Problem

Trust breaks down when authenticity lives beside the media.

Roadscript starts from a practical observation: content moves through screenshots, reposts, recompression, edits, and platform pipelines that do not preserve metadata perfectly. That makes it harder for creators, platforms, and everyday users to reason about whether an image still carries a trustworthy authenticity signal.

A few predictable sharing patterns are enough to break fragile provenance.

The current media environment does not need malicious actors to create ambiguity. Normal sharing behavior can be enough to disconnect content from the context that originally described it.

Metadata can be stripped

Exports, reposts, platform transforms, and conversions can remove the file-level context around an image.

Screenshots break provenance

Once content is re-captured as pixels, external labels and attached metadata often stop telling the whole story.

Edited and AI-generated media is harder to verify

Audiences increasingly need ways to evaluate authenticity without relying only on source claims or visual intuition.

Users need content-layer authenticity

Creators, platforms, and users need signals designed to travel with the media itself across real workflows.

This is a usability problem as much as a technical one.

Even when provenance tooling exists, the experience often breaks down when media leaves the original environment. Roadscript is aimed at a future where authenticity can still be checked in simpler, more resilient ways after content has already started moving.

Creators need durable authorship signals

People publishing original work need tools designed to keep authenticity meaningful beyond a single platform or file boundary.

Platforms need clearer verification primitives

Moderation, trust, and downstream product decisions benefit from signals that survive more than ideal transfer conditions.

Users need understandable verification

Authenticity systems only help if people can interpret the result without needing to decode a full research stack first.

Honest previews still matter early

Roadscript is still in public preview, so this site focuses on the problem clearly without overstating what is already productized.