ByteDance to implement AI safeguards
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Irish director Ruairi Robinson posted a video on X that he made in Seedance with a two-line prompt, in which Brad Pitt and Tom Cruise have a cinematic choreographed fist fight. Unlike most “AI slop” that has a cartoonish sheen, this video looked like it could’ve been right out of a Mission Impossible flick.
The powerful new video model made by TikTok's Chinese owner is drawing alarm in Hollywood after it churned out a slew of copyrighted IP.
Seedance 2.0, a new AI video generation model from TikTok’s Chinese parent company ByteDance, is drawing allegations of copyright infringement as it goes viral for creating realistic cinematic videos depicting Hollywood actors and characters.
ByteDance is facing scrutiny over Seedance 2.0, an AI video tool creating Hollywood star deepfakes and sparking copyright concerns.
An AI-generated video of Tom Cruise throwing down with Brad Pitt on a rooftop just lit up social media, and now the fallout is getting serious. What started as a viral clip is turning into a high-stakes battle over copyright,
Seedance 2.0, which is only available in China for now, lets users generate high-quality AI videos using simple text prompts.
The actors' union says the new model from Bytedance enables "blatant infringement" on properties like "Lord of the Rings."
ByteDance has said it is working “to prevent the unauthorised use of intellectual property” by users of its new AI tool Seedance 2.0, after complaints from studios and Hollywood industry groups. In a statement to the BBC, ByteDance said it “respects intellectual property rights and we have heard the concerns regarding Seedance 2.0.”
SAG-AFTRA is joining the industry condemnation of ByteDance, the Chinese owner of TikTok, for releasing a new video model that has enabled widespread copyright infringement online. SAG-AFTRA President Sean Astin is among those whose likeness has been used in videos generated by the model,
ByteDance pledged tighter safeguards for Seedance after cease-and-desist letters from The Walt Disney Company and Paramount Global over alleged IP violations. Studios and unions warn that the AI video tool infringes copyrighted content and likeness rights.