For AI Creators

Protect Your AI Prompts Before You Share Them

AI creators often share prompts, workflows, system instructions, and prompt packs across marketplaces, clients, teams, and public communities. OriginProof gives those assets a timestamped proof record before they leave your hands.

Prompt work needs evidence

Prompt creation is easy to copy and difficult to explain after the fact. A creator may spend days refining instructions, examples, constraints, evaluation notes, and workflow details, but the final text can still look like a simple block of words. When a prompt is shared publicly, sold as part of a pack, sent to a client, or included in an AI product, the creator needs a clear record that the exact digital fingerprint existed at a specific time.

OriginProof focuses on that evidence layer. It creates a SHA256 fingerprint from the submitted prompt or file, records a UTC timestamp, issues a Proof ID, and creates a public verification page. The goal is not to turn prompts into a legal claim or private marketplace. The goal is to give creators a clean, professional record they can reference later.

Register before distribution

The strongest workflow is simple: register the prompt before you share it. This can happen before uploading a prompt pack to a marketplace, before sending examples to a client, before publishing a workflow in a course, or before releasing a public demo. The Proof ID becomes a stable reference that can be included in a README, portfolio, sales page, or delivery document.

A verification link gives buyers and collaborators a way to confirm that a proof record exists. It does not expose hidden business logic by itself. It confirms the registered fingerprint, timestamp, and metadata shown on the verification page.

Use certificates and profile pages

Each registered proof can include a title, creator profile, source context, and optional skills. This helps turn a raw fingerprint into a professional registry entry. A creator profile can collect public proof records under one identity, while skills pages help organize work by topics like ai-prompting, automation, product-design, research, or content-systems.

The certificate PDF is useful when a more formal record is needed. It includes the Proof ID, timestamp, SHA256 hash, verification URL, and QR code. This makes it easier to share proof evidence in client work, documentation, and portfolio material.

What OriginProof does not claim

OriginProof records proof of existence. It does not verify authorship, grant ownership, register copyright, or decide who legally owns a prompt. That distinction is important because prompt ownership can depend on contracts, employment terms, jurisdiction, platform rules, and other context. OriginProof keeps the product focused on a narrower and more reliable function: timestamped digital evidence.

For AI creators, that narrow function is still valuable. It gives you a neutral timestamp, a public proof page, and a certificate that can support your records when a prompt or workflow becomes commercially important.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I prove I created a prompt?

You can register the prompt text or a prompt file with OriginProof. The system creates a SHA256 fingerprint, records a timestamp, and gives you a Proof ID with a public verification page.

Can a prompt be protected?

OriginProof can provide timestamped proof of existence for a prompt. It does not grant copyright, ownership, or legal rights, but it can help show when a specific prompt fingerprint was registered.

Can I timestamp a prompt before sharing it?

Yes. You can paste the prompt, register it, and keep the Proof ID, certificate, and verification link before sending the prompt to clients, marketplaces, collaborators, or internal teams.

Do you store my prompt?

OriginProof is designed to store proof metadata such as hash, timestamp, Proof ID, title, and source context. The proof record is based on the fingerprint, not public storage of your original prompt content.

Register a proof of existence

Create a timestamped proof record, receive a Proof ID, and keep a public verification link for later reference.

Register Your First Proof