Site icon TheDailyCheck.net

Hollywood scribes up in arms over tapping AI as writers

‘ART CANNOT BE CREATED BY MACHINE | A mariachi band performs as members of the Writers Guild of America picket outside the Netflix office in Hollywood to protest the insistence of studios in tapping artificial intelligence. (Agence France-Presse)

LOS ANGELES — A Hollywood writers’ strike broke out this week over pay, with anger and fear at the picket lines fueled by the refusal of studios like Netflix and Disney to rule out artificial intelligence replacing human scribes in the future.

With their rapidly advancing ability to eerily mimic human conversation, AI programs like ChatGPT have spooked many industries. Last week the White House summoned Big Tech to discuss the potential risks.

As part of the weekslong talks with studios that collapsed on Monday, the Writers Guild of America (WGA) asked for binding agreements to regulate the use of AI.

Under the proposals, nothing written by AI can be considered “literary” or “source” material—industry terms that decide who gets royalties—and scripts written by WGA members cannot “be used to train AI.”

But according to the group, the studios “rejected our proposal” and instead offered to merely meet once a year to “discuss advancements in technology.”

“It’s nice for them to offer to have a meeting about how they’re exploiting it against us!” joked WGA negotiating committee member Eric Heisserer, who wrote the Netflix hit film “Bird Box.”

“Art cannot be created by a machine. You lose the heart and soul of the story… I mean, the first word is ‘artificial,’” he told Agence France-Presse (AFP) on the picket line outside the streaming giant’s Hollywood headquarters on Friday.

‘Not just scripts’

Few of the striking writers who spoke to AFP believe their work could be done by computers. But the apparent conviction of studios and streamers that it can has been an extra slap in the face.

They fear that belt-tightening executives in Hollywood—where Silicon Valley companies have upended many traditional practices such as long-term contracts for writers—may seek to cut costs further by having computers write their next shows.

Comments by Hollywood executives at this week’s Milken Institute Global Conference in Beverly Hills will have done nothing to quell writers’ concerns.

“In the next three years, you’re going to see a movie that was written by AI made… a good one,” said movie producer Todd Lieberman.

“Not just scripts. Editing, all of it… storyboarding a movie, anything,” added Fox entertainment CEO Rob Wade. “AI is going to be able to do absolutely all of these things.”

The studios’ own account of the breakdown in WGA talks offered a more nuanced take.

In a briefing note shared with AFP, they said writers do not, in fact, want to outlaw AI, and appear happy to use it “as part of their creative process”—so long as it does not affect their pay.

That scenario “requires a lot more discussion, which we’ve committed to doing,” the studios said.

‘Bad first drafts’

For Leila Cohan, a 39-year-old writer on Netflix smash hit “Bridgerton,” the only usefulness of AI for writers is limited to “busy work” such as coming up with names for characters.

She predicted that studios “could start making incredibly bad first drafts with AI and then hiring writers to do a rewrite.”

“I think that’s certainly a very scary possibility…. It’s very smart that we’re addressing this now,” she said.

The last Hollywood strike in 2007-08 won writers the right to be paid for online viewing of their shows or films—highly prescient, at a time when streaming was in its infancy.

Back then, Netflix had barely started online viewing, and the likes of Disney+ and Apple TV+ were more than a decade away.

Even for sci-fi writer Ben Ripley, who believes there is no role whatsoever for AI in writing, introducing legislation now “to put guardrails up” is “very necessary.”

Writers “have to be original,” he said. “Artificial intelligence is the antithesis of originality.”

RELATED STORIES

‘Plagiarism machines’: Hollywood writers and studios battle over the future of AI

Striking Hollywood writers air their woes in the age of streaming

Hollywood writers to go on strike; Jimmy Kimmel, Jimmy Fallon shows to go dark



Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.


Your subscription has been successful.

Read Next

Don’t miss out on the latest news and information.

Subscribe to INQUIRER PLUS to get access to The Philippine Daily Inquirer & other 70+ titles, share up to 5 gadgets, listen to the news, download as early as 4am & share articles on social media. Call 896 6000.

For feedback, complaints, or inquiries, contact us.

For all the latest Entertainment News Click Here 

 For the latest news and updates, follow us on Google News

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! TheDailyCheck is an automatic aggregator around the global media. All the content are available free on Internet. We have just arranged it in one platform for educational purpose only. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials on our website, please contact us by email – abuse@thedailycheck.net The content will be deleted within 24 hours.
Exit mobile version