Skip to content
 Lamar as a deepfaked Will Smith in his music video. Kendrick Lamar. CTTO: cnet.com
Lamar as a deepfaked Will Smith in his music video. Kendrick Lamar. CTTO: cnet.com

News -

Could rapper Kendrick Lamar get sued for using deepfake technology in his music video ‘The Heart Part 5’?

Infamous rapper Kendrick Lamar's latest music video ‘The Heart Part 5’ is garnering views not only for the song, but also for the use of deepfake technology to morph his face into several popular faces from the entertainment industry. The question now is whether he can be sued for using different faces without seeking their permission.

In the video, he digitally adds the likenesses of rappers like Will Smith, Jussie Smollett and Nipsey Hussle as well as sport personalities O.J. Simpson and the late Kobe Bryant .

Lamar said his five-minute music video is about perspective. After rapping the opening line, his face is morphed into Smith while mentioning the Oscars 2022 moment where he slapped Chris Rock.

He later took on the face of Smollett and rapped about the actor's desire to represent the Black community.

Deepfake is a type of artificial intelligence (AI) technology that can add faces and voices to an existing film or footage. It makes use of a number of images and videos of a person captured from various angles.

Copyright attorney Aaron Moss, chair of Greenberg Glusker’s litigation department, said: “Looking at it from the perspective of how [the deepfake] was used in the creative process, you have to focus on the different meaning and message that the resulting use ends up communicating.” Copyright attorney Alan Friedman, partner at Fox Rothschild, believes that deepfakes in the video appear “highly transformative” and that “fair use would be a strong defense to a copyright challenge.”

This technology is increasingly being used in recent years, like Channel 4's "Alternative Christmas Message" in the UK which featured Queen Elizabeth II addressing her citizens by dancing.

But it has also been used as a weapon of propaganda.

Recently, a fake video of Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy asking his troops to surrender to Russia was doing the rounds.

PitchMark helps innovators deter idea theft, so that third-parties that they share their idea with get the idea but don’t take it. Visit PitchMark.net and register for free as a PitchMark member today.

Topics

Categories

Contacts

Mark Laudi

Mark Laudi

Press contact Managing Partner (+65) 6223 2249

Related content

Image from VERIFY

Deepfake of Ukraine’s Zelenskyy shows that IP laws governing such tech is urgently needed

Recently, a video featuring a deepfake version of Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy appeared on social media, asking his troops to surrender in the ongoing war with Russia.
The video was quickly identified as a fake, partly due to its poor quality. Zelenskyy also swiftly posted a video of himself exposing the deepfake, and Facebook, YouTube and Twitter announced they had removed the vide

Screengrab of Cadbury video explaining how Bollywood star Shah Rukh Khan's digital avatar was used in its ad campaign

That's not really Shah Rukh Khan — the growing prevalence of deepfakes throws up urgent IP questions

For those celebrating the festival of Deepavali/Diwali in India this month, take a second look at any seasonal ads starring celebrities. You might just be looking at a digital avatar created by artificial intelligence rather than the real star.

Rephrase.ai, a Bengaluru-based startup, says in a report published on Rest of World that they are working on some of these ads. Here’s what they do

Source: Instagram account of Duan Mei Yue and Angelina Poveteva

Rip-off or not: Singaporean model accused Russian artist of using the likeness of her face on a topless body and exhibiting it for sale

Singaporean model Duan Mei Yue has accused Russian artist Angelina Poveteva of painting the likeness of her face on a topless body, and then exhibiting the painting at a Moscow art fair and selling it without her consent.
Duan published a two-minute video on social media to raise her concern along with the supporting evidence. She claimed that Poveteva had sold the painting to two buyers for US

Bodyright image source: www.unfpa.org/bodyright

Can UNFPA’s “bodyright” initiative stop women from getting abused in the virtual world?

UNFPA, a United Nations sexual and reproductive health agency, wants to change the way women are treated in the virtual world and is urging them to join their global movement.
The internet provides an important space for women who want to express themselves and garner professional opportunities. However, this access acts as a double-edged sword because they disproportionately face all forms of

Let your clients get the idea, without taking it.

PitchMark deters idea theft and provides you with options if it happens.

PitchMark protects the expression of your original concepts, designs, proposals, business plans, creative pitches, music - in short, any idea that you conceived and published, and claim as your own. It gives you peace-of-mind by signalling to whoever you share it with that you are its creator, and that you wish to be respected as such.

If you receive or evaluate ideas or pitches, join PitchMark as a sign of your commitment to respect the Intellectual Property rights of their creators. Attract more in-depth pitches from a wider range of sources. Highlight your PitchMark membership in your Sustainability or CSR Report.

PitchMark