OpenAI’s Sora 2 isn’t a creative breakthrough—it’s a calculated flood. By releasing an endless stream of copyright-blurring AI videos, the company isn’t challenging Hollywood’s rules so much as burying them. The strategy is simple: overwhelm the system, exhaust enforcement, and redefine ownership by default.
How Hideo Kojima Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Algorithm
Hideo Kojima, the man who once warned us about the dangers of algorithmic control, now calls artificial intelligence a “friend.” It’s not a sellout—it’s evolution. In a year when Hollywood’s fear of AI is finally cooling, Kojima’s new stance signals that the conversation has moved beyond panic. He’s not rejecting the future; he’s learning how to shape it.
How Movie Talk Turned Into Fantasy Football for Film Bros
Movie talk has turned into a noisy, bad faith echo chamber where box office numbers are treated like sports scores and AI-written clickbait drowns out real discussion. The loudest, most controversial voices get rewarded, while honest, thoughtful conversation gets ignored. Media literacy hasn’t just declined—it’s been buried under SEO headlines, culture war bait, and the endless churn of empty content.
Congress Can’t Stop School Shootings, But They’ll Ban AI Jokes
Congress finally found something it could regulate—deepfake porn. But in their rush to “protect the children,” they may have just taken a sledgehammer to satire, parody, and online creativity. The TAKE IT DOWN Act sounds noble, but it’s a censorship time bomb waiting to go off.
Can Artificial Intelligence Save Anime from Itself?
As anime demand skyrockets, studios like Toei Animation are turning to AI to ease burnout and speed up production. But is AI really the villain fans fear—or the tool that could save the industry from collapsing under its own weight?
The NO FAKES Act Is Coming. Fair Use Might Be the First Casualty
There’s no question that the NO FAKES Act is trying to address a real problem. AI has advanced to the point where voices and faces can be cloned with uncanny accuracy, and the consequences aren’t theoretical anymore. We’ve already seen deepfakes cause reputational harm, manipulate the public, and create entirely fabricated content that looks and … Continue reading The NO FAKES Act Is Coming. Fair Use Might Be the First Casualty
