crabtree-ireland
Amazon's 'House of David' Used Over 350 AI Shots in Season 2. Its Creator Isn't Sorry
Amazon's Used Over 350 AI Shots in Season 2. Its Creator Isn't Sorry The show, which follows David's ascent to King of Israel, used four times as much AI this season, including for many of its battle scenes. A dusty visual overlay partially obscures crowds of men in the desert, sword-fighting in armor and on horseback. With some wardrobe tweaks, this scene could look like something out of or . But showrunner Jon Erwin says he didn't have the budget to bring these scenes to life. Instead, he used AI .
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How Video Games Became the New Battleground for Actors and AI Protections
On Wednesday, members of the Screen Actors Guild–American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, or SAG-AFTRA, voted to ratify a new contract for video game performers, officially bringing an end to a nearly yearlong strike. A majority, 95 percent of members, voted in favor of the contract, which guarantees annual raises for three years, increased compensation, and guardrails designed to prevent game companies from giving their work to AI. Actors in the video game industry had been on strike for 11 months as part of a fight to secure protections against AI, a sticking point that held up negotiations for most of that time. Every other issue in the contract, including compensation and working conditions, was already resolved months ago, says SAG-AFTRA's national executive director and chief negotiator Duncan Crabtree-Ireland. The strike was temporarily suspended in June, pending contract ratification. According to Sarah Elmaleh, a voice actor who also serves as a SAG-AFTRA committee chair, actors in the games industry have been wearily eyeing AI for years--even before tools like ChatGPT exploded in use.
Trump urged by Ben Stiller, Paul McCartney and hundreds of stars to protect AI copyright rules
The'America's Got Talent' judge told Fox News Digital why he doesn't like AI technology in songwriting. "We firmly believe that America's global AI leadership must not come at the expense of our essential creative industries," the letter, addressed to Trump's Office of Science and Technology Policy and shared by Deadline and Variety, began. "America's arts and entertainment industry supports over 2.3M American jobs with over 229Bn in wages annually, while providing the foundation for American democratic influence and soft power abroad. The letter was submitted as part of comments on the Trump administration's U.S. AI Action Plan. WHAT IS ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE (AI)? SIMON COWELL WARNS AI'SHOULDN'T BE ABLE TO STEAL' HUMAN TALENT "Access to America's creative catalog of films, writing, video content, and music is not a matter of national security.
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California lawmakers are trying to regulate AI before it's too late. Here's how
For four years, Jacob Hilton worked for one of the most influential startups in the Bay Area -- OpenAI. His research helped test and improve the truthfulness of AI models such as ChatGPT. He believes artificial intelligence can benefit society, but he also recognizes the serious risks if the technology is left unchecked. Hilton was among 13 current and former OpenAI and Google employees who this month signed an open letter that called for more whistleblower protections, citing broad confidentiality agreements as problematic. "The basic situation is that employees, the people closest to the technology, they're also the ones with the most to lose from being retaliated against for speaking up," says Hilton, 33, now a researcher at the nonprofit Alignment Research Center, who lives in Berkeley.
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Hollywood Faces Its Post-Strike Future
On Wednesday night, the actor Jeremy Allen White, of "The Bear," was working his way down a red carpet in Dallas. It was the première of "The White Claw," an A24 movie about the Von Erich clan of professional wrestlers. On the carpet, an "Entertainment Tonight" reporter informed White, "We just heard moments ago--the strike is over!" and stuck the mike in his face. "That's amazing," White said, seeming taken aback. Asked how he felt, he added, "I don't know the details of the deal, but I'm sure that SAG got what we wanted."
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Scenes from Hollywood's Hot Labor Summer
"Jump the fuck up!" Tom Morello, the guitarist for Rage Against the Machine, instructed the crowd outside the gates of Paramount. Morello, who wore his signature red bandana around his neck, was strumming "This Land Is Your Land," to rev up the morning's picketers. Everyone raised a fist and jumped the fuck up, singing, "This land was made for you and me!" The Writers Guild of America was on day one hundred and three of its strike against the Hollywood studios, represented by the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (A.M.P.T.P.); the actors of SAG-AFTRA were on day thirty. The August sun was blazing, and the experienced strikers wore hats; others found shade under signs that read "ON STRIKE!" or "CUT OUT THE CRAP AMPTP!" It was "Bruce Springsteen Day" on the Paramount line, and several people had come in "Born in the U.S.A." garb. A guy in a headband and tight jeans marched along Melrose Avenue. "I'm here so often I plan my outfits," he said to a companion.
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'Bargaining for our very existence': why the battle over AI is being fought in Hollywood
To get her start in Hollywood, Chivonne Michelle studied acting at New York University. But what helped her break into the industry and gave her the key training she needed was working on set as a background actor. Today, the rise of artificial intelligence (AI) technology threatens to put those "entry level and working class" Hollywood jobs at risk, Michelle and other striking actors say. AI is threatening jobs across many sectors, from doctors and lawyers to data scientists and journalists. But Hollywood actors and writers, currently united in their first "double strike" in more than 60 years, are fighting back in an unprecedented way, vowing to protect every worker in their industry, from the extras to the stars, from being replaced by new technologies.
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I Cloned My Voice and My Mother Couldn't Tell the Difference
This article is from Understanding AI, a newsletter that explores how A.I. works and how it's changing our world. A couple of weeks ago, I used A.I. software to clone my voice. The resulting audio sounded pretty convincing to me, but I wanted to see what others thought. So I created a test audio file based on the first 12 paragraphs of this article that I wrote. Seven randomly chosen paragraphs were my real voice, while the other five were generated by A.I. I asked members of my family to see if they could tell the difference.
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