Exclusive: Thousands of UK actors “digitally in the group without their enlightened consent were cleared,” according to an open letter from the Union of British Actors urging progress in artificial intelligence while returning to the negotiating table with an agreement.
“We have no transparency on how to record our offers, similar and personal data, store and process them in the context of production and beyond,” said Equity, in a letter to an online agreement.
The message comes one day before fairness, and the product’s commercial body is scheduled to sit for another round of negotiations on a group of new collective agreements that have been in a year for about 12 months, as artificial intelligence guarantees have proven completely thorny. Ownerous rights increase the risks in recent months, as the Secretary -General, who has been re -elected Paul Fleming, said that the union “industrial work is ready” if negotiations continue to fail, while the Federation threatened the court's procedures to the BBC, information technology, Disney materials and the union if the rights of members are penetrated in training artificial intelligence models.
“We jokes to write before your negotiating meeting with stock officials on June 25 to express their concern about the lack of progress in securing the protection of Amnesty International for Performance Artists,” Al -Insaf wrote in the open letter. “We believe this is unacceptable and urge to agree to give priority to this decisive field that affects our industry and ways of living.” The agreement refused to comment.
Using the new US SAG-Aftra Etisalat as a partial scheme, the Equity claim with PACT has been designed with the effects of the Wooing IQ of different categories of the actor including supportive and supportive artists. Equity said it has put forward a “constructive proposal” including “important provisions on artificial intelligence training, which clarified the federation is a red line in these negotiations.” She added today: “We will not accept any deal that does not give us a major protection to use our personal data to train artificial intelligence systems and create offers created from artificial intelligence.”
Group agreements that are negotiated with the vast majority of British TV programs and independent films. In addition to confusion, separate BBC and ITV agreements with stocks have failed to include artificial intelligence guarantees because broadcasters do not want to include them until the stock group negotiations are resolved. The broadcasters insisted that “the discussion on the provisions of artificial intelligence is still firmly on the table.”
The move comes at a time when the UK government considers legislation that means that copyright holders should be transferred from using their materials to train artificial intelligence models. The BFI report revealed earlier this month that text programs were used from more than 130,000 films and TV programs to train such models.