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Proof pages are evidence summaries, not endorsements.
The proof-page system is designed to show a conservative public view of a provider audit. The strongest proof page makes the record easier to inspect while explaining why the data still has limits.
Verified tracking can reduce cherry-picking. It cannot guarantee future results, your execution quality, or suitability for your account.
Proof-page blocks
Each block should answer a different trust question.
Verification status
Is the provider pending, active, verified, partially verified, paused, or revoked?
Tracked period
How long has the signal history been tracked, and how many signals are included?
Delayed stats
Are public metrics delayed or abstracted so private paid signals are not leaked live?
Limitations
What stayed private, what could not be parsed, and what assumptions were needed?
Metric reading order
Read risk before celebrating return.
What proof does not prove
The missing guarantees should be visible.
A verified past record can still fail in a new market regime.
Latency, slippage, order type, fees, and liquidity can change outcomes.
Proof pages do not know your capital, goals, leverage tolerance, or discipline.
Some raw messages, VIP discussion, or proprietary notes may stay behind the paywall.
Provider response
A serious proof page leaves room for corrections and disputes.
Providers should have a documented way to challenge parsing errors, explain unusual market conditions, and request corrections without quietly rewriting history. That response process is separate from ranking or favorable coverage.