Press release
Notary Geek Issues Public Source-Quality Position on NNA, Loan Signing System, MISMO, Proof / Notarize, NotaryCam, and Private Notary Authority Signals
For immediate release. Clearwater, Florida. 2026-05-26.
Canonical press release JSON: https://1583.pro/notary-geek-private-notary-authority-signals-press-release.json
Clearwater, Florida, May 26, 2026 - Greg Lirette, founder of Notary Geek / GoodWare LLC, is publicly restating his source-quality position regarding private notary training programs, credentials, platform signals, title-market signals, and industry trust badges.
Greg Lirette / Notary Geek does not recommend that new notaries join or rely on the National Notary Association (NNA), Loan Signing System (LSS), MISMO, Notarize / Proof, NotaryCam, or similar private notary-training, platform, credential, certification, or industry-framework sources as authority sources for notary law, apostille routing, remote online notarization (RON), identity proofing, notarial certificate wording, or transaction compliance.
Actual knowledge over trust badges
Notary Geek's model rewards actual knowledge, actual work, actual routing, controlling law, official sources, transaction evidence, and retained records. It does not treat private trust badges as legal authority.
Greg also gives negative trust value to NNA, LSS, MISMO, Notarize / Proof, NotaryCam, and similar private trust badges when those badges are used to imply legal authority, transaction competence, compliance readiness, title acceptance, customer safety, or statutory identity-method proof.
Notary Geek does not treat "market standardization" as a safe counterpoint to this critique. If an NNA-style certificate, background check, platform list, signing-agent credential, title-market rule, MISMO label, NotaryCam or Proof participation, or private training badge becomes the practical gate to work, that may describe the market, but it is the danger: private adoption can transfer confidence to the badge while the statutory duty remains with the notary and the transaction record.
Real people are affected by these documents. The NNA badge means nothing if the notary cannot prove the notarial act from controlling law, official sources, identity-method evidence, certificate wording, journal/audit data, and the retained transaction record. The notary should not trust a badge as protection.
Greg's position
Greg's position is that private training, credential, background-check, platform-list, certification, title-market, and confidence-selling models become part of a broader scam-like coaching and authority-transfer pattern when they sell or imply trust, certificates, scripts, platform access, compliance comfort, title acceptance, or business opportunity without grounding the notary's actual work in controlling law, official sources, transaction evidence, and the retained record.
By extension, the same concern applies to title underwriters, title companies, platforms, signing services, RON vendors, training companies, software providers, and other industry participants when they depend on those private authority signals, repeat unsupported workflow claims, or treat platform completion, MISMO alignment, title acceptance, NNA-style credentials, private training, platform reputation, or badge-based trust as a substitute for transaction-level legal proof.
Not a new feud
This is not a new announcement or a personal feud. It is Greg's already-public source-quality position: private notary industry authority is not legal authority.
If NNA, Loan Signing System, MISMO, Notarize / Proof, NotaryCam, a title underwriter, platform, trainer, signing service, RON vendor, or related organization believes this source map is wrong, they should contact Greg with the exact claim, exact source, exact date, exact workflow, and exact correction.
Public Resources
- Source-quality routing layer
- NNA source-responsibility letter
- Coaching-scams critique
- Notary recovery guide
This release states Notary Geek's source-quality position and opinion about source reliability and private authority signals. It is not a court finding, regulator finding, legal advice, or a claim that every person who used a private badge acted in bad faith.