EntertainmentLawyer.Pro™ Entertainment Law & Litigation
- Prevent AI ID Theft: Trademark Your Personaby Elliot Zimmerman on January 17, 2026 at 10:34 pm
Matthew McConaughey has now joined the growing club of performers racing to protect every atom of their identity before AI does it for them. Sensible move. Some of us filed those registrations before it was fashionable. And if anyone needs a reminder of why this matters, revisit The Congress (2013), where Hollywood convinces actors to sign away their likeness, voice, and persona so studios can generate infinite AI‑driven performances without them. Paul Giamatti plays the Continue reading Prevent AI ID Theft: Trademark Your Persona→
- Copyright Protection of MIDI Filesby Elliot Zimmerman on December 16, 2025 at 11:54 pm
While there isn’t a single “MIDI case” that stands out the way White-Smith v. Apollo did for piano rolls, the U.S. copyright doctrine has evolved through software and digital music cases to treat MIDI files as protectable embodiments of musical works. Courts and commentators consistently apply 17 U.S.C. §102 (original works fixed in a tangible medium) to MIDI, and case law around software object code and digital sampling provides the backbone for this analysis. ⚖️ Continue reading Copyright Protection of MIDI Files→
- AI Copyright Showdown: UK Ruling Contrasts with US Legal Battlesby Elliot Zimmerman on December 16, 2025 at 8:07 pm
UK Landmark Decision: No Infringement Without Embodiment In a groundbreaking ruling, the UK High Court delivered its first major judgment on generative AI and copyright in Getty Images (US) Inc & ors v Stability AI Limited ([2025] EWHC 2863 (Ch)) [6]. The court held that Stability AI did not infringe Getty Images’ copyright through its training of the Stable Diffusion model, because the resulting model weights, while derived from copyrighted images, do not contain or Continue reading AI Copyright Showdown: UK Ruling Contrasts with US Legal Battles→
- AI and the Entertainment Industry: A Legal Opportunity Amid Technological Disruptionby Elliot Zimmerman on September 8, 2025 at 11:39 am
The Looming Threat: AI as a Job Killer? Widespread concern has taken hold in Hollywood and across the entertainment industry that artificial intelligence (AI) will displace human creators—writers, actors, musicians, directors—at an unprecedented scale. During the 2023 strikes, generative AI (GenAI) emerged as a central point of contention, provoking fears that automation could erode decades-old creative professions [GAI & Collective Bargaining in…]. Unionized labor has raised alarms about AI rewriting scripts, duplicating likenesses, and replacing Continue reading AI and the Entertainment Industry: A Legal Opportunity Amid Technological Disruption→
- $150K Per Photo? Statutory Copyright Damages & DMCAby Elliot Zimmerman on August 20, 2025 at 7:30 pm
STATUTORY DAMAGES REALITY CHECK: For non-willful copyright infringement, courts typically award $2,500-$15,000 per work, while willful infringement can command $50,000-$150,000 per work. The landmark case Scott Hargis v. Pacifica Senior Living Management LLC, No. 3:22-cv-05352-JSC (N.D. Cal. 2023) shattered records with a $6.3 million verdict ($150,000 × 43 photos) – sending a clear message about willful infringement. See 17 USC 504 et seq. DOUBLE YOUR RECOVERY WITH DMCA: Don’t overlook 17 USC 1202! While regular infringement Continue reading $150K Per Photo? Statutory Copyright Damages & DMCA→

