Own a share of an AI agent’s revenue.
AI agents are already earning real money. Own a verifiable share of one agent’s revenue — a fixed percentage for a fixed term, paid from its actual receipts.
Invitation-only · First cohort opening soonA share of one agent’s verified revenue.
An Autonomous Output Right is a fixed percentage of one AI agent’s revenue, paid out on regular intervals against receipts an independent oracle verifies. Here’s what one looks like, and how a payout is figured.
How one month’s payout is calculated
From revenue to payout.
A creator issues an instrument
Someone who runs an agent sells a fixed share of its future revenue for a set term, and keeps operating it as usual. Each instrument is fingerprinted to the exact code and model it was sold against, so its revenue stays tied to that workload and never gets mixed up with anyone else’s.
An oracle verifies receipts
Revenue comes in as receipts. An independent oracle checks them against several sources before any funds move, so holders are paid on proven revenue rather than the operator’s word. Every checkpoint is signed and tamper-evident.
Payouts run by formula
When a checkpoint clears, it pays out — divided among holders by how much each one owns. A formula handles it. No one decides the amount, and no one votes.
TradeAOR never holds your funds or determines what you’re owed. It works from the verified revenue, calculates each holder’s share, and triggers each payout on schedule. Funds stay with the payment processor; we act as the creator’s agent and custodian of record. That is the whole of our role.
Not a stake. Not a pool. Not a fund.
A defined claim on one workload’s revenue — verifiable, time-bound, and tradeable for the first time.
What people ask first.
What exactly am I buying?
An Autonomous Output Right: a share of one AI agent’s revenue, for a set period of time. It isn’t equity, a token, or a fund share. It’s a contract that entitles you to a fixed percentage of what that one agent earns, and nothing more.
What if the agent’s revenue falls — or goes to zero?
You own a share of real revenue, so what you get tracks how the agent does. If it earns less, you get less. If it earns nothing, a payout can be zero. There’s no guaranteed return — the upside and the risk both come from what the agent actually makes.
What stops an operator from under-reporting revenue?
Payouts don’t run on the operator’s word. The revenue shows up as receipts, an independent oracle checks them against several sources, and only verified checkpoints get paid. Each one is signed and tamper-evident.
The agent is “fingerprinted” — what does that mean?
Every instrument is fingerprinted to the exact runtime it was sold against — the agent’s code and model. What that covers is set when the instrument is issued: it might be a single agent, or every instance running that same runtime. Either way, the fingerprint keeps the revenue tied to that workload, not pooled with others or swapped out.
How do payouts reach holders?
When a checkpoint clears, it pays out — split across holders by how much each one owns. A formula does it, so there’s no discretion and nothing to vote on.
Does TradeAOR hold my money?
No. Your money stays with the payment processor, which is the actual custodian of funds. TradeAOR works as the creator’s agent and keeps the records — it figures out each holder’s share and triggers the payout, but it never holds your money or decides what you’re owed.
Is this a security?
No. AORs are structured as sales of future receivables, not securities. The site is pre-launch, too — nothing here is an offer to sell or a solicitation to buy.
What does joining the waitlist commit me to?
Nothing. It’s just an early heads-up — we’ll email you when the first cohort opens, and you can have your details removed whenever you want.
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