Questions

Yes.


This isn't a lie detector.


It's simply a clear declaration.


Most of the photos that matter in daily life aren't shared to win arguments.

They're shared to include someone.


In relational spaces — friends, family, trusted circles — a clear declaration is usually enough.


This isn't about convincing strangers.


Not everyone will believe every image online. That's normal.


Genuine Capture isn't trying to persuade the entire internet.


It simply removes hesitation for the people you're actually sharing the moment with.


You don't need the whole world to believe you.


You only need the people who matter.

Sometimes you do.

But something subtle has changed.

Even among friends, there's often a small hesitation now.

Not accusation. Just uncertainty.

The mark removes that hesitation instantly — without anyone needing to ask an awkward question.

No.

Genuine Capture is not a forensic system.

It's not digital analysis.

It's not blockchain.

It's not legal certification.

It's a visible signal from the person sharing the photo.

A simple way to say: this happened.

It adds something small — yes.

But without it, something larger may be missing.

The mark allows the viewer to experience the image fully, without hesitation.

The choice becomes:

A perfectly clean image

or

A fully received moment

Most people find the trade worth it.

If hesitation doesn't matter to you, then it may be.

But if you've ever looked at a photo and quietly wondered…

and that wondering changed how deeply you let yourself go into it…

then you already understand why this exists.

No.

AI can be creative, beautiful, astonishing.

Sometimes it doesn't matter whether something is real.

But sometimes it does.

Genuine Capture exists for those moments.

They might.

But when someone cares whether something really happened,

a clear signal makes a difference.

And over time, shared signals become shared language.

Yes.


Genuine Capture can be used anywhere an image is shared.


In some professions, it may matter more than others.


For example, therapists, coaches, counselors, or anyone whose image is part of how trust begins.


When your photo isn't just decorative — but part of how someone decides whether to reach out — clarity can matter.


It's not about marketing.


It's about removing hesitation.


If your work is built on trust, letting people know the moment was real may quietly support that.

For friends sharing real moments.

For families preserving real memories.

For hobbyist photographers proud of what they captured.

For professionals whose image carries trust.

For anyone who wants the starting point restored.