Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2024-09-18 17:10:46| Engadget

Remember when the Writers Guild of America (WGA) and SAG-AFTRA went on strike for months, in great part to get protections against AI? Well, while they did get some stipulations in there, it's not stopping AI from coming to Hollywood anyways. Lionsgate, the studio behind the John Wick and Hunger Games franchises, has struck a deal with AI startup Runway, the Wall Street Journal first reported and Runway confirmed in a press release. The arrangement will allow Runway access to Lionsgate's content library in exchange for a fresh, custom AI model that the studio can use in production and editing. The deal is similar to recent (and equally icky feeling) ones with publishing houses such as TIME and Dotdash Meredith, but it is the first of its kind for the film and TV industry. Vice chairman of Lionsgate Studio, Michael Burns, said that in recent months, he feared falling behind competitors without a step like this. "Runway is a visionary, best-in-class partner who will help us utilize AI to develop cutting edge, capital efficient content creation opportunities," Burns stated. He then claimed, "Several of our filmmakers are already excited about its potential applications to their pre-production and post-production process." There's also the small matter that he expects the company will save "millions and millions of dollars" through this agreement. Whether that money will come out of creatives' paychecks is something we can only speculate about now, but it wouldn't be surprising. As for Lionsgate's new bedfellow, like many AI companies, Runway has faced accusations of pilfering content to train its system. A former employee came forward in July with alleged internal spreadsheets demonstrating that Runway used YouTube videos from the likes of Disney, Netflix and popular media outlets to train its Gen-3 model. A group of artists are also suing Runway and other players like Stability AI for copyright infringement, reports Artnet. The plaintiffs garnered a win in August, with California District Judge William Orrick finding they had reasonably argued these companies had violated the artists' rights.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/lionsgate-signs-a-deal-with-the-devil-an-ai-startup-151046341.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

Latest from this category

09.01Too big to fake? Taiwanese star Jolin Tsai rides a 30-meter serpent at Taipei Dome
09.01Lumus brought a massively wider FOV to smartglasses at CES 2026
08.01Handwriting is my new favorite way to text with the Meta Ray-Ban Display glasses
08.01IXIs autofocusing lenses are almost ready to replace multifocal glasses
08.01Razer put a waifu in a bottle at CES 2026
08.01YouTube will let you exclude Shorts from search results
08.01Hands-on with Fender Audio's headphones and speakers at CES 2026
08.01Emerson Smart brings offline voice control to lamps and fans
Marketing and Advertising »

All news

09.01US Supreme Court verdict on Trump tariff tonight: How Sensex, Nifty may get impacted
09.01Ashish Kacholia-backed Indo SMC IPO to open on January 13. Check GMP, price band, other key details
09.01F&O Radar | Deploy Bear Put Spread in Nifty to gain from bearish bias in index
09.01Bharat Coking Coal IPO fully subscribed within 30 minutes on Day 1; strong 41% GMP lifts listing hopes
09.01Too big to fake? Taiwanese star Jolin Tsai rides a 30-meter serpent at Taipei Dome
09.01Ofcom urged to use 'banning' powers over X AI deepfakes
09.01Why most strategic plans fail just as often as New Years resolutions
09.01Friday Watch
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .