Christopher Nolan, the filmmaker of "" claims that artificial intelligence (AI) in films has "responsibilities" similar to those associated with the development of atomic bombs.

 




The film business is "already using" AI, according to filmmaker Christopher Nolan

 

In his next movie "Oppenheimer," which hits theatres later this month, director Christopher Nolan explores the making of the atomic bomb.

The renowned British-American director admitted that artificial intelligence is having an influence on society now, much as how J. Robert Oppenheimer's invention of the atomic bomb in the 1940s had an impact in the past.

When it comes to AI invading the entertainment sector, "a lot of the AI researchers I talk to right now see this as their - they refer to it as the Oppenheimer moment," Nolan told Fox News Digital.

"Really, it's about going back and asking, 'Okay, what might have been done differently?' after reading Oppenheimer's narrative. What obligations do those who develop technologies that may have unforeseen consequences have?

"The film business is currently filled with anxiety on how AI will affect things. The truth is that it is already in use, has been for years, and will continue to grow. over any unease over AI, the "Inception" director remarked, "a lot of attention has to be paid to these problems, particularly as it relates to artists' rights, copyrights, and things like that.

"I believe that the work being done today, especially by the unions, will benefit us in the long run. In the end, it's a tool that needs to be treated as such and not be let to replace the concept of responsibility, he said.

He said, "We have to hold individuals responsible for how they're utilising this technology.

On July 21, the movie's premiere will take place. It stars Emily Blunt, Matt Damon, Robert Downey Jr., Cillian Murphy, and Florence Pugh. 

The employment of AI in business is a topic that has been discussed by many directors before Nolan.

Justine Bateman, a former actor who is now a filmmaker, recently told Fox News Digital, "I think AI has no place at all in Hollywood. To me, technology should address issues that people face.

She said, "Using ChatGPT or any other... programme that uses AI to produce scripts, using it in lieu of a writer, utilising that is not fixing a problem. "Writers are many here. Actors are plenty here. We have plenty of directors. There is no shortage of brilliant individuals here.

She describes AI programming as "more complex than what I'm about to say, but basically... feeding it a bunch of information, giving it a task, and then, based on the information it has, it gives you the result." It successfully completes the task you assigned it. What are you preparing it for if you ask it to create a screenplay? What is it being fed? the works of others. That is stealing. Its usage will have a terrible impact on the entertainment industry, one that will be calamitous.

Steven Spielberg has discussed his own mixed views about AI with Stephen Colbert on "The Late Show."

"I adore anything that was made by a human being, not a computer. It's wonderful when a human uses the means of digital technologies to express themselves or to communicate something, he said. 


The renowned director, however, said that AI also makes him "very nervous."

You're essentially giving the computer authority over your point of view and your own humanity by using what you manufactured and created,  that is the computer.


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