Global authenticity standards ecosystem

Standards for authenticity, provenance, and evidence integrity.

Digital Integrity is the open standards, governance, certification, and research framework for authenticity verification, synthetic media defense, and evidence integrity in digital systems.

720published documents across 9 standards series
805Kwords of substantive standards, frameworks, and playbooks
9series from threat landscape through sector adoption frameworks

Digital Integrity system layers

DI-100 · Threat Landscape
DI-200 · Standards & Controls
DI-300 · Legal & Evidence
DI-400 · Reference Architecture
DI-500 · Implementation
DI-600 · Research & Global Index
DI-700 · Global Governance
DI-800 · Sector Frameworks

Why this matters

Synthetic media erodes public trust in journalism, elections, financial systems, legal evidence, and organizational communications. Digital Integrity provides the infrastructure required to restore verifiability.

What makes this different

Digital Integrity is a layered discipline rather than a single tool or product. It combines standards, evidence rules, certification, monitoring, implementation playbooks, workforce development, and adoption frameworks within one coherent system.

Who it serves

Governments, courts, enterprises, platforms, media organizations, research institutions, standards bodies, legal practitioners, and civil society groups.

The framework

The publication is organized as a formal standards body architecture. Nine series address successive layers of the Digital Integrity discipline.

DI-000 · Master Index

Repository governance, standards catalog, control catalog, global registry, maturity model, document dependency graph, and RFC process.

DI-100 · Threat Landscape

Synthetic media threat taxonomy, adversary models, sector threat matrices, attack lifecycle, and intelligence foundations for the discipline.

DI-200 · Standards & Controls

Control framework, control catalog, maturity model, incident response, governance standards, audit and compliance frameworks, and certification requirements.

DI-300 · Legal & Evidence

Digital evidence admissibility standards, chain-of-custody procedures, cross-border evidence handling, litigation playbooks, and regulatory alignment.

DI-400 · Architecture

Reference architecture, technology landscape, interoperability models, and system blueprints for authenticity verification infrastructure.

DI-500 · Implementation

Deployment playbooks, detection frameworks, sector implementation guides, operational procedures, and adoption pathway documentation.

DI-600 · Research & Index

Global maturity index methodology, benchmark studies, observatory frameworks, dataset standards, and ecosystem readiness measurement.

DI-700 · Global Governance

Global initiative strategy, ecosystem program design, alliance governance, international coordination, and institutional partnership frameworks.

DI-800 · Sector Frameworks

Sector-specific adoption frameworks for finance, justice, media, government, elections, and enterprise deployment contexts.

New · DI-010

The Digital Integrity Reference Model

The DIRM is the formal nine-stage process framework for the discipline, spanning governance architecture through continuous threat intelligence. It is free to use, sector-agnostic, and cross-referenced to every DI standards series.

01
Govern
02
Identify
03
Preserve
04
Detect
05
Verify
06
Investigate
07
Assess
08
Respond
09
Intelligence

Core outcomes

  • Reliable authenticity verification for digital media and evidence
  • Standardized controls for synthetic media detection and provenance tracking
  • Legal frameworks for evidence admissibility and chain-of-custody in the AI era
  • Operational playbooks for platforms, governments, enterprises, and media organizations
  • Global observability into synthetic media threats and ecosystem readiness
  • Professional accreditation, certification, and ethical governance for practitioners

Who should start here

  • Governments: national implementation, election protection, evidentiary standards, and policy alignment
  • Enterprises: deployment models, incident response, fraud defense, and brand protection
  • Platforms: detection, moderation, authenticity labeling, and transparency workflows
  • Legal practitioners: evidence authentication, admissibility procedures, and litigation support
  • Researchers: datasets, benchmarks, observatory frameworks, and research agenda
  • Standards bodies: governance model, RFC process, and canonical standards reference

From foundation to global infrastructure

Phase 1: FoundationPublish core standards

Publish the foundational standards, governance structures, global registry, and public repository. Establish the Standards Council and constitute the initial working groups.

Phase 2: Standards FormationBuild certification and monitoring

Publish Working Drafts across all nine series. Operationalize the certification program, benchmark frameworks, observatory systems, and verification infrastructure.

Phase 3: Certification LaunchDeploy across sectors

Announce the first cohort of certified organizations and accredited practitioners. Begin implementation across enterprises, platforms, media, legal systems, and election protection programs.

Phase 4: Global AdoptionCoordinate policy and alliance

Establish sustained global readiness measurement, alliance governance, international regulatory alignment, and cross-jurisdictional coordination under the DI-700 and DI-800 programs.

Start with the canonical reading path

Read the foundational documents in sequence, then move into the certification, implementation, and deployment guides relevant to your context.

Digital Integrity is the discipline that joins authenticity standards, evidence integrity, operational response, and global adoption in a single coherent system.

Framework positioning statement

The initiative operates as a modern standards body: open governance, structured specifications, certification systems, reference architectures, and operational guidance.

Governance model summary

The repository holds 720 documents and 805,000 words of standards content, making Digital Integrity one of the larger authenticity and trust frameworks in active development.

Repository status, March 2026