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Verify a decision

Every moderation decision on AVOID.NET is anchored to the Solana blockchain. You don't have to trust us — you can verify cryptographically that we committed to a verdict at a specific moment and have not rewritten it.

How verification works

  1. We commit. When a moderator accepts/rejects a submission, we serialize the decision into deterministic UTF-8 bytes (payload_canonical_string), hash it with SHA-256, encode the digest as base58, and write it to Solana inside an SPL Memo v2 transaction.
  2. We store the bytes. The exact bytes we hashed are stored alongside the decision in our database. Anyone can read them and recompute the hash in any language.
  3. You compare three values. Database hash, your independently-recomputed hash, and the hash inside the on-chain memo. If all three match, the decision is authentic and timestamped.
The on-chain memo format is AVOID.NET|v1|h:<b58-sha256>|d:<id>|t:<iso>

Find a signature on any investigation page's decision log, or run python -m src.verify_decision --signature <sig> for a CLI check.

Sequence
#2
Score
00 (0)
Cluster
mainnet-beta
Slot
426251810
Off-chain at
2026-06-13T18:18:49.327Z
Anchored at
Block time

Independent verification

1. Database (off-chain)
EiafowiKSb9tKvaaJEs9xuGRgfs7MbJhXUXNi82TMFLf
2. Recomputed (your browser)
computing…
3. On-chain (Solana memo)
fetching…
Canonical bytes hashed (1222 chars)
{"actor":"reviewer","decided_at":"2026-06-13T18:18:49.198Z","decision":"review","investigation_id":"a7376be0-6a6f-4bb8-99da-faa2ffb8facc","new_score":0,"page_slug":"fake-hyperliquid-app","prev_score":0,"reason":"The investigation page describes a real and well-documented scam incident; the core facts (ZachXBT warning, Google Play fake app, theft address, $281,000 figure, Apple App Store variant, Cyble CRIL broader campaign) are all confirmed by multiple independent sources. The main weaknesses are: (1) the 'Tvtion Inc.' developer name is not confirmed by the specific cited sources, appearing instead in secondary aggregators; (2) the fabricated positive reviews claim lacks direct source support; (3) a timeline entry for the Cyble CRIL report uses an incorrect date and wrong citation source; and (4) the claim that Hyperliquid 'has never released an official mobile application' was accurate at the time of the November 2025 scam but became stale in April 2026 when Hyperliquid launched its first official Android app. No claims were found to contradict credible sources.","score_delta":0,"sequence_num":2,"submission_content_hash":null,"submission_id":null,"submission_kind":null,"submission_valence":null,"v":1}