Your voice. Your video. Your audience data. Your terms.
From the first hundred listeners to the next hundred million — keep the rights to your voice, your video, and your subscriber list intact. The infrastructure built for what Joe Rogan needed before Spotify, and what Joe Budden built on Patreon.
Three problems streaming numbers will not solve for you.
An AI voice clone of you, selling supplements
It happened to Joe Rogan and Andrew Huberman in 2023 — a fake endorsement clip hit five million views before the platform pulled it down. Your audience cannot tell the difference, and your name pays the bill.
Streaming numbers without listener identity
Spotify and Apple show you the downloads. They do not show you who came back, who paid, or who would follow you to the next platform if you left.
An ad-load that burns the audience down
Dynamic ad insertion is now most of the impressions in the feed. The loyal listener is the one who notices first, and the one you cannot afford to lose.
Six pieces of infrastructure podcasters needed yesterday.
A signed voice and video record
One signed record of your voice and your face, with the scopes you actually granted — ad reads, interview licensing, clip derivatives. Anything outside the scope is a clean takedown.
Continuous watch for cloned audio
Your voice fingerprint runs against ElevenLabs, Resemble, and PlayHT detection feeds plus an internal index. Routine fakes file automatically; judgment calls land in your queue.
Episode provenance, baked in at recording
Every episode ships with a signed manifest that travels through YouTube, Spotify, and Apple. When a clip lands on TikTok, the chain back to your microphone is already there.
An audience list that belongs to you
Listeners, paid subscribers, and superfans live in a vault you control. Sponsors query it through a metered interface; you keep the names, the emails, and the right to leave.
For networks: defend the whole roster
When one host gets impersonated, the network brand pays. The roster panel surfaces every voice across every show, with bulk takedown and graceful departure attestations built in.
Long-form sponsor pairings, not check-chasing
Match with sponsors who fit the show's audience and the host's voice for more than one drop. Recurring revenue beats the single big advance every time.
From microphone to court-ready in four steps.
Mint a Creator Proof Record for your voice and face. Choose the scopes you authorize — ad reads, interviews, clips — and lock the rest.
Recording rigs and editors emit a signed provenance manifest at export. The chain rides with the file through every platform.
Continuous scan across YouTube, TikTok, and the audio detection feeds. Routine clones file themselves; the close calls come to you.
Pull listener and subscriber data from every platform you publish on into one vault. When you migrate, you bring them with you.
Solo hosts, networks, and Patreon-first podcasters.
If the show is the business, the voice is the asset, and the audience is the moat — this gateway is the operating layer underneath.
- Independent solo podcasters
- Investigative + interview shows
- Comedy + culture podcasts
- Sports talk hosts
- Podcast networks
- Audio studios
- Patreon-first creators
- Substack podcasters
The EU AI Act Article 50 disclosure rules for synthetic audio start applying on August 2, 2026. Tennessee's ELVIS Act has been in force since July 1, 2024. California's digital replica laws (AB 2602 and AB 1836) were signed September 17, 2024. Federal NO FAKES Act legislation has been reintroduced and remains in committee. The gateway ships ready for all of them.
Start with the voice.
Most hosts have a working Creator Proof Record and an active voice-clone watch the same week they sign up. Networks usually onboard a full roster in two.