Two problems, two tools
Creators often ask for “the best watermark” as if one setting covers every risk. In practice you are solving deterrence and attribution:
- Visible watermarks make casual reposts look unappealing. They signal ownership on previews and public crops.
- Invisible tracking IDs tie a leaked full-resolution file back to one subscriber copy.
Using only visible marks on paid packs means every subscriber gets the same pixels. You may discourage sharing, but you still cannot identify the source after a leak.
Using only invisible IDs on public teasers means drive-by downloaders face no friction at all. Your marketing assets remain easy to repost.
Where each layer belongs
Public and preview content: visible marks with readable opacity, sized for the platform you publish on.
Subscriber-only full files: invisible recipient IDs embedded per person, plus license language that sets expectations.
Mixed releases: a visible corner mark on lower-res previews, invisible IDs on the files people pay to unlock.
Readability vs aggression
Aggressive tiled watermarks protect previews but annoy paying subscribers who expect a clean viewing experience. The preview tool helps you find a balance: enough signal to deter, not so much that it becomes the product.
Invisible IDs avoid that trade-off on delivered files because the image looks clean while still carrying forensic payload data.
Revenue impact in plain terms
Deterrence protects future leaks by raising the effort to repost. Attribution protects past leaks by telling you who to revoke, replace, or pursue.
If your business model depends on exclusive access, attribution is what turns a leak from a community crisis into an actionable incident.
Build a layered workflow
Start by previewing visible settings on the surfaces you publish openly. Then plan invisible IDs for named subscriber delivery and keep a log that maps IDs to accounts.