Intellectual Property and Blockchain: It’s a match!

How can Blockchain support creators in the IP market?

RYDE Platform
3 min readAug 1, 2019

Written by Jan Denecke, Founder and CEO of Ryde Holding Inc.

Photo by Hitesh Choudhary on Unsplash

At the core of bitcoins and all other newly-minted cryptocurrency coins, is the Blockchain. Many people think that the two are the same, but they are not. Blockchain technology is a distributed, but shared ledger, more accurately, a database, that allows you and me to record and keep track of an item, or transaction.

We tend to think that this recording and tracking process is digital objects only, but that, too, is limiting this powerful new technology. Companies are creating these databases to track all kinds of physical objects — from diamonds to art to photographs.

Blockchain is not governed by one single user and herein lies some of its greatest strength. There is no centralized version of this shared database. Instead, it is nearly-completely accessible to the public and even private companies. That transparency means that all users can see the activity for every piece of information in the shared database. Once something is in the database, it is immutable. It cannot be changed or removed.

Let’s explore any intellectual property (IP) that pays a royalty to the creator of it –artists, musicians, authors, and photographers are just a few examples. IP comes in many different forms and the licenses or royalties can be earned from territorial/geographic licenses, time-based licenses, to usage types.

Many creators sell their works through distribution networks or resellers, and there is a lot of mistrust and inefficiencies in those systems. There are redundant costs based on financial institution processes — exchanging various international currencies is but one expense that goes away when you have a digital currency or token. Also, it isn’t easy to see what’s been sold, when, or by whom, but Blockchain technology offers to solve some of these challenges.

Photo by Duncan Kidd on Unsplash

It has always been difficult to create and register the catalog of images for photographers. Just take a look at the world of trademarks, a long and expensive process, with difficulties and limitation in the searchable database. With the technology of blockchain, the game is changing for better — for both registration and search.

To continue with this example, creators can register their works to a Blockchain to provide a tamper-proof method of proving ownership (again, the immutable, unchangeable nature of the Blockchain keeps it from being lost or tampered with). Ownership used to be hard to prove, but Blockchain would fix that, and more — as creators would know who is using their work, who is seeking a license to their work, or using it illegitimately. Currently, there are several companies building Blockchain-based platforms for music, writers, and other creator types.

Overall, these blockchain-driven platforms will make it cheaper to move and sell intellectual property — because all the costs from complicated and expensive royalty systems will cease to exist. We will have one very simple and transparent royalty accounting system, documented in the blockchain. And the IP holders, the creators, will receive more money from their creative works as we build a real and lasting economic model that helps protect their works.

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RYDE Platform

We are the one-stop solution for photographers to monitor and monetize unlicensed image use worldwide easily.