
Meta|Aug 24, 2025 06:05
Saw @campnetworkxyz define CAMP as a coordination engine, rather than a traditional governance token or payment token. I think this design concept is pretty innovative.
From a technical perspective, the core problems CAMP addresses are:
1️⃣ How creators can register and manage IP on-chain
2️⃣ How AI can train and use these IPs in a compliant way
3️⃣ How revenue can be automatically distributed among creators, builders, and agents
CAMP serves as the unified economic standard for these three processes.
The most critical part is the provenance step!
Traditional IP licensing involves offline contracts, legal fees, and endless disputes—high cost, low efficiency, and lots of controversy. Camp uses the Origin framework to put IP directly on-chain, so every use, remix, and revenue distribution is recorded on-chain.
When training AI, it’s no longer about scraping random content but using authorized IP data only. This not only protects creators’ rights but also makes AI training data traceable.
From an ecosystem perspective, the Camp testnet has already attracted many native projects. For example, StoryChain is working on AI-driven narrative creation, TrailHeads is building fan co-creation tools, and KOR Protocol is experimenting with bringing mainstream IPs like Netflix onto the blockchain.
All these projects need a unified value exchange standard, and CAMP is that bridge.
As the coordination engine of the @campnetworkxyz ecosystem, CAMP enables creators, builders, and AI agents to collaborate under the same economic standard. Its greatest value lies in redefining the content economy in the AI era, truly turning content into assets.
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