Certified Report Terms
What "certified" means for Eagle Eye Reports — and what it does not mean.
Last Updated: June 9, 2026
These Certified Report Terms supplement and form part of the Terms of Service.
In one paragraph: A Certified Report is a point-in-time snapshot of an Eagle Eye Report that Eagle Virtual digitally signs. "Certified" means you can verify that the snapshot came from Eagle Virtual and has not been altered since it was issued — it is tamper-evident, not tamper-proof. It is not a government certification, a notarization, a legal opinion, expert testimony, or a guarantee that the underlying data is complete, that all risks were detected, or that the report will be admissible in any proceeding.
1. Scope
These terms govern Eagle Eye Reports and Certified Reports produced by the Eagle Virtual Service. They supplement the Terms of Service; capitalized terms not defined here have the meanings given there. If these terms conflict with the Terms of Service with respect to reports, these terms control.
2. Definitions
- "Eagle Eye Report" (or "EER" or "report") — an address screening report produced by the Service, presenting source-cited sanctions, issuer-control, name/label, and coverage facts about one or more blockchain addresses.
- "Live Report" — the on-screen version of an Eagle Eye Report. A Live Report reflects the data available to the Service each time the page loads and can therefore change from one viewing to the next. A Live Report is not certified.
- "Snapshot" — a fixed, point-in-time capture of a report's content and the data state it was generated from, identified by the generation timestamp shown in the report.
- "Certified Report" (or "Certified Copy" or "Official Report") — a Snapshot that Eagle Virtual has issued as a PDF artifact with a unique serial number and a digital signature generated with Eagle Virtual's signing keys.
- "Certification" — Eagle Virtual's act of signing a Snapshot. The signature covers the issued artifact so that any later alteration is detectable on verification.
- "Serial" — the unique identifier printed on a Certified Report (for example, EER-YYYYMMDD-######).
- "Verification URL" — the public page at eaglevirtual.com/verify/report/<serial> (also reachable via the QR code printed on the report) where anyone holding a Certified Report can confirm its authenticity and integrity.
3. What "Certified" Means
When a Certified Report passes verification at its Verification URL, that verification confirms:
- Origin — the artifact was issued by Eagle Virtual;
- Integrity — the artifact's content matches what Eagle Virtual signed at issuance, byte for byte (any alteration after issuance causes verification to fail — this is what we mean by tamper-evident);
- Issuance record — the Serial, issuance timestamp, and subject address recorded by Eagle Virtual for that artifact.
Certification is a statement about the artifact: that this specific document, with this Serial, is what Eagle Virtual produced at that moment from the data sources cited within it.
4. What "Certified" Does Not Mean
Certification is not, and must not be represented as:
- A certification, endorsement, attestation, or approval by any government, regulator, court, or standards body;
- A notarization, apostille, or qualified electronic signature or seal within the meaning of the EU eIDAS Regulation or similar laws (Eagle Virtual's signature is a vendor-applied cryptographic signature, not a qualified trust service);
- A legal opinion, legal advice, expert opinion, or expert testimony;
- A guarantee that the report's underlying data is accurate, complete, or current, or that every relevant risk, listing, or relationship was detected;
- A guarantee that the report will be admitted into evidence or accepted by any court, arbitrator, regulator, auditor, or other third party — admissibility and weight are always determined by the receiving body under its own rules;
- A statement about anything that happened after the Snapshot was taken.
"Tamper-evident" is the precise claim: alteration of a Certified Report after issuance is detectable through signature verification. No document can be made impossible to alter ("tamper-proof"); what Certification provides is reliable detection.
5. Data Limitations
Every report — live or certified — is subject to the following inherent limits:
- Point-in-time. A Certified Report reflects the data available to Eagle Virtual at the stated Snapshot time. Sanctions lists, issuer actions, blockchain state, and name/label data change continuously; events after the Snapshot are not reflected.
- Source dependence. Report content reproduces and cites official government lists, public blockchain data, and other public sources. Those sources can contain errors, be published late, be corrected, or be withdrawn by their originators.
- Indexing and finality. Blockchain data can be delayed, reorganized ("reorgs"), or re-indexed; ingestion introduces lag between an on-chain event and its appearance in a report.
- Coverage limits. Coverage is limited to the sources, chains, tokens, and time ranges described in the report. Where coverage is stale or incomplete, the report says so (for example, "UNKNOWN — STALE" or "UNKNOWN — INCOMPLETE"); those states are unknowns, not clearance.
- No-hit results. "No known hit" means no match was found in certified coverage at the Snapshot time. It is not a determination that an address is risk-free.
6. Verification
Anyone holding a Certified Report may verify it at its Verification URL, without an account. Verification checks the artifact's signature and integrity against Eagle Virtual's issuance records and displays only signed public fields. A failed verification means the artifact was altered, corrupted, or not issued by Eagle Virtual — treat a failed artifact as unverified and request a fresh copy from the report holder or issuer. Verification confirms origin and integrity; it does not re-evaluate or re-confirm the underlying data.
7. Immutability and New Copies
Issued Certified Reports are immutable: Eagle Virtual does not rewrite the content of an issued Serial. Customers can issue new Certified Copies of a report subject at any time; each new copy receives its own Serial and records the prior copy where applicable. A newer copy does not invalidate an older one — each remains a valid, verifiable record of what the data showed at its own Snapshot time. Eagle Virtual retains issuance records and artifacts as needed to operate the Verification URL, including after the issuing customer's subscription ends; we may retire verification for an artifact where required by law.
8. Permitted Use and Responsibility
- You may share Certified Reports with your regulators, auditors, counterparties, and professional advisers, and use them in proceedings to which you are a party, consistent with the Terms of Service.
- Do not alter a Certified Report, remove its disclaimers or citations, or present an altered document as certified. Do not describe Certification in ways these terms say it is not (Section 4).
- Reports are informational tools. They are not legal advice, and decisions made on the basis of a report — including compliance, transaction, filing, and escalation decisions — remain solely your responsibility.
- Reports may contain personal data published from public sources; handle them in accordance with applicable data protection law. See Data We Publish.
9. Disclaimers and Liability
The disclaimers, limitation of liability, and indemnification provisions of the Terms of Service apply to all reports, including Certified Reports.
10. Contact
- Questions about these terms: legal@eaglevirtual.com
- Verification problems or suspected forged artifacts: security@eaglevirtual.com
- Address: Eagle Virtual LLC, 8586 Potter Park Dr., Sarasota, FL 34238, United States