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Midjourney users can create AI images of protected characters like Shrek, Yoda and Marvel superheroes, according to a new lawsuit.
Disney and NBCU filed a federal lawsuit Tuesday against Midjourney, a generative AI start-up, alleging copyright infringement ...
It was only a matter of time before the major Hollywood studios started taking the fight to the artificial intelligence ...
Brandon Bauman, a top Hollywood dealmaker and chief strategy officer at Loti AI, examines the landmark lawsuit filed by ...
Disney and Universal's 110-page lawsuit against Midjourney claims the AI player stole "countless" copyrighted works to train its software.
"Piracy is piracy," says Disney's chief legal officer, as the studios aim to show that tools allowing personalized AI slop creations of characters like Darth Vader or Shrek run afoul of their IP.
In a move that could redefine the boundaries between generative AI (genAI) and intellectual property, Disney and Universal ...
Moonvalley, which works with Hollywood power players like Natasha Lyonne, is releasing an AI video model for filmmakers.
Learn how to simulate cinematic camera movements in Midjourney using descriptive prompts. Master zooms, pans, and tracking ...
AI companies like Anthropic and OpenAI only need to pay for cheap sources of copyrighted work to train their models, per a ...
This is not the first time Midjourney has been accused of misusing artists’ work to train their AI systems. A year ago, a California federal judge found that ten artists behind a copyright ...