Audit trail
The Givmo Charitable Fund publishes a public, tamper-evident audit trail of its accounting ledger. Each day the accounting system anchors the state of its books to two independent external witnesses that the Fund cannot retract or rewrite.
View the live audit trail: givmocharitable.org/audit
How the audit trail works
The audit page is a deterministic, content-hashed record of the Fund's daily accounting witness. For each daily record it lists the ledger's chain hash, the digest anchored into the Bitcoin blockchain via OpenTimestamps, and the hash that chains each record to the one before it — so the daily sequence cannot be reordered or back-dated. Every hash appears inline as plain text.
The page carries its own artifact_hash, a SHA-256 over
the page's canonical data. Anyone can recompute that hash from the published bytes and
confirm the page has not been altered. The page is also snapshotted by the
Internet Archive (the Wayback Machine),
so the externally-held copy cannot be taken back.
Until the Fund's first witness record is published, the audit page reports that no records have been published yet.