PLPlenaProof
PLENA VRX Standard

One proof grammar.
Controlled upgrade layers.

PlenaProof now names the layers it already needs: simple receipts first, stronger evidence packets when facts matter, public registry and QR verification when recipients must check status, and AI-era trust receipts when machines are involved.

Controlled upgrade rule

VRX-1 remains the foundation. Higher VRX layers do not replace it; they extend the same receipt grammar only when the case needs stronger evidence, public interoperability, or AI-era accountability. This keeps the consumer experience simple while allowing institutions to adopt stronger proof standards.

LayerPLENA rolePrimary buyer/user valueCurrent d19.131 asset
VRX-1Basic proof receiptSomeone can read and review the core record without needing PLENA's internal database.Existing VRX-1 pages and universal receipt schema.
VRX-2Evidence packetA scattered case becomes a structured packet with attachment references, custody events, redactions, and export trail.vrx2-evidence-packets.html + assets/vrx2-evidence-packet.schema.json.
VRX-4Public registry / QR verificationA recipient can scan or open a verification route and inspect public-safe receipt status.vrx4-public-registry-qr.html + assets/vrx4-public-registry-record.schema.json.
VRX-5AI-era trust receiptAI-assisted decisions become reviewable: who used AI, who reviewed it, what risk flags existed, and what appeal route remains.vrx5-ai-era-trust-receipts.html + assets/vrx5-ai-trust-receipt.schema.json.
Consumer-friendly

Start with a simple receipt

A user should not need to understand all VRX layers. The interface can ask what happened, gather evidence, and choose the appropriate layer behind the scenes.

Institution-ready

Upgrade only when needed

Institutions can request VRX-2 for evidence-heavy cases, VRX-4 for public verification, and VRX-5 for AI-assisted workflows.

Truth boundary

No fake certification

The standard distinguishes local/static verification, public-safe registry publication, and any future cryptographic or partner-backed confirmation.