When Everyone Can Create, Who Owns What We Make?
ByteDance's Seedance 2.0 created viral celebrity deepfakes in minutes. This isn't a piracy crisis—it's the beginning of a new licensing model where AI lets anyone create personalized content while IP holders still own the rights.
TL;DR: ByteDance's Seedance 2.0 just created viral celebrity deepfakes in minutes, terrifying Hollywood and exciting creators. This isn't a piracy crisis. It's the beginning of a new licensing model where AI lets anyone create personalized content while IP holders still own the rights, exactly like software today.
ByteDance dropped a bomb last week that nobody saw coming.
Their Seedance 2.0 AI created photorealistic videos of Tom Cruise, Brad Pitt, and Donald Trump in minutes. Not deepfakes that look fake. Videos so convincing that Hollywood studios sent cease-and-desist letters before lunch and SAG-AFTRA issued a statement by dinner. This isn't "AI is getting better." This is the moment when what seemed years away arrived overnight.
Chinese tech companies are dropping new models weekly, each one more capable than the last. The creative power that once belonged to studios with million-dollar budgets is shifting to anyone with a laptop. The tools that remake Hollywood are the same tools in your pocket.
Here's what nobody's talking about: this isn't a crisis. It's a preview.
The Genie Is Out
ByteDance isn't worried about cease-and-desist letters. They're flexing. Trained on massive amounts of TikTok data, they wanted the world to know what's possible. The attention they're getting far exceeds any concern about IP copyright owners. And honestly? Mission accomplished.
But here's the thing that keeps me optimistic about all this. Eventually, this will all get sorted out. Not through lawsuits or regulations that can't keep pace. Through a model we already understand perfectly: software licensing.
Think about how you use software today. You don't own Microsoft Word. You license it. You get a copy that's uniquely yours, customized to your needs, running on your machine. But Microsoft still owns the IP. You can't resell it. You can't claim you invented it. The rules are clear, and they work.
Now imagine that same model applied to creative content.
Your Personal Hollywood
Here's the future I see coming, and it's not dystopian. It's exciting.
Content owners, whether they're Hollywood studios or individual creators, will license the rights to their IP. You'll be able to create a personalized version of your favorite movie, game, or story with the help of local AI running on your devices. Want a version of your favorite film where the pacing is faster? Done. Want to see your kid as the hero in an animated adventure? Easy.
But you don't own it. You licensed it. The IP holder still owns the underlying rights, just like software today. They set the terms. They collect the revenue. And you get something that feels custom-made for you at a reasonable cost.
I spent years at Symantec, where I was the first VP/GM for Cloud. We were figuring out how to move software from boxed products to licensed services. It was messy at first. People were worried about piracy, about losing control, about business models falling apart. But we figured it out. And the result? More access, more flexibility, more value for everyone.
This is the same transition, just in a different medium.
The Real Question
The question isn't whether AI can create realistic celebrity deepfakes. Clearly, it can. The question is: what happens when everyone can?
Terrifying if you're a studio trying to maintain total control. Liberating if you're a creator who's always wanted to tell stories but couldn't afford the tools. Inevitable if you've been paying attention to how technology evolves.
We're entering the Digital RenAIssance, and this is what it looks like in practice. Not machines replacing humans. Machines augmenting what humans have always wanted to do: create, personalize, imagine.
The tools are here. The models are working. The only thing left to figure out is the business model. And honestly? We've done this before.
How do you think personalized AI content should work? Should you be able to license your favorite characters and stories to create your own versions? What would you create first?
Steve Chazin helps everyday people understand and use emerging technology. Subscribe to "Tomorrow, Explained" at stevechazin.beehiiv.com for weekly AI insights that won't make your head hurt.