Attribution Engine
1. What this skill does
Attribution Engine helps creators prepare clear, platform-aware credits and disclosures before publishing.
It focuses on clarity, consistency, and platform alignment, so your work travels cleanly across feeds, remixes, and reposts without unnecessary confusion later.
This skill does not tell you what you are legally required to do.
It helps you organize and format information using each platform’s own rules.
2. Important note before we begin
Before using this skill, you will see a short notice:
This tool helps format attribution and disclosure information using publicly available platform guidance.
It does not provide legal advice, determine compliance, or guarantee outcomes. You remain responsible for how and where content is published.
3. Why attribution matters in 2026
Attribution is no longer just courtesy.
Platforms now use attribution and disclosure signals to decide:
how content is labeled
how far it travels
whether it is limited, flagged, or reviewed
Small mismatches, like forgetting a native toggle or using the wrong AI label, can quietly reduce reach or trigger reviews.
This skill helps you catch those issues early.
4. Core concepts (plain language)
Attribution
Who should be credited publicly for the work.
Example:
Performer
Producer
Visual artist
Brand partner
Tool or system used
Disclosure
Whether viewers need to be told something important about how the content was made or funded.
Examples:
AI-assisted editing
Synthetic or altered media
Paid or gifted brand relationships
Provenance
How the content came into being.
Examples:
Fully human-authored
Human-authored with AI assistance
Fully AI-generated
5. Human vs AI labels (avoiding over-labeling)
Not all AI use is the same.
Over-labeling simple edits as “AI-generated” can cause platforms to treat your work as low-effort or mass-produced.
This skill helps distinguish between:
AI-Generated
Content created autonomously by a system with no meaningful human editorial control.Human-Authored, AI-Assisted
Content where a person made the creative decisions and used tools for help such as cleanup, mastering, or compositing.
Example:
“Human-authored with AI-assisted mastering.”
This helps preserve trust without self-demotion.
6. Commercial relationships and brand credits
Hashtags alone are no longer enough.
If a post involves a material connection, such as:
sponsorship
gifted products
affiliate links
paid usage
most platforms expect you to use their native branded content tools.
This skill will:
flag when attribution suggests a commercial relationship
remind you to enable the platform’s built-in partnership or branded toggle
Example warning you may see:
This credit appears promotional. Make sure the platform’s native paid partnership setting is enabled before publishing.
7. Platform-aware formatting
Each platform treats attribution differently.
The Attribution Engine adapts output based on:
character limits
“read more” cutoffs
native labels and toggles
visible vs hidden metadata
Supported platforms include:
YouTube
TikTok
Instagram
Spotify
YouTube Music
SoundCloud
Tidal
Netflix
Amazon Music
You can also name any other platform. The skill will reference that platform’s current public documentation when available.
8. Metadata does not always survive uploads
Many platforms strip file metadata during upload.
To reduce loss:
the skill can generate a visible attribution string for captions or descriptions
and a reference ID you can keep internally
Example visible string:
Ref OP-2026-ALPHA | Auth R. Mutt | Human-AI Collaborative
This helps attribution survive reposts and re-uploads.
9. Collaborators and consent clarity
Attribution records are not contracts.
Listing collaborators here:
does not define ownership
does not imply revenue splits
does not replace agreements
This skill treats attribution as documentation, not legal representation.
10. How this fits with other skills
Attribution Engine works best alongside:
Creator Rights Assistant
Organizes rights, licenses, and internal records at creation time.Content ID Guide
Helps you understand and organize information when automated claims appear.
Together, they support a calmer, more predictable content lifecycle.
11. What this skill does not do
This skill does not:
validate licenses
determine ownership
predict platform actions
guarantee reach or safety
advise on how to bypass systems
It exists to reduce avoidable mistakes and save time.
12. Simple example
Input:
Video with original music, light AI color correction, and a gifted product.
Output:
Suggested credit string for YouTube description
Reminder to enable branded content toggle
Human-authored, AI-assisted disclosure language
Platform-specific formatting notes
No guessing. No legal claims. Just clarity.
13. Summary
Attribution Engine helps creators explain their work clearly in the language platforms expect.
It reduces confusion, protects context, and supports transparency without over-labeling or over-promising.
Clean inputs lead to calmer outcomes.