As the 2026 Lunar New Year approaches, AI video generation technology is experiencing explosive growth, but accompanying copyright governance challenges are becoming a market focus. Recently, ByteDance's video generation model Seedance 2.0 launched quietly and quickly gained popularity, yet its powerful generation capabilities have triggered chain reactions: Stephen Chow's agent publicly questioned the platform for hosting numerous unauthorized AI-generated movie clips; on social platforms, AI-produced celebrity face "family reunion" New Year greeting videos have sparked portrait rights disputes. In the AI era, the creation methods of digital content have undergone fundamental changes. Traditional infringement typically involved illegal redistribution of complete works, whereas current AI generation involves deep learning from massive datasets, extracting elements such as character images and specific scenes for recombination. Addressing this industry pain point, VOBILE GROUP (03738) has launched element-level rights management capabilities on its Vobile MAX™ platform, showcasing real cases for the first time. In demonstrated cases, the platform conducted targeted tracking of recent hotspots: using the "Judy" character from "Zootopia" as an example, Vobile MAX™ can accurately identify and track AI-generated variant content across the internet. For recreations involving classic real-person images (such as Kobe Bryant), the platform not only enables widespread dissemination monitoring but also assists creators in monetizing content. Through this mechanism, rights holders and creators can clearly understand the circulation paths and monetization potential of their assets, achieving true visibility.