Legal Verification of Web Pages?
"Electronic Frontiers Australia is along similar lines, sort of, and do sympathize with my position. Australian Consumer's Association (Choice) aren't too helpful either. The closest thing I've found is a Justice of the Peace, but they only can verify if one (physical) document is an exact (physical) copy of another. Is there anywhere that provides a service that will legally say that a document appeared on a particular site on a particular day and was last modified on such and such a date? Or am I disadvantaged just because I've used the latest technology to read (incorrect) documentation on a product? Is there a need for a service that can independently verify the state of a document as it appears today for future use?"
I don't think that they can notarize after the fact.. the whole point is that they can only notarize stuff when they see it happening. A copy of a website and the date stamp of the cached copy can both be faked. All he would be able to do is that you had a copy which may have been already altered when he stopped by...