WriteStamp is three things working together: a writing canvas that records itself, an authorship record that can’t be faked after the fact, and a review console that turns that record into a verdict.
Writers get a clean, full-screen editor with markdown formatting and a live word count. Underneath, an event SDK captures the composition as it unfolds — keystroke timing, deletions, pauses, pastes, tab switches and periodic draft snapshots. None of it interrupts the writing.
Every session becomes an ordered event ledger — the raw material of proof. It captures how the essay was written without storing what was pasted (only counts and content hashes), so authorship is verifiable and privacy stays intact.
Judges open a console with a confidence-scored leaderboard, paste and tab-switch flags, and a 10× replay of how each piece was composed. Natural-language queries let Claude triage the field — surface the suspicious, shortlist the clean.
The whole lifecycle, end to end — posted, written, judged, verified.
An organiser opens a competition — public or invite-only, with the rules and prompt.
WriteStamp proves authorship from the shape of the writing — timing, rhythm, revision. The behavioural record is counts, timing and hashes, not your keystrokes; every paste is flagged where it lands.