Consent Evidence as a Service
Audit-grade consent records, preserved at the moment judgement is exercised.
CEaaS is evidence infrastructure for organisations that may one day be asked to prove what actually happened — not what was intended.
It supports scrutiny under GDPR, procurement and insurance review, and increasingly the EU AI Act.
For the conceptual distinction between interaction and proof, see what consent evidence actually is.
CEaaS in regulatory context
- CEaaS and the EU AI Act — governance and consent evidence under high-scrutiny AI regulation
- CEaaS and GDPR — lawful basis, consent, and accountability evidence
- CEaaS and Consent Management Platforms — execution versus evidence
The problem
Consent systems are designed for interaction in the present.
Evidence is required under scrutiny — often years later.
When audits, disputes, procurement reviews, or regulatory inquiries arrive, organisations are asked a simple question:
What exactly happened, and on what basis?
Most consent platforms cannot answer that question in a form that survives hindsight, staff turnover, system change, or adversarial review.
The distinction
Consent and evidence are not the same thing.
| Consent platforms | Consent Evidence (CEaaS) |
|---|---|
| Manage preferences | Preserve facts |
| UI-driven | Record-driven |
| Editable | Append-only |
| Present-focused | Hindsight-safe |
CEaaS does not replace your consent tooling.
It preserves what was exercised — immutably.
What CEaaS actually does
- Captures the consent state at the moment of user action
- Anchors consent to the exact policy text in force
- Cryptographically hashes consent and policy artefacts
- Records withdrawals and changes as new evidence
- Makes records independently inspectable years later
- Maintains an append-only audit trail over time
Nothing is inferred.
Nothing is overwritten.
Nothing relies on screenshots or vendor assurances.
Pricing
CEaaS pricing reflects evidential durability — not clicks, users, or traffic.
The tiers below reflect increasing levels of accountability and defensibility under scrutiny.
All prices are exclusive of VAT or equivalent sales taxes.
What counts as a domain?
A domain represents a single logical consent surface operating under a shared policy regime. Separate policy regimes require separate evidence boundaries.
CEaaS — Core
£49 / month per domain
Foundational consent evidence infrastructure.
- Silent capture of consent events from existing CMPs
- Append-only, audit-grade evidence preservation
- Policy text hashing and time-fixing
- Inspectable records if later required
This tier is deliberately non-visible. It preserves facts, but does not signal governance publicly.
CEaaS — Assurance
£149 / month per domain
Defensible consent and governance evidence — publicly anchored.
- Everything in CEaaS Core
- Governance Evidence Record
- Evidence Banner or Persistent Evidence Mark
- Publicly inspectable evidence anchoring
- AI use and oversight disclosure
This is the point at which evidence becomes protection.
For most professional services and regulated organisations, this is the appropriate starting point.
Learn more about the Evidence Banner →
CEaaS — Institutional
From £495 / month (contracted)
Multi-domain, multi-entity evidence infrastructure with extended governance, assurance, and evidential support.
Evidence scales with accountability.
Who this is for
- Regulated commercial organisations
- Public bodies and arms-length authorities
- Boards and trustees with personal accountability
- Organisations operating across jurisdictions
If you may one day need to defend consent or governance decisions, evidence must exist before hindsight arrives.
Built on evidential standards
CEaaS is implemented in accordance with the Veriscopic Evidence Standard (VES). The standard itself is published independently at vesstandard.org, reinforcing CEaaS as infrastructure rather than a proprietary format.
Access
If consent or governance evidence is something you may one day need to defend, you can request a short walkthrough or proceed directly to activation.
Request a 10-minute walkthrough
Veriscopic does not provide legal advice or certify compliance.