurally possible.
When two parties disagree about what was recorded, there's no canonical answer either of them can defend. Resolution depends on whichever side has the louder lawyers, not on the record itself.
The shape of the problem — "produce a record an external party can verify without trusting us" — is the same in very different industries. Two of them are where SecLog is being deployed today.
Post-trade infrastructure spends most of its budget reconciling systems that don't trust each other. SecLog removes the cause: every counterparty can verify the canonical record themselves, and disputes end with a proof instead of a phone call.
Sampling-based audit is a statistical estimate of integrity, not a guarantee. SecLog reduces audit to a deterministic check: did this record exist, signed, at the time it claims to have? Yes or no. Without the operator in the room.
We claim our records can be verified without us. Don't take our word. Run the verifier live in your browser, or download a real bundle and check it offline. No contact with us. No access to our systems.
The single change SecLog makes to your operating posture: when somebody who matters asks whether a record is real, you don't have to answer. The record answers for itself.
“Every record we keep can be verified by anybody who needs to, without our cooperation, without our systems, and without trusting us.”
Bring the record you can't currently defend. We'll show you what proving it looks like — from your auditor's seat, not ours.