Cryptographic Registry

 

The Cperm Cryptographic Registry provides a publicly verifiable publication and provenance record for discoveries, inventions, creative works, software, methods, protocols, trademarks, concepts, designs, authorship claims, and other intellectual creations.

Unlike traditional filing systems that may require significant cost, lengthy examination periods, or formal registration before a public record exists, the Cperm Cryptographic Portal allows creators to establish an immediate, timestamped publication trail supported by cryptographic proof receipts and public verification.

A registry entry does not claim to replace government-issued patents, trademarks, copyrights, or other statutory rights. Instead, it creates an independently verifiable historical record documenting what was disclosed, when it was disclosed, and how that record has been preserved over time.

Each bulletin may include one or more registry functions, including:

• Cryptographic Notary
• Disclosure Ledger
• Public IP Trail Tracer
• Proof Receipts
• Supplemental Clarification Bulletins
• Immutable Publication History

Every publication receives a signed cryptographic receipt that may later be verified using the public verification system. Additional clarification bulletins may be published without altering earlier records, preserving chronological continuity while documenting corrections, updates, or additional evidence.

The Registry is particularly valuable for:

• documenting inventions before formal patent filing
• establishing public disclosure records
• preserving evidence of development
• recording authorship
• documenting creative works
• maintaining chronological project histories
• recording independent discoveries
• creating transparent provenance trails
• strengthening research archives
• preserving publication integrity

For many creators, a traditional patent or trademark filing may come later. For others, it may never be necessary. Regardless of future legal filings, maintaining a cryptographically verifiable publication history provides a permanent, independently verifiable record of the development and disclosure process.

The Cperm Cryptographic Registry is therefore intended to complement—not replace—existing intellectual property systems by providing immediate publication, transparent provenance, immutable continuity, and publicly verifiable cryptographic evidence.

 

Cperm Cryptographic Registry

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