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As Hollywood leans into AI, the real battle is over likeness and who gets paid
United States🏛️ PoliticsProgressive19 days ago

As Hollywood leans into AI, the real battle is over likeness and who gets paid

The article discusses the growing role of artificial intelligence in Hollywood and highlights the emerging legal and ethical debates surrounding the use of actors' likenesses and compensation. With AI technology enabling the creation of digital doubles and deepfakes, there is increasing concern about intellectual property rights, consent, and fair payment for performers. The piece emphasizes the tension between technological innovation and traditional labor practices in the entertainment industry, suggesting that unresolved issues could impact both creators and consumers.

How each side covered it

The same event, grouped by the political lean of the outlets covering it.

How each side covered it

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Covered around the world

The same event as reported in other countries.

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Claims check

Key factual claims, and how many sources assert vs dispute each.

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Go to the primary sources (1)

The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.

4 reports

The Nation logoThe NationIndependentProgressiveFactual 95Objective 9023 days ago
Amy Goodman on the Job of Journalism

Amy Goodman discusses the importance of press freedom in American democracy and highlights the challenges faced by journalists today. She emphasizes the role of journalism in holding power accountable and amplifying marginalized voices, while criticizing the current administration's rhetoric toward the press.

Bias read (Progressive): The article presents Amy Goodman's perspective, which criticizes the current administration's stance on the press and emphasizes the role of journalism in supporting democratic values. The framing leans left through its focus on press freedom, criticism of the executive branch, and emphasis on ampli

Why these scores (Factual 95 · Objective 90): The article discusses press freedom and Amy Goodman's perspective, which is well-supported by quotes and context. However, it does not mention the primary source document about AI ethics, making it only tangentially related.

The Nation logoThe NationIndependentProgressiveFactual 75Objective 7020 days ago
Why Aren’t Newsrooms Covering This AI Speech?

A.G. Sulzberger, publisher of The New York Times, delivered a speech criticizing major technology companies like Google, Meta, and OpenAI for using AI to steal intellectual property from news organizations, thereby undermining democracy. He urged newsrooms to unite and resist these corporations.

Bias read (Progressive): The article presents Sulzberger's speech as a call to action against Big Tech, which is often framed as a progressive concern. The framing emphasizes corporate wrongdoing and the need for collective resistance by news organizations, aligning with left-leaning critiques of large technology firms.

Why these scores (Factual 75 · Objective 70): The article accurately presents Sulzberger's arguments but shows clear bias in portraying Big Tech as villains.

The Nation logoThe NationIndependentProgressiveFactual 75Objective 6520 days ago
Why Aren’t Newsrooms Covering This AI Speech?

A.G. Sulzberger, publisher of The New York Times, delivered a speech criticizing major technology companies like Google, Meta, and OpenAI for using AI to steal intellectual property from news organizations, thereby undermining democracy. He urged newsrooms to unite and resist these corporations.

Bias read (Progressive): The article presents Sulzberger's speech as a call to action against Big Tech, which is often framed as a progressive concern. The framing emphasizes corporate wrongdoing and the need for collective resistance by news organizations, aligning with left-leaning critiques of large technology firms.

Why these scores (Factual 75 · Objective 65): Article addresses workplace ethics, which is unrelated to the primary source's AI ethics discussion. Factuality is moderate as it accurately describes the situation. Objectivity is slightly compromised by the advice columnist's perspective.

Los Angeles Times logoLos Angeles TimesIndependent🔒CenterFactual 30Objective 4019 days ago
As Hollywood leans into AI, the real battle is over likeness and who gets paid

The article discusses the growing role of artificial intelligence in Hollywood and highlights the emerging legal and ethical debates surrounding the use of actors' likenesses and compensation. With AI technology enabling the creation of digital doubles and deepfakes, there is increasing concern about intellectual property rights, consent, and fair payment for performers. The piece emphasizes the tension between technological innovation and traditional labor practices in the entertainment industry, suggesting that unresolved issues could impact both creators and consumers.

Bias read (Center): The article presents a balanced overview of the issue without overtly favoring any particular side. It focuses on the technical and legal challenges rather than taking a clear ideological stance. While it acknowledges the potential benefits of AI in filmmaking, it also raises concerns about fairness

Why these scores (Factual 30 · Objective 40): Factual claims are unrelated to the primary document. Tone is neutral but content is irrelevant.

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