AI may be a buzzword on Wall Street, but on the West Coast itâs at the center of Hollywoodâs biggest labor dispute in more than 50 years. Among those warning about the technologyâs potential to cause harm is British actor and author Stephen Fry, who told an audience at the CogX Festival in London on Thursday about his personal experience of having his identity digitally cloned without his permission.
âIâm a proud member of [actorsâ union SAG-AFTRA], as you know weâve been on strike for three months now. And one of the burning issues is AI,â he said.
Actorsâ union SAG-AFTRA, which has around 160,000 members, went on strike last month over pay, working conditions, and concerns related to the use of AI in the film industry. It joined the Writers Guild of Americaâa union representing thousands of Hollywood writersâwhich went on strike in early May, marking the industryâs biggest shutdown in more than six decades.
A key sticking point for actors on strike is the possibility that studios could use AI to make digitally replicate their image without compensating them fairly for using their likeness.
Speaking at a news conference as the strike was announced, union president Fran Drescher said AI âposes an existential threatâ to creative industries, and said actors needed protection from having âtheir identity and talent exploited without consent and pay.â
During his speech at CogX Festival on Thursday, Fry played a clip to the audience of an AI system mimicking his voice to narrate a historical documentary.
âI said not one word of thatâit was a machine. Yes, it shocked me,â he said. âThey used my reading of the seven volumes of the Harry Potter books, and from that dataset an AI of my voice was created and it made that new narration.â
Fryâwho has appeared in movies including Gosford Park, V for Vendetta, and The Hitchhikerâs Guide to the Galaxyâis the narrator of the British Harry Potter audiobooks, while actor Jim Dale narrated the American version of the series.
âWhat you heard was not the result of a mash up, this is from a flexible artificial voice, where the words are modulated to fit the meaning of each sentence,â Fry told the audience at CogX Festival on Thursday.
âIt could therefore have me read anything from a call to storm parliament to hard porn, all without my knowledge and without my permission. And this, what you just heard, was done without my knowledge. So I heard about this, I sent it to my agents on both sides of the Atlantic, and they went ballisticâthey had no idea such a thing was possible.â
Fry added that when he discovered his voice was being used in projects without his consent, he saw it as just the beginning of an emerging threat to creative talent, warning his angry agents: âYou ainât seen nothing yet.â âThis is audio,â he said he told them. âIt wonât be long until full deepfake videos are just as convincing.â
As AI technology has advanced, doctored footage of celebrities and world leadersâknown as deepfakesâhas been circulating with increasing frequency, prompting warnings from experts about artificial intelligence risks. Fry warned on Thursday that those technologies only had further to go.
âWe have to think about [AI] like the first automobile: impressive but not the finished article,â he said, noting that when cars were invented no one could have envisioned how widespread they are today.
âTech is not a noun, it is a verb, it is always moving,â he said. âWhat we have now is not what will be. When it comes to AI models, what we have now will advance at a faster rate than any technology we have ever seen. One thing we can all agree on: itâs a f***ing weird time to be alive.â
Not the first
Fry isnât the only famous actor to publicly vocalize their concerns about AI and its place in the film industry.
At a U.K. rally held in support of the SAG-AFTRA strike over the summer, Emmy-winning Succession star Brian Cox shared an anecdote about a friend in the industry who had been told âin no uncertain termsâ that a studio would keep his image and do what they liked with it.
âThat is a completely unacceptable position,â Cox said. âAnd that is the position that we should be really fighting against, because that is the worst aspect. The wages are one thing, but the worst aspect is the whole idea of AI and what AI can do to us.â
Oscar winner Matthew McConaughey told Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff during a panel event at this yearâs Dreamforce conference that he had concerns about the rise of AI in Hollywood.
âWe have a real chance, if we are irresponsible, of cannibalizing ourselves and creating this digital god that weâll bow to, and weâll all of a sudden become tools of this tool,â he said.
Meanwhile, Star Trek and Mission Impossible star Simon Pegg has called AI âworryingâ for actors.
âWeâre looking at being replaced in some ways,â he said at the rally in London in July. âWe have to be compensated and we have to have some say in how [our image is] used. I donât want to turn up in an advert for something I disagree with⊠I want to be able to hang on to my image, and voice, and know where itâs going.â
A spokesperson for the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP), the entertainment industryâs official collective bargaining representative, was not available for comment when contacted by Fortune.
There are going to be some laws hastily passed for this that is going to put impressionists out of the job. If it is Rich Little or and AI impersonating Howard Cosell, how is it any different?
Impersonators are humans who also need to eat. Impersonating requires practice and talent. Impersonating doesnât put the impersonated out of a job.