When trust lives with the platform that created the signature — not with you — legal certainty is fragile. Tindom changes that.
Most electronic signatures can only be verified by the platform that created them. If the platform changes its API, gets acquired, or shuts down — you lose the ability to verify.
In disputes, a signature that can't be independently validated is a liability, not an asset. The burden of proof shifts to you. Courts and regulators expect more.
As AI-driven identity fraud accelerates, the bar for trusted verification is rising. Most signing infrastructure was built before that bar moved. It hasn't caught up.
Enterprise legal teams managing high-stakes contracts that need to remain verifiable long after they were signed — regardless of the platform used.
Public sector bodies that require independent, auditable trails for administrative decisions and inter-agency document exchange under eIDAS.
Lenders, insurers, and asset managers whose regulatory obligations demand more than a vendor's assurance — they need verifiable, third-party proof.