For years the internet has measured everything about us.
Clicks.
Views.
Location.
Scroll depth.
But one thing was never measured properly — human attention.
You can open a video and walk away.
You can mute an ad and leave the phone on the table.
Platforms still count it as engagement.
We wanted to solve a strange problem:
The internet knows what you touched —
but it never knew if you were actually there.
So we built a concept we call Proof-of-Watch.
A phone-based verification layer that confirms a user actually watched content before rewards are generated.
Not background farming.
Not bots.
Not auto play abuse.
Real presence → measurable time → rewardable activity.
This turns attention into something closer to a resource.
Bitcoin proved computing power had value.
Staking proved locked capital had value.
We are experimenting with a simpler question:
Does human time have value online?
Because right now billions of hours are spent on phones daily — but none of it belongs to the user.
We are not trying to replace social media.
We are trying to recognize the human behind the screen.
If time is life, then attention is digital life.
And digital life should be measurable.

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