XSeal redesign turns document tamper-evidence into a clearer story

XSeal, the SHA-256 document tamper-evidence tool, moved to a notarial archive design that walks you from a file to its fingerprint to a wax seal to a verified result.
XSeal shipped a design update at xseal.nl that makes document tamper-evidence easier to understand at a glance. The site now wears a notarial archive look: a bookish serif over a light paper ground, deep teal ink, and wax-seal gold reserved for the seal itself.
The How it works section is now a ruled ledger that walks through the real process in four numbered steps. You choose a file, XSeal forms its SHA-256 fingerprint, a wax seal presses down onto the document, and a later check returns an Authentic verdict. The fingerprint shown is a real SHA-256 hash, not a decorative placeholder.
Nothing changed about how XSeal works. Your file is never uploaded, only its hash and metadata are stored, and verification stays free for anyone with the file and its Seal ID. Seal a document in seconds at xseal.nl.


