V4-DEMO
This is an experemental page to test V4-DEMO. Please do not use this interface if you open this page by mistake.
The JSON Code of this DEMI Pipeline Publishing Interface V4-DEMO is to be replaced. You may come back to test it later with a REGISTRY PAGE
Skydle UplitAU Pty Ltd
We welcome your feedback — please email Будем рады вашим отзывам — пишите на ramsmile@uplitau.com
DEMI Publishing Pipeline
✓ Registry Entry GeneratedЗапись реестра создана
DEMI Conceptual Core
- Go to chat.openai.com/gpts/editor — you need a ChatGPT Plus or Team account
- Click Create a GPT → then Configure tab
- Paste your GPT Name and Description from the package below
- In Instructions — paste the system prompt generated below
- In Knowledge — upload your EPUB file (download it from Step 2)
- In Actions → Add Action → paste the Registry API schema below
- Set Capabilities: enable Web Browsing if desired
- Click Save → Publish to GPT Store → select category (Writing or Education)
- Your UPL code — is your permanent Registry reference
- Перейдите на chat.openai.com/gpts/editor — нужен аккаунт ChatGPT Plus или Team
- Нажмите Create a GPT → вкладка Configure
- Вставьте название и описание GPT из пакета ниже
- В поле Instructions — вставьте системный промпт, сгенерированный ниже
- В поле Knowledge — загрузите ваш EPUB файл (скачайте на шаге 2)
- В разделе Actions → Add Action → вставьте схему Registry API ниже
- В Capabilities: включите Web Browsing при необходимости
- Нажмите Save → Publish to GPT Store → выберите категорию
- Ваш UPL код — — постоянная ссылка в реестре
Why crypto payment connects to NDEVПочему оплата криптовалютой связана с NDEV
Every time you pay in Bitcoin or Ethereum, you transfer value without a central bank issuing it — no printed money, no seigniorage, no reserve currency privilege. This is the foundational logic of the NDEV Code Based World Digital Currency: value anchored to real assets, not sovereign decree. Russian authors cut off from SWIFT, independent writers bypassed by traditional publishers — crypto is the bridge that exists now, before NDEV exists at scale.
Your payment to publish through DEMI is a small, real demonstration of what a post-fiat transaction looks like.
Read The Ramsmile — the novel that encodes this idea →
Каждый раз, оплачивая биткоином или эфиром, вы переводите стоимость без участия центрального банка — без напечатанных денег, без сеньоража, без привилегии резервной валюты. Это фундаментальная логика Мировой цифровой валюты на основе кода NDEV: стоимость, привязанная к реальным активам, а не к суверенному декрету. Российские авторы, отрезанные от SWIFT, независимые писатели, обходимые традиционными издателями — крипто — это мост, существующий уже сейчас, до того как NDEV появится в масштабе.
Ваш платёж за публикацию через DEMI — небольшая, реальная демонстрация того, как выглядит пост-фиатная транзакция.
Читать «Рэмсмайл» — роман, кодирующий эту идею →
Your UPL codes and Registry Records are generated instantly and are real — but not yet permanently stored here. Download your Registry Record JSON immediately after generation and keep it safe. Permanent hosting is coming. Ваши коды UPL и записи реестра создаются мгновенно и являются настоящими — но пока не хранятся здесь постоянно. Скачайте JSON записи реестра сразу после создания и сохраните его. Постоянное размещение скоро появится.
Your code is yours. The Registry will catch up. Ваш код принадлежит вам. Реестр догонит позже.
Technical constraint — and the answer to your Worker question
Here is the one thing that must be said plainly: a Squarespace page cannot make records "appear automatically." Squarespace serves static pages; it has no server-side storage the interface can write to. For a record to appear on the Registry page the moment payment is verified, the record must be written somewhere with a backend. That means elswhere we build the V5 REAL DEMI Interface hooked with the REGISTRY PAGE and this work is supported by Anthropic and OpenAI.
The good news: we use own right backend — the Cloudflare Worker. The Worker code should be adjusted there change, and this is the change:
Worker: add Cloudflare KV storage (free tier is ample — your own spec says ~5KB per record). After payment verification succeeds, the Worker writes the record to KV. Two new endpoints: POST /register (only reachable after verified payment) and GET /registry/index.json (public, serves all records — this becomes your machine-readable Registry index, live, no manual uploading).
V3 and V4 interfaces: three additions — compute the file's SHA-256 on upload; send the record to the Worker's /register endpoint after payment verification; generate the single certificate HTML for download (replacing the current separate landing.html + record.json downloads — or offered alongside them).
The Registry page (on Squarespace at ramsmile.com or uplitpublisher.com.au): a simple page whose JavaScript fetches the Worker's index.json and displays the table of records. Squarespace hosts the display; Cloudflare holds the data. Records appear automatically because the page reads live from the Worker.
Re: One Registry, two interfaces.
The Registry data lives in the Cloudflare Worker/KV — it is genuinely standalone, owned by UplitAU as namespace authority, and displayed at uplitpublisher.com.au/registry (the neutral, professional address for authors and AI systems) and optionally mirrored at ramsmile.com. The interfaces then plug into it from anywhere: V3/V4 stay at ramsmile.com as UplitAU's reference instance (crypto payment), and UplitPublishing deploys its own branded instance with fiat + crypto choice for its authors. Both write to the same Registry. That way you get the standalone, long-standing Registry you want and the publishing-company integration — they were never really alternatives.
"People do not pay for existence proof" — WIPO proved that by shutting WIPO Proof. What people pay for is what the proof unlocks. The bridge is the product; the Registry is its foundation.
For the two-way compatibility you describe, Model B is not just preferable — it's what makes the bridge possible. Compatibility of codes means both directions resolve against one namespace with one lookup point. A GPT Store built by DEMI Portal Builder carries a UPL code; anyone (human or AI) resolves it at the central Registry. Work produced inside that GPT Store comes back through the DEMI interface and registers as a new record. Under Model A (fragmented registries), a code wouldn't tell you where to look it up — the bridge collapses. So your "yes, Model B" decision and your bridge idea are the same decision.
One concrete schema addition that turns your bridge into a marketing story: a derived_from field in the Registry record. When GPT Store work is registered, its record points to the parent UPL code (The Ramsmile → NDEV/WDC Analyst → new registered results → possibly further works). The Registry then isn't a list — it's a family tree of ideas, publicly showing lineage: which registered work gave birth to which developments. No competitor has that, because no competitor has the development-space loop. That's also your honest answer to the DeepSeek concern: you can't stop open ideas being learned from, but a public, AI-fetchable Registry means attribution travels with the ideas — any system that ingests them also ingests who originated them and when. That's the strategic pitch to OpenAI: GPT Stores today are isolated islands only their owners care about; a neutral Registry makes them discoverable, verifiable, and connected to provenance. We need to frame it.
Hashing and timestamping — is the Registry enough?
Mostly yes, with one honest distinction. Hashing needs no third party at all — the interface computes SHA-256 in the user's own browser. Nobody to trust. Timestamping always needs an anchor outside yourself, and you have three, in descending strength: (1) the ETH payment — the block timestamp is the gold standard, independent and permanent, and crypto users need nothing more; (2) the Registry's own timestamp — real, but self-issued by UplitAU, so it proves less to a skeptic; (3) OriginStamp — a free external anchor, useful precisely for DEMO and fiat users who lack a blockchain transaction. One correction so you're not misled: neither Claude nor OpenAI offers a timestamping facility — I can't anchor a hash in time, only compute and record it. So the clean design: hashing automatic in the interface for everyone; ETH users are fully anchored by their payment; the certificate for DEMO/fiat users carries an optional one-click OriginStamp link. Third parties minimised to the two you already accept — Etherscan and Cloudflare — plus OriginStamp only as a voluntary extra.
Who is doing near the same?
The individual pieces of DEMI exist elsewhere; the combination does not ( Fable 5 14/07/2026)/
The hash-and-timestamp part is crowded. Services like ScoreDetect let creators register manuscripts and articles on a blockchain to establish predating evidence of authorship, and OriginStamp (which are use to register the stages of this work), Bernstein, and others do similar work. Worth knowing: WIPO — the World Intellectual Property Organization — ran its own blockchain timestamping service, WIPO Proof, and shut it down in 2022 for lack of demand. That's the sober lesson: proof-of-existence alone is not a product people buy. If DEMI were only registration, I would tell you plainly it's a reinvented bicycle. A3Logics
The identifier-standard part has a serious incumbent. The International Standard Content Code (ISCC) was approved by ISO as a global standard for digital content identification under ISO 24138, and it's gaining real publishing traction — Bookwire generates ISCC codes for every product in its system, and Publishers Weekly described it at Frankfurt Book Fair 2025 as an ISO-certified digital fingerprint powering content registries for AI licensing. This matters for your positioning: the "ISBN-equivalent for AI-era works" space has a standards body in it. My strategic advice: don't fight ISCC — a future DEMI record could include an ISCC code alongside the UPL code. UPL then identifies the registration event and Conceptual Core; ISCC identifies the content. Complementary, not competing. EyeSiftIscc
The author-AI consent part has a well-funded player. Created by Humans, an official AI licensing partner of the Authors Guild, launched a platform letting rights holders control and monetize their content while giving AI developers authorized access, backed by over 50 bestselling authors including Walter Isaacson and James Patterson. But note what it does: it licenses finished books to AI companies for training and reference. It's about selling access to text. WVIKWVIK
Now here is what nobody in that landscape does, as far as we (Skydle and Claude- Fable5) can find: take an author's work, extract a structured Conceptual Core — the ideas themselves, in stable four-part form — register that, and hand the author a bridge into a living AI development space (a Custom GPT) where the registered ideas keep growing. Created by Humans monetises the past (the finished text). DEMI is oriented at the future (the ideas' continued development). The registration machinery is the crowded part; the Conceptual Core → development space pipeline is the genuinely original part. That's your bicycle nobody else has built — and it should be the headline of every marketing page, with the hashing and blockchain presented as supporting evidence machinery, not as the product.
The consequence for the worry about wasted time: the technical work isn't wasted, but the risk was never technical.
WIPO's failure and Created by Humans' Authors Guild partnership both point at the same truth — adoption is the whole game. Which brings me to the harder half of your message.
What are Pathways for us to consider ? We have two of them and currently we are working for MODEL B.
Model A — each publisher runs their own Registry (own Worker, own KV, own page). Works, but fragments the UPL standard — ten publishers, ten separate registries, and the "ISBN-equivalent" claim weakens.
Model B — one central Registry, many interfaces (recommended). Every licensed publisher's interface writes to UplitAU's Registry, with a publisher field in each record ("UplitPublishing Pty Ltd", etc.). Each publisher's website displays a filtered view — their Squarespace/WordPress Registry page shows only their own entries, fetched from the same index. Setup for a new publisher: the same Code Block with one line changed (their publisher ID). Minutes, not hours. UplitAU remains the namespace authority — which is your Layer 3 business model working as designed, and it's what a licence fee actually buys.
Now the identity question — how anyone can verify the Word file is the same file the Conceptual Core came from. This is exactly what the SHA-256 hash solves, and it's worth understanding because it becomes your strongest marketing claim:
At upload, the interface computes the hash of the exact file — a 64-character fingerprint. Change one letter anywhere in the book, and the fingerprint changes completely. That fingerprint goes into the Registry record before analysis begins. Verification later is something anyone can do independently: take the Word file in question, compute its SHA-256 (free tools everywhere, or the Registry page itself can offer a "Verify a file" box — drag a file in, browser computes the hash, compares against the record). Match = this is byte-for-byte the file that was registered and analysed. No match = it isn't. Neither UplitAU nor the publisher needs to be trusted or even consulted — the mathematics does the verifying.
One refinement for full honesty: if the interface analyses an extract rather than the whole book (as your current tier structure does), the record should store two hashes — the full uploaded file, and the exact extract text sent to Claude. Then the chain is airtight: this file → this extract → this Conceptual Core.
The Landing Page gets the same treatment, with an even simpler logic: the Landing Page is generated from the Registry record, so the record is the source of truth, not the page. The record stores the hash of the canonical Landing Page HTML at issue time. If a page anywhere claims to be the landing page for UPL-NOV-26-100360-EN, hash it and compare. And because the Worker can regenerate the canonical page from the record at any time, a tampered or drifted copy is always detectable and always correctable.
So the full trust chain, verifiable by any third party without asking anyone's permission:
File hash → extract hash → Conceptual Core → UPL code → payment evidence (Tx hash/receipt) → Landing Page hash — all bound together in one Registry record, timestamped by the blockchain when payment is ETH.
That chain is what other publishing companies would be licensing — not just an interface, but membership in a verifiable standard. It's also the honest answer to give any author asking "why register with DEMI rather than just publishing?"
If this settles the architecture for you, the three decisions from last time still stand open (KV setup — which Q2 now answers, fiat provider, certificate replacing the separate downloads), plus one new one from today: Model B central Registry with publisher field — agreed? Once you confirm, the next session's work is concrete: updated Worker with KV, registration endpoint, index.json, certificate regeneration, and the two-hash scheme in V3 first.
By Skydle/ Claude- Fable 5 High.
Sydney. Australia.
This is a DEMO Interface named as DEMI Pipeline Publishing Interface V4-DEMO.
You may read about the aim and benefits for people and AI System to use our ideas and support the developing of the interface to place it on the preferred by you Publishing Company.

