
Share The Track. Keep The Record.
CREATORSEAL™ helps music producers and artists document that beats, demos, stems, session exports, and unreleased tracks existed before the file left their hands — so there is proof tied to that version before it gets shared, downloaded, or circulated.
Music Creators Know How Fast A Track Can Slip Out Of Context.
- You share beats, demos, or stems before the relationship feels fully safe.
- You worry about what happens after an artist, producer, label, or A&R gets the file.
- You want documentation of what version existed before remakes, leaks, or split disputes start.
- You are tired of treating upload dates, tags, or DAW metadata as if they are enough.
Music creators consistently describe the moment of sending a track as the moment they feel least protected. The file is out, and what happens next depends entirely on trust.
The concern is rarely about obvious theft. It is about a beat that gets heard, absorbed, and recreated — or a demo that circulates further than intended — without any record tied to the original version.
Upload dates are a common first answer. They document when you went public, not when the file existed or what state it was in when it first moved between hands.
The Vulnerable Moment Is Before Release.
The risky moments for music creators are familiar:
That is when beats get heard and remade, demos circulate, or files travel farther than intended.
The exposure moment is not only after release. It is when the file leaves your hands.
What Music Creators Use Today Still Leaves A Gap.
YouTube And BeatStars Upload Dates
Publishing timestamps document when a track went live. But if someone hears your beat in a private share or session and recreates it before you post, the upload date does not document when the original version existed.
DAW Project And Export Metadata
Your production software records when a project was last saved or exported. That log lives inside your catalog — it is not portable proof you can reference outside your system or share as an independent record.
Producer Tags And Audio Watermarks
Tags are a useful deterrent when a beat is published. But if a track is shared privately — in a session, via DM, or before upload — a tag alone is not a timestamped, verifiable proof record.
Email And DM Delivery Threads
A delivery thread shows when you hit send. It does not document when the file was created, what state it was in, or what happens after it gets forwarded or shared further.
Copyright Registration After The Fact
Registration is valuable for legal protection, but it typically happens after the creative work is complete. It does not create a timestamped record tied to a specific version shared before release.
Trust In The Studio Or Collaboration
Most music is made on trust between producers, artists, and collaborators. That works until a version gets leaked, remade, or disputed — and by then the window for creating a clean proof record has closed.
These approaches feel like protection, but each one has a real limitation.
How CREATORSEAL™ Helps Music Creators
Three Steps · Ninety Seconds
Finish → Seal → Share
Finish
Do the work
Stay in your tools. Drop the final file into CREATORSEAL when it's done.
Seal
Hash. Sign. Anchor.
Local SHA-384, your key, RFC-3161 timestamp. Nothing uploaded — only the fingerprint.
Share
Send with proof
Post anywhere. The receipt rides along. Anyone can verify, on any machine, offline.
Real Music Workflows
Seal the version before any of these moments.
Ways Music Producers and Artists Can Use CREATORSEAL™
CREATORSEAL™ documents that a specific file existed in a specific form at a specific time. Here is where that matters most.
What You Are Documenting
- The specific version of a beat, demo, stem pack, or rough mix at the exact timestamp sealed
- Which version of a track was shared before a collaboration, label review, or upload
- That an original beat or production existed before it circulated further
- The state of a session export or stem pack at the time of handoff
- That a topline, hook, or lyric draft was created before a co-writing session
What CREATORSEAL™ Does Not Do
- Determine legal copyright ownership or split attribution
- Replace copyright registration, PRO filing, or music publishing agreements
- Store, access, or listen to your audio files at any point
- Guarantee outcomes in sampling, remake, or split disputes
- Replace legal counsel for music industry contracts or intellectual property matters
- Act as a substitute for producer agreements or artist collaborator contracts
Common Questions Music Creators Have
Upload timestamps document when a track went public — but the risky moment often happens before that. If someone hears your beat in a private share, session, or DM and recreates it, your publish date does not help. CREATORSEAL™ creates a record tied to the version that existed before you shared it.
No. CREATORSEAL™ documents that a specific file existed in a specific form at a specific time. It does not determine legal copyright ownership, which depends on jurisdiction, registration, and other factors outside this tool. What it creates is a timestamped reference point for the version you sealed.
No. Your file stays on your device. CREATORSEAL™ fingerprints it locally and creates a proof record without uploading the audio. The file itself is never transmitted to CREATORSEAL™'s servers.
Seal the new version separately. Each seal creates its own independent proof record, so every stage of the track's development has its own timestamp. Over time, this creates a documented timeline of what existed and when.
No. CREATORSEAL™ documents the existence of a specific file at a specific time. It does not replace producer agreements, split sheets, publishing deals, or legal counsel. Use both — the seal creates a documentation layer that works alongside your contracts.
Yes. Sealing before a collaboration, label review, stem handoff, or outside production session creates a clear reference point for what you brought to the table. Each collaborator can seal their own contributions independently.
It works for producers, beatmakers, artists, songwriters, engineers, and any team handling unreleased music. Anything you would want a timestamped record of before it leaves your hands can be sealed.
Seal The Beat Before The Share.
Seal your beat, demo, or unreleased track before sharing — not after a remake, a leak, or a dispute.
Know An Artist Or Producer Who Always Worries Before Sending A Track Out?
Send this to a beatmaker, songwriter, artist, engineer, or producer who has felt that exact moment.
