WE LIVE IN A HELL WORLD
SAG-AFTRA, the union representing thousands of performers, has struck a deal with an AI voice acting platform aimed at making it easier for
Snippets from the article by Karissa Bell:
SAG-AFTRA, the union representing thousands of performers, has struck a deal with an AI voice acting platform aimed at making it easier for actors to license their voice for use in video games. ...
the agreements cover the creation of so-called βdigital voice replicasβ and how they can be used by game studios and other companies. The deal has provisions for minimum rates, safe storage and transparency requirements, as well as βlimitations on the amount of time that a performance replica can be employed without further payment and consent.β
Notably, the agreement does not cover whether actorsβ replicas can be used to train large language models (LLMs), though Replica Studios CEO Shreyas Nivas said the company was interested in pursuing such an arrangement. βWe have been talking to so many of the large AAA studios about this use case,β Nivas said. He added that LLMs are βout-of-scope of this agreementβ but βthey will hopefully [be] things that we will continue to work on and partner on.β
...Even so, some well-known voice actors were immediately skeptical of the news, as the BBC reports. In a press release, SAG-AFTRA said the agreement had been approved by "affected members of the unionβs voiceover performer community." But on X, voice actors said they had not been given advance notice. "How has this agreement passed without notice or vote," wrote Veronica Taylor, who voiced Ash in PokΓ©mon. "Encouraging/allowing AI replacement is a slippery slope downward." Roger Clark, who voiced Arthur Morgan in Red Dead Redemption 2, also suggested he was not notified about the deal. "If I can pay for permission to have an AI rendering of an βA-listβ voice actorβs performance for a fraction of their rate I have next to no incentive to employ 90% of the lesser known βworkingβ actors that make up the majority of the industry," Clark wrote.
SAG-AFTRAβs deal with Replica only covers a sliver of the game industry. Separately, the union is also negotiating with several of the major game studios after authorizing a strike last fall. βI certainly hope that the video game companies will take this as an inspiration to help us move forward in that negotiation,β Crabtree said.
And here are some various reactions I've found about things people in/adjacent to this can do
And in OTHER AI games news, Valve is updating it's TOS to allow AI generated content on steam so long as devs promise they have the rights to use it, which you can read more about on Aftermath in this article by Luke Plunkett
'Our goal continues to be shipping as many games as possible'





















