The Good Tech Companies - Meet EQC One: A New Platform that is Pro-Content Creators
Episode Date: July 4, 2025This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/meet-eqc-one-a-new-platform-that-is-pro-content-creators. EQC One allows creators of all kin...ds to distribute their work to subscribers, sell directly to fans, or find commercial sponsors to make it available for free. Check more stories related to media at: https://hackernoon.com/c/media. You can also check exclusive content about #social-media, #eqc-one, #jason-ho, #teklium, #social-media-revenue-split, #revenue-split, #content-creator-platforms, #good-company, and more. This story was written by: @missinvestigate. Learn more about this writer by checking @missinvestigate's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. EQC One is a platform for content and talent exchange. It allows creators of all kinds, including musicians, authors, video producers, researchers, and influencers, to distribute their work to subscribers, sell directly to fans, or find commercial sponsors to make it available for free.
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Meet EQC One. A new platform that is pro-content creators, by Miss Investigate.
It is hard to overstate the impact of the content creation economy on the modern world.
In the last decade, musicians, filmmakers, writers, podcasters, and influencers have
transformed their passions into livelihoods. Big platforms like YouTube, Spotify, Instagram, and TikTok have become the new broadcast networks
and publishing houses, promising anyone with talent and a smartphone the chance at all
reach a global audience.
The numbers are staggering.
According to industry analysts, the global digital content creation market is worth on
the order of tens of billions of dollars and is growing at a double-digit annual rate. Millions of new content creators have joined
social media since 2020, with many even making it a full-time career. This digital gold rush
has changed how people consume media, build communities, and even shape culture and politics.
However, a troubling reality persists. Techlum founder Jason Ho notes that despite all the talk of empowerment, many major platforms
are not actually prioritizing content creators.
He argues that the very platforms that built the creator economy have quietly constructed
a system that often works against the interests of those who fuel it.
The platform paradox.
Who really profits?
Techlum's Jason Ho explains why content platforms often
overlook their creators. He says that while creators generate the content, platforms control
the audience, the discovery process, and most of the revenue streams. He notes that creators
typically receive only between 5% and 30% of their content's revenue on many major platforms.
Ho adds that in extreme cases, some platforms take up to 95% of the value, leaving creators
with just a fraction of what their work could be worth.
He says the rest is absorbed by the platform in the form of commissions, infrastructure
fees, and other opaque deductions.
He explains that algorithms, designed to maximize viewer engagement and ad revenue, decide which
content is promoted and which is buried.
He adds that creators often chase those algorithmic trends, tweaking their work to fit ever-changing rules,
and sometimes watch their reach evaporate overnight with no clear explanation.
Ho adds that platforms also reserve the right to censor, demonetize, or remove content at will.
Under these conditions, creators who challenge the status quo or tackle sensitive topics
risk losing their audience and income without warning or recourse.
He mentions, the paradox is clear.
The platforms that claim to empower creators have, in many ways, become their gatekeepers
and biggest beneficiaries.
A new model emerges, the EQC-1 proposition.
Techlium's CEO, Jason Ho, saw these inefficiencies and set out to build a platform for creators
and audiences.
Developed by Techlium Inc., EQC1 is Mareth in a conventional marketplace.
It aims to reimagine how digital talent, content, and value flow online.
At its core, EQC1 is a platform for content and talent exchange.
It allows creators of all kinds, including musicians, authors, video producers, researchers,
and influencers, to distribute their work to subscribers, sell directly to fans, or
find commercial sponsors to make it available for free.
EQC One aims to create a fair and progressive internet by facilitating a set of new rules
to remove barriers imposed by dominant entities, ensuring the internet evolves with modern culture and
society, Ho shares.
How EQC-1 flips the normal content creation When designing EQC-1, the team put content
creators first by tackling major platform inefficiencies.
For example, instead of taking large cuts of earnings, EQC1 charges
only a 0.5% transaction fee, allowing creators to keep an industry leading 99.5% of their
sales. Ho emphasizes that this sharply contrasts with the hefty cuts taken by industry giants,
where creators often end up with a much smaller share of the revenue. EQC1 also aims to eliminate creators' infrastructure costs.
In its model, servers, storage, bandwidth and content delivery
are provided without direct charges to creators.
The platform's digital currency and token system
compensates service providers for these resources.
In practice, this means creators and users can use cloud services
without upfront hosting or delivery fees.
Beyond finances, EQC-1 promises to respect creators' artistic freedom.
It forbids hidden algorithmic filtering, so content discovery is driven by transparent metrics,
like view counts, download statistics, and user ratings, and human recommendations rather than opaque algorithms.
EQC-1 also uses its quantum-inspired encryption, emulated quantum communication, or EQC, to
protect content against piracy.
It introduces a read once feature.
Once an authorized user decrypts and views a file, the decryption key is immediately
invalidated.
In other words, once someone watches the video, that specific
encryption key is gone, preventing any further playback of that file copy.
Techlium uses EQ certificates to account for every transaction on the platform. These certificates
track the computing power, storage, and bandwidth used by each piece of content, making payments
transparent and based on actual resource usage rather than opaque criteria.
Compensation then reflects the true cost of delivering the content, according to the network's
rules.
This technology is a game-changer for creators who have long struggled with content theft
and unauthorized distribution, Ho says, underscoring EQC1's emphasis on security.
With these features, EQC1 aims to flip the traditional model of content creation on its
head, empowering creators with greater control, stronger security, and the rewards they deserve.
Why now?
The need for a new platform, the timing for Eqc1's launch is no accident.
The creator economy is at a crossroads.
While more people than ever are producing and sharing content, the vast majority struggle to earn what they deserve. The dominance of a few major platforms has
led to increasing calls for alternatives that are fairer, more transparent, and more aligned
with creators' interests. Moreover, Hull notes that cybersecurity threats are on the
rise. Content theft, data breaches, and privacy violations are becoming routine, eroding trust in existing platforms.
Younger generations raised online demand platforms that reflect their values, openness, accountability, and genuine opportunity, qualities, Ho says, that EQC1 is designed to embody.
The road ahead, can EQC1 succeed? Ho acknowledges that competition is fierce among major platforms.
However, He believes that EQC One's success will depend on its ability to attract creator
sand users at scale, deliver on its promises of fairness and security, and maintain its
commitment to transparency as it grows.
Digital privacy shouldn't be a luxury or an afterthought, says Ho.
With EQC One, we're offering a secure, fairly compensated platform available to everyone,
transforming how we think about data security in the digital age.
A question for the future.
The rise of the creator economy was supposed to usher in an era of empowerment on opportunity.
Yet, for too many, the reality has been one of dependence on platforms that profit from
their labor while limiting their control and earnings. EQC1 offers a glimpse of a different path, one where creators
are truly at the center, where value flows to those who created, and where technology serves the many,
not the few. As the next generation of creators chooses where to build their digital lives,
the question is no longer whether the world needs a platform like EQC1,
but whether today's platforms can afford not to change.
Ho challenges, what kind of creator economy do we want to build, and who shall truly benefit from it?
With EQC1, the future of possibilities awaits. This piece was published as part of Hacker Noon's
business blogging program, featured photo courtesy of Pexels Thank you for listening to this Hacker Noon's business blogging program. Featured photo courtesy of Pexels. Thank you for listening to this Hacker Noon story, read by Artificial Intelligence.
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