Stamped is an autonomous AI agent that monitors the web for your content, auto-issues licenses to anyone who uses it, and sends royalties to your wallet — 24/7, forever, without you lifting a finger.
Stamped scans social feeds, blogs, and media sites in real-time — 24 hours a day. Every mention, share, or derivative use gets logged to an immutable record.
When content is detected in the wild, Stamped issues a license on your behalf — smart contract terms, blockchain timestamp, legally binding. No lawyers needed.
Money hits your crypto wallet the moment a license is issued. USDC, USDT, ETH — whatever you set. No invoicing. No waiting 60 days. No cut taken by intermediaries.
Every piece of content you register gets a blockchain timestamp — proof of creation, proof of ownership, proof of licensing. You own the record, forever.
Upload your posts, images, threads, songs, or designs to Stamped. Each piece gets a cryptographic hash and blockchain timestamp — establishing your provenance record from day one.
Our AI agent monitors the open web, social platforms, and media sites. When your content appears — shared, quoted, or reused — it's detected immediately via content fingerprinting and visual matching.
Stamped triggers a smart contract license with your pre-set terms. USDC arrives in your wallet within seconds. You can track every license, every payout, every usage event on the blockchain ledger.
Every week, brands, writers, and media companies take viral posts, threads, and designs from creators on social media. They quote them, screenshot them, remix them — and monetize them. Meanwhile, the creator who made it gets nothing.
Not because the system is broken. Because no one built the right system yet.
Stamped is that system. An AI agent that does what the creator economy has always needed: detects when your work is being used, issues a license, and puts money in your wallet. Automatically. Continuously. On your behalf.
"The creators who built the internet's most valuable content have been getting ripped off for twenty years. That ends now."