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Actress and director Natasha Lyonne unveiled her production company’s ethical approach to AI video generation at Fortune’s Brainstorm AI conference in San Francisco last week, positioning Asteria Film Co. as a copyright-conscious alternative in an industry facing mounting legal challenges.yahoo
Speaking on December 8-9, Lyonne criticized competitors for what she described as reckless data practices, stating: “I don’t think it’s super kosher copacetic to just kind of rob freely under the auspices of acceleration or China”. Her comments come as AI video generators like OpenAI’s Sora 2 and Google’s Veo 3 face copyright controversies over training methods.fortune
Asteria, which Lyonne co-founded with filmmaker Bryn Mooser in 2022, partnered with Moonvalley AI to create Marey, an AI video generation tool named after pioneering cinematographer Étienne-Jules Marey. Unlike competitors that scrape web content, Marey trains exclusively on licensed, high-resolution footage or open-license material.fortune
The tool, now available to the public for $14.99 monthly, offers filmmakers production-grade capabilities including camera control, motion transfer, and trajectory control while generating videos up to 10 seconds at 1080p resolution. Moonvalley, founded by former DeepMind researchers, raised $84 million in July 2025 and positions itself as commercially safe for professional use.deadline
The timing underscores Hollywood’s broader AI reckoning. In October, the Motion Picture Association blasted Sora 2 after its launch enabled users to generate videos featuring copyrighted characters, forcing OpenAI to switch from an opt-out to opt-in model within 72 hours. The U.S. Copyright Office’s 2025 report concluded that using copyrighted materials for AI training may not constitute fair use, particularly when sourced from pirated content.cnbc
Lyonne emphasized the human cost, telling the Fortune conference that as AI adoption accelerates, “both tech and Hollywood need to respect the work of the cast, as well as the crew and the writers behind the scenes”. Her company aims to demonstrate that “powerful AI can be built while respecting artists’ and creators’ rights,” according to Moonvalley CEO Naeem Talukdar.fortune