LOGBOOK

HELP

Quiz Entry - updated: 2026.05.31

When you drop an image into a Content Credentials "Verify" tool, what kinds of information does it reveal?

Who signed it, who created it, which software made it, and the list of edits applied — the full signed provenance record.

For an image with intact credentials, the Verify tool (e.g. verify.contentauthenticity.org) shows fields like:

  • Signed by — the certifying entity (e.g. Adobe Inc.) and timestamp.
  • Created by — the producing organisation (e.g. Starling Lab).
  • Produced with — the tool/version (e.g. Adobe Photoshop 24.0.0).
  • Changes & activities — what was done (e.g. "assets imported", "colour corrections / hue & saturation changed").
  • Assets used — ingredients composited into the final image.

Why this is powerful: instead of a single "verified ✓" stamp, you get a transparent, inspectable history. You decide whether the source and edits are trustworthy for your purpose — provenance, not censorship.

Tip: It's been called a "nutrition label" for digital content — you read the ingredients and judge for yourself.

From Quiz: ISF / Integrity & Content Authenticity (C2PA) | Updated: May 31, 2026