According to TheWrap and Deadline, the Senate Judiciary Committee unanimously cleared the bipartisan No Fakes Act by voice vote on Thursday. The legislation would create a legal right for individuals to authorize the use of their voice and likeness in AI-generated videos and photos and to demand takedowns of unauthorized digital replicas, with that post-mortem right transferable to heirs and terminating no longer than 70 years after death (Deadline). The bill includes First Amendment carve-outs for news, parody, and reporting and adds a counter-notice process and a single national rule to limit litigation and provide safe-harbor for platforms that promptly remove unauthorized deepfakes (TheWrap, Deadline). Sponsors and supporters include senators Thom Tillis, Marsha Blackburn, Amy Klobuchar, Chris Coons, multiple entertainment unions such as SAG-AFTRA, and tech companies including OpenAI and Google/YouTube (TheWrap; Deadline). It is unclear when the full Senate will vote (TheWrap).
What happened
According to TheWrap, the Senate Judiciary Committee unanimously cleared the No Fakes Act by voice vote on Thursday. Deadline reports the committee vote was unanimous, though Deadline notes three Republican senators raised First Amendment concerns. Per Deadline, the bill creates a legal right for individuals to authorize the use of their voice and likeness in AI-generated photos and videos and to demand removal of unauthorized digital replicas. Deadline also reports the bill makes that right transferable to heirs and executors and that the post-mortem right terminates no longer than 70 years after death. TheWrap reports the legislation includes First Amendment exceptions for news reporting and parody and adds a new counter-notice procedure to challenge removals. TheWrap writes the bill also aims to impose a single national rule to reduce litigation and allows platforms to avoid liability when they promptly remove unauthorized deepfakes. TheWrap and Deadline list sponsors and supporters including senators Thom Tillis, Marsha Blackburn, Amy Klobuchar, Chris Coons, entertainment unions such as SAG-AFTRA, and tech companies including OpenAI and Google/YouTube. TheWrap notes it is unclear when the legislation will be placed on the Senate floor.
Editorial analysis - technical context
Companies and platforms that host user-generated media will face operational questions about implementing the bill's counter-notice procedures and takedown timelines. Industry-pattern observations: similar federal and state content-rights rules typically require technical investments in automated detection, human review workflows, metadata provenance, and appeals handling to meet notice-and-takedown timelines without excessive over-removal.
Industry context
Industry reporting frames the bill as a response to increasing use of AI-generated digital replicas; TheWrap cites the White House's March legislative framework urging federal protections for unauthorized AI-generated replicas. Observed patterns in comparable regulatory changes show entertainment guilds and rights-holders push for clear private rights of action while technology companies press for safe-harbors and First Amendment carve-outs. This bill includes both approaches by pairing takedown rights with counter-notice and exemptions for news, documentary, parody, and archival research (Deadline; TheWrap).
What to watch
Observers should watch whether the Senate Majority Leader schedules a floor vote and whether amendments emerge that change the scope of post-mortem rights, the definition of covered "digital replicas," or platform liability. Also monitor how platforms and content-hosting services update policy, detection, and appeals tooling in response to a passed law, and whether any constitutional challenges test the bill's balance between removal procedures and free-speech protections.
Scoring Rationale #
The bill would create a nationwide legal framework affecting platforms, creators, and rights-holders, making it notable for practitioners working on content moderation, provenance, and compliance. It is not yet law and still faces floor scheduling and possible amendments.
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