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After launching a lawsuit against Midjourney earlier this month, Disney is reportedly looking to form a partnership with OpenAI.
Disney and NBCUniversal's lawsuit against AI company Midjourney is a way to establish legal precedent around AI.
In a move that could redefine the boundaries between generative AI (genAI) and intellectual property, Disney and Universal ...
Brandon Bauman, a top Hollywood dealmaker and chief strategy officer at Loti AI, examines the landmark lawsuit filed by ...
Midjourney users can create AI images of protected characters like Shrek, Yoda and Marvel superheroes, according to a new lawsuit.
Midjourney could echo the other AI companies that have defended their actions as fair use, though the visual similarities in the side-by-side comparisons in Disney and Universal’s lawsuit seem ...
Disney’s lawsuit seeks monetary damages and an injunction that could halt Midjourney’s operations—just as the company prepares to launch a commercial video-generation product. Part II: Bartz v.
For enterprise leaders evaluating AI, Midjourney Video V1's a double-edged sword: a low-cost, fast-evolving tool with strong user adoption ...
A week after Disney and Universal filed a landmark lawsuit against Midjourney, the generative AI startup’s new V1 video tool will make clips of Shrek, Deadpool, and other famous creations.
On this episode of “Uncanny Valley,” we explore Disney and Universal's lawsuit against Midjourney, which could be consequential for the future of how intellectual property is treated in the AI era.
The lawsuit includes some convincing side-by-sides of the real movie stills and the images Midjourney has created. It's not as if those examples are a close facsimile that can be mistaken for ...