About Scripli
Scripli was built to answer a question the internet has never had to answer before: how do you prove a human wrote something?
The problem
For most of history, authorship was assumed. If your name was on something, people believed you wrote it. That assumption held because there was no easy alternative — producing convincing text at scale required human effort.
That changed with large language models. Now any piece of writing — an essay, an article, a legal brief, a novel chapter — could have been generated in seconds. And the tools built to detect AI-generated text have a fundamental problem: they analyse the output, not the process. They produce probabilistic scores, not proof. They flag innocent writers as frauds.
The false positive problem is not a bug to be fixed. It is a structural consequence of output-based detection. The approach is wrong.
The Scripli approach
Scripli proves the process, not the output. It observes a writing session in real time — recording behavioural signals like writing rhythm, revision patterns, and session timing — and seals that evidence into a tamper-proof record. The result is a Human Authenticity Certificate (HAC): a signed, verifiable proof that a human wrote this document, in this session, on this date.
No document text is ever stored or transmitted. The certificate is about the act of writing, not what was written. A writer can prove their work is authentic without revealing a single word of it.
Anyone can verify a HAC — a professor, an editor, a platform, a legal system — by visiting the public verification URL. No account required. The certificate is permanent and non-transferable.
Mission
To make human authorship verifiable — so writers never have to explain themselves to an algorithm.
Founder
Contact
Questions, press inquiries, or partnership interest: hello@scripli.com