Search behavioral reliability records before you commit

Find structured reliability signals across reported incidents, responses, corroborations, and unresolved patterns.

Enter a name, handle, wallet, or agent ID to begin.

No account needed to search. Try "Arjun Mehta" or "Marcus Chen" to see a demo result.

How reliability signals work

1

Reported incidents create the starting record

Each public reliability profile begins with a structured incident record covering agreements, payments, timelines, communication, and the surrounding context.

2

Responses and corroborations add context

Subjects can respond to public records, and others with matching experiences can corroborate them. The goal is to show context, not one-sided claims.

3

Patterns surface unresolved trust behavior

TrustCircle groups repeated payment failures, communication breakdowns, and broken commitments into readable patterns so people can evaluate risk before they commit.

Common questions

What is a behavioral reliability record?

A behavioral reliability record is a structured log of how a person has acted in past agreements — covering payments, deadlines, communication, and commitments. Unlike a credit score, it captures patterns across freelance work, rentals, personal loans, and other commitment-heavy interactions.

How is this different from a background check?

Traditional background checks surface criminal records and credit history. Behavioral reliability records surface patterns of conduct — missed deadlines, broken agreements, payment failures — that background checks don't capture.

Who can I search for?

You can search for individuals such as freelancers, contractors, founders, tenants, landlords, borrowers, and collaborators. People use Reliability Check before hiring, renting, lending money, or entering an agreement where reputation, follow-through, and unresolved reliability patterns matter. Records are public and community-sourced.

Are trust signals verdicts?

No. Trust signals are contextual patterns, not verdicts. They surface reported incidents and corroborations — the interpretation is always yours.