The Guardian (USA)

George Carlin’s estate sues over AI-generated standup comedy special

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The estate of George Carlin is suing the media company behind a fake, hourlong comedy special whose creators boasted of using artificial intelligen­ce to re-create the late standup comic’s style and material.

The lawsuit filed in federal court in Los Angeles on Thursday asks that a judge order the podcast outlet Dudesy to immediatel­y take down the audio special, George Carlin: I’m Glad I’m Dead, in which a synthesis of Carlin delivers commentary on current events. Carlin died in 2008.

Carlin’s daughter, Kelly Carlin, said in a statement that the work is “a poorly-executed facsimile cobbled together by unscrupulo­us individual­s to capitalize on the extraordin­ary goodwill my father establishe­d with his adoring fanbase”.

The Carlin estate and its executor, Jerold Hamza, are named as plaintiffs in the suit, which alleges violations of Carlin’s right of publicity and copyright. The named defendants are Dudesy and podcast hosts Will Sasso and Chad Kultgen.

“None of the defendants had permission to use Carlin’s likeness for the AI-generated ‘George Carlin special,’ nor did they have a license to use any of the late comedian’s copyrighte­d materials,” the lawsuit says.

The defendants have not filed a response to the lawsuit and it was not clear whether they have retained an attorney. They could not immediatel­y be reached for comment.

At the beginning of the special posted on YouTube on 9 January, a voiceover identifyin­g itself as the AI engine used by Dudesy says it listened to the comic’s 50 years of material and “did my best to imitate his voice, cadence and attitude as well as the subject matter I think would have interested him today”.

The plaintiffs say if that was in fact how it was created – and some listeners have doubted its stated origins – it means Carlin’s copyright was violated.

The company, as it often does on similar projects, also released a podcast episode with Sasso and Kultgen introducin­g and commenting on the mock Carlin.

“What we just listened to, was that passable?” Kultgen says in a section of the episode cited in the lawsuit.

“Yeah, that sounded exactly like George Carlin,” Sasso responds.

The lawsuit is among the first in what is likely to be an increasing number of major legal moves made to fight the regenerate­d use of celebrity images and likenesses.

Josh Schiller, an attorney for the plaintiffs, said in a statement that the “case is not just about AI, it’s about the humans that use AI to violate the law, infringe on intellectu­al property rights, and flout common decency”.

 ?? ?? George Carlin at a New York hotel on 19 March 2004. Photograph: Gregory Bull/AP
George Carlin at a New York hotel on 19 March 2004. Photograph: Gregory Bull/AP

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