
RightsLink
Digital rights management (DRM) software
- Features
- Ease of use
- Ease of management
- Quality of support
- Affordability
- Market presence
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- Professional services (engineering, legal, consulting, etc.)
- Agriculture, fishing, and forestry
- Public sector and nonprofit organizations
What is RightsLink
RightsLink is a rights licensing and permissions management platform used to request, price, grant, and pay for reuse of copyrighted content. It is commonly used by publishers, scholarly societies, and media organizations to manage permissions for articles, images, excerpts, and other content across print and digital channels. The product supports self-service licensing workflows for requesters and administrative tools for rightsholders to define policies, pricing, and approvals. RightsLink is typically deployed as a service integrated with publisher websites and content platforms to streamline permissions and royalty collection.
End-to-end licensing workflows
RightsLink supports the full permissions lifecycle, from request intake and policy-based pricing to approvals, invoicing, and payment processing. This reduces manual email-based permissions handling for publishers and rightsholders. It also provides a structured audit trail for requests and granted licenses. These capabilities align well with organizations that need repeatable, high-volume permissions processing.
Self-service permissions at scale
The platform is designed to enable requesters to obtain licenses through guided, self-service flows embedded in content experiences. This can shorten turnaround time compared with manual review for common reuse scenarios. It also standardizes how reuse terms are presented and accepted. For publishers with large catalogs, this approach can reduce operational overhead.
Policy and pricing controls
RightsLink allows rightsholders to configure reuse categories, pricing rules, and approval requirements to match internal policies. This helps enforce consistent licensing terms across different content types and channels. Administrative controls support exceptions and custom handling where needed. The configurability is useful for organizations with complex rights and permissions rules.
Narrower focus than DAM
RightsLink primarily addresses permissions, licensing, and royalty workflows rather than full digital asset management. Organizations that need asset storage, creative workflows, and rich media operations typically require additional systems alongside it. This can increase integration and governance work across tools. Buyers should evaluate how RightsLink fits into a broader content and asset stack.
Integration effort varies
Deployments often depend on integrating licensing flows into publisher sites, content platforms, and internal finance or rights systems. The level of effort can vary based on existing infrastructure and how customized the licensing experience must be. Data mapping for products, content identifiers, and pricing rules may require careful setup. Ongoing changes to policies can also require administrative coordination.
Not a media DRM enforcer
RightsLink is oriented toward permissions and licensing transactions, not technical enforcement of playback or device-level restrictions for streaming media. Organizations seeking encryption-based DRM for video delivery may need separate DRM technologies. This distinction matters for teams evaluating “DRM” as content protection versus rights licensing. Fit assessments should separate licensing workflows from media protection requirements.
Seller details
Copyright Clearance Center, Inc.
Danvers, Massachusetts, United States
1978
Private
https://www.copyright.com/
https://x.com/copyrightdotcom
https://www.linkedin.com/company/copyright-clearance-center