| Over the years I’ve noticed that the internet has no real system for tracking the origin of viral content. Memes, images, short videos, art, graphic design, and AI art can spread across dozens of platforms within hours. As they move from account to account, attribution usually disappears. The person who created something can lose credit almost immediately. Other industries solved versions of this problem decades ago. Music has licensing infrastructure and rights databases. Film and television track ownership and credit carefully. But nothing comparable really exists for internet-native content. Once something goes viral, it effectively becomes detached from its source. Some platforms are starting to experiment with authenticity and verification systems inside their own ecosystems. For example, companies like Meta have begun introducing provenance tools tied to AI-generated media and "original" posts for reels. But those systems largely operate inside individual platforms. There still isn’t a widely adopted attribution layer that travels with content as it spreads across the internet. Technically we now have things like perceptual hashing, reverse image search, and cryptographic signatures that could help track provenance. I’m curious how people here think about this. Is attribution for viral content even solvable at scale, or is the nature of the internet fundamentally incompatible with it? Are there technical approaches that could realistically work across platforms? |
The Internet is a transport medium. It sounds like you are asking if it possible to (somehow) associate universal, intrinsic, and immutable attribution metadata with some or all (not sure what "viral" distinguishes in this context) Internet _content_ and have all receivers of that content accept the implications of that attribution metadata.
I think the failure of pretty much all the various digital rights management efforts applied on a MUCH smaller scale to infinitesimal subsets of content types that are now being schlepped across the Internet would suggest that no, there are no technical approaches that would realistically work.
And music, film, and television ownership/credit being tracked carefully? In certain law abiding environments, it's possible the owners/creators get a small fraction of what they believe they are entitled to, but in the majority of the world, not so much.