DIJJI.ai records what changed, who changed it, and when, in an Audit Log. There’s no single site-wide feed — each organization, team, member, project, task, and integration keeps its own log on its detail page. This page walks through opening one and reading it. For what the audit log is and what it captures, see the Audit log concept page.
Viewing the audit log is an admin action. If you’re a member, the panel doesn’t appear — see Roles: admin and member.
Open an Audit Log panel
- Go to the detail page of the thing whose history you want:
- Organization — Settings → Organization.
- Team — Settings → Team.
- Member — Settings → Members, then the member.
- Project — the project’s overview page.
- Task — the task’s detail page.
- Integration — the integration’s detail page.
- Scroll to the Audit Log panel. It starts collapsed, showing just the header with a ▸ arrow.
- Select the Audit Log header. The arrow turns to ▾ and the entries load. The history shown belongs only to the thing you’re looking at.
Read an entry
Entries are listed newest first. Each one shows:
- The action in bold —
created,updated,invited,triggered, and so on. - Who did it — by a person’s name, or by system when DIJJI.ai made the change automatically.
- When — the date and time on the right, in your browser’s local time zone.
If the action changed specific fields, they’re listed underneath as field: old value → new value, with the old value struck through. A blank value shows as ∅. Renaming a project, for example, reads:
updated by Dana Okafor 5/22/2026, 2:43:15 PM
name: Billing → Payments
Page through older history
The panel shows 20 entries at a time. When there are more, paging controls appear at the bottom — use them to step back to older entries and forward again. There’s no search, filter, or date-range picker; the log is a straight reverse-chronological list, so the most recent change is always at the top.
What to know
- An empty panel is normal for something new. If nothing has been recorded yet, the panel reads “No audit entries — No mutations have been recorded for this record yet.”
- Each panel is loaded on demand. Entries fetch the first time you expand the panel, so there may be a brief pause before they appear.
- One panel, one thing. A project’s panel shows only that project’s changes. To review a different thing, open its detail page and expand the panel there.