Cate Blanchett Launches Human Consent Registry to Safeguard Identity Rights Against AI Exploitation

June 23, 2026
Cate Blanchett Launches Human Consent Registry to Safeguard Identity Rights Against AI Exploitation
  • Hollywood star and UNHCR goodwill ambassador Cate Blanchett launched the Human Consent Registry through her RSL Media nonprofit to let people control how their likeness is used by AI systems.

  • EU lawmakers, including MEP Eva Maydell, attended the launch and described the registry as turning consent principles into practical rights and trust-building mechanisms.

  • The registry treats identity as a form of intellectual property and aims to promote transparency, trust, and human-centric AI progress in line with evolving policies like the EU AI Act.

  • Future registries are anticipated for creative works, fictional characters, and brand marks, with regulators potentially adopting compliance measures as governance of AI training data tightens.

  • EU discussions include potential licensing for creative works and addressing impersonations or deepfakes, though progress differs across national efforts and proposed EU-wide steps.

  • Currently there is no enforcement mechanism compelling AI firms to follow signals, and users deposit personal data with a third party.

  • In a later phase, protections are planned to extend beyond individuals to cover works of art, brands, and other creations.

  • The effort follows earlier moves by others to police likeness use, such as McConaughey trademarking clips and Swift seeking trademark protection for images and sounds.

  • Support from filmmakers like Steven Soderbergh, Emma Thompson, and Helen Mirren highlights the registry as simple, independent, and essential for protecting artists’ rights.

  • Industry backing from figures like Kevin Huvane (CAA) underscores that consent offers meaningful control for artists in the AI era.

  • The registry targets individuals as well as third parties such as agents and managers and plans to expand protections to works of art, characters, and brands.

  • RSL Media says the registry will extend protection to works of art, characters, and brands in the future.

Summary based on 19 sources


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