AI actors and writers will be ineligible for Oscars | Mix 106.9
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By Lisa Richwine

LOS ANGELES, May 1 (Reuters) – Academy Awards organizers issued new rules on Friday to ​clarify that acting and writing ‌must be performed by humans and not artificial intelligence to be eligible for the movie industry’s highest honors.

The changes from ‌the ​Academy of Motion Picture ⁠Arts and Sciences ⁠apply to submissions for the next Oscars ceremony, scheduled for March 2027.

Generative AI has raised alarm in ​the movie and TV business as workers fear studios will use ⁠the technology to replace ⁠human workers to lower ​costs. The debut last year of an ​AI-generated “actress” dubbed Tilly Norwood, and its ‌producer’s boasts of interest from studio executives, added to concerns and sparked a backlash from the SAG-AFTRA ⁠actors union.

Under the Academy’s new rules, filmmakers can use AI tools but a “synthetic” actor ⁠such ‌as Norwood would be ineligible ⁠for an Oscar, the ​group ‌said in a statement. It ​said screenplays ⁠must be “human-authored” to be considered.

The rules state the Academy can request additional information to verify submissions were created by humans.

(Reporting by Lisa RichwineEditing by ​Rod Nickel)

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