Hollywood will need permission to make AI deepfakes of long-gone stars

California is another step closer to defining how and when moviemakers and others can use AI versions of celebrities in their projects. The California state Senate has passed AB 1836, a law requiring those who want to make an AI replica of a deceased performer get explicit consent from their estates. The bill now goes to Governor Gavin Newsom, who will likely sign the bill thanks to its backing by the unionized performers of SAG-AFTRA and related groups. 

The law covers any digital recreation using AI. That might mean a still image, a voice clone performing a new role, or even a full character in a film made long after their passing. Regardless of the purpose, the producers must get the estate or legal representative of the deceased performer to agree. The new bill comes right after the Senate passed the related AB 2602. That bill focuses on living performers and sets stricter rules for consent before AI replicas can be used. Together, these bills represent a growing recognition of the need to regulate AI’s impact on both the living and the deceased in the entertainment industry.

“For those who would use the digital replicas of deceased performers in films, TV shows, video games, audiobooks, sound recordings and more, without first getting the consent of those performers’ estates, the California Senate just said NO,” SAG-AFTRA said in a statement. “AB 1836 is another win in SAG-AFTRA’s ongoing strategy of enhancing performer protections in a world of generative artificial intelligence.”

Deepfake Demand

The union has already encouraged deals built around the structure of the bill even before it becomes law. For instance, SAG-AFTRA and AI startup Narrativ partnered on a new online marketplace where actors can license their voices AI voice clones while controlling where and how the voices are used. Similarly, AI voice developer ElevenLabs made a deal with the estates of several deceased Hollywood stars, including Judy Garland, James Dean, Laurence Olivier, and Burt Reynolds, to get legal rights to their voices for new AI-created performances. 

SAG-AFTRA’s embrace of the bill is unsurprising, considering the last year or so. AI was central to the recent strike by the union, and AI protections were built into the new master TV and film contract template. But the bills may mean a lot more to the AI space than just deepfake casting calls. California might set a template thanks to the strength of the state’s entertainment and tech industry. Other states and countries may model their own regulations on the same premise to simplify matters on a global scale.

“The passing of this bill, along with AB 2602 earlier this week, builds on our mosaic of protections in law and contract,” SAG-AFTRA wrote. “Both of these bills have been a legislative priority for the union on behalf of our membership and beyond, making explicit consent in California mandatory. We look forward to these bills being signed by Governor Gavin Newsom.”

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