AI assistance in this project
OMLA's website, codebase, and documentation were developed with significant AI assistance — primarily Anthropic's Claude — under human direction and review. This page explains what that means in practice.
What AI did
- Drafted initial versions of HTML pages, CSS, and JavaScript modules from human specifications.
- Wrote draft SQL migrations against a human-specified schema and RLS posture.
- Produced the first-pass commercial-integration analysis from a research prompt.
- Generated placeholder locale files and the scaffolding for the i18n system.
- Authored the chatbot backend, its system prompt, and this AI-disclosure page.
What humans did
- Architecture decisions. Ed25519 as identity, Bech32m as addressing, 30% royalty rate, hoster-fork carve-out, multi-currency reimbursement — all human-owned choices, not AI recommendations accepted blind.
- Policy positions. What is commercial use, what is fair to creators, what OMLA does and does not mediate. All human.
- Final review. Every substantive change was reviewed, edited, or rejected by a human before landing.
- Live operations. The production database, keypairs, payment integrations, and compliance decisions are operated by humans, not agents. The chatbot cannot act on your account.
Why we disclose this
Anyone evaluating OMLA — a licensor, a platform considering integration, a hoster considering onboarding, a creator considering publishing — deserves to know whether they are reading human-authored prose or AI-authored prose, and where the judgement calls were made. The honest answer is: both, with human judgement at the decision points.
This is not defensive and not congratulatory. It is tooling disclosure.
What this does not mean
- AI does not set OMLA policy.
- AI does not move money or approve compliance decisions.
- AI does not have access to creator secret keys or Supabase service-role credentials.
- The OMLA chatbot is a scope-locked documentation retriever. It cannot take actions on your account or process disputes. If you need a human, email support@omla-ai.org.
AI in the licensed models themselves
Separate question, easily confused: what OMLA licenses is AI models. That is the point of the license — fair royalties for AI model creators. The disclosure above is about tooling used to build the infrastructure around the license, not about the models OMLA registers.
Contact
Questions about this disclosure: board@omla-ai.org. Legal / compliance: legal@omla-ai.org.