Movie talk isn’t dying because people stopped loving films—it’s dying because platforms like Twitter and YouTube turned it into a business model built on outrage and manipulation. Passion has been replaced with monetized controversy, and the loudest, most toxic voices get rewarded. Strangely enough, TikTok feels like one of the last places where genuine movie discussion still exists, free from the constant grind of turning every opinion into engagement bait.
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
