HR 8323
SOUL Act of 2026
Take action
Record your position on this measure.
Sign in to record your position, submit testimony, or contact your legislator.
Sign in to take action- Introduced
- Passed House
- Passed Senate
- To President
- Became Law
Bill overview
The SOUL Act of 2026 aims to establish legal rights for U.S. citizens over their own unique likeness, including their name, image, voice, biometric data, and genetic information. It prohibits unauthorized digital replicas and synthetic media that utilize these likenesses for commercial purposes, granting owners exclusive rights that extend for their lifetime plus 50 years after death. The bill provides legal remedies for violations and establishes a framework for platforms to address unauthorized content.
Key provisions
- Defines ‘unique likeness’ to include name, image, voice, biometric data, genetic markers, and AI-generated identity data.
- Grants U.S. citizens exclusive rights to reproduce, distribute, and create derivative works based on their unique likeness.
- Establishes a duration of rights for the individual’s lifetime plus 50 years after death.
- Provides civil remedies, including injunctive relief and statutory damages, for unauthorized use of likenesses.
- Requires platforms to remove unauthorized content upon receiving a valid takedown notice.
- Exempts certain uses, such as fair use, government activities, and First Amendment-protected speech.
- Preempts state laws that offer similar protections for unique likeness.
- Specifies that no criminal penalties will be applied under this act.
Who is affected
- U.S. Citizens
- Digital Content Creators
- Social Media Platforms
- Artificial Intelligence Developers
Sponsors
Official sponsors from legislative records.
Primary sponsor
Arguments in favor
Reasons to support this legislation.
No arguments in favor have been submitted.
Submit yoursArguments opposed
Reasons to oppose this legislation.
No arguments opposed have been submitted.
Submit yoursRead the latest version inline or switch to a previous version.
119th CONGRESS — 2d Session
H. R. 8323
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
A BILL
To amend title 17, United States Code, to establish sovereign ownership rights in unique likeness for U.S. citizens, to protect against unauthorized digital replications and abuses, and for other purposes.
This Act may be cited as the Sovereign Ownership of Unique Likeness Act of 2026 SOUL Act of 2026
or the
.
Title 17, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new chapter:
In this chapter:
The term individual’s unique likeness
means the set of personal traits owned by each U.S. citizen from birth or upon development or acquisition, including:
Name, including full legal name, nicknames, or stage names.
Image, including photographs, videos, digital representations, or any visual depictions.
Likeness, including physical appearance, body shape, movements, habits, or style.
Voice, including natural speaking or singing voice and any artificial intelligence-generated reproductions.
Biometric identifiers, including facial geometry, iris patterns, vocal timbre, gait, or fingerprints, when used to replicate or identify an individual for commercial purposes, excluding uses for law enforcement or national security.
Genetic markers, including DNA sequences or traits that could be used to replicate or misuse identity in commercial applications, such as artificial intelligence tools, with exemptions for medical or research purposes under applicable laws, including the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act of 2008 (42 U.S.C. 2000ff et seq.).
Other related traits, including avatars, deepfakes, or digital replicas derived from the elements described in subparagraphs (A) through (F), encompassing artificial intelligence-generated identity data. The term unique likeness
shall be construed broadly to adapt to technological advancements.
The term digital replica
means any computer-generated or technologically created representation that reproduces or simulates an individual’s unique likeness without authorization, including deepfakes or synthetic media.
The term owner
means the U.S. citizen to whom the unique likeness belongs, or their authorized licensee, heir, or assignee after death.
The term platform
means any interactive computer service as defined in section 230(f)(2) of the Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. 230(f)(2)) that hosts user-generated content.
The owner has the exclusive right to reproduce, distribute, publicly display, perform, or create derivative works based on their unique likeness. This prohibits unauthorized digital replicas or synthetic media.
The rights under this chapter endure for the life of the individual plus 50 years after death, regardless of commercial exploitation during life.
These rights apply to U.S. citizens and activities affecting interstate commerce. Rights are inalienable except through voluntary waiver or license by the owner. Ownership vests automatically without registration.
The rights under this chapter do not apply to:
Non-commercial uses qualifying as fair use under section 107 of this title, including parody, satire, caricature, criticism, news reporting, scholarly commentary, transformative artistic works, incidental inclusions, or public domain elements.
Government activities, including law enforcement or national security.
Activities protected by the First Amendment to the United States Constitution, consistent with judicial precedents.
This chapter does not affect uses authorized before the effective date.
An owner may bring a civil action in Federal district court for:
Injunctive relief to prevent or restrain violations.
Takedown orders for unauthorized content.
Actual damages or statutory damages of not less than $750 nor more than $30,000 per violation, as the court considers just.
In cases of willful violation, up to $150,000 in statutory damages. No proof of economic or reputational harm is required; harm is presumed.
A platform is liable if it fails to remove unauthorized content after receiving a valid takedown notice, but may qualify for safe harbor protection if it acts in good faith, consistent with section 512 of this title (Digital Millennium Copyright Act).
This chapter provides only civil remedies.
This chapter preempts any State law that provides equivalent rights or remedies for unique likeness, to ensure uniformity.
If any provision of this chapter is held invalid, the remainder shall not be affected.
This Act takes effect 90 days after the date of enactment.