\u0027We don\u0027t want our material feeding them, and we also don\u0027t want to be fixing their sloppy first drafts,\u0027 says negotiating committee member
Screenwriter John August, a member of the WGA negotiating committee, said writers have two concerns regarding AI. “We don’t want our material feeding them, and we also don’t want to be fixing their sloppy first drafts,” he said.At issue is a rapidly growing, multifaceted technology that’s swept across global industry.
AI can help writers break “the blank piece of paper phenomenon,” Seymour said, and it’s good at what he describes as “pantomime,” or producing straight-forward, blunt dialogue, though it lacks nuance.Citizen KaneThis advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.“What [AI] could do is spew out a garbled piece of work,” said Warren Leight, a screenwriter who served as showrunner and executive producer of the NBC drama.
The union is also arguing that existing scripts should not be used to train artificial intelligence, which would open the door to intellectual property theft.
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