Zack Sharf Bruce Willis did not sell his rights to a deepfake studio, despite reports of the contrary that recently went viral online.
The Telegraph reported at the end of Sept. that Willis made history as “the first Hollywood star to sell his rights to allow a ‘digital twin’ of himself to be created for use on screen.” While a “digital twin” of Willis was created by the deepfake company Deepcake to be used in an advertisement for the Russian telecoms company MegaFon, Deepcake does not own the rights to Willis’ image or to his “digital twin.” Willis’ representative confirmed to Variety that “there is no partnership or agreement that exists between Bruce and Deepcake.” A spokesperson for Deepcake told Variety the same, adding, “The rights to Bruce Willis’ image [and] to his Digital Twin belong to Bruce Willis and to him only.” Deepcake is an AI-powered content creation platform that creates “digital twins” of celebrities using their likeness, but they do not maintain the rights over these “digital twins.” The spokesperson added, “One gets their own fully accurate ‘digital twin’ which may substitute them anywhere – on their own decision.” According to Deepcake, the studio worked with MegaFon in August 2021 on an ad campaign starring Bruce Willis.
Deepcake did not work with Willis’ team directly and never entered into an agreement with him to use his “digital twin” for any additional purpose. “Our engineers processed a dataset composed of 34,000 images of Bruce Willis and made his ‘digital twin’ for the series of MegaFon ads,” the spokesperson said. “Bruce Willis, whose bilateral contractual agreements with MegaFon remain unknown to Deepcake, appreciated our service and described it as ‘a very new and interesting
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