Here’s the latest on that topic.
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Dua Lipa has filed a lawsuit against Samsung Electronics, alleging that the company used her image on TV packaging without permission. The suit seeks about $15 million in damages and includes claims of copyright infringement, trademark infringement, and violation of publicity rights. Sources reporting this include Reuters and BBC, with coverage dated May 10–11, 2026.[2][5]
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The allegations center on a backstage photo of Lipa from the 2024 Austin City Limits festival being used on Samsung TV boxes sold in the U.S. without authorization. Samsung has not publicly commented on the pending litigation.[5][2]
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Additional outlets have echoed the $15 million figure and described the lawsuit as targeting copyright, trademark, and right-of-publicity violations. Coverage comes from outlets such as Firstpost, Asianet Newsable, Mandatory, and Page Six, all reporting the same general allegations and timeframe.[1][3][4][7]
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For context, this development follows a broader pattern of celebrities pursuing rights over the use of their likeness in advertising, though the specifics of the Lipa-Samsung case (e.g., evidence, legal strategy) will emerge through court filings and responses from Samsung.[8][5]
If you’d like, I can summarize the key legal claims (copyright, right of publicity, trademark) and outline what evidence is typically required in such cases, or pull the most up-to-date official filings and statements as they become available.