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California Senate Votes to Advance AI Copyright Bill

July 15, 2026

The California Senate Privacy, Technology and Consumer Protection Committee has advanced AB 412, legislation requiring developers of generative AI systems to disclose copyrighted materials used in their training processes. The bill would enable voice actors and other creative professionals to request lists of their copyrighted works used in AI datasets and sue developers who refuse compliance. While supporters like voice actor Matthew Parham argue the measure provides crucial protections for creators whose voices and works can currently be copied without legal recourse, opponents such as startup founder Chudi Iregbulem contend the compliance requirements would impose excessive costs on small companies.

Who is affected

  • Voice actors and members of the National Association of Voice Actors (NAVA)
  • Artists, creators, and copyright holders across California
  • AI developers and generative artificial intelligence companies
  • Startups like Beatmatch
  • Matthew Parham (professional voice actor and NAVA director of operations)
  • Chudi Iregbulem and his three-person startup team with over 10,000 users
  • Musicians, painters, and photographers whose works may be used in AI training

What action is being taken

  • The Senate Privacy, Technology and Consumer Protection Committee is voting in favor of AB 412
  • Assemblymember Bauer-Kahan is accepting committee amendments that narrow the measure by removing prescriptive technical language
  • Artists and creators from across California are traveling to Sacramento to witness the committee vote

Why it matters

  • This legislation addresses a significant legal gap where creators currently have no protection against AI companies copying their voices, faces, artwork, and other creative works to train artificial intelligence systems. Voice actors are particularly vulnerable because no one in America currently owns the right to their voice, meaning voices can be legally stolen. The bill matters because it would establish transparency requirements that fall within state jurisdiction while respecting federal copyright law, giving creators the ability to discover if their protected works were used without authorization and take legal action against non-compliant developers.

What's next

  • No explicit next steps stated in the article

Read full article from source: The San Diego Voice & Viewpoint

California Senate Votes to Advance AI Copyright Bill