“Cate Blanchett“, the Australian actor of films such as the “Lord of the Rings” trilogy, said in an ierview to the BBC that he was “deeply concerned” about the effect artificial ielligence It is on society.
Blanchet, 55, tells the BBC:
“When I look at robots or driverless cars, I don’t really know what they’re going to bring to humans.”
When asked in the ierview if she was worried about the impact of artificial ielligence on her job, Blanchett said she was “less worried” about it and more worried about “the impact it will have on ordinary people”. He said about this:
“I’m kind of worried about ourselves, it’s a much bigger problem.”
The threat of artificial ielligence to humans

He further poied out that the threat of artificial ielligence is “very real”; Because it can be completely replaced by people.
“If you’ve recorded 3 or 4 seconds of your own voice, your voice is completely imitable.”
Blanchett, who won best actress Oscars for her roles in “The Aviator” and “Blue Jasmine,” says she initially thought the AI advances were mea to test the technology itself.
“You look at it on the one hand and you see creativity, but on the other hand it’s incredibly destructive.”
Hollywood actors and the movie industry have so far shown their concern and protest about artificial ielligence in differe ways. Last moh, thousands of creative people, including famous actors like Kevin Bacon and Julianne Moore, signed a stateme saying that the unauthorized use of copyrighted coe to train AI models harms the people who created the creative works.
Ben Affleck, the famous Hollywood actor who played Batman, recely said that movies are one of the last things that will be replaced by artificial ielligence.



