Media has evolved faster than the systems built to manage it. Contracts remain slow, distribution rights are still fragmented across borders, and transparency is often lost between creators, studios, and investors. MILC (Media Industry Licensing Content) is fixing this disconnect with a live marketplace that turns intellectual property into a digital asset that is traceable, tradable, and legally enforceable. What began as a bold idea to simplify licensing has grown into a functioning Web3 infrastructure for global content exchange. With new partnerships on the cusp of being announced, MILC is quietly preparing to expand this technology far beyond media.
From Fragmented Rights to a Unified System
For decades, a single film or song could have different owners in multiple countries, each buried under unique licensing terms and months of paperwork. It was a process designed for the analog era. The result was inefficiency that hurt both creators and audiences. A producer in Germany might wait half a year for rights approval in Spain. Independent studios lacked the financial and legal reach to compete with major networks. Distribution became the major problem to fix.
MILC’s Rights Marketplace solves that structural bottleneck. By tokenizing intellectual property, every asset from a documentary to a music catalog can be represented as a digital token backed by real, enforceable rights. This gives creators control and flexibility, while smart contracts automate what used to take lawyers and weeks of negotiation. A cross-border deal that once required multiple intermediaries can now close in hours. Payments, royalties, and licensing data are recorded on-chain for full transparency.
The system is already live. According to the company’s investor memorandum, the Rights Marketplace manages an IP library valued at roughly €30 million, with €15 million from its Series B round dedicated to platform expansion.
Regulation has also been built into the foundation. The platform aligns with European frameworks such as MiCA, the AI Act, and GDPR, offering a compliant, scalable model that bridges innovation and legal clarity. Hendrik Hey, MILC’s Founder and CEO, explained the company’s purpose succinctly:
“MILC is the infrastructure layer where immersive content lives, evolves, and, crucially, earns. We are not just building a platform; we are architecting the protocol that will power the immersive content economies of the next decade.”
Redefining Ownership and Monetization
Traditional licensing has always been skewed in favor of large intermediaries. Creators who generate the ideas and content often end up with the smallest share of the reward. MILC’s model flips that structure by embedding ownership directly into the technology itself.
When an artist or filmmaker mints a token on the Marketplace, that token represents real intellectual property, something that can be licensed, sold, or traded globally without losing its traceability. Independent studios can negotiate directly with distributors. Royalty flows are automatic and transparent, enforced through smart contracts rather than human oversight.
The result is a more balanced ecosystem. Producers gain liquidity without losing rights. Investors access tangible digital assets backed by creative output. Distributors get faster deal execution and lower administrative costs. For creators, the change is transformative because it gives them a direct path to audiences and capital without the traditional roadblocks of bureaucracy or scale.
Industry projections highlight the size of this opportunity. Analysts expect the global intellectual property licensing market to grow from $340 billion in 2024 to $580 billion by 2030. Even a small percentage of that share represents enormous value for any system capable of managing tokenized rights efficiently.
Beyond Media: Building the Infrastructure for a Digital Economy
What makes MILC’s approach different is that its architecture isn’t limited to film or music. The same technology that governs digital rights can apply to any asset that benefits from transparent ownership and automated settlement. Over the past year, MILC has extended its platform into new horizons, including education, live events, and sustainable energy systems. Each project demonstrates how the Marketplace can serve as the connective tissue for a broader digital economy.
The platform’s versatility is also reflected in its partnerships. One of its most significant ongoing collaborations is with the ION Power Grid Association (IPG), a global initiative working on decentralized energy systems. Together, MILC and IPG are creating a network that mirrors the same transparency principles applied in media but now directed toward renewable power generation. Their joint project, known as the Green Energy Project, uses MILC’s blockchain infrastructure to connect producers and consumers of clean energy in real time.
At the heart of this energy network is the ION-P token, a digital asset designed to manage the exchange of electricity across distributed systems. It functions much like the licensing tokens inside MILC’s media marketplace. Every transaction, from generation to consumption, can be recorded instantly.
While details of the upcoming partnerships remain under wraps, the groundwork has been laid, and what comes next could reshape how decentralized infrastructure is deployed. MILC’s marketplace is not just evolving, it is expanding into a global framework that could redefine how digital ownership, energy, and data intersect.
About MILC
Hendrik Hey is the Founder of MILC (Media Industry Licensing Content), a pioneering company in the blockchain and metaverse space, with a strong background in media and content. MILC operates a real-life metaverse platform that serves not only the media industry but also various industrial use cases. The company also focuses on Web3 consulting, aiming to support complex real-world industries on their way into Web3. MILC is a sister company of European media giant Welt der Wunder, which Hey founded over 25 years ago.