Legal Architecture
Not a standalone feature — part of the process. Every authorization, token, receipt, and watermark is already a legal artifact. This page makes that explicit.
Contract Layer
DIAP tokens are machine-readable translations of existing guild contracts.
Evidentiary Layer
Render receipts + watermarks = timestamped chain of custody, admissible in arbitration.
Statutory Layer
Compliant with ELVIS Act, AB 2655, AB 1836, BIPA, EU AI Act.
Right of Publicity Layer
Grounded in Midler v. Ford, White v. Samsung lineage.
Motion Identity Layer
The movement is the identity. The law is catching up. TrustMark is already there.

A few seconds of footage is enough for an AI to extract how someone walks, gestures, and emotes — and replicate it indefinitely.
Right of publicity law was built for a world where impersonation required a human. Today, a few seconds of footage is enough for an AI to extract how someone walks, gestures, and emotes — and replicate it indefinitely.
The law partially covers this. TrustMark makes it enforceable.
What motion identity includes — and what AI can extract from it
Every one of these layers is present in a standard production frame. Every one of them can be extracted, modelled, and redeployed — without the performer, the studio, or the guild ever knowing.
Where the law currently stands
Courts have consistently held that identity protection extends beyond name and likeness. White v. Samsung established that the totality of a person's recognizable presence carries rights — a robot in a blonde wig was enough. Midler v. Ford confirmed that performance style is protectable. The Right of Publicity, in its more expansive state-level forms, covers “signature styles or mannerisms” — which courts have interpreted to include movement patterns and behavioral signatures.
But motion identity specifically — the pixel-level fingerprint of how a body moves — sits in a legal grey zone. Protected in principle. Unenforceable in practice. And completely invisible to AI systems that don't read contracts.
What TrustMark does
TrustMark registers motion identity as a discrete, protected construct — separate from face, voice, and performance signature. Studios capture it in production. It's registered on-chain with a 24-joint skeletal fingerprint. Every downstream AI use requires an explicit authorization token.
The law decides what to do with a violation. TrustMark creates the record that makes the case.
Motion identity is the last unprotected layer of a performer's identity. TrustMark closes that gap — before production begins, not after the lawsuit lands.
Training Separation
TRAINING_USE is never implied. Always a separate, explicit authorization. Defaults to NO.
Vault Architecture
Stores secure records, not raw identity data. If breached — useless without the source.
Stress Test
Every claim on this site has been audited against the hardest questions the industry will ask.
Governance & Legal Foundation
TrustMark IP is being built alongside founding leadership from the AI Trust Foundation.
The AI Trust Foundation is the leading U.S. voice for guiding AI technology to safe and beneficial uses. Founded by AI industry leaders and former U.S. lawmakers, the Foundation works directly with policymakers — including engagement with the White House on national AI governance standards — to develop the frameworks that will define how AI operates responsibly at scale.
TrustMark IP's registration and protection protocol is designed in alignment with these emerging standards — built not just for today's creators, but for the regulatory landscape being written right now.

Ready for industry review
TrustMark\'s legal architecture is designed to withstand scrutiny from guilds, studios, lawyers, agents, and technical integrators. Every artifact is defensible.