Mumbai: IAB Tech Lab has announced the release of the Content Monetization Protocol (CoMP) Specification v1.0 for public comment, introducing a standardized framework designed to ensure that AI systems establish commercial agreements with publishers before crawling or using their content.
The framework aims to create a structured mechanism for communication between content owners, marketplaces and AI systems, enabling them to define permissions and commercial terms prior to content access. The CoMP specification is currently open for public comment until April 9, 2026, allowing industry stakeholders to provide feedback before the framework is finalized.

Commenting on the initiative, Anthony Katsur, CEO of IAB Tech Lab, said, “AI systems require chips, power, and information. Information is the only input in that equation that does not yet have a consistent commercial infrastructure around it. If we expect high-quality content to continue fueling AI-driven products, we need clear terms of engagement and a mechanism that supports compensation, accountability, and long-term sustainability. CoMP is designed to help the industry move in that direction.”
The move comes at a time when many publishers are facing significant traffic declines, including reductions in search referral traffic exceeding 50 percent in some cases. CoMP aims to support a sustainable global information ecosystem by enabling new monetization opportunities linked to AI usage while ensuring fair compensation for content creators.
The framework is designed to work across direct licensing arrangements as well as third-party marketplaces. By establishing a single standardized protocol for signaling permissions and commercial terms, CoMP allows content owners and AI systems to avoid building multiple proprietary integrations, reducing operational complexity and enabling scalable adoption across the ecosystem.
The protocol also assumes that publishers have already implemented strong access controls, such as blocking strategies through Edge Compute infrastructure or Content Delivery Networks (CDNs). Once these safeguards are in place, CoMP provides a structured pathway for transitioning from restricted access to commercially negotiated agreements.
Industry stakeholders have expressed support for a standardized approach to content monetization in AI environments. Julianne Jennings said, “At The Weather Company, we believe the future of the industry depends on human-centric, AI-driven innovation that prioritizes the end user. Our collaboration with the IAB Tech Lab on the CoMP framework is a critical step in establishing a foundation for secured data collaboration that benefits the entire ecosystem. By creating a standardized path for commercial agreements, we ensure our high-fidelity weather data remains effortlessly accessible across activation channels—empowering buyers and driving performance outcomes while maintaining the trust and accuracy our users rely on every day.”
Echoing this sentiment, Jon Roberts said, “We know the best AI products require the best inputs and the AI economy will need more quality content in the future, not less. A global information economy needs global standards and we have been a supporter of the IAB CoMP initiative from the beginning. We support global standards that help all creators get paid fairly.”
Achim Schlosser added, “The first release of the CoMP API marks an important step toward establishing interoperable, transparent standards for fair value exchange in the AI ecosystem, recognizing that AI systems depend on high-quality, trusted content. As an early contributor, we believe scalable, robust compensation frameworks — alongside visibility and attribution for content usage — are essential to sustaining high-quality journalism and premium content in the AI era.”
Highlighting the importance of fair compensation for content creators, Rob Beeler said, “Publishers should be compensated for the use of their intellectual property – and for the real investment required to produce quality content. While much remains to be figured out about how LLMs will work with publishers, CoMP provides a necessary framework for those discussions, helping us move faster from theory to practice and better protect the future of publishing.”
Jennifer Bas further noted, “As AI systems and agents become the front door to information, they inherit the authority, credibility, and trust of the publishers and brands whose content they learn from and surface. CoMP creates a mechanism for that quality and trust to be valued in the AI supply chain.”
The CoMP specification has been developed through collaboration with the CoMP Working Group and is expected to evolve further through industry feedback during the public comment period. Input from publishers, marketplaces, technology providers and AI developers will help refine the framework before its final release.
Stakeholders interested in reviewing the specification or participating in the consultation process can submit feedback until April 9, 2026 through the official IAB Tech Lab website.















