Reality check

Current status

Proofline has an experimental server and web-client prototype today. Native capture clients, trusted-contact review, notifications, official hosted accounts, cost-recovery billing, and decryption workflows are not ready today.

How to read this page

This page is deliberately conservative. It separates what exists today from what is partial, planned, or not ready, because safety software should not blur prototype work into production promises.

Current

Experimental server

An experimental server exists today. It can receive already-encrypted uploads and keep the records needed to organize them, but it is not broad public-production infrastructure.
Current

Web-client prototype

An experimental web-client prototype exists for account and incident-review flows. It is not a recording client, mobile app, public admin dashboard, or production safety workflow.
Partial

Trusted-contact records

Trusted-contact relationship, sharing, and wrapped-key records exist in the backend. They do not yet provide trusted-contact review screens, notifications, or decryption.
Planned

Product direction

Native capture clients, location and context capture, trusted-contact review, future official hosted accounts, cost-recovery billing, and stronger upload behavior are future work.
Not ready

Emergency reliance

Proofline is experimental, not an emergency service, and not a guaranteed real-time response system.

Not ready today

These are not hidden features, soft launches, or "coming soon if you squint" capabilities. They are not ready today.

  • Emergency reliance or guaranteed real-time response.
  • Production iOS or Android capture clients.
  • Trusted-contact notifications or production live context sharing.
  • Browser, backend, or trusted-contact decryption workflows.
  • Official hosted accounts, cost-recovery billing, or payment-gated access.
  • Playable media export or legal-submission workflow.

Where detailed docs live

The public website is intentionally short. Developers and reviewers should use the GitHub repositories for implementation details, deployment boundaries, security models, and roadmap planning: open-proofline on GitHub .

Sources

These project documents provide more detail about the current implementation, planned work, and security limits.