RSL
Machine-readable content-licensing terms, referenced from robots.txt — say which AI uses are free and which require a license or royalty.
- name
- RSL
- full_name
- Really Simple Licensing
- layer
- licensing
- creator
- RSL Collective (Reddit, Yahoo, Medium, O'Reilly and others)
- status
- emerging standard
- year
- 2025
- one_liner
- Machine-readable content-licensing terms, referenced from robots.txt — say which AI uses are free and which require a license or royalty.
- spec_url
- https://rslstandard.org
- snippet
robots.txt: License: https://example.com/license.xml → <rsl> ... <permits>search</permits> ... </rsl>- abbreviation
- RSL
- also_known_as
Really Simple LicensingRSL Standard- canonical_spec_url
- https://rslstandard.org
- entity_uri
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Really_Simple_Licensing
- taxonomy_layer
- licensing
- sub_layer
- content-licensing-terms
- protocol_type
- license
- central_problem
- Lets publishers attach machine-readable licensing terms to content — declaring which AI uses are free and which require a license or royalty — referenced from robots.txt.
- maintainer
- RSL Collective (nonprofit; co-founded by Eckart Walther and Doug Leeds)
- governance_body
- RSL Collective
- license
- — verify-against-primary-at-build ↗ https://rslstandard.org
- maturity_tag
- emerging
- current_spec_version
- RSL 1.0
- spec_date
- 2025-12-10
- launch_date
- 2025-09-10
- last_verified
- 2026-06-15
- transport
- robots.txt License: directive → RSL XML license document
- core_mechanism
- A site references an RSL license document (XML) from robots.txt via a License: directive; the RSL document declares per-use permissions (e.g. search vs. training) and any royalty/licensing requirement, with RSL 1.0 adding dynamic pricing and collective-rights-organization integration.
- discovery_endpoint
- robots.txt License: directive → RSL XML (e.g. /license.xml)
- settlement_type
- —
- adoption_metric
- Launch backed by publishers including Reddit, Yahoo, People Inc., Internet Brands, Ziff Davis, Quora, O'Reilly Media, and Medium source
- notable_adopters
{"value":"Reddit","source":"https://rslstandard.org/press/rsl-standard"}{"value":"Yahoo","source":"https://rslstandard.org/press/rsl-standard"}{"value":"O'Reilly Media","source":"https://rslstandard.org/press/rsl-standard"}- relationships
{"predicate":"enforced_by","target":"web-bot-auth","note":"RSL -enforced_by-> Cloudflare (research §2 seed triple); enforcement in practice depends on verifying which agent is real (Web Bot Auth). Cloudflare is the enforcing operator, not a protocol record id."}{"predicate":"competes_with","target":"pay-per-crawl","note":"RSL and pay-per-crawl both price/gate AI access in the licensing layer (pay-per-crawl is not a separate record in this 12-record pass)."}- ideal_use_case
- A publisher who wants to license content to AI — free for some uses, paid for others — in a machine-readable way.
- when_to_use
- When you must price or gate AI use of your content and want terms that crawlers and licensing intermediaries can read automatically.
- when_not_to_use
- When you simply want to welcome agents to read your content (Layer-1 discovery) and have no licensing or royalty requirement.
- code_example
- # robots.txt License: https://example.com/license.xml <!-- license.xml --> <rsl><content url="/"><permits>search</permits><prohibits>train</prohibits></content></rsl>
- source
- First published 2025-09-10; RSL 1.0 official spec 2025-12-10: https://rslstandard.org/press/rsl-1-specification-2025 and https://rslstandard.org/press/rsl-standard . Enforced_by Cloudflare: research §2.
- agent_readiness_link
- access-economics
- layer_legacy
- content