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OneCoin2 decisions on this page

Audit log

Every state-changing event for OneCoin: moderation decisions on community submissions, plus corrections and updates from the news pipeline. URL-based decisions carry three independent witnesses — the original source, an Internet Archive snapshot taken at submission time, and a Solana memo signed by our publicly-disclosed publisher key.

  1. #1reviewby reviewerreviewer
    2026-05-13 20:28:45Z
    Score: 00 (no score change)
    The OneCoin investigation page is overwhelmingly accurate on the major facts: founding history, corporate structure, the fake blockchain, DOJ prosecutions, Greenwood's sentence, Ignatova's fugitive status and reward, and the 2026 victim compensation process are all well-supported by primary government sources and reputable journalism. One clear factual error was identified: the timeline records Mark Scott's sentencing as April 4, 2023, when multiple independent sources confirm it occurred on January 25, 2024. Two minor date imprecisions were also found: the educational package maximum price (225,500 euros is a secondary source figure; the primary Wikipedia figure is 118,000 euros) and Greenwood's plea date (December 16, not December 20, 2022). The page's summary claim that the scheme 'collapsed in 2017' slightly understates that operations continued under Konstantin Ignatov through early 2019.
    anchoranchored
    chain
    mainnet-betaslot 419,542,465
    sig
    oQbL59RTUEbf…52zX6deNexplorer ↗
    hash
    Ee4ZfwJWSDJU…ATaHKVXasha256 → base58
    verifying row…full verify ↗
    canonical bytes (1247 B) ▸
    {"actor":"reviewer","decided_at":"2026-05-13T20:28:45.212Z","decision":"review","investigation_id":"2a4d9ed1-6251-4571-ad83-62cbf44d238d","new_score":0,"page_slug":"onecoin","prev_score":0,"reason":"The OneCoin investigation page is overwhelmingly accurate on the major facts: founding history, corporate structure, the fake blockchain, DOJ prosecutions, Greenwood's sentence, Ignatova's fugitive status and reward, and the 2026 victim compensation process are all well-supported by primary government sources and reputable journalism. One clear factual error was identified: the timeline records Mark Scott's sentencing as April 4, 2023, when multiple independent sources confirm it occurred on January 25, 2024. Two minor date imprecisions were also found: the educational package maximum price (225,500 euros is a secondary source figure; the primary Wikipedia figure is 118,000 euros) and Greenwood's plea date (December 16, not December 20, 2022). The page's summary claim that the scheme 'collapsed in 2017' slightly understates that operations continued under Konstantin Ignatov through early 2019.","score_delta":0,"sequence_num":1,"submission_content_hash":null,"submission_id":null,"submission_kind":null,"submission_valence":null,"v":1}
    Verify offline (run on your own machine)
    python -m src.verify_decision b3467421-20ad-4a45-b2b4-2ec2376acd45
  2. #2review reviseby judgejudge
    2026-05-13 20:28:45Z
    Score: 00 (-20)
    The page is factually strong on 82.8% of material claims, backed by Tier 1 government sources and reputable journalism. However, claim_findings[16] (Mark Scott's sentencing date) contains a clear factual error: the timeline states April 4, 2023 when independent sources confirm January 25, 2024. claim_findings[3] ('collapsed in 2017') understates that operations continued under Konstantin Ignatov until March 2019. claim_findings[5] (225,500 euros maximum package price) is sourced to an industry blog rather than primary documentation. These errors, coupled with medium-priority coverage gaps (Konstantin Ignatov's final sentencing, victim harm by geography), warrant revision to correct dates and expand context on scheme duration and loss distribution.
    anchoranchored
    chain
    mainnet-betaslot 419,542,468
    sig
    315y6pT5jJBS…5rb4ewXfexplorer ↗
    hash
    GuVBaFUsvaDz…5osgGKfFsha256 → base58
    verifying row…full verify ↗
    canonical bytes (1104 B) ▸
    {"actor":"judge","decided_at":"2026-05-13T20:28:45.212Z","decision":"review_revise","investigation_id":"2a4d9ed1-6251-4571-ad83-62cbf44d238d","new_score":0,"page_slug":"onecoin","prev_score":0,"reason":"The page is factually strong on 82.8% of material claims, backed by Tier 1 government sources and reputable journalism. However, claim_findings[16] (Mark Scott's sentencing date) contains a clear factual error: the timeline states April 4, 2023 when independent sources confirm January 25, 2024. claim_findings[3] ('collapsed in 2017') understates that operations continued under Konstantin Ignatov until March 2019. claim_findings[5] (225,500 euros maximum package price) is sourced to an industry blog rather than primary documentation. These errors, coupled with medium-priority coverage gaps (Konstantin Ignatov's final sentencing, victim harm by geography), warrant revision to correct dates and expand context on scheme duration and loss distribution.","score_delta":-20,"sequence_num":2,"submission_content_hash":null,"submission_id":null,"submission_kind":null,"submission_valence":null,"v":1}
    Verify offline (run on your own machine)
    python -m src.verify_decision 71fd5b87-277b-4a1b-bb40-ac5fe518681c
How verification works. The “Row integrity” check above is computed in your browser — your machine recomputes the SHA-256 of the canonical bytes and compares against the stored hash. No avoid.net server can fake that check. The “full verify” link goes one level deeper: your browser fetches the on-chain transaction from a Solana RPC node and confirms the same hash is in the memo. If you don’t want to trust either avoid.net or the public RPC, run the CLI verifier on your own machine — python -m src.verify_decision <event_id>.