IP Registry

Register once. Own forever.

Every pitch, every signed deal, every uploaded asset — on record at the moment of creation. The rights and provenance layer for the whole platform: split percentages enforced downstream, licenses issued and tracked, transfers and inheritance preserved. Registration is the platform mantra. Permanence is the structural promise.

Free to start. Splits enforced downstream. Every record on-chain.
Why IP Registry

Creative rights live scattered across paper contracts, agency files, and Word docs from 2009.

Mix-IP collapses the whole rights stack into one open registry. Pitches register at the moment of creation. Signed deals from Briefs and Opportunities write their negotiated terms straight to the record. Assets uploaded through Pro Transfer App stamp the registration with an integrity hash and a chain-of-custody trail. Splits don't live in a side letter — they live in the registry, and Payments executes them downstream. Licenses, transfers, sub-licenses, disputes, and inheritance all leave a permanent, queryable trace.

At creation Registration moment Pitches, signed deals, asset uploads — every creation event mints an IP record. The platform mantra, baked into every entry point.
Every Right and share Territory, format, duration, exclusivity, medium — all queryable, all enforceable. Revenue, IP, and distribution splits each tracked separately.
Auto Splits enforced Recoupment, primary participants, secondary participants — the registry decides who gets paid what. Payments executes the waterfall on every distribution.
Forever On-chain provenance Every registration, license, transfer, dispute, and inheritance event timestamped and hashed. The audit trail is the registry — permanent by design.

01/05

The registry

Works, contributions, splits, licenses.

What gets registered: works (films, episodes, scripts, marketing campaigns, songs, branded content, creator posts, feature concepts), credited contributions (creator, role, signed agreement, timestamp), revenue and IP and distribution splits, and the licenses granted — to whom, at what scope, in which territories, for how long. Every entry is hashed, timestamped, and chained to its source signing event. The record carries the negotiated terms forward into Payments, into provenance audits, and downstream into every product surface that needs to know "who owns what, and what can be done with it."

Asset attachment via Pro Transfer App stamps the integrity hash directly into the record — chain-of-custody in one move. More on that in Registered at creation →.

REGISTRATION RECORD

IP-2104 · Cadence · S1

Branded content series · Aurora Athletic · 6-spot campaign

Registered On-chain Verified · Pro Transfer App

Asset metadata

  • Hash 0x4a2f8c…c8e1f3
  • Registered 11 May 2026
  • Master files 2.4 TB · Pro Transfer App ✓

Contributions · 4

  • Camila Restrepo 22%
    Writer
  • Maya Reza 18%
    Director
  • Helio Studios 35%
    Producer
  • DocFront 25%
    Distributor

Licenses · 4

  • Active 3
  • Sub-licensed 1
  • Expired 0
  • Disputed 0
Provenance · 18 events · last 14 Jul 2026

RIGHTS MATRIX · IP-2104

7 variants · 5 dimensions

Medium Territory Duration Exclusivity Status
Theatrical NA 5yr exclusive Active
Theatrical EU 5yr exclusive Available
Streaming LATAM 3yr non-exclusive Licensed
Streaming APAC 3yr non-exclusive Sub-licensed
Sync global perpetual non-exclusive Licensed
Merch EU 2yr non-exclusive Disputed
Print global perpetual non-exclusive Expired
Queryable · sortable · filterable 7 variants · 4 active

02/05

The rights matrix

Rights aren't binary.

One work, many rights variants. A theatrical exclusive in North America. A non-exclusive sync license, global, perpetual. A merch deal in Europe, two years, currently disputed. The registry tracks medium, territory, duration, exclusivity, and license count across every dimension simultaneously — all queryable, all on chain. When a license is issued, it doesn't shadow the rest of the matrix; it sits inside it, a single row in a multi-row record.

The same matrix drives downstream surfaces: Payments knows which territories generate revenue, dispute resolution knows which row is contested, and inheritance knows which rows pass cleanly to heirs.

03/05

Registered at creation

Created → registered.

Every creation event mints an IP record. A pitch in Pitches mints a record at the moment of upload. A signed deal on Briefs or Opportunities writes its negotiated terms straight into the registry. Assets transferred through Pro Transfer App stamp the registration with an integrity hash and a chain-of-custody trail. The mantra isn't a slogan; it's an architectural rule. There is no "register your IP" step — the act of creating is the act of registering.

Three creation surfaces, one ledger. Pitches, signed deals, and verified asset transfers all flow into the same record so the registry sees the work end-to-end — from concept to contract to delivery.

CREATION-EVENT LEDGER

IP-2104 · Cadence · S1

  1. Pitch
    Cadence · concept Camila Restrepo · t+0d
    0x9f1a…b720 On-chain
  2. Deal
    Signed · Helio + DocFront 4 contributors · t+11d
    0xc34d…e9a2 On-chain
  3. Assets
    Master files · 2.4 TB Pro Transfer App transfer · t+24d
    0x4a2f…c8e1 On-chain Verified · Pro Transfer App

WATERFALL · Q2 SYNC LICENSE

$120,000 gross

IP-2104 · sync license · global · perpetual

  • Recoupment $40,000
    Studio advance · recovered first
  • Primary participants $60,000
    Camila · Maya · Helio · DocFront
  • Secondary participants $20,000
    Composer · sound design · agency
Payments · 6 wallets · automated

04/05

Splits + royalty engine

Splits, enforced.

Recoupment first, then primary participants, then secondary participants. The registry decides who gets paid what; Payments executes the waterfall on every distribution. Splits aren't living in a side letter or a producer's spreadsheet — they live in the IP record itself, queryable by any tool that needs them, and enforced automatically when revenue lands.

Distribution event types: sync licenses, theatrical settlements, streaming residuals, merch royalties, and any other revenue that maps to a registered right. The registry doesn't care where revenue comes from — it cares who is owed what against it.

05/05

License management + provenance

Issued. Tracked. On record.

Issue a license, sub-license a row, mark a transfer, sunset a term, resolve a dispute, pass an inheritance. Every license event is timestamped, hashed, and added to the provenance trail of the underlying IP. The audit isn't a separate system; it's the registry, queryable from any moment forward and any moment back.

Status taxonomy locked across the platform: Active, Licensed, Sub-licensed, Encumbered, Disputed, Expired, Transferred, Inherited, Public Domain. Nine states, one shared vocabulary.

LICENSE INVENTORY · IP-2104

5 licenses · 2 active · 1 disputed

  • L-2104.01 Theatrical · NA · 5yr
    Active
  • L-2104.02 Streaming · LATAM · 3yr
    Sub-licensed
  • L-2104.03 Sync · global · perpetual
    Licensed
  • L-2104.04 Merch · EU · 2yr
    Disputed
  • L-2104.05 Print · global · perpetual
    Expired
Connects to

From creation to payout in one platform.

The registry is the connective tissue. Pitches feed in at creation. Briefs and Opportunities lock terms when deals sign. Projects attach delivered assets through Pro Transfer App. And Payments executes the splits the registry decides — all without re-keying a single number.

IP Registry

Register it. Split it. License it. Earn it.

The rights and provenance layer for the whole platform. Pitches register at creation. Signed deals lock terms in the registry. Splits enforce downstream. Licenses, transfers, and provenance leave a permanent chain-of-custody — on record, forever.

Talk to our team Open the registry