The Truth Machine
Bitcoin isn't just money. It's the most reliable timestamp on Earth. And now anyone can use it for $25.
A friend of mine freelances. Graphic design, logos, brand work. She’s good.
Last year, a client hired her to design a logo. She sent concepts. They went quiet. Three months later, she saw her design -- her exact design -- on a competitor’s product line. Different colors, same bones.
She had emails. She had timestamps from Dropbox. She had the Illustrator files with metadata. She took it to a lawyer. The lawyer said: “Can you prove you created it first?”
She could. Sort of. Email timestamps can be faked. File metadata can be edited. Dropbox doesn’t show up in court the way you think it does. The lawyer wanted something more concrete. She didn’t have it.
She let it go.
The Problem With “Proof”
We live in a world where everything is digital and almost nothing is provable.
Think about that for a second. You can screenshot a conversation, but screenshots can be doctored. You can save a contract to Google Drive, but someone with access could swap the file. You can write a journal entry with today’s date, but there’s no way to prove you actually wrote it today and not yesterday.
This matters more than you think. Not just for lawsuits and contracts. For regular people dealing with regular problems:
A landlord who changes the lease terms after you signed
A business partner who denies what was agreed to in a text message
An ex who claims you never said something you definitely said
A contractor who delivers work that doesn’t match the original quote
An inventor who needs to prove they had an idea before a competitor
The common thread? Everyone wishes they had a timestamp that couldn’t be argued with.
Bitcoin as a Truth Machine
Here’s something most people don’t know about Bitcoin: it’s not just money.
At its core, Bitcoin is a clock. A very, very reliable clock. Every 10 minutes, a new block is added to the blockchain -- a permanent, public record that can never be edited, deleted, or argued with. This has been happening without interruption since January 3, 2009.
Nobody controls it. No company, no government, no server that can go down. It just runs. Thousands of computers around the world maintain an identical copy of every transaction ever made. Changing a single record would require overpowering half the computing power on Earth. That’s not an exaggeration -- it’s math.
So what if you could use this clock -- this permanent, unkillable, global ledger -- to timestamp a document?
That’s exactly what Everstone Proof does.
How It Works (Without the Jargon)
You have a document. A contract, a photo, a letter, a text dump, whatever. Something you want to be able to prove existed at this exact moment.
**You upload it.** The file never leaves your device. Seriously -- it’s hashed locally in your browser. We never see it, never store it, never touch it.
**We create a fingerprint.** A SHA-256 hash -- a unique string of characters that represents your exact document. Change a single comma in your document and the fingerprint changes completely. It’s one-way: you can’t reverse-engineer the document from the hash.
**We write it to Bitcoin.** That fingerprint gets embedded into a Bitcoin transaction. It’s now part of the blockchain -- permanent, timestamped, verifiable by anyone.
**You get a sealed bundle.** Your document is encrypted with a passphrase only you know. We deliver the encrypted bundle by email. Even if our servers vanish tomorrow, you have everything you need to prove your document existed at that exact time.
Total cost: $25. One time. Forever.
What Does “Proving It” Actually Look Like?
Let’s say it’s a year from now and someone challenges you. They say you created that contract yesterday, not last March.
Here’s what you do:
You pull up the Bitcoin transaction. Anyone can see it -- it’s public, on the blockchain, timestamped to the exact block it was mined in. Inside that transaction is your document’s fingerprint.
Then you produce the original document. You run the same hash. It matches the one on the blockchain.
Game over. The document existed at that moment. The blockchain says so. It’s not your word against theirs anymore -- it’s math.
No lawyer can argue with a Bitcoin block. No judge needs to understand cryptocurrency. They just need to understand: this fingerprint was written to a public ledger on this date, and it matches this document. Done.
Who Is This For?
Honestly? Anyone who’s ever wished they could prove something.
Freelancers and creatives. Timestamp your work before you share it. If someone steals your design, you have proof you created it first.
Small business owners. Seal agreements, quotes, invoices. If a dispute comes up, you have an unchallengeable record of what was agreed to.
People going through disputes. Landlord-tenant issues, family disagreements, partnership disputes. Document it. Seal it. Sleep easier.
Lawyers and legal professionals. Give your clients a timestamp that holds up. It’s not a “crypto” pitch -- it’s a practical tool that leverages the most secure network on Earth.
Anyone with something important. A letter to your future self. A family recipe. A promise. Things that matter to you, timestamped permanently.
Why Not Just Use a Notary?
You can. Notaries are great. But notaries are humans with business hours. They cost more than $25. They require you to show up in person. And their records are stored in filing cabinets and databases that are exactly as permanent as the company maintaining them.
A Bitcoin timestamp is verified by mathematics, stored on every continent, and doesn’t take lunch breaks.
The Part Nobody Wants to Talk About
Most “blockchain” products are selling you something complicated. They want you to buy tokens, connect wallets, understand gas fees. They’re built for crypto people.
Everstone Proof is built for everyone else.
You don’t need a wallet. You don’t need to understand Bitcoin. You don’t even need to know what a hash is. You upload a document, set a passphrase, pay $25 with a credit card or Bitcoin, and you get a sealed, timestamped, encrypted bundle delivered to your email.
That’s it. That’s the whole thing.
The Bitcoin network does the heavy lifting. We just made it accessible.
$25 to Never Wonder Again
The next time someone says “prove it,” you can.
Not with screenshots. Not with emails. Not with “well, I have a copy on my hard drive somewhere.” With a permanent record on the most secure, most decentralized, most battle-tested network in human history.
Twenty-five dollars. No subscription. No renewal. No company that needs to stay in business for your proof to remain valid.
Everstone Proof -- I Can Prove It. everstonebtc.com/proof

