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Scarlett Johansson’s Voice in Congress w/ Luke Hogg & Josh Levine
Episode 74

Scarlett Johansson’s Voice in Congress w/ Luke Hogg & Josh Levine

Evan and FAI's Josh Levine and Luke Hogg discuss the OpenAI-Scarlett Johansson controversy and the implications of artificial intelligence training on copyrighted and creative works.

The Dynamist · Josh Levine, Luke Hogg, Evan Swarztrauber

August 5, 202453m 16s

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Show Notes

OpenAI unleashed a controversy when the famed maker of Chat GPT debuted its new voice assistant Sky. The problem? For many, her voice sounded eerily similar to that of Scarlett Johansson, who had ironically starred in the dystopian movie Her about a man, played by Joaquin Phoenix, who developed a romantic relationship with a virtual assistant. While OpenAI claimed that Sky’s voice belonged to a different actress, the company pulled it down shortly after the launch given the furor from Johansson and the creative community. But a flame had already been lit in the halls of Congress, as the controversy has inspired multiple pieces of legislation dealing with serious questions raised by generative AI.

Should AI companies be allowed to train their models without compensating artists? What exactly is “fair use” when it comes to AI training and copyright? What are the moral and ethical implications of training AI products with human-created works when those products could compete with, or replace, those same humans? What are the potential consequences of regulation in this area, especially as the U.S. government wants to beat out China in the race for global AI supremacy?

Evan is joined by Josh Levine, Tech Policy Manager at FAI, and Luke Hogg, Director of Policy and Outreach at FAI. Read Josh’s piece on the COPIED Act here, and Luke’s piece on the NO AI FRAUD Act here.

Topics

tech policyaius-chinacompetitionchinaeconomicsbusinesspolicycopyrightai trainingopenaiartificial intelligenceregulationslawdeepfakessky