Hop-on, Inc.’s technology history includes wireless communications, intellectual-property licensing, and standards-based technology rights. That foundation now informs a broader strategy around verified media infrastructure, rights protection, and creator monetization through Digitalage and OOVE.
Hop-on, Inc.’s technology history includes wireless communications, intellectual-property licensing, standards-based technology rights, and public-company technology commercialization. That foundation now supports a broader strategy around verified media infrastructure, rights protection, creator monetization, and durable digital media value.
Hop-on, Inc.’s historical licensed-rights position includes standards-based wireless technology rights associated with foundational communications standards. Within the scope of applicable agreements, that history has included rights commonly associated with technology manufacturing and commercialization, including “make” and “have made” rights.
Hop-on, Inc.’s intellectual-property history includes licensed rights under Nokia’s standards-essential wireless patent portfolio covering foundational wireless communications standards.
Hop-on.com describes these rights only at a high level as part of Hop-on’s broader intellectual-property and technology foundation.
References to Hop-on, Inc.’s licensed rights under Nokia’s standards-essential wireless patent portfolio are provided only as a general description of Hop-on’s intellectual-property and technology history. Specific license terms, royalty rates, payment obligations, schedules, contractual conditions, audit rights, termination provisions, and confidential provisions are not disclosed. Nothing on this website should be interpreted as a statement of current partnership, endorsement, guaranteed revenue, transferability, unrestricted rights, or involvement in Digitalage or OOVE by any third-party licensor.
OOVE is designed to support rights protection, content verification, creator attribution, provenance, classification, and monetization across digital media workflows. It reflects Hop-on’s broader strategy of converting technology rights, media infrastructure, and creator tools into long-term digital asset value.
Frameworks designed to support digital rights protection for creators, rights holders, and media organizations.
Persistent attribution layers designed to preserve creator identity across distribution and remixing.
Verifiable origin and chain-of-custody for digital media — preserved across capture, edit, and distribution.
Durable records of verified content — searchable, structured, and designed to retain value over time.
Structured classification layers that organize media for search, distribution, and licensing.
Pathways designed to enable creators and rights holders to monetize verified media over time.
Digitalage is focused on infrastructure that helps live and uploaded content become protected, searchable, distributable, and monetizable from the point of capture.
A simplified view of the layers that connect creators, rights, infrastructure, and monetization.