For 30 years, entrepreneurs have tried to make micropayments work. Every attempt has failed. Copyright.sh learned from that history.
The Micropayment Death Spiral
The promise sounds perfect: pay $0.001 per article, $0.01 per song, $0.10 per video. Users pay only for what they consume.
But reality killed it:
- Mental Transaction Cost: Every payment decision creates cognitive overhead. Evaluating whether a $0.01 article is “worth it” costs more mental energy than the price itself.
- Processing Fees: Credit card processors charge 2.9% + $0.30. For a $0.01 payment, you lose $0.29.
- Decision Fatigue: Nobody wants to make a thousand tiny purchasing decisions per day.
What Actually Works: Pre-Authorized Budgets
Copyright.sh doesn’t ask AI companies to approve each $0.001 content access. Instead:
{
"monthlyBudget": 10000,
"autoApprove": true,
"maxPerRequest": 0.50
}
Set a budget. Define guardrails. Let the system handle individual transactions.
This is how AWS works. How Stripe works. How every successful usage-based pricing system works.
The Lesson
Micropayments fail when users make decisions. They succeed when systems make decisions within user-defined constraints.
Copyright.sh automates the tedious parts while giving creators control over the important parts: pricing, distribution rights, and payment methods.
That’s not micropayments. That’s subscription-style usage billing. And it works.
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