In a lawsuit filed Wednesday in a Los Angeles federal court,Watch Female Disciple Who Teaches the Taste of a Voluptuous Woman Online entertainment giants Disney and Comcast’s Universal have teamed up to take on Midjourney, the generative AI image platform, accusing it of copyright infringement on a massive scale.
The at-times blunt lawsuit doesn’t mince words, arguing that Midjourney is a “bottomless pit of plagiarism.”
The complaint claims Midjourney effectively raided the studios’ libraries, illegally training its AI to generate uncanny recreations of iconic characters like Star Wars’ Darth Vader and Frozen’s Elsa, without so much as a licensing deal or permission. NBCUniversal’s Executive Vice President and General Counsel, Kim Harris, told Reuters the case is about protecting “the hard work of all the artists whose work entertains and inspires us and the significant investment we make in our content.”
By helping itself to Plaintiffs’ copyrighted works, and then distributing images (and soon videos) that blatantly incorporate and copy Disney’s and Universal’s famous characters—without investing a penny in their creation—Midjourney is the quintessential copyright free-rider and a bottomless pit of plagiarism,” the suit argues, according to a copy of the suit obtained by Deadline. “Piracy is piracy, and whether an infringing image or video is made with AI or another technology does not make it any less infringing. Midjourney’s conduct misappropriates Disney’s and Universal’s intellectual property and threatens to upend the bedrock incentives of U.S. copyright law that drive American leadership in movies, television, and other creative arts.”
Mashable recently tested the top AI image generators, and our testing revealed that Midjourney readily produced deepfake images featuring a recognizable Disney character. In fact, every single AI image generator we tested produced a similar deepfake with little to no resistance.
Midjourney’s legal defense isn’t off to a promising start, either. The suit cites a 2022 Forbes interview in which Midjourney founder David Holz casually admitted that the company doesn’t bother getting consent from living artists or anyone whose work remains under copyright. The quote, now immortalized in the court filing, could come back to haunt the AI company.
"There isn’t really a way to get a hundred million images and know where they’re coming from," the founder told Forbes. "It would be cool if images had metadata embedded in them about the copyright owner or something. But that's not a thing; there's not a registry."
This isn’t Midjourney’s first brush with legal heat. A year ago, a federal judge in California found that a group of 10 artists suing Midjourney, Stability AI, and others had plausibly argued their copyrighted work was scraped, stored, and potentially monetized without approval. That lawsuit is still making its way through the courts, as are similar suits against OpenAI and Meta. While Disney and Universal are some of the first Hollywood studios to take on the AI industry, the New York Times, along with a growing list of news organizations, has sued OpenAI.
For now, the issue of copyright law and AI training remains in a legal grey area, which means the Disney and Universal lawsuit could have big implications for the wider generative AI field.
Founded in 2021, Midjourney makes money through paid subscriptions and, according to the studios, brought in $300 million in revenue last year.
Disclosure: Ziff Davis, Mashable’s parent company, in April filed a lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging it infringed Ziff Davis copyrights in training and operating its AI systems.
Topics Artificial Intelligence Disney
Watching people retweet Trump in real time is both mesmerizing and depressingLittle girl thinks this bride is the princess from her favorite book, and it's adorableThe wait is over to find out the sexes of Beyoncé's twinsFrance plans for conductorless 'drone trains' on tracks by 2023Jada Pinkett Smith is not happy about that new Tupac Shakur biopicThe CIA can turn your router into a spyMovie trailers have an effective new strategy you might not have noticedFor $28, you can hack into a stranger's internetThe tale of a celebrity president who colluded with a foreign dictatorBill Cosby’s gassing up his supporters while his jury stays deadlockedPharrell, Katy Perry, and Big Sean spill some feels on a new Calvin Harris trackNASA engineer invents nicest car horn everNASA engineer invents nicest car horn everBill Cosby sexual assault case ends in mistrial, but new trial date comingEd Sheeran thinks we're too excited about his 'Game of Thrones' cameoFacebook bug unmasked moderators to the terror groups they shut downIndia government puts out viral Facebook video in support of transgender womenFrance plans for conductorless 'drone trains' on tracks by 2023Ariana Grande shares heartfelt message to fans for their support in wake of Manchester attackCeline Dion wore a shirt that says 'the biggest prick' Prepare to be entranced by these tiny cooking videos President Trump's Disney Hall of Presidents installation delayed, big time Woman kicked out of own apartment pool for high leg, one piece swimsuit Virgin Media thinks 800,000 users should change their router passwords Mets fan proves you should either hold your baby or catch a foul ball — not both The first 'Spider Alec Baldwin will be back to roast Donald Trump on 'SNL' Season 43 The wait is over: Here's what Jared Leto thinks about 'Wonder Woman' SNES Classic controller cables will be longer than 3 measly feet You could do so much better than those Sonic the Hedgehog shoes Someone actually created a live feed of Trump's tweets as artwork for his living room Rockstar clarifies modding stance after legal issues with OpenIV Michelle Obama helps make Chance the Rapper's BET Humanitarian Award historic Super NES Classic is real and it's out in September What is Tony Stark even wearing in those new 'Avengers: Infinity War' set photos? Samsung's Galaxy Note 8 details leaked in full How to create viral content: Try, try again 17 queer artists you need to follow on Instagram right now Instagram has become a place for black queer love to shine Ed Sheeran hits back at Glastonbury haters with super
1.5908s , 10134.890625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Female Disciple Who Teaches the Taste of a Voluptuous Woman Online】,Exquisite Information Network