We're excited to share that Horizen has published a project showcase featuring DataHubz as part of their Thrive Builder Funding Program series.
The showcase dives deep into what we're building, why compliance is broken, and how we're fixing it with cryptographic verification anchored on Horizen's privacy-first infrastructure.
Why This Matters
Compliance today is a paperwork nightmare. Organizations scramble through spreadsheets, screenshots, and last-minute audit prep, only to find that their actual security practices have drifted from what's documented. The industry keeps adding more consultants, more checklists, more documents, but verification still happens under audit pressure, months after the fact.
We're building something different.
Verifiable Compliance Evidence
The showcase explores how Hubz uses Verifiable Compliance Evidence (VCE) to shift trust assumptions entirely:
"Traditional audit trails rely on trust: trust that evidence wasn't modified, backdated, or selectively presented. With Verifiable Compliance Evidence, Hubz cryptographically fingerprints evidence and anchors those fingerprints on the Horizen blockchain. The evidence itself stays private, but its integrity becomes mathematically provable."
This means auditors, customers, and regulators can independently verify that evidence is unchanged, without requiring access to sensitive data.
Built for SMBs
We designed Hubz for organizations without dedicated compliance teams. Plain language guidance instead of regulatory jargon. Opinionated workflows that reduce decision fatigue. Automation where possible, human checkpoints where necessary.
The goal is to let small teams operate like well-resourced compliance organizations, without the overhead.
Read the Full Showcase
The article covers our approach to framework-aware roadmaps, evidence intelligence, context-matched AI models, and why we chose Horizen's ecosystem for building verifiable compliance infrastructure.
Read the complete interview on Horizen's blog
Read the Full ShowcaseWe're grateful to the Horizen team for featuring our work and for their continued support of privacy-first, verifiable infrastructure. This is what compliance should become: provable, privacy-preserving, and independently verifiable.