Bluechips Launches Cryptographic Verification Layer To Combat Global Surge In AI-Driven Fraud

April 2, 2026
1 min read
Photo Courtesy of: Bluechips

BlueChips today announced the launch of its cryptographic verification layer designed to authenticate digital media, verify identity, and record user consent amid rising cases of AI-generated fraud. The system provides a technical method for confirming the origin and legitimacy of videos, images, audio, and documents increasingly affected by synthetic manipulation.

Reports from financial institutions, enterprises, and online platforms show a rapid increase in deepfake impersonation, synthetic identification attempts, and fraudulent digital communications. BlueChips’ verification layer is built to address these issues by allowing organizations to validate content at the moment it is created rather than analyzing it after the fact.

The system uses cryptographic “Stamps,” which attach a hardware-attested signature to a media file. Each stamp contains the file hash, verified device information, subject identity verification, and a timestamped record of consent. Once generated, the stamp is written to a permissioned blockchain and anchored to a public chain for auditability and tamper resistance.

“Our goal is to introduce a clear method for validating the source of digital content,” said Rick Gulati, founder of BlueChips. “Every stamp contains the information needed to confirm that a piece of media was created by a verified device and with documented consent.”

BlueChips is releasing an API suite, SDKs, and webhooks to support enterprise adoption. These tools enable businesses to integrate verification workflows into their existing systems, including onboarding processes, customer interactions, and compliance checks. Developers can register new stamps, verify them in real time, and retrieve consent receipts as needed.

The solution is structured to support use cases across multiple sectors. Financial institutions can authenticate user-submitted identification materials and communication channels. Creator platforms can verify uploaded media and provide users with a mechanism to document or revoke consent. Security teams can use the verification layer to track provenance and detect unauthorized modifications.

“Companies across industries are requesting stronger verification methods as AI-generated content becomes more accessible,” Gulati added. “We are releasing this system to help organizations implement a consistent and traceable standard for authenticity.”

The launch also includes support for C2PA-compatible manifests, zero-knowledge–ready consent receipts, and verification endpoints for public-chain anchoring. Stamps can be revoked by users or administrators, and revocation is propagated to verifiers within seconds.

BlueChips will expand the system with additional integrations in the coming months. The company is preparing features intended for financial services, enterprise security teams, and large-scale creator platforms, along with tools that support regulatory compliance and cross-border verification requirements.


About BlueChips
BlueChips provides cryptographic verification infrastructure for authenticating digital media, identity, and consent. The company’s system uses hardware-based attestation, blockchain anchoring, and C2PA-compatible metadata to help institutions and creators validate the origin, integrity, and authorization of digital content. BlueChips serves clients across financial services, enterprise security, and creator-focused platforms.

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