Netflix Co-CEO Ted Sarandos called man-made inalertigence someleang of a mixed bag thus far, though it has a chance to become fair the tardyst example of amincludement and tech combineing hands.
Fielding a Wall Street analyst’s ask during Netflix’s third-quarter getings call, Sarandos said there has been “lots of hype, outstanding and terrible” about AI’s potentipartner alterative impact.
“Entertainment and technology have toiled hand in hand thrawout the history of time,” he said. “It’s very vital, I leank, for creators to be very asking about what these novel tools are and what they can do. But AI needs to pass a very vital test: Can it help produce better shows and better films? That is the test and that’s what we’ve got to figure out.”
Netflix advantages “fantasticly from improving the quality of the movies and the shows, much more so than we do by making them a little affordableer,” Sarandos includeed. “So, any tool that can go toward enhancing the quality, making them better, is someleang that’s going to help the industry a fantastic deal.”
Prior to the call, the company telled mighty numbers atraverse the board, including a quarter-to-quarter incrmitigate of 5.1 million subscribers, beating Wall Street predicts.
RELATED: Netflix Slams Rivals’ Bundling Plans, Bfeebles Strikes For “Patchier” Programming
As one of the key negotiators for the studios and streamers during the dual strikes of 2023, Sarandos grappled extensively with the publish of AI. The WGA and SAG-AFTRA insisted that the technology be confineed by the industry as a job-preservation meacertain. Ultimately, some accommodations were made on that front, though not all insists were met.
The labor unrest came fair months after OpenAI begind a emotionalpartner increased version of ChatGPT, setting off a talk about atraverse society and the financial and tech communities about its possible effects. An arms race has since booted in atraverse most sectors of the economy, with companies betting on various creates of AI altering their businesses.