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HomeTechnologyThe psychology of re-checking: What Claritycheck says about digital trust

The psychology of re-checking: What Claritycheck says about digital trust

ClarityCheck is a digital security platform and online verification tool that helps people proactively find out who they can trust in the digital landscape. People are increasingly being asked to trust strangers who contact them for deliveries, job opportunities, appointments and more, often without much information to back up their claims. By verifying who exactly is trying to interact with them and whether they are who they say they are, users can have peace of mind when deciding to communicate with them.

“ClarityCheck was born out of a simple but increasingly common problem: asking people to trust strangers online despite having very little context. From missed calls that felt awkward to dating profiles that weren’t quite right to emails that raised subtle red flags, the founders recognized a gap between intuition and verification,” says a ClarityCheck spokesperson.

Is delivery SMS a scam? Is a job advertisement real? Is someone really who they say they are?

Verification is no longer limited to extreme cases. For many, it has become a normal part of daily behavior. People no longer trust their gut instincts and are using ClarityCheck to ensure their digital security.

Verification is the new intuition

ClarityCheck searches show a significant change in behavior among users who check who they interact with before engaging or making real-life decisions. Verification isn’t about being paranoid, it’s about being mindful of who someone invests their time in and who they trust.

ClarityCheck’s peak activity times are between 6 and 10 p.m., after most people’s work and school hours, when they check for missed calls, social interactions, emails, and perhaps dating apps. People often use ClarityCheck after “emotionally charged moments” such as dating, ghosting, or suspicious contact attempts.

Often, users perform multiple searches after the first session uncovers some questionable answers or raises additional questions. Users also return at a later date to re-verify a contact after communication has been renewed.

“The brand aims to shape broader conversations about digital trust, consent and personal safety, backed by real behavioral data rather than abstract theory,” says a ClarityCheck spokesperson.

From expert tool to user habit

ClarityCheck uses open source intelligence (OSINT), but has simplified it so that it is accessible to everyday people who are not tech savvy. It’s not overloaded with jargon and is designed specifically for mobile-first users, which is 85% of people who perform searches. It offers fast, intuitive searches in a single, accessible place.

The platform has a strong user base in the US, UK and EU and has received more than 19.5k Trustpilot reviews with a rating of 3.9+.

People are looking for a data-driven way to “manage modern digital uncertainty,” and ClarityCheck believes trust is “built, lost and repaired online.”

“ClarityCheck aims to become the default reflex when something feels unsafe online, just as people today instinctively search for a name or number,” says a ClarityCheck spokesperson.

ClarityCheck provides an overview of changing online behavior. Not only does it track isolated searches, but it also detects patterns that emerge across the user base. Based on this user behavior data, ClarityCheck aims to help shape the conversation around digital trust, online consent and personal safety.

Daily Sparkz works with external contributors. All contributor content is reviewed by the Daily Sparkz editorial team.

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