On Monday, beloved actor James Earl Jones passed away at age 93, but in 2022, he signed an agreement with LucasFilms to allow the voice of Darth Vader to live on through Gen AI replication. Jones’s permission to replicate his voice is a bittersweet prelude to today’s news from Capitol Hill, where the House of Representatives introduced its own No FAKES Act to prohibit the unlicensed replication of any person’s likeness or voice. Sponsored by Reps. Salazar, Dean, Moran, Morelle, and Wittman, the House bill is identical to the Senate No FAKES Act introduced in late July and, so, demonstrates a bicameral, as well as bipartisan, sense of urgency to address misuse of Gen AI for this purpose.
To recap, No FAKES establishes a new property right in the likeness of any person and prohibits unauthorized replication of a likeness, which includes voice. Historically, likeness has only been protected on a limited basis by a patchwork of state Right of Publicity (ROP) laws, typically prohibiting unauthorized use of a celebrity likeness for commercial/advertising purposes. But the unprecedented capability of Gen AI to be used by anyone to replicate the likeness of anyone—and which will exacerbate the reality-bending world of online “information”—has prompted Congress to move swiftly and, in my view, creatively.
It was July 2023 when the idea of a federal ROP law was discussed during a hearing held by the House Judiciary Committee Subcommittee on Intellectual Property. At the time, I imagined this was a prelude to years of haggling on Capitol Hill while Gen AI developers proceeded at internet speed to wreak havoc with tools to produce more advanced “deepfakes.” Instead, the introduction of No FAKES in the Senate just one year later—and now, the same bill in the House less than two months after that—reveals both seriousness and deftness in legislators’ zeal to confront the issue. Rather than approach the matter as one to be remedied by a federal ROP law, Congress, with input from various stakeholders, has responded to the novelty of the challenge with novel legislation, drawing upon principles found in ROP, trademark, and copyright law.
If passed, No FAKES would operate akin to ROP, but it automatically applies to every citizen, and unlawful replication is not limited to commercial/advertising purposes. At the same time, because many misuses of Gen AI replication have both reputational and commercial implications, No FAKES shares a kinship with trademark, which is a creature of the Commerce clause. And finally, the new right is copyright-like as a property right which vests in the individual, may be licensed for various uses, and is descendible to heirs and assigns with certain limits and conditions unique to protecting likeness.
Opposition Is Familiar but the Battlefield Is Different
Many of the usual suspects representing Big Tech, including the newly formed (I can’t believe they called it this) Chamber of Progress, will likely raise constitutional challenges to No FAKES, leaning hard into the refrain that the new likeness right will chill protected speech. As to the merits of that argument, the text of the bill already includes well-crafted, First Amendment-based exceptions; and as a PR message, I believe Big Tech is refreshingly at a disadvantage. Concerns over abuse of Gen AI encompass a broad range of Americans—from professional creators to parents seeing how easily children can be sexually exploited—and in general, people just aren’t buying Big Tech’s “make life better” rhetoric anymore.
Examples of legitimate innovation (e.g., Jones permitting Darth Vader to continue, or Randy Travis overcoming physical voice loss) will entail permission of the person whose likeness or voice is being replicated. Yet, in response to the many harms which may be caused by unlicensed Gen AI replication, AI defenders will promote the overbroad refrain that “innovation” must be allowed to flourish — but of course, “innovation” is Big Tech’s euphemism for “profitability at any cost.” Congress is still playing catch-up to address myriad harms fostered by pre-AI social media and is, therefore, reluctant to repeat the mistakes of the late 1990s by allowing Gen AI “room to grow” without restrictions.
Interestingly, Chamber of Progress appears designed to frame the multi-billion-dollar AI gamble as socially and politically “progressive,” a strategy belied by its advocating broad liability shields for AI developers akin to Section 230 of the CDA and Section 512 of the DMCA. In fact, that view aligns perfectly with Open AI CEO Sam Altman suggesting that it is impossible to develop without free use of copyrighted works, or with investor Marc Andreesen writing a smug and erroneous manifesto as a plea for continued laissez-faire policy in all things tech. If there is anything “progressive” about Gen AI, Chamber of Progress will need to produce more than worn out rhetoric to prove it.
We’ve been here and done this, but No FAKES is a bill with a lot of political momentum. The likelihood that many citizens will oppose a prohibition on the unlicensed use of their own, or their children’s, likenesses seems low to the point of futility. We’ll see what comes, but by my lights, No FAKES is destined to become law.
Image by: nikolay100
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