ByteDance has paused plans to launch its new AI video model globally, according to a report in The Information.
The Chinese company, best known as TikTok’s parent organization (and now a minority shareholder in its U.S. spinoff), launched Seedance 2.0 in China back in February. Brief videos generated by the model, including a clip featuring Tom Cruise fighting Brad Pitt, soon went viral and drew intense criticism from Hollywood.
While one successful screenwriter declared that the footage meant, “It’s likely over for us,” studios quickly sent ByteDance a flurry of cease-and-desist letters, with Disney’s lawyers accusing the company of a “virtual smash-and-grab of Disney’s IP.” ByteDance responded by promising to introduce stronger safeguards for intellectual property.
The company had planned to make Seedance 2.0 available globally in mid-March, The Information said, but it’s delaying those plans as its engineers and lawyers work to avert further legal issues.
ByteDance did not immediately respond to TechCrunch’s request for comment.
KelpDAO plans to adopt Chainlink CCIP after the massive exploit last month. KelpDAO has…
Elon Musk has repeatedly warned that AI may reshape the world faster than most people…
Business insurance startup Corgi announced on Wednesday a $160 million Series B, led by TCV,…
Key TakeawaysStake and Roobet lead Canada’s offshore iGaming market, where top operators capture 60% of…
Senator Kirsten Gillibrand took the Consensus Miami 2026 mainstage on Day 2 and expressed optimism…
Topics include growth hacking, game design, blockchain, AI, digital marketing, cybersecurity, copywriting, and big data.…