Recently, young actress Huang Yang Diantian filed a lawsuit against Bilibili (commonly known as ‘B Station’) with the Xuhui District People’s Court in Shanghai, citing violations of her portrait and reputation rights. According to public filings, Huang alleges that Bilibili permitted users to upload and disseminate edited videos featuring her likeness without her consent. Some of these videos allegedly contained malicious edits, distorted facts, and even personal attacks, negatively impacting her public image and mental well-being. The plaintiff demands that Bilibili remove the infringing content, issue a public apology, and compensate for economic losses and emotional distress. The case has sparked public debate over the responsibilities of online platforms: within a user-generated content (UGC) ecosystem, should platforms like Bilibili bear greater obligations to monitor and moderate content? As of now, Bilibili has not issued an official statement regarding the lawsuit. Legal experts note that if the court determines the platform knowingly or negligently failed to address the infringement, it could be held jointly liable. This case may set a significant precedent for copyright and personality rights protection in China’s short-video and fan-edit communities.
近日,青年演员黄杨钿甜因个人肖像权及名誉权问题,正式向上海市徐汇区人民法院提起诉讼,起诉哔哩哔哩(B站)平台。据公开信息显示,黄杨钿甜方面指控B站在未经其授权的情况下,允许用户上传、传播包含其肖像的剪辑视频,并在部分视频中存在恶意剪辑、歪曲事实甚至人身攻击的内容,对其社会形象和心理健康造成负面影响。原告要求B站删除相关侵权内容、公开道歉,并赔偿经济损失及精神损害抚慰金。此案引发公众对网络平台责任边界的关注——作为内容分发平台,B站在用户生成内容(UGC)生态中是否应承担更高程度的审核义务?目前B站尚未就该诉讼作出官方回应。法律界人士指出,若法院认定平台明知或应知侵权行为却未及时处理,可能需承担连带责任。此案或将对国内短视频与二次创作领域的版权与人格权保护产生示范效应。
原创文章,作者:admin,如若转载,请注明出处:https://avine.cn/1191.html