Consent that's real — and revocable.
A checkbox isn't consent. In FIDNT every "yes" is granular, time-boxed, and reversible — and it produces a signed receipt you can take to the National Privacy Commission.
ISO/IEC 27560Consent Receipt
admissible · RA 8792 §7
What makes FIDNT consent real
Five properties the Data Privacy Act expects of valid consent — built into every grant, not buried in a policy.
Granular
Per party, per purpose, per scope. You allow exactly what's asked — nothing bundled in.
Time-boxed
Every grant has a stated duration and expires on its own. No open-ended "forever."
Revocable
Withdraw any consent in one tap. The revocation is itself recorded and takes effect at once.
Receipted
Each grant produces a signed consent receipt to the international standard — proof, not a promise.
Informed
You see who's asking, why, the scope, and how long — before you decide, in plain language.
Court-admissible
ML-DSA-65 (FIPS 204) signed and hash-chained, so the receipt stands as evidence without a vendor affidavit.
Grant it. Watch it. Pull it back.
When you grant
- You see the who, why, scope, and duration first
- You sign with your own key — only you can
- A signed receipt lands in your vault instantly
- The grant is scoped — use outside it is a breach
When you revoke
- One tap — the consent ends immediately
- The revocation is recorded and timestamped
- The other party is served notice on the channel
- Continued use after revocation is enforceable
Consent is the lawful basis that makes data licensing yours to grant. See where the value goes → Data Licensing.