Physical autonomy verification

Auvexra NASCA

NASCA helps the public, operators, manufacturers, insurers, and agencies understand whether a physical autonomous system is registered, certified, operating within its approved envelope, and subject to accountable evidence records. NASCA is built around identification, certification, telemetry integrity, safety-zone awareness, public verification, emergency accountability, and evidence preservation.

What this system does

NASCA is Auvexra’s public trust and certification layer for physical autonomous systems, including drones, vehicles, robots, fleets, hardware-bound autonomy, NRID identity, telemetry, public seals, enforcement, and incident evidence.

  • Autonomous system registration and NRID identity
  • Certification status and public seal verification
  • Operational design domain and mission authorization records
  • Telemetry, sensor provenance, custody, and admissibility evidence
  • Emergency broadcast, safety zones, override accountability, and incident review
  • NASCA Mobile public lookup, proof-pack viewing, complaint, appeal, and account controls
Public Knowledge

Plain-language context for public trust.

Auvexra pages are written for public understanding. They avoid internal engineering labels and focus on what people can verify, what the system does, and where users can exercise privacy or account rights.

A public user should be able to verify whether a physical autonomous system is recognized and in good standing.

A verified seal does not mean a system can operate anywhere or without restrictions; it means the displayed status is backed by a current NASCA record.

When evidence is incomplete, stale, restricted, or legally retained, NASCA must communicate that clearly instead of overstating trust.

NASCA separates public-safe verification from protected telemetry, private operational details, and sensitive incident evidence.

Mobile and account coverage

  • NASCA Mobile supports public trust lookup, QR/seal verification, proof-pack viewing, complaints, appeals, and account deletion requests.
  • NASCA Mobile may collect account, contact, device, diagnostics, verification, and support information when users sign in, submit reports, or request assistance.
  • NASCA Mobile public views must not expose private telemetry, protected evidence, security details, or unredacted incident records.

Expected outcomes

  • People can check whether an autonomous physical system is registered, certified, restricted, or under review.
  • Organizations gain a structured authority layer for certification, mission review, incident response, and evidence handling.
  • PublicTrust surfaces show safe status without exposing protected operational data.