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17 contributions to AI Income Court
⚖️ Today's Case: Selling AI Personas and Characters for Companion Apps
THE IDEA: Create original AI character personas — with backstories, personality profiles, conversation guidelines, and voice characteristics — and license or sell them to companion app platforms like Character.ai, Replika, or emerging AI social platforms. The prosecution entered carefully. This case involves both a business model and a set of ethical questions the court cannot ignore. ⚖️ The court establishes the scope: This case is about the commercial opportunity of building and monetizing AI personas for companion app platforms. The court will evaluate the business model. It will also address the ethical dimensions because they are inseparable from the commercial reality. 🧾 Exhibit A: The platform dependency problem is severe. Character.ai, Replika, and similar platforms have changed their terms, their content policies, and their monetization structures multiple times with minimal notice to creators. Replika removed romantic relationship features from its product overnight in 2023 — a decision that devastated the user base and eliminated revenue streams for anyone who had built around that functionality. A creator who has invested significant time building characters on a platform they do not control is building on rented land with an unpredictable landlord. The platform owns the distribution. The platform owns the user relationship. The platform owns the ability to remove your character at will. 🧾 Exhibit B: The monetization path is unclear and inconsistent. Unlike content platforms with established creator monetization programs, companion app platforms do not have mature, reliable revenue sharing arrangements with character creators. The financial upside for persona creators is speculative and platform-dependent. The court finds the income claims circulating in this category to be largely unverified and unverifiable. 🧾 Exhibit C: The ethical dimension cannot be separated from the commercial one. Companion AI applications serve users who are, in many documented cases, experiencing loneliness, social anxiety, or difficulty forming human connections. Characters designed to maximize engagement and emotional dependency in these users — without transparent disclosure of their artificial nature — raise ethical questions that the court considers material to the business model evaluation.
⚖️ Today's Case: Selling AI Personas and Characters for Companion Apps
0 likes • 9d
Very informative, with strong points and useful takeaways.
⚖️ Today's Case: Selling AI-Generated Music on Streaming Platforms
THE IDEA: Use AI music generation tools like Suno and Udio to produce tracks at scale, distribute them through streaming platforms like Spotify and Apple Music, and collect royalties passively as the catalog grows. The defendant uploaded 10,000 songs last Tuesday. Spotify noticed. 🔍 The court examines the streaming royalty math first: Spotify pays between $0.003 and $0.005 per stream. To generate $1,000 per month, a catalog needs approximately 250,000 streams. To generate $1,000 per month from AI-produced tracks with no existing audience, no playlist placement, no artist profile, and no promotional budget — the catalog needs to somehow accumulate a quarter million streams from cold zero every single month. The math does not work before the platforms even enter the conversation. ⚔️ The prosecution calls the platforms themselves as witnesses: Spotify, Apple Music, and YouTube Music have all moved aggressively against AI-generated content flooding their catalogs. Spotify removed tens of thousands of AI-generated tracks in 2024 after identifying systematic catalog manipulation. Streaming platforms are implementing AI detection tools and tightening distributor agreements to limit the volume of non-human-created content that can be uploaded per account. The distribution window that made this theoretically possible is actively closing. 🧾 Exhibit A: The discovery problem is insurmountable without promotion. Music discovery on streaming platforms is driven by algorithmic playlist placement, editorial curation, and listener behavior signals. AI-generated tracks with no listener history, no playlist placements, and no artist following generate none of those signals. They exist in the catalog the same way a book exists in a warehouse with no address. Technically available. Functionally invisible. 🧾 Exhibit B: The distributor terms are tightening. DistroKid, TuneCore, and CD Baby have all updated their terms of service regarding AI-generated content. Several have implemented upload limits specifically targeting catalog flooding behavior. The distribution infrastructure that made this play possible is systematically closing the door.
⚖️ Today's Case: Selling AI-Generated Music on Streaming Platforms
0 likes • Jun 5
Bravo! Couldn't agree more!
1 like • Jun 5
@Robert Barco
Subscribe Your Way to Millions: Let's Take Your MRR Game to Skool
From POD to Digital Products, Your Path to Predictable, Consistent Earnings is Clear and it’s Here Every month, most digital entrepreneurs start from zero again. New product. New launch. New promotion. New scramble. And if the product sells, great. But then what? Next month, you do it all over again. The key to sustainable growth, wealth, and ultimately building an asset or business that you can sell for 6, 7, or even 8 figures rests upon three little letters with BIG weight in ecommerce… MRR. That’s monthly recurring revenue. MRR is something I understand very well. Better than 90% of my business revenue (across nearly 50 storefronts I own, manage, or run) originates from products and services that generate MRR. Do YOU have any income stemming from MRR? If not, that needs to change. And it’s going to RIGHT NOW. I had YOU in mind when I started working last year on the product I’m releasing today. Subscribe Your Way to Millions: The Encyclopedia of Claude-Powered MRR Products is something I hope you will keep on your desktop, reference often, and follow closely as you run your business moving forward. This is not another AI side hustle list. It is not vague talk about memberships, communities, or passive income. This is a complete resource for finally building a real monthly recurring revenue plan that makes sense. Inside, you get 17 documents, 52 Claude-powered MRR frameworks, 100 subscription product concepts, validation worksheets, retention audits, pricing systems, platform guidance, launch planning, growth strategy, monthly production workflows, and a full 90-day roadmap. The goal is simple: Help you stop guessing what kind of recurring product to build. Help you stop creating things people buy once and forget. Help you build something people actually need again next month. Whether your future MRR product is a paid Skool community, a recurring template vault, a productized service retainer, a niche strategy brief, a micro-SaaS-style tool, a prompt library, a monthly audit, or something completely uncommon, this gives you the map.
Subscribe Your Way to Millions: Let's Take Your MRR Game to Skool
0 likes • Jun 1
Thank you so much! 🤗
⚖️ Today's Case: Get Rich Quick AI Courses and Automated Income Bots
THE IDEA: Purchase an AI-powered course, trading bot, or automated passive income software — usually priced between $47 and $997 — that promises to generate effortless wealth using artificial intelligence while you sleep, travel, or do nothing at all. The defendant arrived in a rented Lamborghini. The court has seen this before. The prosecution does not need long. This case rests on a single question that no defendant in this category has ever answered honestly under oath. If the software actually beat the stock market, generated automated passive income at scale, or produced the results displayed on the sales page — why is the creator selling it to strangers on the internet for $97 instead of using it quietly to accumulate unlimited wealth? The court will wait. No answer is forthcoming. Proceedings continue. 🧾 Exhibit A: The trading bot testimony. AI trading bots promising consistent returns have been circulating in various forms since algorithmic trading entered the mainstream conversation. The pitch is seductive. An AI that analyzes market patterns faster than any human, executes trades without emotion, and compounds gains around the clock without supervision. Financial freedom on autopilot. Here is what the evidence actually shows. Institutional trading firms employ hundreds of PhD-level quantitative analysts, operate server infrastructure colocated within feet of exchange servers for microsecond execution advantages, and spend tens of millions of dollars annually on data and technology. Their edge is measured in fractions of a percent applied to billions in capital. The $97 bot sold through a Clickbank affiliate program does not have a proprietary edge over Goldman Sachs. It has a refund window and a disclaimer buried in the terms of service that says past performance does not guarantee future results. That disclaimer exists because the past performance shown on the sales page is either fabricated, cherry-picked, or generated from a backtesting environment that bears no relationship to live market conditions.
⚖️ Today's Case: Get Rich Quick AI Courses and Automated Income Bots
1 like • Jun 1
Love this: "The income the software generates flows in one direction. From the buyer's bank account to the seller's."😀
⚖️ The Most Controversial Case of The Week: The AI Wrapper Gold Rush
THE IDEA: Take a publicly available AI model from OpenAI, Anthropic, or Google — add a basic user interface, a domain name, and a brand — then market it as a "proprietary, revolutionary" AI software product and charge a monthly subscription. The defendant filed a motion to have this case dismissed on the grounds that building on top of existing infrastructure is a standard and accepted practice in software development. The motion was denied. The court acknowledges that building on existing infrastructure is standard practice. The court is not trying the infrastructure. The court is trying the marketing. Proceedings began. ⚖️ The prosecution defines the specific charge: This case is not about developers who build genuinely useful tools on top of AI APIs and are transparent about how they work. That is legitimate product development and this court has no quarrel with it. This case is about the specific practice of wrapping a public AI model in a minimal interface, branding it as proprietary and revolutionary technology, obscuring the fact that the buyer is essentially paying a markup to access a model they could access directly, and marketing this arrangement as a breakthrough software product with a defensible competitive position. That is what is on trial today. 🧾 Exhibit A: The technology is not proprietary. When a seller markets their AI tool as "our exclusive AI" or "our proprietary technology" while the product is routing user inputs directly to the OpenAI API and returning the response through a branded text box — that marketing claim is false. The AI is not theirs. The model is not exclusive. The "proprietary technology" is a web form with a monthly subscription attached to it. Buyers making purchasing decisions based on the belief that they are accessing unique, exclusive AI capabilities are being misled about what they are buying. The court finds this testimony dispositive. 🧾 Exhibit B: The value evaporates when the underlying model updates. This is the structural vulnerability that exposes the AI wrapper business model most brutally. The product's entire value proposition — whatever specific capability or output quality the tool promises — is entirely dependent on the behavior of the underlying model. When OpenAI releases a new model, or changes an existing one, or deprecates a feature, the wrapper product changes with it. Without warning. Without the seller's control or consent.
⚖️ The Most Controversial Case of The Week: The AI Wrapper Gold Rush
0 likes • May 29
Well said!
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Lana Frei
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39points to level up
@lana-frei-6170
AX Designer

Active 2h ago
Joined May 21, 2026
New Milford, CT