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How It Works

A step-by-step explanation of how creative assets enter the PonyLife coordination framework and how participation is handled.

Updated: 2026-02-01
Format: PDF

Overview

PonyLife enables creators to place intangible creative assets into a shared coordination framework, where visibility, valuation, and outcomes are explored collectively rather than in isolation.

Step 1 — Asset Submission

Creators submit an intangible creative asset to the PonyLife platform.

Submission includes a description of the work, visual representation, and contextual information relevant to potential distribution or use.

The creator retains full ownership of the asset at all times.

Step 2 — Delegation of Rights

The creator delegates limited commercialization and participation rights to the platform.

This delegation allows PonyLife to include the asset in coordinated promotion efforts, represent the asset within the platform ecosystem, and participate in predefined economic outcomes if the asset is commercialized.

This is not a transfer of ownership, but a structured rights delegation.

Step 3 — Internal Valuation & Participation Allocation

PonyLife performs an internal, non-binding valuation of the asset for coordination purposes.

Based on this valuation, a certain amount of participation units (represented via the platform token) may be allocated to the creator.

These units reflect conditional participation within the ecosystem, not a guaranteed market price.

Valuation is experimental, used internally, and may change as coordination dynamics evolve.

Step 4 — Coordinated Visibility & Experimentation

The asset becomes part of a shared experimental framework.

Within this framework, assets are promoted collectively rather than individually, visibility and uncertainty are distributed across participants, and outcomes emerge probabilistically through coordinated efforts.

PonyLife does not promise success — it experiments with coordination models.

Step 5 — Outcome Handling

If an asset is successfully commercialized, economic outcomes are handled at the platform level according to predefined rules.

This may include platform operations, ecosystem sustainability, and open-market mechanisms supporting participation liquidity.

After commercialization, the creator retains their allocated participation units, and those units become freely usable within or outside the platform.

Example (Concrete Scenario)

A digital artist submits a high-quality digital artwork to PonyLife with a description and visual materials.

The artist delegates limited commercialization rights to the platform.

PonyLife performs an internal valuation and allocates participation units to the artist.

The artwork enters the shared ecosystem and is included in collective promotion experiments.

If the artwork is sold, the platform handles the resulting economic outcome, and the artist keeps their participation units.

  • PonyLife does not guarantee a sale.
  • PonyLife does not guarantee a return.
  • PonyLife does not promise a specific outcome.

Why This Model Is Different

Traditional platforms isolate creators and concentrate risk. PonyLife distributes visibility, uncertainty, and experimentation across a shared system.

This shifts the focus from individual success to collective coordination, and from guaranteed outcomes to structured experimentation.