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Operating model

Trust charter

The trust charter is the promise Overturo makes to every participant — principals, businesses, and the regulators that govern them. It's the operating model behind the platform. It sits alongside the rights it grants you (your rights) and the public evidence we publish on our trust page.

Last updated:
March 2026
Version:
1.0
Binding on:
All Overturo participants

The charter isn't aspirational. Every business signing onto Overturo accepts it as a condition of use, breach is grounds for suspension, and the evidence trail behind each principle is cryptographically signed and anchored to external witnesses — so a charter claim is one a regulator can verify, not one we ask you to take on faith.

01

Transparency by default

Every consent, agreement, and approval is recorded in a tamper-evident chain. Both sides of the relationship can see the same trail; neither side can edit history.

02

Minimise by design

Businesses can only ask for what they need for the purpose they declare. Overturo enforces purpose scoping at the protocol layer — not as a policy promise.

03

No dark patterns

Consent screens may not pre-tick optional purposes, use confusing language, or punish refusal with degraded service for purposes that are not required.

04

Verifiable proof

Decisions are cryptographically signed and anchored to external witnesses. Anyone — including auditors — can verify that a record hasn't been altered since it was made.

05

Shared accountability

Businesses sign the charter as a condition of using Overturo. Breach of the charter is grounds for suspension, and audit evidence is preserved for the regulator's investigation.

How we hold ourselves to it

Each principle has a public counterpart you can inspect. The trust centre publishes the live evidence, the security page covers the controls, and our team is one click away if something doesn't add up.