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Glossary

Content vault

Also known as: content library, media vault

A content vault is a secure, organized library where a creator stores digital content and controls who can access it. It holds videos, files, audio, and images in one place, often arranged in folders, and gates them so only the right members or buyers can open each item. It combines storage, organization, and access control.

Storage, organization, and access in one place

A content vault does three jobs at once. It stores your files, it organizes them into a navigable structure like folders and collections, and it enforces who can open what. Rather than scattering work across cloud drives, link shorteners, and separate payment tools, a vault keeps everything together so both you and your members always know where content lives and who can see it.

Why creators use a content vault

Creators accumulate large libraries — back catalogs, source files, recordings — that are hard to manage and easy to leak. A vault keeps that library tidy and protected, lets members browse it like a drive, and makes it simple to gate older material behind paid tiers. It turns a messy collection of files into a browsable, monetizable product.

Vaults versus generic cloud storage

Generic cloud storage is built for sharing files with people you choose, not for selling access to a paying audience. A content vault adds the missing pieces: paywalls, subscription tiers, secure streaming, and a public-facing page where new buyers can preview and subscribe. The result is storage that doubles as a storefront.

Why Lockrooms

Lockrooms is a content vault you can charge for: drag in any file, organize it in folders like Google Drive, and sell access by subscription, per-folder tier, or one-time purchase. Keep about 95% with weekly payouts.

FAQ

Frequently asked

What is a content vault?

A secure, organized library where a creator stores digital content — videos, files, audio, images — and controls who can access each item, combining storage, organization, and access control.

How is a content vault different from Google Drive?

Cloud drives are made for sharing with chosen people, not selling access. A content vault adds paywalls, subscription tiers, secure streaming, and a public page so you can monetize the library.

Can a content vault hold any file type?

A good vault handles videos, PDFs, audio, images, and other files in one place, so your whole library lives together rather than scattered across tools.

Put it into practice today.

Upload any file, organize it like a drive, and charge for access like a membership. Free to start — keep 95%, paid weekly.