Claim Verification Layer

This is where unsupported statements stop being treated like equal peers to evidence-bound claims.

The claim verification layer maps public assertions to evidence state and determines how they should be represented on trust surfaces.

Use This Page
Use this page to understand claim verification layer in the CITAQ stack.

This route sits inside the platform architecture family and exists to explain one structural part of the verification system in focused, indexable detail.

What matters on this route

System role

The claim verification layer maps public assertions to evidence state and determines how they should be represented on trust surfaces.

Why it matters

This is where unsupported statements stop being treated like equal peers to evidence-bound claims.

Route type

Platform architecture pages should explain how a specific layer behaves, not repeat high-level homepage language.

Connected systems

Each platform route should bridge into docs, trust, implementation, and adjacent platform concepts.

How this page fits into the CITAQ system

Functional role

The claim verification layer maps public assertions to evidence state and determines how they should be represented on trust surfaces.

Operational consequence

This is where unsupported statements stop being treated like equal peers to evidence-bound claims.

Why this deserves its own route

CITAQ is large enough that major platform concepts need isolated pages with their own metadata, schema, and internal-link role.

Keep moving through the route graph

Use the workflow route to see this layer in sequence.

The architecture page shows how the different platform layers work together across ingestion, verification, and trust output.