Anonymizing Promissory Notes as Negotiable Instruments – CCPA/HIPAA-compliant de-identification per UCC §3-104

A promissory note qualifying as a negotiable instrument under UCC §3-104 identifies the maker by name and signature, and names the payee in the promise-to-pay clause. anonym.legal anonymizes those personal identifiers — preserving principal amount, interest rate, maturity date, and payment schedule — so the instrument can be reviewed for portfolio pricing or compliance assessment without exposing individual financial data.

When this applies

This task applies when promissory notes are reviewed by investors pricing a loan portfolio, compliance officers assessing instrument documentation, or advisers structuring a note purchase transaction, and those reviewers need to evaluate the instrument terms rather than the identities of individual makers or payees.

  1. Upload the promissory note (and any endorsements or allonges) to anonym.legal.
  2. The engine identifies the maker's name and address, the payee's name, and any co-makers or guarantors named in the instrument.
  3. Each named individual is anonymized consistently across the note and any attached endorsements.
  4. Principal amount, interest rate, maturity date, payment schedule, and default provisions remain in clear text.
  5. A mapping table is generated with US data residency.
  6. Release the anonymized instrument for portfolio review; restore originals before transfer, negotiation, or collection proceedings.

What you provide

  • Promissory note
  • Endorsements or allonges (if applicable)
  • Any attached guarantee or personal surety agreement

Limitations & cautions

  • A promissory note must be re-identified before negotiation or transfer, as UCC §3-104 requires the promise to be signed by the maker — an anonymized version cannot be negotiated.
  • The tool does not assess whether the instrument satisfies all requirements of a negotiable instrument under UCC §3-104 — obtain qualified legal advice.
  • Notes that have been converted to electronic form under applicable state e-sign laws should be reviewed for additional legal requirements before processing.

FAQ

What makes a promissory note a negotiable instrument under UCC §3-104?

Under UCC §3-104, a negotiable instrument must be an unconditional promise to pay a fixed amount of money, be payable to bearer or to order, be payable on demand or at a definite time, and contain no other undertaking. This tool anonymizes personal data in the note but does not evaluate negotiability — obtain legal advice.

Can an anonymized promissory note be used in a loan portfolio sale?

No. The anonymized version is for internal review and pricing purposes only. The actual note transfer must use the original identified instrument. Re-identify using the mapping key before any transfer or endorsement.

Are endorsement signatures anonymized?

Yes. Named endorsers on allonges and endorsements are anonymized consistently with their appearances in the main instrument.

Commercial Contracts

About this page

We update this page when our platform or the law changes.

Read our founder note for how we work.

Each change shows up in the timestamp at the top.

We follow these rules

  • GDPR (EU 2016/679).
  • ISO/IEC 27001:2022.
  • NIS2 (EU 2022/2555).
  • HIPAA safe harbor under 45 CFR § 164.514(b)(2).

Our promise

We do not sell your data.

We do not train models on your text.

We store your files in Germany.

You can delete your account at any time.

You own your work.

Where we run

Our servers live in Falkenstein, Germany.

We use Hetzner. They hold ISO 27001 certification.

All data stays in the EU.

Backups run every day.

Need help?

Email support@anonym.legal.

We reply within one business day.

How we test

We run a full check suite on every release.

Each surface gets its own sweep script and report.

Human reviewers spot-check the output each week.

We track recall and precision on a labelled set.

Bad runs block the deploy.

What we never do

  • We never sell your information to third parties.
  • We never train models on what you upload.
  • We never keep your work after you delete it.
  • We never share keys with any outside firm.
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Plans in plain words

We sell credits, not seats.

One credit covers one short job.

Long jobs use a few credits each.

You can top up at any time.

Unused credits roll over each month.

Read the plans page for current rates.

Who built this

A small team of engineers and lawyers built this.

We ship from Europe and work in the open.

Our founder note spells out why we started.

Where to start

How the parts fit

A browser add-on cleans text inside Chrome.

A Word plug-in handles drafts in Office.

A small desktop tool works on whole folders.

An agent protocol link feeds large models safely.

All four share one core engine and one rule set.

Words from our team

We started this work after a lunch about cookies.

One friend kept getting odd ads on her phone.

We asked why a court file leaked through a draft.

We sketched the first build on a napkin that week.

By month three we had a tiny demo for a friend.

She used it on her first case the next day.

Common questions we hear

Can the tool read scanned PDFs? Yes, with OCR.

Does it work on long files? Yes, in small chunks.

Can I roll my own rule set? Yes, save it as a preset.

Does it run offline? The desktop build runs offline.

Do you keep my files? No, the cloud build wipes after each run.

Will it learn from my work? No, we never train on inputs.

A short tour of the workflow

Upload a file or paste a snippet of prose.

Pick the entities you want gone from the draft.

Choose a method: replace, mask, hash, encrypt, or redact.

Press run and watch the side panel show each hit.

Skim the result and tweak any rule that misfired.

Save the cleaned file or send it to a teammate.