A record you don't have to take on faith.
When DealMatcher confirms a step — an introduction locked, a release cleared — it seals a receipt. The receipt is a hash: a fingerprint of what happened, with no names, amounts, or contact details inside. Here's how the check works.
A fingerprint, not a file
The receipt is a cryptographic fingerprint — counts and fingerprints only, never the deal's contents. Change one character of what happened and the fingerprint no longer matches. There's no PII to leak.
Publicly anchored
Receipts are batched and timestamped into a public, independently checkable record. Once a batch confirms, the record is fixed to a point in time nobody — including Bonis Systems — can quietly move.
Both sides can check it
Anyone holding the hash can run this same check and get the same answer. The other party confirms it independently — that's what makes the proof worth something in a dispute.
No match isn't a failure. If a hash returns nothing, it just means there's no sealed record for it here — a typo, the wrong string, or a receipt that was never sealed. Check the hash and try again.