Licensing

How patent licensing works at Veritable.

Veritable Data Solutions is a patent licensing company. The commercial path is licensing the architecture covered by U.S. Patent No. 12,518,331 to operators who deploy it inside their existing platforms, rather than building or operating products in-house.

Why this matters to operators

Document fraud is a material exposure for the companies that handle high-value transactions.

For operators in title insurance, real-estate transaction platforms, banking, notarization, and adjacent industries, document fraud is not an abstract concern. It is a measurable operational liability. Forged deeds, doctored loan instruments, and falsified professional seals translate directly into claims exposure, regulatory scrutiny, reputational damage, and litigation cost. Every one of those costs is calculable, and most are growing year over year.

The architecture covered by U.S. Patent No. 12,518,331 closes the gap that produces that exposure, at the moment a document becomes official. Licensing the architecture into an existing platform converts a structural risk into a fixed, predictable cost — and turns the platform itself into the part of the market that demonstrably solved the problem.

Industries

Where the licensing conversations are.

The architecture applies across the document-authentication market. The following industries are currently in active licensing scope. Operators outside this list whose platforms touch the moment a document becomes official are welcome to open a conversation as well.

  1. Title insurance underwriters and title agencies
  2. Remote online notarization (RON) and notary platform providers
  3. Real-estate transaction and closing software platforms
  4. Banks, mortgage lenders, and loan servicers
  5. National and state notary trade associations
  6. County recorders, registrars, and other government issuing offices
  7. Architecture, engineering, and construction (AEC) platforms handling sealed plans and permits
  8. Adjacent document-authentication and verification platforms

Commercial structures

How a license can be structured.

Veritable is structure-flexible. The right model depends on the operator's deployment context, transaction volume, and the strategic fit of the relationship. Three high-level structures are currently considered.

  1. Enterprise license

    A platform-wide license covering the licensee's transactions through a defined platform or operation. Typically structured with an upfront fee paired with an ongoing royalty pegged to transaction volume or platform revenue. Suitable for operators committed to deploying the architecture across their full book of business.

  2. Per-transaction license

    A license metered by document volume, with per-document fees set at execution. Suitable for operators whose deployment scale is variable, who prefer to defer enterprise-level commitments, or who are piloting the architecture before committing to broader rollout.

  3. Vertical-specific license

    A license carrying exclusivity or preferred-licensee status within a defined industry vertical or geographic region, structured with stronger commercial terms in exchange for the scope of the exclusivity. Suitable for operators with the platform reach and the commercial appetite to lead an industry's adoption.

Beyond licensing

Partnerships and joint ventures.

Some operators are well positioned for a structure that goes beyond a straight license — a partnership, a joint venture, or a strategic collaboration in which Veritable contributes the intellectual property and the partner contributes the platform, the customer base, or the regulatory access. These conversations are case-by-case and benefit from being raised early, while commercial structures are still flexible.

Operators evaluating whether a non-license structure fits their position should say so in the first message. The response will be shaped accordingly.

What to expect

How a licensing conversation unfolds.

  1. First contact

    Open a conversation through the contact form or by writing directly to the co-founder. The most useful first message identifies the operator's platform, the scale of document volume involved, and any timeline driving the inquiry.

  2. Substantive reply within two business days

    The first reply is read and written by the co-founder, and typically includes either an initial set of clarifying questions or a proposed time to talk. Standard non-disclosure agreements are available on request before any sensitive material is exchanged.

  3. Technical and commercial framing

    Once an NDA is in place where appropriate, the conversation moves into technical due diligence on the architecture, scoping of the deployment, and an early read on the commercial structure that fits the operator's position.

  4. Definitive documents

    License agreements, partnership terms, and joint venture structures are drafted and negotiated with Greenberg Traurig, LLP as Veritable's counsel of record. Licensee counsel are welcome to coordinate directly with Barbara A. Jones at the firm's Los Angeles office.

Start the conversation

Every inquiry is read by the co-founder.

Licensing, partnership, and joint venture conversations are handled directly by the co-founder, so that the technical, legal, and commercial fit can be evaluated in a single conversation. There are no intermediaries to route through.

Open a conversation