You've spent weeks — maybe months — developing your blog post. It's original, it's valuable, and it's yours. But how do you prove it? What happens when someone else claims they had the same idea first? Without proof of when your blog post was created, you have nothing but your word.
Traditional methods like mailing yourself a sealed envelope (the "poor man's patent") are unreliable and easily challenged. Formal patents cost thousands of dollars and take months to process. But there's a modern solution that's fast, affordable, and mathematically tamper-proof: Bitcoin blockchain timestamping.
Every day you wait is a day someone else could independently develop a similar blog post — or worse, steal yours. In the world of intellectual property, the first to prove existence wins. Not the first to create, but the first to have verifiable proof.
A blog post is particularly vulnerable because it often exists only as a document, a file, or an idea in your head. Unlike physical inventions, there's no manufacturing date or physical evidence. Digital proof is your strongest defense — and blockchain proof is the strongest form of digital proof available today.
Enter a description of your blog post or upload the actual file. Your content is hashed locally — it never leaves your device.
A SHA-256 fingerprint of your blog post is permanently recorded on the Bitcoin blockchain with an exact timestamp.
A PDF certificate with blockchain proof, QR code, and verification link is delivered to your email.
Courts worldwide are increasingly recognizing blockchain timestamps as valid evidence. In 2025, a French court accepted Bitcoin blockchain proof as sufficient evidence of IP ownership in a copyright dispute. Chinese, American, Italian, and EU courts have followed similar paths. While this doesn't replace formal patent registration, it provides strong, independently verifiable proof of when your blog post was first documented.
Permanent Bitcoin blockchain proof. Certificate in under 2 minutes. $19.
Timestamp for $19 →Yes. You can describe your blog post in text, and that description gets timestamped. The more detail you include, the stronger your proof. You can also upload files — documents, designs, code, images — anything that represents your blog post.
Each version gets its own timestamp. If your blog post evolves, you can create a chain of proof showing how it developed over time. This actually strengthens your claim by showing the progression of your original thinking.
Your files are never stored on our servers — only the SHA-256 hash, which cannot be reverse-engineered into your original content. Your blog post stays private. The blockchain records only the proof, not the content.