DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Taylor Swift seeks further protections for her voice and likeness with new trademark filings

April 28, 2026
in News
Taylor Swift seeks further protections for her voice and likeness with new trademark filings

Taylor Swift is entering her trademark era.

The global pop star’s company, TAS Rights Management, filed three new trademark applications last week, per the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office. Two of the applications relate to soundbites of her voice, saying the phrases “Hey, it’s Taylor Swift” and “Hey, it’s Taylor.” The other is a well-known image of Swift, often representative of her recent Eras tour, featuring the 36-year-old onstage, holding her pink guitar and dressed in a shimmering bodysuit.

The push to lock down her public image comes at a time when many high-profile celebrities have called for regulations against unauthorized AI-generated content. Matthew McConaughey was one of the first Hollywood A-listers to leverage trademark law as an extra layer of protection.

In January, the “Interstellar” actor secured eight trademarks for his likeness, including images of him smiling and the iconic recording of him saying, “Alright, alright, alright,” from the 1993 movie “Dazed and Confused.”

“My team and I want to know that when my voice or likeness is ever used, it’s because I approved and signed off on it,” the actor told the Wall Street Journal in January. “We want to create a clear perimeter around ownership with consent and attribution the norm in an AI world.”

Registering a trademark for a celebrity’s speaking voice to defend against the prospect of AI-voice generation is a novel legal approach that has not yet been tested in court. Representatives for Swift did not respond to a request for comment on the intent of the recently filed trademarks. But Josh Gerben, one of the first attorneys to report Swift’s latest legal moves, said this is one of the growing gaps in intellectual property protection that AI can exploit.

Before AI infiltrated the internet, musicians, like Swift, would typically rely on copyright law to help prevent the unauthorized use and distribution of their music, while right to publicity laws would protect them from unlawful commercial use of their likeness. But with AI, users can manipulate people’s voices and images to sing or say practically anything.

So if McConaughey has a trademark on his voice saying a phrase, then theoretically any AI-generated voice that sounds similar to it could be considered a violation of that trademark, according to Gerben.

“If they have this trademark protection in place, then the [AI] platforms can’t use that same voice to create new content,” Gerben said. “Every celebrity would essentially have to go and do the same thing, but it’s trying to cut this off at the source as much as possible.”

Variety first reported news of Swift’s trademark filing.

As one of the most popular musicians, Swift has dealt with her share of unauthorized AI-generated content. She was previously one of the many female celebrities whose likeness was among several of Meta’s AI chatbot virtual celebrities. The illicit chatbots allegedly produced pornographic images. Before the 2024 presidential election, Donald Trump also shared AI-generated images of Swift falsely suggesting that she had endorsed him, including one of her dressed as Uncle Sam with the words, “Taylor wants you to vote for Donald Trump.”

Because Swift is such a recognizable public figure, Luke Arrigoni, the chief executive of Loti AI, a tech company that focuses on likeness protection, said trademark filings like these aren’t merely defensive but rather a setup for a long-term protective infrastructure.

“By locking down these trademarks now, she’s ensuring that if a brand wants to use a ‘Swift-like’ AI voice in 2027, they’ll have to go through her authorized gates or face federal trademark infringement,” Arrigoni said in a statement. “She’s essentially putting a price tag on her digital self, and that’s exactly where the entire talent industry needs to go to survive.”

The post Taylor Swift seeks further protections for her voice and likeness with new trademark filings appeared first on Los Angeles Times.

Horrific moment motorcycle smashes into car, killing rider and seriously wounding passenger
News

Horrific moment motorcycle smashes into car, killing rider and seriously wounding passenger

by New York Post
April 28, 2026

Horrifying video shows a motorcycle slamming into a car in Russia, killing the rider and seriously wounding the passenger as ...

Read more
News

UAE To Exit OPEC After Nearly 60 Years

April 28, 2026
News

I’ve traveled solo to all 50 states. Here are the places I’d recommend to first-time solo travelers.

April 28, 2026
News

OPEC shocker as UAE leaves oil cartel days after negotiating swap lines with Scott Bessent’s Treasury

April 28, 2026
News

The Small U.K. Agency That’s a 911 for Ships in the Strait of Hormuz

April 28, 2026
Adopting Trump’s Voice, Justice Dept. Asks Judge to Let Ballroom Proceed

Adopting Trump’s Voice, Justice Dept. Asks Judge to Let Ballroom Proceed

April 28, 2026
A DOGE Affiliate Is Now in Charge of the US Government’s ID Platform

A DOGE Affiliate Is Now in Charge of the US Government’s ID Platform

April 28, 2026
F.B.I. Knew Civil Rights Group Informants Helped Bring Down Extremists, Lawyers Say

F.B.I. Knew Civil Rights Group Informants Helped Bring Down Extremists, Lawyers Say

April 28, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026