Renowned filmmaker James Cameron, known for cinematic masterpieces like The Terminator, Titanic and Avatar, has once again voiced his concerns on the potential risks of Artificial Intelligence. The acclaimed Hollywood director emphasised that he had sent out a cautionary signal about these dangers in 1984 with his blockbuster sci-fi drama The Terminator.

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“I am fully aligned with their apprehensions. My warning in 1984 seems to have fallen on deaf ears,” Cameron said in an interview with CTV News.  

What about AI in writing?

Although he wouldn't consider relying on AI to pen his screenplays, Cameron expressed apprehensions that AI could significantly influence the industry in the years to come. He further elucidated that he might be prompted to reconsider his stance and take AI more seriously, possibly in the next two decades, if it clinches an Oscar for Best Screenplay.

Cameron's outspoken concerns reflect a general apprehension in the film industry, amplified amidst the ongoing Writers Guild of America strike and the SAG-AFTRA's strike against Hollywood studios. These events brought to the forefront debates about unregulated AI use in Hollywood, and the protection of actors' and writers' crafts.

However, Cameron expressed his doubts about the likelihood of technology usurping writers in the near future, noting that the narrative's quality holds supreme importance over the means of its composition.

 “I sincerely find it hard to believe that an inanimate mind merely parroting the sentiments of other sentient minds—recounting life experiences, love, deceit, fear, mortality—and then jumbling it all together into a tangled mess of words, can create something that resonates with audiences,” he added.

Fears outside creative world- weaponisation of AI

However, in the world outside Hollywood, Cameron's warning about AI weaponisation echoes the fears of many AI experts. The accelerating pace of AI development and its unchecked growth in military applications have led to urgent calls for regulation to prevent a future in which AI-controlled combat goes beyond human control and spirals into uncontrollable escalation.

“The largest threat is the militarization of AI,” he averred, further appending that humankind might unwittingly engage in a race akin to the nuclear arms race with AI, inevitably leading to an escalation.

He accentuated the urgent need to interrogate the motivations propelling AI development. Cameron underscored the requirement to ascertain whether AI is being propelled by profit motives, which he referred to as “inculcating avarice”, or for defense purposes, which he labeled as “instilling paranoia.”