Products
We believe in a clearer and more collaborative future—one that gives agency to creatives and AI innovators alike. For AI companies, that future is no longer optional: regulators on both sides of the Atlantic now expect you to know—and show—what your models were trained on.
We offer a straightforward way to get there: license creative work whose rights holders have chosen to make it available for training and generation, with consent and provenance documented from the start.
Providers of general-purpose AI models must put in place a copyright policy that identifies and respects rights holders’ reservations, and publish a sufficiently detailed summary of the content used in training. These obligations began applying to new models in August 2025.
The text-and-data-mining exception only covers works whose rights holders haven’t reserved their rights. Where rights are reserved—as a growing share of creators and publishers now do—training requires authorization. In other words: a license.
Since January 2026, developers of generative AI systems made available in California must publicly document the datasets used to train them—including whether they contain copyrighted or licensed material.
Meanwhile, U.S. courts are testing the boundaries of fair use in a growing wave of copyright litigation. Documented consent and provenance are quickly becoming the safest foundation to build on.
Explore creative work—across modalities and domains—that artists and rights holders have explicitly chosen to license for AI training and down-stream generation.
Our research includes a data provenance framework for generative AI datasets, so consent and sourcing are documented rather than assumed—ready for the disclosures regulators now expect.
Compensation flows to the people who make the work that makes AI work—turning rights holders from adversaries into partners.
The modalities, domains, and scale you’re after—whether for training, fine-tuning, or generation.
We connect you with artists and rights holders who have chosen to license their work, with provenance documented.
Agree on terms directly with rights holders, with attribution and compensation built in from the start.
If you’re exploring licensed creative data for training or generation—or preparing for the disclosure rules already in force—we’d like to hear from you.
An individual creator? See Individual creators. Managing a catalog of rights? See Enterprise.