Verification strengthens trust.
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Purpose
This principle affirms that confidence in records grows when their accuracy and process can be checked.
Principle
Verification strengthens trust.
Meaning
When participants, witnesses, or lawful authorities are able to confirm that a record fairly represents what occurred, reliance on that record increases. Verification ties documentation back to responsibility.
Trust is built through confirmability.
What Verification May Involve
- Review by those present.
- Confirmation by witnesses.
- Comparison with original materials.
- Identification of recorder and method.
- Transparency about uncertainty.
Why Trust Matters
- Communities depend on shared understanding.
- Reliable records reduce conflict.
- Future generations need confidence in what they inherit.
- External misuse becomes harder when process is visible.
Verification vs Control
Verification checks faithfulness. It does not transfer authority to the verifier.
Examples
- Participants confirm that minutes reflect discussion.
- Audio is checked against transcript.
- Names, dates, and locations are validated.
- Clarifications are added after review.
If Verification Is Absent
- Doubt increases.
- Competing interpretations multiply.
- Authority may be questioned.
- Corrections become harder.
Safeguards
- Provide opportunities for review.
- Keep originals where possible.
- Document who verified and when.
- Allow challenges through lawful pathways.
Cross-references
- Recording Requires Careful Attention to Accuracy
- Errors Must Be Identified and Corrected
- Witnessing Supports Legitimacy of Records
- Accuracy and Restraint Preserve Integrity
- Method Matters as Much as Content
Notes
Future development may include formal verification practices for different record types.