Hollywood, ByteDance
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Laid-off and sidelined by last year's production slowdown, Hollywood visual‑effects veteran Michael Eng discovered a gap in his resume while
Rhett Reese, a scriptwriter known for his "Deadpool" films, said in an interview that the Cruise-Pitt video had sent a "cold shiver" up his spine
A new Hollywood-focused startup is proposing the use of so-called “AI bounty hunters” to help studios track down potential misuse of film and television content generated by artificial intelligence, according to a report from Deadline.
Hollywood studios and industry groups are criticizing a new artificial intelligence video model, Seedance 2.0, accusing it of enabling widespread
Entertainment about or made with artificial intelligence has been missing the mark with viewers over the past year.
ByteDance’s AI-video creator draws buzz for its realistic scenes and a backlash over privacy and copyright.
A 15-second clip created by an artificial intelligence tool owned by the Chinese technology company ByteDance appears more cinematic than anything so far.
Hollywood studios have declared war on companies stealing their intellectual property using artificial intelligence, and are fighting back by using so-called “bounty hunters.”
The risk of losing control over one’s image and voice is a serious concern in cases where AI deepfakes recreate deceased actors such as James Dean or Audrey Hepburn because such portrayals may comprom
Hollywood's elite, including Scarlett Johansson, Cate Blanchett, Nicolas Cage, Samuel L. Jackson, and Natasha Lyonne, are raising alarms about AI's threat to creative professions. Through campaigns and legal actions,