The real deal Lionel Richie is easy like Sunday Morning(Image: Eric McCandless/ABC via Getty Images)

Motown legend Lionel Richie has applied to trademark the sound of his voice to protect it from AI clones.

The Hello star made four applications in the UScovering audio of him saying phrases from his best known songs, including "Hello, is it me you’re looking for?" as well as: Say You, Say Me,Easy Like Sunday Morning and All Night Long.

The move was driven by growing fears over AI voice cloning with a raft of stars looking at new ways of protecting their likeness.

Taylor Swift has already applied to register her voice saying “Hey, it’s Taylor” and “Hey, it’s Taylor Swift,” while actor Matthew McConaughey sought protection over audio of his famous “Alright, alright, alright” line from the 1993 film Dazed and Confused.

No1 star Taylor has already moved to protect her voice(Image: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for TAS Rights Management)

These filings appear to be designed to address the impending problem of artificial intelligence programs training on famous voices and replicating them in new songs without compensation or attribution. It could also protect them from being in movies or advertising campaigns.

To win federal registration, Richie would need to prove that consumers associate his voice singing those specific lyrics with particular goods or services.

Richie’s applications also wouldn’t necessarily stop someone from using his voice to say different words.

However, if successful it could become an important test case for how trademark laws adapt to the AI era.

Source: Drudge Report