Protection that doesn'tget in the way of buyers.
Here every access is signed and unique. Even the videos you make public. The file is never exposed. And every copy carries its origin inside it, invisible, so you know where a leak came from. Real protection, without breaking the experience for the people who bought.
Your risk isn't a piracy cartel.
The protection industry was built for Hollywood. A 200-million-dollar film, an organized cartel, a 4K leak. That's not your case.
Your risk is simpler and closer. It's the link dropped in a WhatsApp group. It's the login that becomes a password shared among five people. It's the browser extension that downloads the lesson. It's the student who records the screen and resells your $497 course for $25 in a sharing group.
Each of those leaks isn't just a lost sale. It's your product devalued. It's your method, which took years to build, circulating for free.
- Exposed links. The public embed anyone can copy.
- Shared credentials. One login, five people watching.
- Download by site or extension. They intercept the stream and save the file.
- Screen recording. Simple software captures everything on screen.
- Sharing and resale. Access sold for next to nothing.
Protecting content means closing those five paths. Not with a wall that blocks everyone. With layers that answer each one of them.
You can lock it down. We chose to trace it.
There are two ways to protect video.
The first is to lock it down. Hard DRM, the kind the big streamers use. It encrypts the file and tries to stop any copy. It sounds strong. The problem shows up in practice: to really protect, it needs specific hardware, which restricts the devices the video runs on. And in the browser, where most of your audience watches, it falls back to software mode and doesn't even stop screen recording. In the end, hard DRM blocks part of the people who bought and barely bothers the ones who wanted to pirate.
We went the other way. Instead of trying to prevent the copy, Moviie makes every access accountable and every copy traceable. People who bought watch without friction, on any device. People who share the link find out it no longer works. People who leak leave their fingerprint on the copy.
It's not less protection. It's protection that aims at the right threat without punishing the wrong person.
Four layers. None gets in the way of play.
Protection on Moviie isn't an on-off switch. It's end-to-end in the sense that matters: it starts before the first click and ends on the copy that leaked. Each layer closes one of the paths. None of them weighs on someone who just wants to watch.
Signed, unique links
Signing
Every playback link is signed, unique and expires. There's no raw file URL to copy, scrape or host somewhere else. Even public videos get a signed link. Shared it in a group? In a little while it won't open anymore.
Locked domains
Domain
You decide where the video can play. Copied the embed and pasted it on another site? It won't run. The player only works on the domains you allowed. The content travels with you, not with whoever copied the code.
Trace
Trace
Each person who watches gets an invisible mark in the image itself, tied to the viewer and imperceptible to them. If the lesson leaks, recorded or downloaded, the mark points back to the source. Leaking stops being anonymous.
Private by default
Default
Nothing on Moviie is an open file. The default is closed: signed access, controlled delivery, traceable origin. You open what you want, at the level you want. The rest stays protected without you configuring anything.
Screen recording: the part nobody tells you.
Let's be direct, because most platforms aren't.
Nobody fully stops screen recording. Not Moviie. Not hard DRM, when the video plays in a browser. The only way to turn the recording into a black screen is hardware DRM, and it only works on specific devices, locking the video out for everything else. If that's exactly your requirement, a guaranteed black screen on a controlled device, or a contract that mandates studio DRM, that's one point where hard DRM does something we don't. It's honest to say so.
What we do is different and, for almost everyone, more useful. Screen recording already degrades the video. With Trace, it also comes out with the fingerprint of whoever recorded it. The leak isn't prevented. It is signed. And a signed leak becomes something else: it becomes evidence.
In Brazil this isn't theory. There have already been court convictions of people who bought a course and resold it cheap. What was missing in most cases was identifying the source. Trace delivers exactly that: which access the video came from. It moves from vague suspicion to evidence you can use.
Sensitive isn't just the thousand-dollar course.
Sensitive content is anything with real value that can't circulate loose.
It's the launch still under embargo. It's the internal training that can't leave the company. It's regulated content, in health, in finance, in law, that demands control over who watches. It's the mentoring session, the recorded consulting, the proprietary method that is your entire business.
For all of them the math is the same. Whoever needs to watch, watches easily. Whoever shouldn't see, doesn't. And if something slips, you know where it slipped from.
Protection that doesn'tget in the way of buyers.
All features, on every plan. The signed links, the locked domain, Trace and private by default come switched on from the first day of your trial.