Licensed identities for the age of artificial intelligence
Artificial intelligence has fundamentally transformed the way digital content is created. Realistic faces, voices and videos can now be produced in a matter of minutes.
Yet despite the rapid pace of technological progress, one key question remains unanswered:
Who owns digital identity?
As brands increasingly turn to AI-generated content in advertising, creators, athletes, actors and public figures face a growing risk of unauthorised use of their face, voice and likeness. At the same time, the industry still lacks the infrastructure required to verify ownership, manage commercial rights and protect digital identities.
To address this gap, Face Protocol is launching an infrastructure that enables people to verify, license, deploy and protect their digital identities for commercial use in the age of artificial intelligence. The platform is now live at FaceProtocol.ai.
Unlike most AI platforms, which focus exclusively on content generation, Face Protocol is built around what happens beyond it — ownership, owner consent and licensing.
The platform operates across four core stages:
Verify — biometric identity verification and confirmation of ownership.
License — the owner defines the commercial rights and terms of use for their digital identity.
Generate — creation of AI advertising content using licensed faces, voices and digital identities only.
Protect — continuous monitoring and protection against unauthorised use.
“Creating a realistic digital human is no longer the hardest part,” says Oleksii Martynovskyi, Founder & CEO of Face Protocol. “The real challenge is proving ownership and consent. We believe that a trust infrastructure for digital identities will become one of the foundational elements of the AI economy.”

The platform brings together an AI Marketplace, AI Studio, Guard Protocol and enterprise licensing tools in a single ecosystem, allowing brands to produce AI advertising using licensed faces, voices and digital identities.
Instead of arranging a new shoot every time, owners of digital identities can license their AI versions for multilingual advertising campaigns while retaining full control over how and where their likeness is used.
According to Evgeny Shvetc, Co-founder & Head of AI Department, consent must be built directly into the technology. “If a digital identity isn’t licensed, it shouldn’t be used to generate content. Trust can’t rest on contracts alone — it has to be part of the infrastructure itself.”
Face Protocol is starting in the UAE, where onboarding is already open to its first creators and corporate clients. The next stage will be expansion across the GCC, followed by entry into international markets. By launch, the team had completed the platform architecture, the AI pipeline, the commercial licensing system and the marketplace, and had begun working with its first brand partners.
As artificial intelligence reshapes advertising, media and the creator economy, the central question is gradually shifting from what AI is capable of creating to who owns the digital identity it creates.
Face Protocol’s mission is to build the infrastructure that will make licensed AI identities the new standard of the digital economy.



