April 9, 2025, 1:20 pm
Facing rising concerns over the unauthorized use of personal likenesses by AI, YouTube has expanded its pilot program to monitor and detect AI-generated content involving famous figures. The platform is also actively supporting the NO FAKES Act, which seeks to establish legal standards to prevent unauthorized use of an individual’s identity. This dual approach aims to protect intellectual property rights and ensure that the misuse of AI technology to replicate real identities is curtailed effectively.
The post YouTube also hates AI replicas of people appeared first on Android Headlines.
Anti-deepfake bill raises concerns about censorship and breaking encryption.
Senators Coons and Blackburn have reintroduced the NO FAKES Act, aiming to set standards for using AI to replicate an individual’s face, name, and voice. The bill, previously proposed in 2023 and 2024, has now gained additional bipartisan support.
YouTube expanded its pilot to monitor AI-generated content using famous figures' likenesses and backed the NO FAKES ACT, legislation aimed at preventing unauthorized AI use of creators’ images.
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