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China - Anonymised individual v Anonymised applet developer, 29 April 2024

07 Jul 2026 International 3 min read

Anonymised individual v Anonymised applet developer, 29 April 2024

CourtPeople’s Court of Jiading District, Shanghai Municipality
CountryPRC (Mainland China)
Parties

Claimant: Anonymised individual

Defendant: Anonymised applet developer

Date Claim Issued29 April 2024
Type of ClaimCease and desist
Summary of Key Background FactsThe plaintiff is a photographer who holds the copyright to 13 video works published on a video-sharing platform. The defendant developed an applet and, without authorisation, used AI technology to “swap faces” in the plaintiff’s works for commercial purposes. These altered videos were displayed on the applet, allowing users to view them at any time and from any location. Furthermore, users were able to utilise the applet—along with the materials and technology provided by the defendant—to access and download the copyrighted videos with altered faces at their convenience.
Remedies sought

The claimant sought the following remedies:

  1. Remove infringing videos and prominently display a publicly issued apology statement within the applet for one consecutive month;
  2. Compensate the plaintiff for economic losses amounting to RMB 48,000 and reasonable legal expenses of RMB 2,000, totalling RMB 50,000.
Summary of key legal arguments

Claimant:

The defendant, without authorisation, used the claimant’s original classical-style video works to create new videos through AI face-swapping technology for the purpose of generating commercial traffic. This conduct constitutes an infringement of the claimant’s right to disseminate the works via information networks.

Defendant:

  1. The claimant published classical-style portrait photography videos on the social media platform, featuring a female protagonist with a highly recognisable appearance. There is a visually discernible difference between the female protagonists in the copyrighted videos and those in the AI-processed videos.
  2. The defendant utilised an AI video fusion interface to generate ‘face-swapped’ videos using synthetic algorithms. This process inherently blurs side-profile shots, and the videos uploaded by the defendant excluded such angles from the claimant’s original footage.
  3. The videos displayed by the defendant were provided by users of the applet to the defendant’s staff. To mitigate the risk of infringement, the defendant undertook corresponding processing prior to uploading, replacing the face in the claimant’s videos with that of a staff member.

Court’s Judgement:

  1. The AI-processed videos bear substantial similarity to the claimant’s copyrighted videos. It was created by partially replacing the original footage using AI face-swapping technology and lacks independent originality. The defendant did not contribute to the creative process or add any personal expression.
  2. The defendant’s conduct constitutes an infringement of the claimant’s right to disseminate their work via information networks. The AI-processed video closely mirrors the original’s expression and may serve as a market substitute, potentially diminishing its commercial value. Even if the videos were initially submitted by a user, the defendant’s staff directly received and processed it. As an internet service provider, the defendant failed to exercise reasonable diligence in addressing the risk of infringement.
CMS CommentThis case was recognised as an Intellectual Property Benchmark Case of 2024 by the Supreme People’s Court, providing important guidance on AI-related copyright infringement cases.

 

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