How it works

A trust system that favors legibility over spectacle.

Four Hunger already knows how to feed people. This layer makes the work easier to trust without turning families or children into public content. It also fits the donor relationship that already works today: personal field videos, a real person on the ground, and updates that feel human rather than automated.
Step 01

Staff capture one batch in the field

The Kobo form records the partner home, date, counts, evidence package, safety flags, and a first donor-safe summary draft. The form is designed for low friction on mobile and offline-friendly field conditions.

Step 02

Private review checks the claim

Admin sees the batch, evidence items, consent notes, and privacy flags in one place. The question is not whether a story sounds compelling. The question is whether the claim is bounded, legible, and safe to publish.

Step 03

A second reader approves or slows it down

The second-reader role is the minimum distributed check. It exists to make sure the operator is not the only unchecked judgment in the loop.

Step 04

The public card is published

Published proof cards include counts, dates, evidence reviewed, caveats, and what stayed private. They do not include names, child faces, or private hardship details.

Step 05

The donor experience stays personal

The MVP does not replace the human layer that already works. A donor can still receive a custom thank-you video from Wendell on the ground and then get stronger proof-backed updates over time.