Every PnL screenshot on Whop today could be edited in Photoshop in 30 seconds. The whole signal economy is downstream of the fact that nobody can prove their results, so callers post screenshots, screenshots get faked, buyers can't tell, and everyone races to the bottom on hype.
PnL Cards replace the screenshot with a verifiable record. Three pieces, each proving something different:
UTT nullifier. The cryptographic onchain timestamp. Proves exactly when the trade was entered. Can't be backdated, can't be self-reported, can't be edited later when the trade looks worse than you remember.
Reclaim zkTLS proof. Proves the dollar PnL from the trader's actual exchange account. Whop never sees the raw trade data, only the ZK proof that the claim is true. The trader keeps their broker, their privacy, their edge. The buyer gets the proof.
Auto-clipped chart replay. Every trade on Whop is automatically screen-recorded and saved to Shelby. The chart, the execution, the indicator that fired, and the resulting card. No face, no identity, no wallet leak. Both winning and losing trades are recorded, so there's no cherry-picking.
Card Data Fields
Before the fields: the split below is compliance-first. Everything private is private inside the AIP-143 + UTT envelope, which means amounts sit under Confidential Assets' auditor-key protocol and wallet-level privacy sits under UTT's monthly anonymity budget. A regulator subpoena against a card owner returns legal answers by design. It doesn't require the exchange, the signal group, or Whop to be a trusted party. That is the constraint traders and counterparties both need in order to trust the record at all.
Public always:
- ›Asset and direction (long/short)
- ›Entry time (UTT timestamp, cryptographic, not self-reported)
- ›Verified dollar PnL (Reclaim zkTLS)
- ›Attribution chain: which .whop signal group called it, which .whop indicator fired it, which .whop vault managed it
- ›Auto-clipped chart replay link
Private always:
- ›Wallet address (hidden via UTT, UTXO model, address never linked to the trade)
- ›Position size (hidden via Confidential Assets)
- ›Counterparty
- ›Leverage details (visible to card owner via decryption key)
Optional selective disclosure via ACE:
- ›Detailed trade metadata: exact size, execution slippage, order fill details
- ›ACE-encrypted and attached to the card
- ›Owner controls the allowlist contract. Grant decryption to auditors, fund managers, or regulators without making public
PnL Cards as Aptos Objects
Every PnL card is a Token v2 Object on Aptos. It is dynamic, updating in real time while a position is open and finalizing at close. The card object contains the UTT nullifier, the Reclaim proof, and the Shelby pointer to the chart replay. Because it is an Aptos object, it is composable. It attaches to the trader's .whop name, links to the signal group or indicator that generated it, and feeds into Whop Explorer's leaderboard.
How PnL Cards Build a Track Record
Every trade produces a PnL card. Each card is a permanent onchain record attached to the trader's .whop name. The Whop Explorer aggregates all of a trader's cards into a track record. Win rate, total PnL, and expectancy are computed from the full set. There is no way to selectively include or exclude trades.
The Whop Explorer displays all of a trader's PnL cards under their .whop name:
- ›Total verified PnL across all cards
- ›Win rate (profitable closes / total closes)
- ›Average PnL per trade
- ›Sharpe ratio computed from card outcomes
- ›Maximum drawdown (worst single losing card)
- ›Streak (consecutive profitable closes)
- ›Average entry-to-publish delay (from UTT timestamp to when the call went public, for signal callers)
The entry-to-publish delay matters for signal callers specifically. A caller who consistently publishes within 5 seconds of entry is provably not waiting to see which way the trade goes before claiming they made the call.
Perps PnL Cards
Decibel perps cards track additional fields:
- ›Unrealized PnL (live, updates in real time from Decibel position data)
- ›Realized PnL (finalized at close)
- ›Funding rates paid
- ›Leverage used
- ›Maximum drawdown during the open position
Funding rate paid is a real cost that most trading leaderboards omit. Including it gives an honest picture of net performance.
Auto-clipped Chart Replays
Every trade on Whop generates an auto-clipped recording saved to Shelby. This isn't optional. Winning and losing trades are both recorded.
What gets recorded:
- ›Every trade session on the Spot orderbook
- ›Every Decibel perps position
- ›Every indicator-fired bot trade
- ›Every vault auto-execution
Privacy. The recording captures the chart and execution, not the trader's face or screen beyond the trading interface. The trader's wallet address is hidden via UTT. Position sizes are hidden via Confidential Assets. An observer can watch the replay and verify that the trade happened without learning who made it or how large it was.
Clipping pipeline. The raw auto-clipped footage is permanently saved to Shelby and indexed on Whop Explorer. The Explorer has a tab for all trading moments, clips, and PnL cards. Content Rewards clippers can browse this library, take the raw footage, and turn it into polished content with animations, captions, and commentary for distribution on TikTok, YouTube, and other platforms.
Accountability. A signal caller's ratio of winning-to-losing replays is itself a data point. Every clip is permanently linked to the PnL card from that exact trade. The clip is the visual proof. The card is the verified numerical outcome. Neither can be separated from the other.
The Viral Acquisition Loop
PnL cards shared on social media drive traffic back to Whop Explorer. When max.whop shares their verified PnL card on Twitter, viewers click through to Whop Explorer and see the full verified history, not just one screenshot. They can subscribe to the signal group, fund the indicator, or start copy trading from that page.
Comparison With Existing Verification Methods
Four options. Three of them break.
Screenshots. Trivially fakeable. No timestamp. No proof of account.
Broker-linked trackers (Myfxbook, TraderSync). Rely on API connections the trader controls. No ZK proof. The platform sees the raw data. Doesn't work onchain.
Onchain trade history. Transparent but links trade to wallet. Reveals position size and trade history, which is exactly what creates the front-running problem.
Whop PnL cards. UTT hides the wallet and position size. Reclaim proves the dollar figure from the exchange account. The onchain timestamp is cryptographic. The auto-clipped replay is the visual proof. Private enough to protect the trader's edge, verified enough to prove their track record.
Where they end up
A card is the atomic unit of trader reputation on Whop. Every card lands on the trader's .whop profile in Explorer, where it aggregates into the leaderboard, feeds Content Rewards attribution, and becomes searchable by QVAC. Cards shared on social drive viewers back to the full verified profile, not just one cropped screenshot. The card is what every other product in the stack composes on.