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IP·Inscription
Provenance

A receipt for every byte you ship.

Provenance is the protocol layer. Every other product on IP Inscription — licensing, tokenization, enterprise audit — is just a contract sitting on top of the same primitive: a signed, anchored, machine-verifiable hash of your work.
Anchor record
v1.0
Lattice — Chapter IV
by Mira Okafor · Image · 14 frames
hash0x8f3a91…d12c
block#19,482,003
signer0xC0FFEE…42a3
anchored1.2s after upload
Tamper detection

Change one character. Watch the fingerprint move.

A hash is a one-way summary of every byte. Edit anything in the text below — punctuation, capitalization, a hidden space — and the fingerprint changes completely. That's what makes inscriptions tamper-evident.

manifest content
100 characters · 103 bytesSHA-256 · client-side
anchored hash
inscribed
…computing…
current hash
live
Matches inscribed manifest
Byte-for-byte identical to what was inscribed. Verifies green.
Lineage

Every derivative points back to the source.

Inscriptions form a directed graph. Remixes, translations, and adaptations cite their parent — and the parent's certificate updates automatically.

rootderivative7 certificates · 6 edges
Original2026-04-18
Lattice — Chapter IV
by Mira Okafor
hash
0x8f3a91…d12c
lineage
This is the root inscription.
descendants
  1. Lattice (Remix)·Remix
  2. Lattice — Motion Pass·Adaptation
  3. Lattice (jp localization)·Translation
Versus

Copyright is a right. Inscription is proof.

Copyright protects you on paper. Registration creates a record at one institution. Inscription gives you a public, machine-readable receipt anyone can verify.

Capability
Copyright
Gov. Reg.
Inscription
Exists the instant you create
Cryptographically verifiable
Independent of any one institution
Machine-readable
Carries royalty splits
Time-stamped to the second
Public, no account required
Available globally, day one

Inscription doesn't replace copyright — it makes it provable.

Use cases

Who uses provenance?

Anyone who creates something they might one day need to prove they made.

Concept artists

Lock pitch decks before they leave the room.

Inscribe each frame before the meeting. If your visual shows up in someone else's deck, the receipt speaks for itself.

Photographers

Watermark the byte, not the pixel.

A SHA-256 of the raw file is more durable than any embedded watermark — and survives every export.

Writers

Timestamp drafts as you write.

Inscribe chapters, treatments, or research notes. Provenance is order-of-creation, not order-of-publication.

Designers

Defensible design history, automatic.

Plug the SDK into Figma or your CI to inscribe every milestone — no extra workflow, full audit trail.

Researchers

Prior art, on the public record.

Inscribe a hash of your methodology or findings before submission. Cite the certificate in any future dispute.

Open-source maintainers

Sign your code, not just your commits.

Inscribe release artifacts at build time. Anyone consuming your library can verify they have the bytes you shipped.

In-house design teams

Stop attaching screenshots to emails.

Replace every "as of date X, this was our design" thread with a verifiable certificate.

Your next idea deserves a receipt.
Start with one inscription.

Inscribe your first work in under two minutes. No wallet required for the demo, no credit card, no commitments.