Eyeon Software May 2026
A file tree unfolded. It wasn't her project files. It wasn't the studio server. These were labeled by date and timestamp, going back months. HR_Meeting_03-12.mp4. Board_Decision_Memo_01-09.pdf. New_Biz_Pitch_Stolen_Assets.pdf. She clicked one at random. It was a video of the studio head, Marcus, laughing with a rival producer, explicitly detailing how they’d poached ChromaGrade’s biggest client.
She looked at the clock. 4:21 AM. Outside, the first gray light of dawn bled over the parking lot. She thought of the six years of 80-hour weeks. The way Marcus called her “honey” in meetings. The director who took credit for her palette in the Venice Film Festival reel. The assistant she’d seen crying in the bathroom after being denied health insurance. eyeon software
We’re the people who are tired of being blind. We built EyeOn so the people on the bottom could see the strings. You’ve been underpaid for six years. You know Marcus expensed your color grading suite as a “private cinema” for tax fraud. You know Hollis is going to cut you out of the credit for Empty Cradle . We know you know. A file tree unfolded
Yes. That’s the point.
You have three options. One: close the window, forget you saw this, and get fired on Friday. Two: leak a single file to the trades and watch Marcus squirm for a week before he buries it. Three: press the red button at the top of the EyeOn dashboard. That broadcasts everything—every secret, every angle, every hidden camera—to every employee in the industry simultaneously. The cleaners will see what the board said about their wages. The assistants will see the texts their bosses sent about them. The truth, all at once. These were labeled by date and timestamp, going back months
