§ 01
Workflow
Four steps from source material to a review-ready record.
01
Register source material
Preserve source references, fingerprints and available metadata.
02
Compare transformed assets
Examine altered visual and textual material against registered sources.
03
Create a sealed evidence record
Produce a structured PDF and corresponding JSON artifact with integrity references and stated limitations.
04
Invite professional review
Keep automated findings separate from submitted professional observations.
§ 02
Artifacts
One record, two artifacts.
Every sealed record produces a human-readable PDF for review and a corresponding JSON artifact for systems and archives. Both carry integrity references, chronology and the record's stated limitations.
- PDF artifact
- A structured document ordered for professional reading: findings, responses, provenance, limitations.
- JSON artifact
- The same record in machine-readable form, suitable for archives and downstream systems.
- Integrity references
- A sealed snapshot and artifact-state digests record what the package contained when it was sealed.
Provenance & limitations
- Source references
- Preserved
- Chronology
- Recorded
- Sealed snapshot
- 09 Apr 2026
- Integrity digest
- Recorded
Each record states what was examined, what was not, and the limits of the methods used.
Principal findings
- Registered source assets
- 4
- Analysed variants
- 8
- Review status
- Reviewed
Automated findings report measured signals with stated limitations — not conclusions about ownership or infringement.
Fig. 01 — Record details · Fictional demonstration
§ 03
Separation
Findings and judgement stay distinct.
Automated findings, professional responses and platform-recorded metadata are held apart within the record, so system output is never mistaken for professional judgement.
Separation of record
Sphere finding
Measured similarity recorded across analysed variants.
Professional response
Submitted observations, held distinct from system output.
System metadata
Chronology, sealed snapshot and integrity digest, recorded by the platform.
Fig. 02 — Separation of record · Fictional demonstration
§ 04
Limitations
What a record does not claim.
A Sphere Care evidence record reports measured signals with stated limitations and uncertainty. It does not determine ownership, establish infringement or provide legal certainty — those judgements belong to qualified professionals reviewing the organised material.
§ 05
Demonstration
The workspace, recorded.
Fig. 03 — Recorded product demonstration
Sphere Care runs as a focused workspace, separate from the main Sphere site.
§ 06
Audiences
Built for teams responsible for creative work.
- Publishers
- Preserve records around commissioned, licensed and published material.
- Agencies and studios
- Track approved campaign assets, alterations and distribution versions.
- Rights holders
- Build a structured record when protected material is reused or transformed.
- Legal and professional teams
- Review organised evidence without confusing system findings with professional judgement.
§ 07 · Access
Request access to Sphere Care.
Sphere Care is in early access. Request access and the team will follow up to understand your use case and provide workspace onboarding.
Sphere is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. Evidence records support human review and professional follow-up — they are not legal findings.