CORE Proctoring API
Overview
The Proctoring API lets your backend create proctored exam sessions, attach secure video, run iris and gaze analysis, and receive integrity results. Authentication uses Bearer API keys with scopes such as proctoring:read, proctoring:write, video:stream, iris:analyze, and sessions:create.
Endpoints include POST /proctoring/sessions to create a session with external_attempt_id and candidate metadata, video room URLs for candidates, iris analyze for live integrity signals, and POST finalize to close the session and trigger webhooks.
Integrators can embed the proctor UI via developer.coreplatform.in/proctor/embed with a session token for iframe or redirect flows.
See the API reference for request bodies, response fields, rate limits, and error codes.
Assessment Operations
Assessment programs need more than a page where questions are listed. They need candidate communication, predictable access control, monitoring evidence, result review, certificate handling, and reporting that leaders can trust. CORE Platform is organized around that full operational lifecycle so teams can move from planning to delivery to analysis without losing context.
The public pages on coreplatform.in are structured to help search engines and human visitors understand the same thing: CORE is a secure AI assessment platform for online exams, private assessments, proctoring, coding tests, analytics, and certificates. Each page points to related product areas so institutions can evaluate the platform from feature, pricing, security, documentation, and support perspectives before planning a confident rollout.
For indexing quality, CORE pages include direct navigation to related resources, descriptive imagery, concise metadata, and structured data. This makes every public URL useful on its own while still connecting it to the larger assessment platform story for administrators, candidates, recruiters, educators, and search engines.
Explore CORE Platform
Reference Resources
For broader SEO and structured data standards, see Google Search Central Schema.org. CORE uses these standards to keep public pages discoverable, shareable, and understandable to search engines.