TRISHULA · the trident
Content Protection & Anti-Piracy
A film is years of work that can leak in a minute — from a set phone, a vendor's server, or a screener copy. Trishula protects the work itself: before release, through the release weekend, and after.
Before release
Most leaks happen before the premiere.
A film passes through dozens of hands — editing, VFX, dubbing, censor, screeners. We know that pipeline from the inside, and we harden it node by node.
Nandi · the gatekeeper
Vendor security checks
Before your edit, VFX or dubbing partner touches the film, we check how they store, move and delete it — and certify the ones who do it right.
Mudra · the seal
Forensic watermarking
Every copy that leaves your hands carries an invisible mark. If it leaks, the copy itself tells us who had it.
On the ground
Set & dailies discipline
Practical rules for phones, dailies and workprints on set — training the crew actually follows, not a policy document nobody reads.
Release window
The first 72 hours decide everything.
After the leak: find the source
The watermark, the copy's fingerprints and the trading chatter usually point to a person. Leak-source tracing turns "someone leaked it" into a name your lawyers can act on — quietly, lawfully, with evidence attached.
Music too
Songs leak earlier than films — sometimes before the audio launch. The same pipeline discipline, watermarking and strike protocols work for song masters, and we run them for music labels and film audio releases.