Nä'ä mä 'nar nt'uni mfädi ya ar ungumfädi, ByteDance xi nsu posponer lanzamiento global ár modelo generación vídeo AI, Seedance 2.0. ar 'ra'yo je̲ya herramienta, desarrollado ir nge ar empresa nä'ä ar TikTok, xki bí programado pa lanzar jar nga̲tho ar ximha̲i mediados ar Märso pe nu'bya ar xi retrasado nu'bya riesgos legales.

Seedance 2.0 bí lanzado 'me̲t'o jar Ntxinä nuna ar febrero. videos cortos generados ir nge ar modelo rápidamente ganaron Ntheti jar 'ñu, ko 'nar clip ko 'nar escena ar lucha digitalmente recreada entre Tom Cruise ne Brad Pitt provocando una controversia generalizada. ar contenido generado IA bí extendió rápidamente ja ya redes ja ya 'mui ne ngut'a atrajo fuertes reacciones Hollywood.
ar nt'uni mfädi señaló da, ja ar ga ar metraje, 'nar guionista prominente lamentó, “xähmä da termine pa Nugu̲je,” expresando preocupaciones dige ar impacto ar IA jar industria cine ne hyandi. Mente tanto, several major Hollywood studios swiftly took legal action, sending a flurry of cease-and-desist letters to ByteDance. Disney’s lawyers were particularly forceful in their response, accusing the company of a “virtual smash-and-grab of Disney’s IP.”
Facing pressure from the film industry, ByteDance has pledged to strengthen its intellectual property protection measures. According to insiders, the company is now focusing its efforts on having the engineering and legal teams jointly develop solutions to avoid further legal disputes.
As of press time, ByteDance had not responded to TechCrunch’s request for comment. This incident has once again sparked industry discussion regarding copyright issues surrounding AI-generated content. Finding a balance between technological innovation and intellectual property protection is emerging as a common challenge for tech companies.



















































































