So... A.I. *sigh*
My general feeling is to restrain from the fear-mongering about AI taking over and whatever. I feel that if a student can command an AI to write a paper that gets a good grade, either the assignment was dumb or the student put as much thought and effort into managing the AI as she would have to just write it. Except without citing resources, which is bad anyway (my wife is a prof. so dealing with this stuff).
Or if scripts are written by AI then they'll get worse and worse because they're just drawing from existing sources. Already so much feels like it's written by AI, whatever...
But I was listening to a popular leftist podcast that had a someone reporting from the writer's strike protests and talking about what some of the actual meeting between union and companies have been like. While most of the attention is on residual payments and the transition to gig economy practices, one of the demands from the union is to limit AI. According to this journalist, the AI demand was something they figured would be the first the companies would be open to, kind of a small stakes negotiating term. Instead, the studios offered to have an annual meeting to "monitor the situation with AI."
This anecdote suggests that studios are more interested and invested in AI than many thought.
So now I'm more scared of AI- not because of the tech, but because of the companies and some of the consumers. My skepticism of AI in entertainment is that it would create shoddy entertainment. But now I'm thinking- so what, it's shoddy, when has that stopped them before? Enough people watch crap- not necessarily because they"re "dumb" or have bad tastes, but also memeing and hate-watching and "it's so bad it's good" or whatever. Trends change and the pendulum swings back and forth but now also there is so much content to fill the fractured media environment.
And whether we like it or not, video games and movies and TV all effect each other. I have defended hacky game plots but of course those will be easier with AI. And I won't mind it so much with generic looter shooters or whatever (from a consumer standpoint, sucks for writers), but now I'm thinking about a game like Starfield, which despite the entire gamer culture, I'm still excited for. Story and characters are important. But I can just as easily see them generating AI dialogue that fits templated quest structure, and that would SSUUUUUCCCKK.