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Public Act 103-0836 |
HB4875 Enrolled | LRB103 38718 BDA 68855 b |
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AN ACT concerning civil law. |
Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, |
represented in the General Assembly: |
Section 5. The Right of Publicity Act is amended by |
changing Sections 5, 20, 30, and 35 as follows: |
(765 ILCS 1075/5) |
Sec. 5. Definitions. As used in this Act: |
"Artificial intelligence" means a machine-based system |
that, for explicit or implicit objectives, infers, from the |
input it receives, how to generate outputs such as |
predictions, content, recommendations, or decisions that can |
influence physical or virtual environments. "Artificial |
intelligence" includes generative artificial intelligence. |
"Commercial purpose" means the public use or holding out |
of an individual's identity (i) on or in connection with the |
offering for sale or sale of a product, merchandise, goods, or |
services; (ii) for purposes of advertising or promoting |
products, merchandise, goods, or services; or (iii) for the |
purpose of fundraising. |
"Application software provider" means a person providing a |
digital distribution service for other software applications |
and that allows users to search for and download such |
applications. |
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"Cloud service provider" means a cloud service provider as |
defined by 6 U.S.C. 650. |
"Digital replica" means a newly created, electronic |
representation of the voice, image, or likeness of an actual |
individual created using a computer, algorithm, software, |
tool, artificial intelligence, or other technology that is |
fixed in a sound recording or audiovisual work in which that |
individual did not actually perform or appear, and which a |
reasonable person would believe is that particular |
individual's voice, image, or likeness being imitated. |
"Generative artificial intelligence" means an automated |
computing system that, when prompted with human prompts, |
descriptions, or queries, can produce outputs that simulate |
human-produced content, including, but not limited to, the |
following: |
(1) textual outputs, such as short answers, essays, |
poetry, or longer compositions or answers; |
(2) image outputs, such as fine art, photographs, |
conceptual art, diagrams, and other images; |
(3) multimedia outputs, such as audio or video in the |
form of compositions, songs, or short-form or long-form |
audio or video; and |
(4) other content that would be otherwise produced by |
human means. |
"Identity" means any attribute of an individual that |
serves to identify that individual to an ordinary, reasonable |
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viewer or listener, including but not limited to : (i) name, |
(ii) signature, (iii) photograph, (iv) image, (v) likeness, or |
(vi) voice. |
"Individual" means a living or deceased natural person, |
regardless of whether the identity of that individual has been |
used for a commercial purpose during the individual's |
lifetime. |
"Juristic person" means a partnership, trust, estate, |
corporation, unincorporated association, or other organization |
capable of suing and being sued in a court of law. |
"Name" means the actual name or other name by which an |
individual is known that is intended to identify that |
individual. |
"Person" means a natural or juristic person. "Person" only |
includes a service provider under subsections (b) and (d) of |
Section 30 if the service provider created the unauthorized |
digital replica. "Person" does not include a data center, as |
defined by the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity |
Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois, under |
subsections (b) and (d) of Section 30. |
"Service provider" means any entity offering broadband |
service as that term is used in Section 10 of the Broadband |
Advisory Council Act, a wireless carrier as defined by 47 |
U.S.C. 615b(4), or a telecommunication carrier as that term is |
used in Section 13-202 of the Public Utilities Act. |
"Unauthorized digital replica" means the use of a digital |
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replica of an individual without the consent of the |
appropriate person or persons identified in Section 20 or |
their authorized representative. |
"Work of Fine Art" means (i) a visual rendition including, |
but not limited to, a painting, drawing, sculpture, mosaic, |
videotape, or photograph; (ii) a work of calligraphy; (iii) a |
work of graphic art including, but not limited to, an etching, |
lithograph, serigraph, or offset print; (iv) a craft work in |
materials including, but not limited to, clay, textile, fiber, |
wood, metal, plastic, or glass; or (v) a work in mixed media |
including, but not limited to, a collage, assemblage, or work |
consisting of any combination of items (i) through (iv). |
(Source: P.A. 90-747, eff. 1-1-99.) |
(765 ILCS 1075/20) |
Sec. 20. Enforcement of rights and remedies. |
(a) The rights and remedies set forth in this Act may be |
exercised and enforced by: |
(1) an individual or his or her authorized |
representative; |
(2) a person to whom the recognized rights have been |
transferred by written transfer under Section 15 of this |
Act; or |
(3) after the death of an individual who has not |
transferred the recognized rights by written transfer |
under this Act, any person or persons who possesses an |
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interest in those rights. |
(a-5) In addition to the enforcement of rights and |
remedies in subsection (a), the rights and remedies set forth |
in this Act may, in the case of an individual who is a |
recording artist, be enforced by: |
(1) the individual who is the recording artist; or |
(2) a person who has entered into a contract for the |
individual's exclusive personal services as a recording |
artist or who has entered into a contract for an exclusive |
license to distribute sound recordings that capture the |
recording artist's audio performances. |
(b) Each person described in paragraph (3) of subsection |
(a) shall make a proportional accounting to, and shall act at |
all times in good faith with respect to, any other person in |
whom the rights being enforced have vested. |
(Source: P.A. 90-747, eff. 1-1-99.) |
(765 ILCS 1075/30) |
Sec. 30. Limitations regarding use of an individual's |
identity. |
(a) A person may not use an individual's identity for |
commercial purposes during the individual's lifetime without |
having obtained previous written consent from the appropriate |
person or persons specified in Section 20 of this Act or their |
authorized representative. |
(b) A person may not knowingly distribute, transmit, or |
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make available to the general public a sound recording or |
audiovisual work with actual knowledge that the work contains |
an unauthorized digital replica. |
(c) If an individual's death occurs after the effective |
date of this Act, a person may not use that individual's |
identity or digital replica in violation of this Act for |
commercial purposes for 50 years after the date of the |
individual's death without having obtained previous written |
consent from the appropriate person or persons specified in |
Section 20 of this Act. |
(d) Any person who materially contributes to, induces, or |
otherwise facilitates a violation of subsection (b) by another |
person after having obtained actual knowledge that the other |
person is infringing upon an individual's rights under this |
Section may be found liable for the violation. |
(e) Subsection (d) does not apply to a person that solely |
transmits, stores, or provides access to data or software, |
including interactive entertainment software, application |
software providers, or cloud service providers with respect to |
any unauthorized digital replica stored or transmitted at the |
direction of a user of material that resides on a system or |
network, if the person: |
(1) does not have actual knowledge that the material |
or an activity using the material on the system or network |
is unauthorized; |
(2) in the absence of such actual knowledge, does not |
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willfully disregard facts or circumstances that would |
create actual knowledge; or |
(3) upon obtaining actual knowledge, facts or |
circumstances that would create actual knowledge, or |
written notification of claimed unauthorized activity, |
acts expeditiously to remove or disable access to the |
material that is the subject of infringing activity; if |
the person does not personally have the ability to remove |
or disable access to the material, the person acts |
expeditiously to notify the person that has the ability to |
remove or disable access to the material. As used in this |
subsection, "expeditiously" has the same meaning as it |
does in 17 U.S.C. 512. |
(f) Subject to the limitations in subsection (e), all of |
the elements of 17 U.S.C. 512 shall be incorporated mutatis |
mutandis with respect to claims relating to unauthorized |
digital replicas. This exemption shall apply without regard to |
whether the unauthorized version infringes copyright. |
(g) Nothing in this Act may be construed in a manner |
inconsistent with 47 U.S.C. 230 or any other federal law. |
(Source: P.A. 90-747, eff. 1-1-99.) |
(765 ILCS 1075/35) |
Sec. 35. Applicability. |
(a) This Act applies to acts or events that take place |
after the effective date of this Act. |
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(b) Subsections (a) and (c) of Section 30 do This Act does |
not apply to the following: |
(1) use of an individual's identity in an attempt to |
portray, describe, or impersonate that individual in a |
live performance, a single and original work of fine art, |
play, book, article, musical work, film, radio, |
television, or other audio, visual, or audio-visual work, |
provided that the performance, work, play, book, article, |
or film does not constitute in and of itself a commercial |
advertisement for a product, merchandise, goods, or |
services; |
(2) use of an individual's identity for non-commercial |
purposes, including any news, public affairs, or sports |
broadcast or account, or any political campaign; |
(3) use of an individual's name in truthfully |
identifying the person as the author of a particular work |
or program or the performer in a particular performance; |
(4) promotional materials, advertisements, or |
commercial announcements for a use described under |
paragraph (1), (2), or (3) of this subsection; or |
(5) use of photographs, videotapes, and images by a |
person, firm, or corporation practicing the profession of |
photography ("professional photographer") to exhibit in or |
about the professional photographer's place of business or |
portfolio, specimens of the professional photographer's |
work, unless the exhibition is continued by the |
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professional photographer after written notice objecting |
to the exhibition has been given by the individual |
portrayed. |
(c) Subsections (b) and (c) of Section 30 do not apply to |
the use of identity or digital replicas in the following: |
(1) news, public affairs, or a sports broadcast or |
account, or any political campaign; |
(2) for a purpose that has political, public interest, |
educational, or newsworthy value, unless use of the |
audiovisual digital replica is intended to create, and |
does create, the false impression to a reasonable viewer |
or listener that the work is an authentic recording in |
which the individual participated; |
(3) use of a digital replica to depict the individual |
in a documentary, docudrama, or historical or biographical |
audiovisual work, or any other representation of the |
individual as such individual, regardless of the degree of |
fictionalization, unless the use of the audiovisual |
digital replica creates the false impression to a |
reasonable viewer or listener that the digital replica is |
an authentic recording or that the individual participated |
in the work, including, for example, in a live performance |
of a musical work an individual did not participate in; |
(4) use of digital replica for the purposes of |
comment, criticism, scholarship, satire, or parody; or |
(5) promotional materials, advertisements, or |