Certificates say you attended. This proves you decided.
The Itz'at is a cryptographically signed credential backed by an auditable record of real decisions — every review, incident call, prompt and fix that earned it.
From daily work to one-click proof
Work leaves a record
Everything consequential a learner does — challenge submissions with history, exam answers with written reasoning, incident-drill transcripts, Mysty approvals — lands in an append-only record.
Gates get cleared, not attended
Levels advance only when the DSAT, verified skills, solved challenges and drill scores clear the bar. The credential encodes which gates were cleared and when.
The credential is signed
On graduation, the record is summarized and cryptographically signed. Tampering breaks the signature; there is nothing to embellish.
Anyone can verify, instantly
Employers open the public verification page, paste the code, and see the live check — plus the holder's public profile if they chose to publish it. Try the verifier.
Credential FAQ
What is the Itz'at?
Miatz's graduate credential: a cryptographically signed proof that a specific person cleared the program's mastery gates, backed by an auditable record of their real decisions.
How does an employer verify it?
Every credential has a public verification page — paste the code or scan the link and the signature, holder and record summary are checked live. No account needed.
How is it different from a course certificate?
Certificates prove attendance. The Itz'at is backed by evidence: logged decisions from real work — reviews, incident calls, prompts, fixes — that gates were actually cleared, not sat through.
What does 'Itz'at' mean?
It's drawn from the Maya word for 'sage' or 'learned one' — someone whose knowledge was earned and recognized, which is exactly the bar the credential encodes.
Hiring? Read the evidence, not the résumé.
Graduates arrive with a verifiable record of how they think. That's the interview, pre-run.
