New Platform Provides Cryptographic Proof Of Identity, Consent, And Media Authenticity For High-Risk Digital Workflows

Photo Courtesy of: BlueChips

BlueChips today announced the launch of its hardware-attested media verification platform, designed to help organizations verify the authenticity, identity, and consent associated with digital media. The platform addresses the growing risk of deepfake fraud and unauthorized use of digital content across industries including financial services, technology, media, and online platforms.

The BlueChips platform uses secure hardware attestation, cryptographic signatures, and verifiable consent records to establish a tamper-evident provenance trail for digital media. By binding media to a verified device, a confirmed subject identity, and a time-stamped consent record, the system enables third parties to independently validate whether content is authentic and authorized.

“Deepfake fraud has moved beyond novelty and into real operational and financial risk,” said Rick Gulati, founder of BlueChips. “Our goal with BlueChips is to give organizations a way to verify authenticity and consent at a cryptographic level, rather than relying on screenshots, logs, or platform trust alone.”

At the core of the platform is a hardware root-of-trust model that leverages secure enclaves and trusted execution environments on supported mobile and desktop devices. Media is registered at the point of capture or upload, creating a cryptographic record that includes device attestation, subject verification, and a consent receipt. Any subsequent edits, reposts, or derivatives are linked through a hash-based provenance chain, allowing verifiers to assess whether the content remains intact.

BlueChips also issues non-transferable, revocable digital credentials that represent proof of verification and consent. These credentials are recorded on a permissioned ledger for performance and privacy, with optional anchoring to public blockchains for additional transparency. If consent is withdrawn or credentials are revoked, the change propagates immediately to verification systems.

“Verification needs to be simple to use but rigorous enough to stand up to legal, regulatory, and institutional scrutiny,” Gulati said. “We built BlueChips to integrate directly into existing workflows so that authenticity checks can happen automatically, without slowing down operations.”

The platform supports industry standards such as Content Provenance and Authenticity (C2PA) and offers APIs, SDKs, and webhooks for integration into moderation, compliance, and trust systems. BlueChips is designed for organizations that handle sensitive media, including financial institutions, content platforms, AI developers, and enterprises seeking to validate the integrity of digital communications and files.

BlueChips is currently available to approved developers and enterprise partners, with production deployments supported following onboarding and verification.


About BlueChips

BlueChips is a technology company focused on cryptographic trust infrastructure for digital media. The company provides tools that allow organizations to verify identity, consent, and authenticity using hardware-attested signatures, cryptographic provenance, and revocable credentials. BlueChips’ platform is designed to support high-risk digital workflows across financial services, media, technology, and content platforms in an environment increasingly shaped by AI-generated and manipulated content.

Tags

Experienced News Reporter with a demonstrated history of working in the broadcast media industry. Skilled in News Writing, Editing, Journalism, Creative Writing, and English.