Current:Home > StocksChainkeen Exchange-In Hollywood writers’ battle against AI, humans win (for now) -MoneyFlow Academy
Chainkeen Exchange-In Hollywood writers’ battle against AI, humans win (for now)
FinLogic FinLogic Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-10 11:33:49
NEW YORK (AP) — After a 148-day strike,Chainkeen Exchange Hollywood screenwriters secured significant guardrails against the use of artificial intelligence in one of the first major labor battles over generative AI in the workplace.
During the nearly five-month walkout, no issue resonated more than the use of AI in script writing. What was once a seemingly lesser demand of the Writers Guild of America became an existential rallying cry.
The strike was also about streaming-era economics, writers room minimums and residuals — not exactly compelling picket-sign fodder. But the threat of AI vividly cast the writers’ plight as a human-versus-machine clash, with widespread implications for other industries facing a radically new kind of automation.
In the coming weeks, WGA members will vote on whether to ratify a tentative agreement, which requires studios and production companies to disclose to writers if any material given to them has been generated by AI partially or in full. AI cannot be a credited writer. AI cannot write or rewrite “literary material.” AI-generated writing cannot be source material.
Related stories Late-night TV shows plan their returns after Hollywood writers strike ends Here’s when your favorite show will return now that the writers strike is ending“AI-generated material can’t be used to undermine a writer’s credit or separated rights,” the proposed contract reads.
Many experts see the screenwriters’ deal as a forerunner for labor battles to come.
“I hope it will be a model for a lot of other content-creation industries,” said Tom Davenport, a professor of information technology at Babson College and author of “ All-in on AI: How Smart Companies Win Big with Artificial Intelligence.” “It pretty much insures that if you’re going to use AI, it’s going to be humans working alongside AI. That, to me, has always been the best way to use any form of AI.”
The tentative agreement between the Writers Guild and the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, which negotiates on behalf of the studios, doesn’t prohibit all uses of artificial intelligence. Both sides have acknowledged it can be a worthwhile tool in many aspects of filmmaking, including script writing.
The deal states that writers can use AI if the company consents. But a company cannot require a writer to use AI software.
Language over AI became a sticking point in the writers’ negotiations, which dragged on last week in part due to the challenges of bargaining on such a fast-evolving technology.
When the writers strike began on May 2, it was just five months after OpenAI released ChatGPT, the AI chatbot that can write essays, have sophisticated conversations and craft stories from a handful of prompts. Studios said it was it too early to tackle AI in these negotiations and preferred to wait until 2026.
Ultimately, they hashed out terms while noting that the outlook is certain to change. Under the draft contract, “the parties acknowledge that the legal landscape around the use of (generative AI) is uncertain and rapidly developing.” The companies and the guild agreed to meet at least twice a year during the contract’s three-year term.
At the same time, there are no prohibitions on studios using scripts they own to train AI systems. The WGA left those issues up to the legal system to parse. A clause notes that writers retain the right to assert that their work has been exploited in training AI software.
That’s been an increasingly prominent concern in the literary world. Last week, 17 authors, including John Grisham, Jonathan Franzen and George R.R. Martin, filed a lawsuit against OpenAI alleging the “systematic theft on a massive scale” of their copyrighted books.
The terms the WGA achieved will surely be closely watched by others — particularly the striking members of the actors union, SAG-AFTRA.
“This is the first step on a long process of negotiating and working through what generative AI means for the creative industry — not just writers but visual artists, actors, you name it,” says David Gunkel, a professor of media studies at Northern Illinois University and author of “Person, Thing, Robot.”
Actors, on strike since July 14, are likewise seeking better compensation from streaming. But they are also demanding safeguards against AI, which can potentially use a star’s likeness without his or her permission or replace background actors entirely.
Attempts to adopt AI “as a normal operating procedure” are “literally dehumanizing the workforce,” actor Bryan Cranston said recently on a picket line. “It’s not good for society. It’s not good for our environment. It’s not good for working-class families.”
In other developments, SAG-AFTRA members voted overwhelmingly Monday in favor of a strike authorization against video game companies. The use of AI in gaming is a particularly acute anxiety for voice-over actors.
Some skeptics doubt whether the writers made significant headway on AI. Media mogul Barry Diller, chairman of the digital media company IAC, believes not enough was done.
“They spent months trying to craft words to protect writers from AI, and they ended up with a paragraph that protected nothing from no one,” Diller told CNBC.
Robert D. Atkinson, president of the tech policy think tank Information Technology & Innovation Foundation, said limiting AI is unproductive.
“If we ban the use of tools to make organizations more productive, we are consigning ourselves to stagnation,” Atkinson write on X, formerly known as Twitter.
What most observers agree on, though, is that this was just the first of many AI labor disputes. Gunkel expects to see both writers and studios continue to experiment with AI.
“We’re so early into this that no one is able to anticipate everything that might come up with generative AI in the creative industries,” Gunkel said. “We’re going to see the need again and again to revisit a lot of these questions.”
___
Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle at: http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP
veryGood! (9789)
Related
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- Malaysia wants Interpol to help track down U.S. comedian Jocelyn Chia over her joke about disappearance of flight MH370
- Allow Zendaya and Tom Holland to Get Your Spidey Senses Tingling With Their Romantic Trip to Italy
- Politicians say they'll stop fentanyl smugglers. Experts say new drug war won't work
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- Why The Challenge: World Championship Winner Is Taking a Break From the Game
- Biden set his 'moonshot' on cancer. Meet the doctor trying to get us there
- Daniel Penny indicted by grand jury in chokehold death of Jordan Neely on NYC subway
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- 5 Reasons Many See Trump’s Free Trade Deal as a Triumph for Fossil Fuels
Ranking
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- Video shows man struck by lightning in Woodbridge Township, New Jersey, then saved by police officer
- New York City Is Latest to Launch Solar Mapping Tool for Building Owners
- Pierce Brosnan Teases Possible Trifecta With Mamma Mia 3
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- 18 Bikinis With Full-Coverage Bottoms for Those Days When More Is More
- Trump Makes Nary a Mention of ‘Climate Change,’ Touting America’s Fossil Fuel Future
- Climate Change Is Cutting Into the Global Fish Catch, and It’s on Pace to Get Worse
Recommendation
Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
Another Cook Inlet Pipeline Feared to Be Vulnerable, As Gas Continues to Leak
Sniffer dogs offer hope in waning rescue efforts in Turkey
See RHOBH's Kyle Richards and Kathy Hilton's Sweet Family Reunion Amid Ongoing Feud
What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
Beyond Drought: 7 States Rebalance Their Colorado River Use as Global Warming Dries the Region
'The Last Of Us' made us wonder: Could a deadly fungus really cause a pandemic?
Kentucky high court upholds state abortion bans while case continues