2023 was a year of AI hype, but don’t let them convince you it’s inevitable

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Writer Ilana Pena holds her sign on the picket line on the fourth day of the strike by the Writers Guild of America in front of Netflix in Hollywood, California, on May 5, 2023. - The Hollywood writers

Are you tired? I’m tired. It seems like every year we get a new main villain. Last year it was NFTs: apes, slurp juice, whatever the hell Square Enix is doing and what-have-you. This year? Artificial intelligence is here to threaten us all with ultra-processed sludge in place of human creativity.

And it all seems so inevitable. NFTs felt like a kind of infection, a fever stemming from addled CEOs and shareholders trying to wring another buck out of their various franchises. They’ve not been defeated, but we as a people were at least able to bully them to the point that game companies were far more reticent about them this year. 

But AI is as loud as ever. Governments are using it, huge game companies are toying with it, sites that make use of AI-generated content are still being caught out, and the brightest minds in the field of AI are alternating between telling us it’ll be good for humanity and begging for someone to stop them before they kill again on a bi-monthly basis. AI feels as unavoidable at the end of the year as it did at the beginning. 

The Finals came under fire for its use of AI voice acting this year. (Image credit: Embark Studios)

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