A recent lawsuit filed by Tony Robbins’ companies against YesChat.ai is making waves in the intersection of artificial intelligence and law, and for good reason. The case introduces several pressing legal questions surrounding the use of AI-generated personas and may very well-set new standards for how public figures and potentially all individuals are protected in the age of generative AI.
According to court documents, the defendants developed no fewer than eleven AI-powered chatbots designed to replicate Robbins’ persona, coaching style, and language. These bots were marketed under names such as “Talk to Tony Robbins” and “Tony Robbins GPT,” and monetized through subscription models. What makes this particularly significant is that Robbins already offers an official AI product meaning these bots aren't merely fan-made experiments but are instead competing directly with his commercial offerings.
The plaintiffs are seeking over $10 million in damages, calling this a "digital heist." And indeed, the legal implications go beyond just one individual. This case raises questions fundamental to the future of AI development:
This is not simply a case about deepfakes or cloned voices, issues which already pose their own legal challenges. What we are seeing here is the emergence of commercial AI personalities that can simulate real human interaction, all trained on proprietary content, without consent.
Globally, lawmakers are beginning to take notice and respond decisively. Across multiple jurisdictions, we are witnessing a surge in regulatory efforts aimed at protecting digital identity:
Denmark’s model is especially notable. By proposing that individuals, celebrity or not, hold copyright over their personal likeness, it grants ordinary users the same takedown powers that, until now, were largely reserved for public figures through mechanisms like the DMCA.
What happens in the Robbins case could be pivotal. It may determine whether AI developers need explicit permission before training or launching bots modelled on real individuals. The current “build first, ask forgiveness later” approach is increasingly running afoul of emerging laws and expectations.
As countries move swiftly to guard against the unauthorized use of likeness and personal content, the message to the tech industry is clear: the Wild West phase of AI is nearing its end. A more accountable era, grounded in legal safeguards and ethical use, is on the horizon.
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Author: Dr Ian Gauci