the suit He places pictures of copyright -protected personalities, such as Homer Sempson from Disney, as shown above on the right, as well as taking pictures with Midjourney solutions, to the left.
Disney Enterprises, Inc. , Marvel Forfery, Inc. , MVL Film Finance LLC, Lucasfilm Ltd. LLC, Twentieth Center Fox Film Corporation, Universal City Studios Productions LLLP and Dreamworks Animation V. Midjourney, Inc.
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Disney Enterprises, Inc. , Marvel Forfery, Inc. , MVL Film Finance LLC, Lucasfilm Ltd. LLC, Twentieth Center Fox Film Corporation, Universal City Studios Productions LLLP and Dreamworks Animation V. Midjourney, Inc.
In a kind of its kind, Disney and Universal entertainment companies sue the Midjourney Ai company for violating copyright.
the 110 pages, It was presented on Wednesday in a local American court in Los Angeles, and includes the detailed appendages that show the claimants of the prosecutors with visual examples and claim that Midjourney stole the “endless” to train the artificial intelligence engine in creating images created from artificial intelligence.
Many companies have gone after artificial intelligence companies due to the violation of copyright, such as New York Times (Which filed a lawsuit against Openai and Microsoft), Sony Music Entertainment (which filed a suit against AI Song Generator Startups Suno, UDIO) and Getty Images (AI AI). But this is the first time that the pioneering Hollywood players have joined the battle against the scene of artificial intelligence.

Midjourney, a force known in the AI’s generation space with about 20 million registered users, accuses the lawsuit. according to Data Insights Admissage, from “Selling AI”) to generate images (“Photo Service”) that works as a virtual sale machine, and generating unauthorized copies of unauthorized Disney and Universal works.
Details of the lawsuit details of the alleged violation of the famous Disney characters and international characters, including partner, Homer Simpson and Darath Vader.
It seeks unspecified compensation from the artificial intelligence company and aims to prevent it from launching an upcoming video service “without appropriate copyright protection measures.”
Midjourney did not immediately respond to the NPR request for comment.

