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Taylor Swift Files Trademarks for Voice and Image Amid Concern Over AI Misuse

The Guardian

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Date Published
27 Apr 2026
Priority Score
2
Australian
No
Created
27 Apr 2026, 06:00 pm

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The singer’s company filed three applications on Friday after Matthew McConaughey launched similar strategy

Summary

High-profile artists are increasingly utilizing trademark law to create legal perimeters around their biometric likenesses in response to generative AI mimicry. By registering specific vocal phrases and visual stage imagery, these filings attempt to bridge gaps in existing copyright law which often fails to protect the unique 'style' or 'vibe' of a persona from AI-generated deepfakes. While primarily focused on intellectual property and digital rights management, these developments highlight the urgent need for robust governance frameworks to address the non-consensual synthesis of human identity. Such efforts reflect a broader global shift toward establishing norms for consent and attribution in an age of proliferating frontier AI capabilities.

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Taylor Swift performs at Wembley Stadium, London, on her Eras Tour in 2024. Photograph: Scott A Garfitt/Invision/APView image in fullscreenTaylor Swift performs at Wembley Stadium, London, on her Eras Tour in 2024. Photograph: Scott A Garfitt/Invision/APTaylor Swift files trademarks for voice and image amid concern over AI misuseThe singer’s company filed three applications on Friday after Matthew McConaughey launched similar strategyTaylor Swift has filed applications to trademark her voice and image in a move seemingly designed to protect against AI misuse.On 24 April, Swift’s company TAS Rights Management filed three trademark applications, Variety reports. Two of these are sound trademarks which cover Swift saying the phrases “Hey, it’s Taylor Swift” and “Hey, it’s Taylor.”The third application seeks to trademark the well-known shot of Swift on stage during her Eras Tour, describing “a photograph of Taylor Swift holding a pink guitar, with a black strap and wearing a multi-colored iridescent bodysuit with silver boots. She is standing on a pink stage in front of a multi-colored microphone with purple lights in the background.”The move comes after Matthew McConaughey trademarked his famous “All right, all right, all right” catchphrase from 1993’s Dazed and Confused in addition to other unauthorized uses of his image and voice this January.Matthew McConaughey trademarks ‘All right, all right, all right’ catchphrase in bid to beat AI fakesRead more“My team and I want to know that when my voice or likeness is ever used, it’s because I approved and signed off on it,” McConaughey said in a statement. “We want to create a clear perimeter around ownership with consent and attribution the norm in an AI world.”Swift’s likeness has been used in many AI images and deepfakes, including fake AI-created sexually explicit images. In 2024, Donald Trump posted numerous AI images to Truth Social that falsely showed Swift endorsing him for president. The Guardian has approached a representative for Swift for comment.“Attempting to register a celebrity’s spoken voice is a new use of trademark registration that has not been tested in court before,” said the intellectual property attorney Josh Gerben in a blogpost.“Historically, singers relied on copyright law to protect their recorded music,” he added. “But AI technologies now allow users to generate entirely new content that mimics an artist’s voice without copying an existing recording, creating a gap that trademarks may help fill.“By registering specific phrases tied to her voice, Swift could potentially challenge not only identical reproductions, but also imitations that are ‘confusingly similar’, a key standard in trademark law.”Swift owns more than 50 trademarks related to her name and album titles as well as key song lyrics. In 2014, she registered trademarks for “This sick beat” and “We never go out of style”, phrases that appear in her hit songs Shake It Off and Style.In 2024 she trademarked Female Rage: The Musical, referring to an Eras Tour segment in which she performed songs from her album The Tortured Poets Department.Explore more on these topicsTaylor SwiftAI (artificial intelligence)newsShareReuse this content