Synthetic media is a trust business. Buyers who answer to legal teams, unions and regulators check how a studio handles consent and rights before they sign — so we built Beeyawn around it, not bolted it on.
No voice or likeness enters production without explicit, recorded consent from the rights holder. We capture it on the record, scope it to the specific use, and refuse briefs that can't clear it.
Every asset ships with a record of who consented, to what, and for how long. Usage scope, territory and term are documented so your reuse stays inside what was agreed.
We tell you which models and data sources we used on your project. No black boxes for your legal team to chase — a methodology summary is available for review.
Where the brief calls for it, provenance is signed into the file using open standards, so AI-content disclosure travels with the work across platforms.
The person whose voice or likeness is being used — or, where they can't consent themselves, the party that legally holds those rights (an estate, for example). We record it before production starts and scope it to the agreed use.
Only through a proper estate-licensing pathway, where the rights are held and granted by the estate. We won't proceed without that chain of permission in place.
Yes. We provide a methodology summary covering the models and data choices on your project, plus the consent and rights records — written to be read by people who aren't engineers.
Where a brief or platform requires it, we embed content credentials and support the disclosure labels that platforms and regulators expect.
Not without explicit agreement. Your material is used to deliver your project under the terms we set together — nothing more by default.