The VeritasChain Standards Organization (VSO) has submitted its VeritasChain Protocol (VCP) v1.0, a cryptographic audit framework, to nineteen regulatory authorities across thirteen jurisdictions globally, coinciding with the successful completion of its first integration within a controlled evaluation environment.
The submissions include regulators in the United States, United Kingdom, European Union, Singapore, Hong Kong, United Arab Emirates (DIFC), Australia, India, South Korea, Switzerland, Brazil, Liechtenstein, and Saudi Arabia. VCP v1.0 is designed to address evolving supervisory requirements under the EU AI Act Article 12 for logging and traceability, and MiFID II / RTS 25 for timestamp integrity and event ordering in AI-driven and algorithmic trading systems.
VCP v1.0 functions by replacing mutable log files with tamper-evident cryptographic records, standardized event structures, and verifiable lifecycle reconstruction. This technical approach allows regulators, exchanges, brokers, and audit firms to independently validate the behavior of algorithmic and AI-driven systems through mathematical verification, rather than relying on trust or interpretation.
The VSO also confirmed the initial successful integration of VCP v1.0 within a controlled, production-like evaluation environment as part of its Early Access Program. This integration demonstrated the protocol’s operational readiness for real-world deployment in trading and supervisory systems by generating cryptographically linked event chains, immutable hashing, and verifiable proofs using RFC-aligned structures.
These developments occur as global supervisors increase their scrutiny of automated systems, raise governance expectations, and prepare for new AI oversight regimes. VCP aims to provide a regulation-aligned foundational layer that supports various operational environments, including trading venues, risk engines, and market surveillance systems.
Tokachi Kamimura, founder of VSO, stated, “AI-driven markets can no longer rely on trust-based oversight. This first integration demonstrates that cryptographically verifiable auditability is no longer theoretical — it is deployable today, and ready to serve as a trust layer for global markets.”
To foster institutional adoption, VSO has initiated an Early Access Program for organizations evaluating VCP for exchange-grade, broker-grade, and audit-grade environments, inviting collaboration from regulated market participants and supervisory bodies.