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December 16, 2025

AI Copyright Infringement Risks for Businesses

Disney’s letter to Google highlights growing AI copyright infringement risks for businesses using AI-generated images and content.

Artificial intelligence has rapidly become a common tool for generating images, videos, and marketing content. But a recent cease-and-desist letter sent by Disney to Google highlights a growing legal risk that businesses can no longer afford to overlook: AI copyright infringement.

According to reports, Disney has accused Google of infringing its copyrighted works on a “massive scale” through AI systems that allegedly generate and distribute unauthorized images and videos of Disney’s characters. While the dispute is between two corporate giants, the implications extend to any business using AI-generated content commercially.

Disney’s Cease-and-Desist Highlights AI Copyright Infringement Concerns

According to reporting by TechCrunch, Disney’s letter reportedly alleges that Google’s AI services function as a “virtual vending machine,” capable of reproducing copyrighted characters and works at scale. The claims reference well-known properties including Frozen, The Lion King, Moana, The Little Mermaid, and Deadpool.

Disney further alleges that some AI-generated images were branded with Google’s Gemini logo, potentially creating the false impression that Disney authorized or endorsed the content. That allegation raises not only copyright concerns, but also trademark infringement and false endorsement risks.

Google has stated that it will engage with Disney and emphasized that it relies on public web data and offers copyright controls. Notably, the dispute emerged the same day Disney announced a major AI partnership elsewhere, highlighting the difference between licensed AI use and unauthorized reproduction.

Why AI-Generated Content Creates Copyright Risk

Many businesses assume that AI-generated images are inherently safe to use because they are produced by automated systems. That assumption is increasingly dangerous.

From a legal perspective, AI-generated content can infringe copyright if it:

The scale and speed of generative AI amplify this risk. What might be minor infringement when created by a human artist can become widespread unauthorized distribution when generated repeatedly by an AI model.

In short, using AI art does not eliminate copyright obligations.

Can AI Legally Use Copyrighted Characters?

One of the most common questions businesses ask is: can AI legally use copyrighted characters?

The answer is generally no, at least not without permission.

Copyright law protects characters, visual elements, and expressive features of creative works. If an AI system generates images or videos that reproduce those protected elements, the output may be infringing, regardless of how it was created.

This is especially true when:

Businesses should not assume that AI output qualifies as “fair use” simply because it was generated by a machine.

Who Is Responsible for AI Copyright Infringement?

Another critical issue is liability. Many AI providers include terms stating that users, not the platform, are responsible for how AI outputs are used.

As previously noted by our firm in commentary to The Register on generative AI litigation:

“If companies want to mitigate risks, they should integrate real human creativity in final materials, thoroughly vet their outputs for existing works, document the creative process, and, for any AI tools they do use, make sure they’re aware of licensing terms.”

(You can read the full article in The Register here: https://www.theregister.com/2025/08/12/genai_lawsuit/)

This guidance is becoming increasingly important as enforcement actions and lawsuits accelerate.

How Businesses Can Reduce AI Copyright Infringement Risk

Companies using AI-generated content should adopt proactive risk-management practices, including:

AI can be a powerful assistive tool, but it should not replace careful legal review.

AI Copyright Laws Are Still Evolving

Courts and regulators are still determining how existing copyright laws apply to generative AI. What is clear, however, is that enforcement activity is increasing and major rights holders are willing to act when they believe their intellectual property is being exploited.

For businesses, waiting for perfect legal clarity may be costly. Risk awareness and compliance now can prevent expensive disputes later.

How Our Firm Can Help

Have a question about your matter?

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