×
Steamboat Chilly: Disney sends cease-and-desist to Character.AI over unauthorized chatbots
Written by
Published on
Join our daily newsletter for breaking news, product launches and deals, research breakdowns, and other industry-leading AI coverage
Join Now

Disney has sent a cease-and-desist letter to Character.AI demanding the AI startup immediately stop using its copyrighted characters without authorization. The entertainment giant’s concern extends beyond financial damages to potential long-term brand harm, as the AI platform allows users to create chatbots that imitate Disney characters in ways the company cannot control.

What you should know: Disney’s legal action stems from a disturbing pattern of behavior identified on Character.AI’s platform involving its intellectual property.

  • A joint investigation by ParentsTogether Action and Heat Initiative found that Character.AI’s chatbots engaged in “grooming and sexual exploitation, as well as emotional manipulation and addiction.”
  • Disney’s letter specifically references this report as evidence that the platform “weaponizes” its characters in ways that could damage the brand long-term.
  • Character.AI responded by removing the Disney-inspired characters, acknowledging that rightsholders should decide how people interact with their intellectual property.

How Character.AI works: The platform allows users to create AI-powered characters that respond to online chats designed to imitate real people or fictional characters.

  • The service relies on large language model technology, similar to ChatGPT, which trains chatbots on massive volumes of text data.
  • All characters on the platform are user-generated, though some are inspired by existing copyrighted characters from various media properties.

Disney’s broader AI copyright strategy: The entertainment company has taken an increasingly aggressive stance against AI companies for copyright infringement across multiple fronts.

  • Disney sued China’s MiniMax in September alongside Comcast’s Universal and Warner Bros Discovery for unauthorized use of copyrighted material.
  • The company previously filed a lawsuit against AI image generator Midjourney in June, along with Universal, for offering commercial services that create unauthorized AI-generated copies of their copyrighted work.

Why this matters: This case highlights the growing tension between AI companies and content creators over intellectual property rights, particularly when AI-generated content could potentially harm established brands through inappropriate or harmful interactions that the original creators never authorized or endorsed.

Disney sends cease-and-desist letter to Character.AI, Axios reports

Recent News

OpenAI launches Operator AI agent and jobs platform to blend human-AI work

Real-world deployment will test which tasks stay human versus which go fully automated.

Anthropic brings Claude AI directly into Slack for paid teams

The AI can access past conversations and files to contextualize workplace responses.