Contents
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Deepfakes: An Emerging Threat to Digital Identity
- 3 Denmark’s Legal Innovation: Copyright-Based Deepfake Regulation
- 4 Efficacy of Legal Frameworks in Combating Deepfakes
- 5 Global and Indian Legal Landscape
- 6 Implementation and Enforcement Challenges
- 7 Balancing Innovation with Rights
- 8 Conclusion
Introduction
As deepfake technology advances, safeguarding digital identity becomes essential. Denmark’s proposal to use copyright law for deepfake regulation signals a novel legal response to preserve individual rights in a digital era.
Deepfakes: An Emerging Threat to Digital Identity
- Definition: Deepfakes are AI-generated synthetic media that replicate an individual’s voice, appearance, or expressions to depict events that never occurred.
- Rise in misuse: According to Sensity AI, deepfake videos online have doubled every six months since 2019, with over 90% being non-consensual pornography.
- Consequences: Deepfakes have been used for cyberbullying, political misinformation (e.g., Ukraine conflict), financial fraud, and identity theft, undermining trust and democracy.
- India’s experience: Cases involving fake videos of celebrities like Rashmika Mandanna and public figures have stirred demand for urgent legal remedies.
Denmark’s Legal Innovation: Copyright-Based Deepfake Regulation
- Imitation Protection: Prohibits sharing deepfakes using someone’s voice or face without consent.
- Performance Protection: Covers acts not traditionally protected by copyright (e.g., spontaneous artistic performances).
- 50-Year Protection: Prohibits publication of deepfakes for up to five decades post an individual’s death.
- Consent-centric approach: The onus lies on the content creator to prove prior consent from the impersonated individual.
- Platform accountability: Mandates removal of deepfakes and imposes penalties on non-compliant digital platforms.
Efficacy of Legal Frameworks in Combating Deepfakes
- Expanding rights: Unlike India and most nations, Denmark’s law extends protections to all individuals, not just public figures.
- Civil remedy: Enables take-downs and compensation, shifting enforcement to courts rather than vague penal provisions.
- Preventive power: Harm-agnostic design deters creation and dissemination by outlawing realism-based impersonation, regardless of intent.
Global and Indian Legal Landscape
- India: No standalone deepfake law. Courts rely on:
- Privacy rights (Puttaswamy judgment, 2017).
- Publicity rights (e.g., Amitabh Bachchan, Anil Kapoor cases).
- Defamation and IT Act (Section 66E, 67).
- EU’s AI Act: Imposes transparency obligations for deepfake content.
- USA: Some states (e.g., California, Texas) ban deepfakes in election/pornographic contexts. No federal law yet.
- China: 2023 regulations require explicit consent before publishing synthetic content.
Implementation and Enforcement Challenges
- Jurisdictional limits: Denmark’s law applies only within national boundaries — enforcement against foreign violators is difficult.
- Enforcement burden: Courts may be overburdened; proving consent or realism might be technically complex.
- Satire and fair use: Ambiguity over what qualifies as parody or fair expression could lead to litigation.
- Tech evolution: Deepfake detection often lags behind creation capabilities, requiring constant upskilling of enforcement agencies.
Balancing Innovation with Rights
- Laws must protect digital rights without stifling innovation in generative AI.
- Promoting AI ethics frameworks, encouraging watermarking standards, and public awareness campaigns are key complements to legal tools.
- India’s opportunity: With the upcoming Digital India Act, India can integrate consent-driven deepfake regulation inspired by Denmark.
Conclusion
Denmark’s copyright-based model offers a progressive path for digital identity protection. Yet, global collaboration, technical safeguards, and agile enforcement remain essential to curb deepfake misuse without curbing innovation.


