Verify is built to be useful to people who assess crypto professionally: analysts screening a universe of assets, funds running due diligence, and journalists checking a project before they write about it. This guide covers the tools that support that work.
The verification API
The API returns scores, grades, verdicts and, for Pro accounts, the full signal breakdown and score history as JSON. You can screen a list of assets programmatically, flag anything below a threshold, or pull a report into your own dashboard. The free tier returns the headline score and top flags; the Pro tier returns everything.
Score history and change tracking
Every material score change is recorded with a timestamp and a delta. Pro users can watch any asset and see its trajectory over time. A score that is steadily falling can be an early signal worth investigating, well before it shows up in price.
Citing Verify
Because the methodology is public and the scoring is deterministic, a Verify score is citable and reproducible. When you reference a score, link to the report and note the date, since scores update as the underlying data changes. We publish the methodology in full so your readers can scrutinise it.
Limitations to be aware of
Automated scores rely on available public data, which can be incomplete or lagged. The engine uses proxies where direct data is unavailable. For high-stakes work, treat an automated score as a starting point and corroborate the specific signals that matter to your analysis. Reviewed reports carry more confidence because a human has checked the inputs.