One of the most talked-about AI video generators in recent weeks may not arrive as quickly as expected. According to a new report by The Information, TikTok parent ByteDance has reportedly suspended the global rollout of its Seedance 2.0 video-generation model after running into copyright disputes with major Hollywood studios and streaming platforms.
Seedance 2.0, which debuted earlier this year, quickly went viral online for its ability to generate highly realistic video clips from simple prompts. The model can create short videos from text or images, making it one of the latest entrants in the fast-growing text-to-video AI race alongside tools like OpenAI’s Sora and Google Veo.
Why is ByteDance delaying the launch?
The delay appears to be tied to growing legal pressure from the entertainment industry. According to reports, several Hollywood studios and streaming companies, including Disney, Netflix, and Paramount, raised concerns that the model may have been trained on copyrighted film and TV content without permission. Some AI-generated clips circulating online reportedly featured recognizable characters or actors from popular franchises, triggering legal warnings.
Disney has reportedly sent a cease-and-desist letter to ByteDance, alleging that copyrighted works were used in the model’s training data and that some outputs reproduced protected intellectual property. Faced with these concerns, ByteDance has reportedly paused the planned global rollout, which had been expected around mid-March, while engineers work on safeguards to prevent unauthorized use of copyrighted material.
Why did Seedance 2.0 attract so much attention?
Seedance 2.0 quickly drew attention after its debut thanks to its ability to generate short cinematic videos with realistic motion, camera movement, and characters. Viral clips featuring scenes with recognizable actors and characters fueled both excitement and concern across the creative industry.
The situation also reflects a growing tension in the AI space, where powerful generative tools are advancing rapidly while creators and studios question how training data is sourced. As a result, legal challenges may increasingly shape how and when these AI models reach the public.
