The Micropayment Trap: Why Subscription Models Win

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.