The attribution and settlement layer for fragmented media.

As media fragments and recombines across channels, Hypercut ensures attribution and settlement move with it—by default.

Get a Channel

❖ At Internet Scale

Who is Hypercut for?

Creators who want to define reuse terms and automate settlement.

Developers who need channels and subscription infrastructure.

Media companies navigating fragmentation.

Partners shaping the future media stack.

If you believe attribution and settlement should move with content—not platforms—Hypercut is for you.

Get a Channel

❖ The problem

Media fragments faster than attribution can follow.

Clips, excerpts, remixes, and AI outputs dominate distribution.

Attention explodes. Coordination breaks down.

Attribution disappears the moment content leaves its origin.

Get a Channel

❖ The Insight

Fragmentation is the native distribution model.

Clipping isn’t the problem. It’s how media spreads.

What’s missing is a shared coordination layer beneath fragments—one that persists across channel boundaries.

Get a Channel

❖ The Solution

Hypercut turns fragmentation

into infrastructure.

Every reuse is first-class—not an edge case.

Attribution and settlement follow content, not platforms.

Each fragment reuse triggers protocol-defined settlement between participating channels.

Fragments stop leaking attribution. They become part of a programmable settlement layer.

Get a Channel

❖ The Economic Unit

FAME reflects reuse.

Identity, reputation, and settlement logic live at the channel level.

Channels aren’t feeds — they’re programmable sources.

Channels subscribe to other channels on-chain.

Quality signals emerge from how content moves.

FAME reflects content reuse and participation within the protocol.

Get a Channel

❖ Why Now

The missing layer in the media stack.

AI and short-form have outpaced traditional attribution and settlement models.

Hypercut becomes the channels and subscription layer for apps built on next-generation storage and compute—where fragmentation is the default—starting with Shelby.

Publish once. Let fragments travel. Attribution and settlement follow.

Get a Channel

Join the waitlist.

Hypercut provides protocol infrastructure for attribution and settlement of digital content. Channels are programmable digital namespaces within the protocol. FAME is a protocol-native coordination token. It does not represent equity, debt, or rights to company revenues, dividends, or profit distributions. Participation involves technological and market risk. No financial return is guaranteed.

© HYPERCUT 2026

TERMS

PRIVACY

The attribution and settlement layer for fragmented media.

As media fragments and recombines across channels, Hypercut ensures attribution and settlement move with it—by default.

Get a Channel

❖ At Internet Scale

Who is Hypercut for?

Creators who want to define reuse terms and automate settlement.

Developers who need channels and subscription infrastructure.

Media companies navigating fragmentation.

Partners shaping the future media stack.

If you believe attribution and settlement should move with content—not platforms—Hypercut is for you.

Get a Channel

❖ The problem

Media fragments faster than attribution can follow.

Clips, excerpts, remixes, and AI outputs dominate distribution.

Attention explodes. Coordination breaks down.

Attribution disappears the moment content leaves its origin.

Get a Channel

❖ The Insight

Fragmentation is the native distribution model.

Clipping isn’t the problem. It’s how media spreads.

What’s missing is a shared coordination layer beneath fragments—one that persists across channel boundaries.

Get a Channel

❖ The Solution

Hypercut turns fragmentation

into infrastructure.

Every reuse is first-class—not an edge case.

Attribution and settlement follow content, not platforms.

Each fragment reuse triggers protocol-defined settlement between participating channels.

Fragments stop leaking attribution. They become part of a programmable settlement layer.

Get a Channel

❖ The Economic Unit

FAME reflects reuse.

Identity, reputation, and settlement logic live at the channel level.

Channels aren’t feeds — they’re programmable sources.

Channels subscribe to other channels on-chain.

Quality signals emerge from how content moves.

FAME reflects content reuse and participation within the protocol.

Get a Channel

❖ Why Now

The missing layer in the media stack.

AI and short-form have outpaced traditional attribution and settlement models.

Hypercut becomes the channels and subscription layer for apps built on next-generation storage and compute—where fragmentation is the default—starting with Shelby.

Publish once. Let fragments travel. Attribution and settlement follow.

Get a Channel

Join the waitlist.

Hypercut provides protocol infrastructure for attribution and settlement of digital content. Channels are programmable digital namespaces within the protocol. FAME is a protocol-native coordination token. It does not represent equity, debt, or rights to company revenues, dividends, or profit distributions. Participation involves technological and market risk. No financial return is guaranteed.

© HYPERCUT 2026

TERMS

PRIVACY

The attribution and settlement layer for fragmented media.

As media fragments and recombines across channels, Hypercut ensures attribution and settlement move with it—by default.

Get a Channel

❖ At Internet Scale

Who is Hypercut for?

Creators who want to define reuse terms and automate settlement.

Developers who need channels and subscription infrastructure.

Media companies navigating fragmentation.

Partners shaping the future media stack.

If you believe attribution and settlement should move with content—not platforms—Hypercut is for you.

Get a Channel

❖ The problem

Media fragments faster than attribution can follow.

Clips, excerpts, remixes, and AI outputs dominate distribution.

Attention explodes. Coordination breaks down.

Attribution disappears the moment content leaves its origin.

Get a Channel

❖ The Insight

Fragmentation is the native distribution model.

Clipping isn’t the problem. It’s how media spreads.

What’s missing is a shared coordination layer beneath fragments—one that persists across channel boundaries.

Get a Channel

❖ The Solution

Hypercut turns fragmentation

into infrastructure.

Every reuse is first-class—not an edge case.

Attribution and settlement follow content, not platforms.

Each fragment reuse triggers protocol-defined settlement between participating channels.

Fragments stop leaking attribution. They become part of a programmable settlement layer.

Get a Channel

❖ The Economic Unit

FAME reflects reuse.

Identity, reputation, and settlement logic live at the channel level.

Channels aren’t feeds — they’re programmable sources.

Channels subscribe to other channels on-chain.

Quality signals emerge from how content moves.

FAME reflects content reuse and participation within the protocol.

Get a Channel

❖ Why Now

The missing layer in the media stack.

AI and short-form have outpaced traditional attribution and settlement models.

Hypercut becomes the channels and subscription layer for apps built on next-generation storage and compute—where fragmentation is the default—starting with Shelby.

Publish once. Let fragments travel. Attribution and settlement follow.

Get a Channel

❖ HYPERCUT

Join the waitlist.

Hypercut provides protocol infrastructure for attribution and settlement of digital content. Channels are programmable digital namespaces within the protocol. FAME is a protocol-native coordination token. It does not represent equity, debt, or rights to company revenues, dividends, or profit distributions. Participation involves technological and market risk. No financial return is guaranteed.

© HYPERCUT 2026

TERMS

PRIVACY

The attribution and settlement layer for fragmented media.

As media fragments and recombines across channels, Hypercut ensures attribution and settlement move with it—by default.

Get a Channel

❖ At Internet Scale

Who is Hypercut for?

Creators who want to define reuse terms and automate settlement.

Developers who need channels and subscription infrastructure.

Media companies navigating fragmentation.

Partners shaping the future media stack.

If you believe attribution and settlement should move with content—not platforms—Hypercut is for you.

Get a Channel

❖ The problem

Media fragments faster than attribution can follow.

Clips, excerpts, remixes, and AI outputs dominate distribution.

Attention explodes. Coordination breaks down.

Attribution disappears the moment content leaves its origin.

Get a Channel

❖ The Insight

Fragmentation is the native distribution model.

Clipping isn’t the problem. It’s how media spreads.

What’s missing is a shared coordination layer beneath fragments—one that persists across channel boundaries.

Get a Channel

❖ The Solution

Hypercut turns fragmentation

into infrastructure.

Every reuse is first-class—not an edge case.

Attribution and settlement follow content, not platforms.

Each fragment reuse triggers protocol-defined settlement between participating channels.

Fragments stop leaking attribution. They become part of a programmable settlement layer.

Get a Channel

❖ The Economic Unit

FAME reflects reuse.

Identity, reputation, and settlement logic live at the channel level.

Channels aren’t feeds — they’re programmable sources.

Channels subscribe to other channels on-chain.

Quality signals emerge from how content moves.

FAME reflects content reuse and participation within the protocol.

Get a Channel

❖ Why Now

The missing layer in the media stack.

AI and short-form have outpaced traditional attribution and settlement models.

Hypercut becomes the channels and subscription layer for apps built on next-generation storage and compute—where fragmentation is the default—starting with Shelby.

Publish once. Let fragments travel. Attribution and settlement follow.

Get a Channel

❖ HYPERCUT

Join the waitlist.

Hypercut provides protocol infrastructure for attribution and settlement of digital content. Channels are programmable digital namespaces within the protocol. FAME is a protocol-native coordination token. It does not represent equity, debt, or rights to company revenues, dividends, or profit distributions. Participation involves technological and market risk. No financial return is guaranteed.

© HYPERCUT 2026

TERMS

PRIVACY

The attribution and settlement layer for fragmented media.

As media fragments and recombines across channels, Hypercut ensures attribution and settlement move with it—by default.

Get a Channel

❖ At Internet Scale

Who is Hypercut for?

Creators who want to define reuse terms and automate settlement.

Developers who need channels and subscription infrastructure.

Media companies navigating fragmentation.

Partners shaping the future media stack.

If you believe attribution and settlement should move with content—not platforms—Hypercut is for you.

Get a Channel

❖ The problem

Media fragments faster than attribution can follow.

Clips, excerpts, remixes, and AI outputs dominate distribution.

Attention explodes. Coordination breaks down.

Attribution disappears the moment content leaves its origin.

Get a Channel

❖ The Insight

Fragmentation is the native distribution model.

Clipping isn’t the problem. It’s how media spreads.

What’s missing is a shared coordination layer beneath fragments—one that persists across channel boundaries.

Get a Channel

❖ The Solution

Hypercut turns fragmentation

into infrastructure.

Every reuse is first-class—not an edge case.

Attribution and settlement follow content, not platforms.

Each fragment reuse triggers protocol-defined settlement between participating channels.

Fragments stop leaking attribution. They become part of a programmable settlement layer.

Get a Channel

❖ The Economic Unit

FAME reflects reuse.

Identity, reputation, and settlement logic live at the channel level.

Channels aren’t feeds — they’re programmable sources.

Channels subscribe to other channels on-chain.

Quality signals emerge from how content moves.

FAME reflects content reuse and participation within the protocol.

Get a Channel

❖ Why Now

The missing layer in the media stack.

AI and short-form have outpaced traditional attribution and settlement models.

Hypercut becomes the channels and subscription layer for apps built on next-generation storage and compute—where fragmentation is the default—starting with Shelby.

Publish once. Let fragments travel. Attribution and settlement follow.

Get a Channel

❖ HYPERCUT

Join the waitlist.

Hypercut provides protocol infrastructure for attribution and settlement of digital content. Channels are programmable digital namespaces within the protocol. FAME is a protocol-native coordination token. It does not represent equity, debt, or rights to company revenues, dividends, or profit distributions. Participation involves technological and market risk. No financial return is guaranteed.

© HYPERCUT 2026

TERMS

PRIVACY

The attribution and settlement layer for fragmented media.

As media fragments and recombines across channels, Hypercut ensures attribution and settlement move with it—by default.

Get a Channel

❖ At Internet Scale

Who is Hypercut for?

Creators who want to define reuse terms and automate settlement.

Developers who need channels and subscription infrastructure.

Media companies navigating fragmentation.

Partners shaping the future media stack.

If you believe attribution and settlement should move with content—not platforms—Hypercut is for you.

Get a Channel

❖ The problem

Media fragments faster than attribution can follow.

Clips, excerpts, remixes, and AI outputs dominate distribution.

Attention explodes. Coordination breaks down.

Attribution disappears the moment content leaves its origin.

Get a Channel

❖ The Insight

Fragmentation is the native distribution model.

Clipping isn’t the problem. It’s how media spreads.

What’s missing is a shared coordination layer beneath fragments—one that persists across channel boundaries.

Get a Channel

❖ The Solution

Hypercut turns fragmentation

into infrastructure.

Every reuse is first-class—not an edge case.

Attribution and settlement follow content, not platforms.

Each fragment reuse triggers protocol-defined settlement between participating channels.

Fragments stop leaking attribution. They become part of a programmable settlement layer.

Get a Channel

❖ The Economic Unit

FAME reflects reuse.

Identity, reputation, and settlement logic live at the channel level.

Channels aren’t feeds — they’re programmable sources.

Channels subscribe to other channels on-chain.

Quality signals emerge from how content moves.

FAME reflects content reuse and participation within the protocol.

Get a Channel

❖ Why Now

The missing layer in the media stack.

AI and short-form have outpaced traditional attribution and settlement models.

Hypercut becomes the channels and subscription layer for apps built on next-generation storage and compute—where fragmentation is the default—starting with Shelby.

Publish once. Let fragments travel. Attribution and settlement follow.

Get a Channel

❖ HYPERCUT

Join the waitlist.

Hypercut provides protocol infrastructure for attribution and settlement of digital content. Channels are programmable digital namespaces within the protocol. FAME is a protocol-native coordination token. It does not represent equity, debt, or rights to company revenues, dividends, or profit distributions. Participation involves technological and market risk. No financial return is guaranteed.

© HYPERCUT 2026

TERMS

PRIVACY