On Thursday, the Senate Judiciary Committee unanimously advanced the NO FAKES Act, a bipartisan bill designed to stop unauthorized AI-generated replicas of a person’s voice or likeness.
The legislation would establish a federal intellectual property right, allowing individuals—including actors, musicians, and private citizens—to sue those who create or distribute digital clones without permission. More than 16,000 performers from SAG-AFTRA signed an open letter backing the bill, arguing that AI "style theft" threatens their careers and identities. However, some tech groups and free speech advocates worry the broad language could inadvertently chill legitimate satire, news commentary, and digital innovation.
The bill now moves to the full Senate floor for a final vote as lawmakers seek to create national guardrails for generative artificial intelligence.
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